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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Food and drink producers gear up for Birmingham's first independent food and drink fair

As dozens of food and drink producers gear up for Birmingham's first independent food and drink fair next month Mary Griffin finds out what's in store and asks what sets the city's food scene apart.

Ian Parkes - Marketing manager for Purity - with their new brew Longhorn IPA on show at the Birmingham Independent Food Fair at Millennium Point.

“In Birmingham there’s a feeling that we are fighting against the tide,” says Ian Parkes.

“But that also gives the sense that we can do something really exciting here and it makes people more inclined to shout about Birmingham’s food scene.”

Ian is the marketing manager at Purity Brewing Company which, as one of the region’s greatest culinary success stories of the last decade, is throwing its weight behind the inaugural Birmingham Independent Food Fair coming to Millennium Point next month.

The fair, which follows a one-off pilot event last summer, will bring more than 40 food and drink producers from in and around Birmingham to showcase the city’s alternative to the big chains.

As well as sponsoring the festival, Purity will be running the craft beer bar, serving their Longhorn IPA, Lawless lager and award-winning pale ale Mad Goose – and persuading punters to match the beers with the fair’s spicier foods, from tapas to South East Asian dishes.

Marketing manager Ian says: “We’ve got a strong interest in the food scene in Birmingham thanks to having Pure Bar and Kitchen in the city centre, and we’ve worked for a long time with city chefs, most notably Andreas Antona of Simpsons.

“Because Birmingham is slightly off the radar the entry costs for businesses are cheaper here so that means you can afford to do new and exciting things that just wouldn’t get done elsewhere. You can be a bit more edgy.

“And because Birmingham has more Michelin stars than any English city outside London and has a massive street food scene. That means the city is suddenly being noticed by other people.”