You’ll walk Manchester’s Ancoats and Northern Quarter with a local guide, tasting everything from warm Eccles cakes to homemade cheese pie and even Manchester gin. Meet bakers and chefs along the way as you hear stories behind each dish—and leave knowing you’ve helped support Eat Well Manchester too.
You step out onto the street in Ancoats and it’s noisy—bikes rattling over cobbles, someone shouting to a mate across the road, and that faint smell of baking bread drifting from somewhere I couldn’t quite place. Our guide, Tom, waved us over by an old brick mill (now full of flats, apparently), and just like that we were off on this Manchester food tour. He started talking about how this area used to be the heart of the Industrial Revolution—honestly, I didn’t expect to care much about history, but he made it sound like some wild soap opera. We ducked into our first stop—a tiny bakery—and tried something called an Eccles cake. It was warm and sticky, with sugar crunching between my teeth. I’m not usually big on sweets but… yeah, I finished mine.
We wandered through backstreets in the Northern Quarter next—graffiti everywhere, music leaking out from a record shop door. At one point Tom pointed out where some old footballer used to drink (I forget which one now), and then we landed at this deli run by a woman named Yasmin who handed us slices of her homemade cheese pie. She laughed when I asked for seconds—apparently Mancunians appreciate a good appetite. The wine pairing at our third stop surprised me too; it wasn’t what I’d expect with street food but somehow worked perfectly. And there was this little moment where everyone just went quiet for a second after tasting—maybe just enjoying or maybe thinking about something else entirely.
I liked how each place had its own story—like the Vietnamese spot run by two brothers who moved here years ago or that pub where they poured us something called “Manchester gin.” (Not my usual drink but hey, when in Rome—or Manchester.) The weather kept shifting—sunny one minute, spitting rain the next—but nobody seemed to mind much. People just shrugged and kept chatting; I guess that’s part of life here.
The whole thing lasted about three hours but felt quicker somehow. We met bakers, chefs, even bumped into a couple regulars who joked with Tom about his football loyalties (he dodged answering). By the end I was full in every sense—food-wise for sure, but also just from seeing this side of Manchester you don’t get wandering alone. And knowing each ticket helps someone eat through Eat Well Manchester… well, that sticks with me too.
The guided food tour lasts around 3 to 3.5 hours.
Yes, lunch is included along with multiple tastings at six independent vendors.
You’ll enjoy a paired glass of wine at one stop and try a local Manchester tipple along the route.
No hotel pickup is provided; you meet at the starting point in Ancoats.
Yes, all areas and surfaces on this Manchester food tour are wheelchair accessible.
You must notify them at booking; last-minute requests may not be possible on the day.
The tour covers Ancoats and the Northern Quarter neighborhoods of Manchester.
Yes, infants can ride in prams or strollers and service animals are allowed too.
Your day includes all tastings at six independent spots across Ancoats and the Northern Quarter—think pastries, savory dishes, paired wine and a unique local drink—with bottled water along the way plus lunch itself. Every booking supports Eat Well Manchester charity as well.
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