释义 |
Definition of gastropub in English: gastropubnoun ˈɡastrəʊpʌbˈɡæstroʊˌpəb British A pub that specializes in serving high-quality food. 〈英〉美食酒吧,美食吧 we've built our reputation on searching out obscure restaurants, gastropubs, cutting-edge bars, and superlative food venues Example sentencesExamples - If someone wants a bottle of something healthy and delicious at lunchtime with a sandwich, might they not also want it at home with their evening meal, at a gastropub at the weekend, or for their children in a school lunchbox?
- The long, communal dining-table is laden with comforting home-cooked gastropub food.
- We eat together lots - in gastropubs and delis and, increasingly, nice tea rooms.
- Unless you're eating this ironically in a West London gastropub then the chances are your prawns are frozen shrimps bloated with sugar and salt water, then smothered in ketchup and mayonnaise.
- It's now a lavishly refurbished and rather expensive gastropub.
- This will affect a large majority of the borough's pubs who have cashed in on the gastropub trend by serving bar snacks and full meals.
- Eggs and ham on a muffin stooped in hollandaise sauce is gastropub breakfast food for a chilly British winter.
- Sipping an orange juice in a west London gastropub, he turns out to be a master of the admirable understatement.
- I love all pubs, even gastropubs, so long as they don't destroy your proper pubs, because it would be a shame if youngsters only saw all that chrome and glass.
- In time, I guess, the bar will be turned into a gastropub.
- The second time we meet, it's lunch at a gastropub near Fleet Street.
- For those who bridle at the glaring omissions the reason is simply that I have restricted myself to restaurants or gastropubs that I have visited within the last year.
- Whack them in the microwave for a few seconds, douse them in cream and pretend you're paying a fortune at a gastropub.
- He shuns the lookalike gastropubs with their lookalike clientele and points us in the direction of real food in real pubs.
- Nowadays there's the gastropub, an establishment driven as much by food as booze, frequently run by cooks without the equity to set up a restaurant proper.
- This is what I think is a seedy pub down the road from me, but they say is now an inexpensive gastropub.
- You may be in for a surprise if you peek into the kitchen when next at your local gastropub.
- It used to be an average dark pub, but six years ago the windows became transparent: it was the first gastropub I went to.
- Now they are increasingly gastropubs, with fine wines and restaurant-quality food, targeting a more conservative audience.
- This may have been in the days before gastropubs but it was also before pre-cooked, microwaved contract catering, and the best thing on the menu was always the mixed grill.
Origin1990s: from gastro- in gastronomy + pub. Definition of gastropub in US English: gastropubnounˈɡæstroʊˌpəbˈɡastrōˌpəb British A pub that specializes in serving high-quality food. 〈英〉美食酒吧,美食吧 we've built our reputation on searching out obscure restaurants, gastropubs, cutting-edge bars, and superlative food venues Example sentencesExamples - This may have been in the days before gastropubs but it was also before pre-cooked, microwaved contract catering, and the best thing on the menu was always the mixed grill.
- This will affect a large majority of the borough's pubs who have cashed in on the gastropub trend by serving bar snacks and full meals.
- You may be in for a surprise if you peek into the kitchen when next at your local gastropub.
- The second time we meet, it's lunch at a gastropub near Fleet Street.
- Now they are increasingly gastropubs, with fine wines and restaurant-quality food, targeting a more conservative audience.
- In time, I guess, the bar will be turned into a gastropub.
- It's now a lavishly refurbished and rather expensive gastropub.
- He shuns the lookalike gastropubs with their lookalike clientele and points us in the direction of real food in real pubs.
- I love all pubs, even gastropubs, so long as they don't destroy your proper pubs, because it would be a shame if youngsters only saw all that chrome and glass.
- Unless you're eating this ironically in a West London gastropub then the chances are your prawns are frozen shrimps bloated with sugar and salt water, then smothered in ketchup and mayonnaise.
- For those who bridle at the glaring omissions the reason is simply that I have restricted myself to restaurants or gastropubs that I have visited within the last year.
- Nowadays there's the gastropub, an establishment driven as much by food as booze, frequently run by cooks without the equity to set up a restaurant proper.
- Whack them in the microwave for a few seconds, douse them in cream and pretend you're paying a fortune at a gastropub.
- If someone wants a bottle of something healthy and delicious at lunchtime with a sandwich, might they not also want it at home with their evening meal, at a gastropub at the weekend, or for their children in a school lunchbox?
- Sipping an orange juice in a west London gastropub, he turns out to be a master of the admirable understatement.
- The long, communal dining-table is laden with comforting home-cooked gastropub food.
- Eggs and ham on a muffin stooped in hollandaise sauce is gastropub breakfast food for a chilly British winter.
- This is what I think is a seedy pub down the road from me, but they say is now an inexpensive gastropub.
- It used to be an average dark pub, but six years ago the windows became transparent: it was the first gastropub I went to.
- We eat together lots - in gastropubs and delis and, increasingly, nice tea rooms.
Origin1990s: from gastro- in gastronomy + pub. |