Scribbles

Scribbles An independant eaterie in the centre of Elgin founded in 2001. So whether its a relaxing coffee with friends or family get together, we can cater for it all.
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At Scribbles we aim to welcome our customers with a cheery smile, lots of fun personalities and above all else, great food and drink.

☕ Exciting things brewing at Scribbles…Over the coming weeks, Speyside Coffee Roasting Co. will become our new coffee su...
29/05/2026

☕ Exciting things brewing at Scribbles…

Over the coming weeks, Speyside Coffee Roasting Co. will become our new coffee supplier!

We’re creating a stronger connection between our two businesses and bringing this fantastic locally roasted blend to your cup at Scribbles.

You’ll start to notice a few fresh updates across our menus soon, with more little changes on the way — keep an eye on our socials 👀

Here’s a wee sneak peek at our Breakfast Menu & Coffee update… ☕🍳

☀️ Suns oot, so it’s officially Hugo time. 🍹🌿Nothing says summer quite like a crisp, refreshing Hugo Spritz – elderflowe...
26/05/2026

☀️ Suns oot, so it’s officially Hugo time. 🍹🌿
Nothing says summer quite like a crisp, refreshing Hugo Spritz – elderflower, mint, bubbles, and sunshine in a glass. ✨

Hot, fresh, and made right. That’s our specialty. 🍕Join us daily from 9am right through to the evening.  Booking advisab...
23/05/2026

Hot, fresh, and made right. That’s our specialty. 🍕
Join us daily from 9am right through to the evening. Booking advisable by calling 01343 542835

Something cool is brewing…Matcha Lattes & Iced Coolers are landing at Scribbles this summer 🍵🧊
20/05/2026

Something cool is brewing…
Matcha Lattes & Iced Coolers are landing at Scribbles this summer 🍵🧊

UPDATE  - our wayward bin was located sightseeing by Lady Hill. It must have taken a big effort to get across town to th...
17/05/2026

UPDATE - our wayward bin was located sightseeing by Lady Hill. It must have taken a big effort to get across town to there but happily the council were able reunite us!

🚨 MISSING BIN 🚨

After a wild night on the tiles, our commercial waste bin has failed to make it home.

Last seen: Late Saturday night, looking a little worse for wear.

If spotted wandering the streets confused and full of regret, please es**rt it safely back to us.

No questions asked. ♻️

We are looking to grow our permanent Kitchen Team. If you have a minimum of 2 years relevant experience and enjoy workin...
13/05/2026

We are looking to grow our permanent Kitchen Team. If you have a minimum of 2 years relevant experience and enjoy working in a busy, fast-paced environment please send your CV and covering letter for the attention of Ashley Taylor to [email protected]

Please take 5 minutes to read the post below, digest the information and join us in the fight to bring about change.
12/05/2026

Please take 5 minutes to read the post below, digest the information and join us in the fight to bring about change.

Hospitality is not a luxury sector — it is part of a country’s infrastructure

Following on from my post yesterday, I want to make another point.

Other countries seem to understand hospitality very differently to the UK.

They don’t just see restaurants, cafés, pubs and small hotels as places people go for a treat. They see them as part of the wider economy.

They support jobs.
They support tourism.
They support local suppliers.
They train young people.
They keep villages, towns and high streets alive.
They give visitors somewhere to go.
They give communities places to meet.

That is why many European countries apply a reduced VAT rate to hospitality.

Germany has moved restaurant and catering food to 7% VAT.
Ireland is reducing food-led hospitality VAT to 9% from July 2026.
France commonly applies 10% VAT to restaurant food and food for immediate consumption.
Spain applies 10% VAT to restaurant and catering services.

The UK? 20%.

That difference is huge.

In the UK, hospitality is treated as if it can simply absorb everything: 20% VAT, rising wages, employer costs, food inflation, energy bills, rent, insurance, card fees, repairs, debt from Covid and the energy crisis, and quieter trading months.

But hospitality cannot absorb everything forever.

If a restaurant closes, the government does not just lose VAT. It loses PAYE, National Insurance, business rates, corporation tax, supplier spending, local jobs, training opportunities, tourism spend and economic activity.

A closed business pays nothing.

A supported business keeps contributing.

That is the part that seems to be missing from the conversation.

Reducing VAT for hospitality is not a handout. It is an investment in keeping viable businesses open.

It gives restaurants, cafés, pubs and takeaways a better chance to survive, employ people, pay suppliers, train staff, support communities and keep money moving through the local economy.

Small independent hospitality is fragile. Rural hospitality is even more fragile. Seasonal hospitality is more fragile again.

