Residents of Bruges love their beer, Belgian fries and chocolate – Bruges even has its own official city chocolate: the Bruges swan, or Brugsch Swaentje. Bruges offers plentiful chocolate shops, pubs ...
Bruges has a number of seriously good chefs and its highly competitive restaurant scene, much frequented by locals, keeps prices keen (if relatively expensive by UK standards; expect to pay €50 to €60 ...
Indy lost a legend when Brugge announced its closing. Owners Shannon Stone and Ted Miller called it quits and sold the last of their inventory within minutes, but there is a glimmer of hope on the ...
Bruges? That’s beer and chocolate, isn’t it? A standard remark from people when I told them I was off to Bruges, a UNESCO World Heritage City, for a three-day trip and to be honest it was easy to see ...
Forget the Colin Farrell film In Bruges, where the main hazard is assassination by a criminal mastermind – in reality, the chief danger here is overindulgence. During our weekend in the Belgian city ...
With its maze of cobbled streets, large open squares surrounded by beautifully preserved gothic buildings, tiny laneways opening onto picturesque canals and rows of medieval houses, Bruges is renowned ...
As if visiting Bruges wasn’t already expensive enough: now it has emerged that tourists are being charged more for food than locals. According to Belgian media, non-residents are being charged up to ...
07:32, Thu, Jun 29, 2017 Updated: 08:56, Thu, Jun 29, 2017 Belgian media has revealed that non-residents are being charged up to 10 per cent more to eat in the city than the locals. This has been ...
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