Special item returns to Wetherspoon pubs for Father's Day
Wetherspoon pubs in Wiltshire are bringing back a special menu item for Father's Day weekend.
The Savoy in Regent Street, The Sir Daniel Arms in Fleet Street, and The Dockle Farmhouse in Bridge End Road will be serving the Brunch Burger from Friday, June 13, until Sunday, June 15.
The burger is made with a 6oz British beef patty, American-style cheese, maple-cured bacon, a free-range fried egg, and a British potato hash brown.
Read more: Swindon restaurant to reopen after blaze forced diners to flee
It will be served with chips, six beer-battered onion rings, and a choice of more than 150 drinks, including regional craft beers.
For those choosing a soft or non-alcoholic drink, the meal costs £9.99, while opting for an alcoholic drink will see the price rise to £11.52.
Kelly Wood, manager of The Savoy, said: "I am confident that the pub's customers will welcome the return of the Brunch Burger for three days to mark Father's Day weekend."
The burger will be available for three days only.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Epoch Times
an hour ago
- Epoch Times
A Joint Museum Acquisition of a Rare British Self-Portrait
The British Baroque artist William Dobson (1611–1646) is not a household name, but that may be changing with the international news that London's Tate and the National Portrait Gallery (NPG) have jointly acquired one of his rare self-portraits. The purchase Among modern scholars, Dobson's paintings have been critically acclaimed, especially after two 20th-century exhibitions. Art historians have found similarities between his work and that of such illustrious figures as Caravaggio and Rembrandt, two artists who also have important self-portraiture legacies. However, Dobson has long been forgotten by the general public due to personal and historical circumstances.

Epoch Times
an hour ago
- Epoch Times
‘Sargent and Paris' at the Met
John Singer Sargent (1856–1925) was the most lauded portraitist of his day. At the height of his career, he painted the crème de la crème of society: Gilded Age titans of industry, American dollar princesses, and aristocratic Edwardian beauties. The foundations of his artistic practice can be traced to his time in Paris, where he arrived in 1874 at age 18 and stayed for a decade. He drew inspiration from his teacher, contemporary painters, a varied social circle of creatives and patrons, and art history. 'Sargent and Paris,' a special exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art on view through Aug. 3, 2025, explores this productive, essential period of his work. The show culminates in a presentation of Sargent's pivotal painting 'Madame X,' but the exhibition's ingenuity is that it places the artwork in the context of his rich, early Parisian portraits. Training in Paris

Epoch Times
an hour ago
- Epoch Times
Frans Hals's ‘The Laughing Cavalier'
The paramount artistic talents of the Dutch Golden Age are often identified as Rembrandt and Vermeer. However, some connoisseurs, particularly in the second half of the 19th century, ranked Frans Hals (circa 1582–1666) the premiere Dutch Baroque painter. Hals was popular in his lifetime for genre scenes, often of merrymaking, as well as individual and group portraits. His tonal palette and bravura brushwork inspired subsequent generations of significant artists, such as the American expatriate John Singer Sargent. He proclaimed, 'It's hard to find anyone who knows more about oil painting than Frans Hals.'