Manila Flavours
Hours
Chamber Rating
-
C
Perfect delicious food and service lovely cant not rate xx
Apr 23rd, 2023 -
Edward
It was closed when we went at 4pm, even though the opening times state that it is open. Tried calling but line was busy sometimes, then no answer the other times.
Feb 24th, 2023 -
Paeng Lin
Delicious Filipino food! Very good price. Staff were incredibly welcoming. Thanks to the whole team!!!
Dec 6th, 2022 -
George West
I ordered pork adobo, strawberry soda, and ube taro bubble tea on ubereats on deliveroo. The food arrived piping hot despite me being located in the city centre and the restaurant being located in Smethwick. Everything was DELICIOUS. Filipino cuisine has a lot of Spanish influence alongside Chinese and Indian influence due to the history of colonialism and trade. I've become very familar with Spanish cuisine due to me travelling to Lanzarote (Spanish island in the Canarias) nearly every year with family since I was a baby. The adobo reminded me a lot of an Iberian pork dish I had in Lanzarote but minus the hefty price tag of Iberian pork, so the meat used is clearly great quality if it is comparable to Iberian pork. The strawberry soda was also incredible, and made me nostalgic for diabolo fraise, a drink using strawberry syrup and French lemonade that I would frequently drink when on holiday in France (another frequent travel destination of mine, and I was slightly disappointed when I could only find 1 restaurant that served it when I visited Paris for the first time, as I previously had only been to provinces in the north and south of France that commonly served the drink). The ube taro bubble tea was also great, the tapioca pearls were the perfect texture and weren't too firm unlike a couple of bubble tea chains that I've visited before. If you've never had ube before, I can best describe it as being a nutty, vanilla-like flavour. I was first introduced to Filipino cuisine through the show Steven Universe, where a character named Lars was hinted at being Filipino when he baked an ube cake roll in an episode. At the same time I was starting my GCSE Food Preparation and Nutrition coursework, where I chose the prompt of 'based off Asian cuisine' and focused on Filipino cuisine as I was curious about trying the cuisine after seeing it featured in my favourite show of that time. I'm already pretty familar with Filipino cuisine due to this (and I very proudly earned an 8 (grade equivalent to an A) in said GCSE). Filipino food is criminally underrated as in my opinion there's something for everyone. If you enjoy Spanish food, definitely give Filipino food a try as the Spanish influence means that there's a familiarity of flavours, especially garlic and onion. If you're as crazy about garlic as I am (there's no such thing as too much garlic for me!), definitely try the adobo as it's lovely and garlicky (I'll get the garlic rice too next time, I had to make a small sacrifice of getting plain rice last night as I didn't want customers to smell garlic on me at work today as I work somewhere that sells macarons). Super interested to try the other dishes available, such as the kare kare (unsure of if the version here uses offal, but as someone who has tried chicken feet and loved them, a little bit of offal doesn't discourage me). Filipino food also isn't typically spicy, so if you want to really get into an Asian cuisine but you aren't huge on spice (such as myself, I do enjoy spice to the extent of Nando's 'hot' being my limit, but I tend to avoid spicy food as it's one of my GERD triggers), Filipino food is definitely for you! Don't be discouraged from trying Filipino food just because of infamous foods that you've heard of such as balut, as Filipino cuisine is so much more than that!
May 4th, 2023 -
Matthew Hobley
Great food,great service.
Jul 27th, 2022
Contact Info
- (121) 238-6034
Questions & Answers
Q What is the phone number for Manila Flavours?
A The phone number for Manila Flavours is: (121) 238-6034.
Q Where is Manila Flavours located?
A Manila Flavours is located at 285 Bearwood Rd, Abbey Ward, eng B66 4DR
Q What is the internet address for Manila Flavours?
A The website (URL) for Manila Flavours is: https://www.facebook.com/mnlflavours/
Q What days are Manila Flavours open?
A Manila Flavours is open:
Sunday: 3:00 PM - 3:00 PM
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM
Wednesday: 5:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Thursday: 5:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Friday: 5:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Saturday: 3:00 PM - 3:00 PM
Q How is Manila Flavours rated?
A Manila Flavours has a 4.6 Star Rating from 50 reviewers.
Hours
Ratings and Reviews
Manila Flavours
Overall Rating
Overall Rating
( 50 Reviews )C on Google
Perfect delicious food and service lovely cant not rate xx
Edward on Google
It was closed when we went at 4pm, even though the opening times state that it is open. Tried calling but line was busy sometimes, then no answer the other times.
Paeng Lin on Google
Delicious Filipino food! Very good price. Staff were incredibly welcoming. Thanks to the whole team!!!
George West on Google
I ordered pork adobo, strawberry soda, and ube taro bubble tea on ubereats on deliveroo. The food arrived piping hot despite me being located in the city centre and the restaurant being located in Smethwick. Everything was DELICIOUS. Filipino cuisine has a lot of Spanish influence alongside Chinese and Indian influence due to the history of colonialism and trade. I've become very familar with Spanish cuisine due to me travelling to Lanzarote (Spanish island in the Canarias) nearly every year with family since I was a baby. The adobo reminded me a lot of an Iberian pork dish I had in Lanzarote but minus the hefty price tag of Iberian pork, so the meat used is clearly great quality if it is comparable to Iberian pork. The strawberry soda was also incredible, and made me nostalgic for diabolo fraise, a drink using strawberry syrup and French lemonade that I would frequently drink when on holiday in France (another frequent travel destination of mine, and I was slightly disappointed when I could only find 1 restaurant that served it when I visited Paris for the first time, as I previously had only been to provinces in the north and south of France that commonly served the drink). The ube taro bubble tea was also great, the tapioca pearls were the perfect texture and weren't too firm unlike a couple of bubble tea chains that I've visited before. If you've never had ube before, I can best describe it as being a nutty, vanilla-like flavour. I was first introduced to Filipino cuisine through the show Steven Universe, where a character named Lars was hinted at being Filipino when he baked an ube cake roll in an episode. At the same time I was starting my GCSE Food Preparation and Nutrition coursework, where I chose the prompt of 'based off Asian cuisine' and focused on Filipino cuisine as I was curious about trying the cuisine after seeing it featured in my favourite show of that time. I'm already pretty familar with Filipino cuisine due to this (and I very proudly earned an 8 (grade equivalent to an A) in said GCSE). Filipino food is criminally underrated as in my opinion there's something for everyone. If you enjoy Spanish food, definitely give Filipino food a try as the Spanish influence means that there's a familiarity of flavours, especially garlic and onion. If you're as crazy about garlic as I am (there's no such thing as too much garlic for me!), definitely try the adobo as it's lovely and garlicky (I'll get the garlic rice too next time, I had to make a small sacrifice of getting plain rice last night as I didn't want customers to smell garlic on me at work today as I work somewhere that sells macarons). Super interested to try the other dishes available, such as the kare kare (unsure of if the version here uses offal, but as someone who has tried chicken feet and loved them, a little bit of offal doesn't discourage me). Filipino food also isn't typically spicy, so if you want to really get into an Asian cuisine but you aren't huge on spice (such as myself, I do enjoy spice to the extent of Nando's 'hot' being my limit, but I tend to avoid spicy food as it's one of my GERD triggers), Filipino food is definitely for you! Don't be discouraged from trying Filipino food just because of infamous foods that you've heard of such as balut, as Filipino cuisine is so much more than that!
Matthew Hobley on Google
Great food,great service.