
I'm very happy.'įaisal Awqata, 45, tucked into a heavily-discounted feast at Nando's in Southwark, south London, with four colleagues. He said: 'I bought more food because it's half-price.
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Eduardo Feliz, 42, from the Dominican Republic, visited McDonald's in Waterloo Station for a Big Mac Meal, 20 chicken nuggets and a McFlurry ice cream. Some people returned to the same venue twice in one day. People queue outside a McDonald's branch in Reading today on the first day of the Eat Out To Help Out scheme Francis Crick Institute director Sir Paul Nurse said the Government needed to 'treat the public as adults'.Lockdown rules were eased further in Wales, where 30 people can now meet outside while social distancing.Officials will start testing sewage to track Covid-19 and could ban domestic travel to stop local outbreaks.There were rumours over tightening coronavirus rules in parts of the UK amid fears of a looming second wave.Two tests which can detect coronavirus and flu - and promise results in 90 minutes - are to be rolled out.Doctors will give tailored advice this autumn to anyone over 50 who is obese, overweight or in ill health.Covid-19 cases doubled in Manchester last week and are rising - but young people are still flocking to pubs.Greater Manchester declared a major incident over rising infections as residents were told to stay calm.The Eat Out to Help Out scheme was also launched as: Yet obesity campaigners have warned of the effect on the nation's waistlines and questioned how it marries up with the government's war on flab.

We weren't planning to open Air Street on Mondays and Tuesdays, but we changed our minds and now we have 300 covers a night booked in.' He told the Evening Standard: 'We have had 15,000 bookings for the 13 days. Will Beckett, co-founder of the Hawksmoor group of steakhouses, said his London restaurants were fully booked on the days of the offer and has had to open another.

'It's certainly not returning to pre-Covid levels but it's definitely looking up from the last couple of weeks we've seen,' he told Sky News. Mark Selby, the chief executive and co-founder of Mexican chain Wahaca, hailed the 'shot of adrenaline' for the restaurant industry. Restaurateurs today lined up to praise the scheme after burning through funds during the three-month lockdown. It followed huge queues throughout the day outside participating restaurants, which can be pinpointed by a useful government search tool. London's vibrant West End was packed with diners sitting al freso at socially distanced tables on the road while eating and drinking - although the government is not covering the cost of alcohol. The aim of the £500million enterprise is to drive footfall into income-starved restaurants which were forced to shutter during lockdown and jump-start the economic recovery.Īnd pictures of busy restaurants across the UK tonight suggested diners were taking advantage of the slashed food prices. More than 90 chains including McDonald's, Nando's, Pizza Express and Costa Coffee are among the 72,000 eateries taking part in the scheme, which allows them claim back the lost money from the Treasury. Rishi Sunak's Eat Out To Help Out programme, which gives people £10 per head off their bill, drew crowds to both high-end venues and fast-food outlets alike. Restaurants were tonight heaving with customers dining out on discounts after the government launched its half-price meals scheme to breathe life back into the beleaguered hospitality industry.
