Find out what French restaurants to try in Billund. Billund is built on LEGO. The city is home to a LEGO factory, which produces the lion's share of the world's plastic building bricks, and a theme park, LEGOLAND.
Things to do in Billund
4 based on 677 reviews
Welcome to a fun, playful food experience for the whole family! Build your order with just four LEGO® bricks, scan it at your table, and watch your order screen for a unique behind the scenes look into the kitchen as the Minifigure chefs prepare your meal
You are in the Lego House, having a great time, and get hungry.Definitely eat at the Mini Chef restaurant in the House!You don't have to leave the Lego House and get the maximum time in the House.The food is good, but the better part of the experience is building your meal with Lego!The mechanical service tool is pretty cool too!
4 based on 37 reviews
LE GOURMET is a Nordic cuisine/French brasserie gourmet experience â combined and served in new, creative ways. You will find (almost) no LEGO® bricks here, but LEGO values, quality, and creative play with seasonal ingredients are always on the menu. Our
Visited the newly opened Le Gourmet in the Brick House in Billund. The athmospere was cosy and inviting. The four course meny with wine packadge was carefully selected. I chose the vegetarian meny as the only one in the compagny and was served a very good wine to cabbage which I have never tried before. On top of that very skilled and professional serving. Worth coming back.
4 based on 20 reviews
This cafe is your go-to place for a quick snack or a light lunch. We serve hot and cold beverages, sandwiches and desserts in a casual atmosphere with a slight LEGO® twist. You can either enjoy the food seated in the cafe or get it as take away. You can a
The wonderful Lego House has three eateries inside the building, and visitors dont need to have bought an entry ticket to access any of them. So if you have kids but dont have the three or so hours it takes to get around the main installation, the BRICKACCINO CAFE, the MINI CHEF (kids) restaurant and LE GOURMET (high end dining) are all accessible and give a brief taster of what this excellent addition to Denmark's self-styled Capital of Children is all about ... The cafe is by far the cheapest food option and has a canteen queuing system. It's not very big, and if there's a party of school kids is in front of you, service can be a bit slow. But it offers decent hot drinks, sandwiches and snacks, and the staff are great (shout out to Yeber who was super helpful). Of course, the big draw is that the place is located right inside Lego House, so there's plenty to occupy young kids even if you're not paying to enter the main installation. Pricing is Scandinavian, so not cheap. But note, for hot drinks there are two prices shown on the board (see photo). One is for the barista brewed high end coffee/hot chocolate, the other, 30% cheaper price, is for hot drinks out of the machine located on the counter opposite the till. This price, as well as being significantly lower, also includes a free re-fill, which makes it good value. Seating is in formica tables with Scandinavian designed plastic chairs. There are also seven or eight cosy alcove/pod tables available, very popular with kids, and that have a lovely vaulted wooden ceiling component. Just to add that each table has a tiny paraffin lamp with an open flame inside a glass holder. You have to admire the way the Danes obviously think that parents and kids should be trusted not to set fire to themselves. And of course these lamps are perfectly safe in principle. But I'm pretty sure that the management of any similar attraction in the US or UK would not dare have an open flame in a kids cafe, being terrified of darling little George or Charlotte burning themselves - and the inevitable lawsuit that would follow.
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