Upside Down - Blackpool’s Eating Guide Review: This leafy little gem is a must for breakfast and brunch

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This leafy little gem is a must for breakfast and brunch, the inventive menu displays a love of food and caters for modern tastes and intolerances

Some of the shop fronts long Edward Street have undergone quite a facelift in recent years.

This green café adorned with thriving plants, most of which are for sale, and serving plant-based food, opened just before lockdown and managed to survive despite the inauspicious start.

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We were given a kilner-style bottle of chilled water on arrival and ordered an (impeccable) oat-milk flat white. They take their coffee, tea, even their hot chocolate seriously here.

Blackpool’s Eating Guide: Upside Down reviewBlackpool’s Eating Guide: Upside Down review
Blackpool’s Eating Guide: Upside Down review

The inventive menu displays a love of food and caters for modern tastes and intolerances.

A Power Trip (£7) vegan breakfast of mushrooms on toasted sourdough came elegantly zigzagged with basil and truffle oil and peppered with powdered mushroom to boost the fungi flavour.

The portion was generous: a heap of three different types of perfectly sautéed mushroom tumbled over the edges of a thick slice of toast.

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Cakes and vegan pastries are made in-house – a sticky cinnamon-loaded bun was out of this world – and the whole atmosphere is one of relaxed creativity, the young proprietors working to an accompaniment of slightly head-banging music at an unobtrusively low volume.

A leafy little gem.

Address: 28 Edward Street, FY1 1BA

Website: upsidedownblackpool.com

Hours: Wed-Fri 9am-4pm; Sat and Sun 10am-4pm

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