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A rustic wooden table holding skewers, spring rolls, a taco, and red wine.

Birmingham food tour runs city tastings until July

Birmingham Food Tours: A Taste of Birmingham is running in the city from 18 April to 25 July 2026, giving visitors and locals a guided route through part of Birmingham’s food story.

The Visit Birmingham listing describes the experience as a Guided Tour that moves from a Desi pub to the oldest wine merchant in the city, with the wider route framed around Birmingham’s rich and ever-evolving food scene.

For anyone weighing up a spring or summer food-led day out in Birmingham, the confirmed basics are simple: the event is listed for Birmingham, the published date window runs from 18 April to 25 July, and the source does not list a start time, end time, price, booking details or a street address.

Dates, venue and the details still to check

Detail Confirmed information
Event Birmingham Food Tours: A Taste of Birmingham
Type Guided Tour
Location Birmingham
Dates 18 April to 25 July 2026
Time Not listed in the source text
Price Not listed in the source text
Booking details Not listed in the source text
Best suited to Readers interested in Birmingham food, local culture and guided city experiences

The venue is given as Birmingham rather than a named street address, so anyone planning to attend should treat the listing as a starting point rather than a complete itinerary. The published information confirms the date range and city, but not the meeting point or schedule.

A route through old and changing Birmingham flavours

The strongest clue to the character of the tour is in the short description: from a Desi pub to the oldest wine merchant in the city. That pairing matters because it places the experience across different layers of Birmingham’s food identity rather than around a single restaurant or cuisine.

A Desi pub is part of the Midlands’ broader food culture, where pub settings and South Asian cooking have become a familiar local combination. The mention of the city’s oldest wine merchant points in a different direction: older trading histories, specialist food and drink knowledge, and the kind of businesses that help shape a city’s culinary memory.

The source does not publish a full stop-by-stop programme, menu or list of tastings. What it does confirm is a guided experience built around Birmingham’s food scene, with a focus on both established and evolving parts of that landscape.

Who the Birmingham guided tour is likely to suit

This is most naturally aimed at people who want more context than a standard meal out. A guided food tour can work for visitors trying to understand a city quickly, but it can also suit residents who know Birmingham well and want to look again at familiar streets through food, drink and local history.

The listing does not specify age suitability, group size, accessibility arrangements or dietary provision. Those details are important for families, wheelchair users, people with allergies and anyone planning around travel or work, but they are not included in the supplied event text.

Because the event window stretches from April into late July, it may fit different kinds of city plans: a weekend visit, a food-focused afternoon, or a cultural stop alongside other Birmingham events. The practical gap is that the published source text gives the broad window, not individual session times.

What to confirm before making plans

Before setting aside a date, readers should check the live event listing for the exact session time, meeting point, price and booking process. The information available here confirms the event title, city, type and date range, but not the finer details needed to arrive at the right place.

The confirmed listing is Birmingham Food Tours: A Taste of Birmingham, a Guided Tour in Birmingham running from 18 April to 25 July 2026.

Source: Visit Birmingham Events

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Priya Marshall

Priya Marshall

Author

Priya Marshall covers Birmingham's events calendar through a public-interest lens, checking listings against venue notices, organiser updates and transport information before publication. She has reported on neighbourhood festivals, council-backed cultural programmes, road closures and accessibility issues across the West Midlands, with a focus on helping readers understand what is happening, what has changed and how local decisions affect community life

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