McDonald’s, as Maccy D fans happily hung around in the hope of bagging a bargain burger. One Winchester café reported three-hour queues, with one customer, 25-year-old Brandon Reis, 25, telling Mail Online : "The opportunity to make savings like this may never come again, so I've been eating out two to three times a week." Liezle Greyling, 49, enjoyed a family brunch with her daughters Lilia, 12, and Mea, 9 at a Wetherspoons, in Hammersmith, west London. “Three breakfasts and juices cost us eight pounds," she said."It's amazing.
We've been using the scheme a lot, and have been to places such as Tortilla and Nando’s."Announcing the end of the scheme, Chancellor Rishi Sunak said: "As the Eat Out to Help Out scheme draws to a close, I want to.
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