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Bia Rebel, Belfast – restaurant review | Jay Rayner | Food. Bia Rebel, 409 Ormeau Road, Belfast BT7 3GP (02895 435 964). Ramen £6-£8. Sides £4-£6. Be aware. If you ask chef Brian Donnelly of Bia Rebel to explain how he makes his food, he will tell you. He will go into quite extraordinary detail. There will be hand gestures and a lot of enthusiasm. If you’re a little short on time, perhaps it’s best just to order and keep the questions to a minimum.

This is the thing: we are used to lengthy, sweaty-palmed stories around complex dishes, but for the most part they come greased with excess and largesse and huge price tags. But an £8 bowl of ramen? Now, with his business partner Jenny Holland, he brings all of that to the task of running a small ramen shop on the Ormeau Road in Belfast. Last autumn, Bia Rebel – bia is Irish for food – won the best cheap eats gong in the Observer Food Monthly awards, voted for by the readers. In any case, I don’t believe it is trying to compete, and its offering also happens to be a lot cheaper than those others. Pavanu Mobility. James Street South Restaurant Belfast. 36 Hours in Belfast - Video. Belfast ideas from easyJet. Week-end à Belfast. Go To Belfast - The Official Tourism Website For Belfast, Northern Ireland. Love Fish | Michael Deane * James Street South Bar & Grill - Home *

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No Alibis Bookstore - Belfast * St George's Market. St George's Market, July 2010 St George's Market is the last surviving Victorian covered market in Belfast, Northern Ireland. It is located on May Street, close to the River Lagan and the Waterfront Hall. Belfast Corporation (now Belfast City Council) commissioned the building of St George's Market, which was built in three phases between 1890 and 1896. Before 1890 St George's Market was an open market and most likely contained a slaughterhouse and a meat market. The original market[edit] The original (pre 1890) market was smaller than the new structure.

World War II[edit] After heavy bombing of Belfast by German aircraft in World War II, St George's Market was used as an emergency mortuary. Since 1980[edit] Entrance to St George's Market, September 2009 By the 1980s, St George's Market had developed into a general market and it became the last of Belfast's thriving Victorian markets. St George's Market is primarily used as a market, however a number of other events are held at the site. Whites Tavern 1630.