We cannot be treated the same as large chains, supermarkets or online businesses with completely different models, margins and scale.

If the UK wants thriving towns, villages, tourism destinations and high streets, it needs to recognise hospitality for what it really is:

An employer.
A training ground.
A community space.
A tourism driver.
A local economic engine.

Not just a luxury.

Please sign and share the petition to reduce hospitality VAT to 10%.

Because once these places are gone, they are not easily replaced.

Steve
Anderson’s Restaurant
Boat of Garten

Petition: Reduce VAT on hospitality to 10%: protect jobs, communities & UK competitiveness

Reduce VAT on hospitality to 10% to prevent closures & protect tax revenue. When venues close, HMRC loses 100% of its VAT, business rates, PAYE & corporation tax, reducing employment & supply chains. We believe a lower VAT rate would keep viable businesses trading, securing jobs & ongoing revenue.

https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/759116

11/05/2026

Please get behind the   campaign being spearheaded by Hospitality Together and help support your local, community pubs, ...
11/05/2026

Please get behind the campaign being spearheaded by Hospitality Together and help support your local, community pubs, hotels, cafés, restaurants and takeaways.
www.facebook.com/share/g/1BLj1AGBcz/

An open letter to the Scottish and UK Government from a small independent restaurant owner

I don’t usually write posts like this, but I feel I need to say something — not just for Anderson’s, but for small hospitality businesses across Scotland and the UK.

We are a small, family-run independent restaurant in the Highlands. We employ local people, train young staff, support suppliers, welcome visitors, serve our community, and try our best to keep going through the highs and lows of a seasonal rural business.

But the truth is, hospitality is being squeezed from every direction.

Food costs have risen.
Wages have risen.
Energy costs have risen.
Insurance, repairs, licences, waste, rent, card fees, software fees, accountancy fees — everything has gone up.
VAT takes a huge chunk of every sale.
PAYE and employer costs keep climbing.
And the quiet months are becoming harder and harder to survive.

People see a busy Saturday night and think, “They must be doing well.”

But what they don’t see is what sits behind that. The tax bills. The supplier bills. The loan repayments. The winter losses. The overdraft. The sleepless nights. The pressure of keeping staff employed when the numbers barely work.

And behind the business is a family.

Like so many small business owners, we are trying to support a young family at the same time. Household costs have risen too — food, fuel, mortgage/rent, electricity, clothes, school costs, everything. We are working more hours, taking more stress, carrying more risk, and often earning less than the people we employ.

We are not working harder to thrive anymore.

We are working harder just to survive.

That cannot be right.

Small hospitality businesses are not asking for special treatment so we can make huge profits. We are asking for a fair chance to keep our doors open.

We need proper help.

We need VAT reform for hospitality.
We need tax breaks for small independent businesses.
We need business rates support.
We need help with employer costs.
We need energy support.
We need government to understand that rural, seasonal hospitality cannot be treated the same as large national chains.

Restaurants, cafés, pubs and takeaways are not just places to eat. They are employers. They are training grounds for young people. They support local suppliers. They bring visitors into villages and towns. They create community. They give places their character.

But if things continue as they are, there will be none of us left.

Every time a small restaurant closes, a community loses more than a business. It loses jobs, opportunity, gathering places, tourism, supplier income and local identity.

We love what we do. We love feeding people. We love welcoming locals and visitors. We love being part of Boat of Garten and the wider Cairngorms community.

But love does not pay VAT.
Love does not pay wages.
Love does not pay energy bills.
Love does not keep a roof over a family’s head.

Small hospitality businesses are dying in plain sight.

Please listen. Please act. Please help before it is too late.

Steve Anderson
Anderson’s Restaurant
Boat of Garten

Inspired by John Mountain of FYRE Restaurant, because whether people agree with his delivery or not, he is highlighting something very real.

Small independent hospitality businesses are struggling to survive under the weight of VAT, rising costs, wages, energy, card fees and endless pressure.

This is not just one restaurant. This is an industry-wide crisis.

Hospitality needs support now, before there are none of us left.

MacDonald MP
Government
Government
Treasury
Highland Council
Forbes MSP
Swinney
Reeves
Starmer
Sarwar

Hospitality Group
of Small Businesses - FSB
Restaurant By Chef John Mountain
























Address

154 High Street 01343 542835
Elgin
IV301BD

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 9pm
Tuesday 10am - 9pm
Wednesday 10am - 9pm
Thursday 10am - 9pm
Friday 10am - 10pm
Saturday 10am - 10pm
Sunday 10am - 9pm

Telephone

+441343542835

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