For this year's Latitude festival in Suffolk, a well-known screenwriter and director of motion pictures will serve as the featured chef.
At the event at Henham Park near Southwold, Richard Curtis and his wife Emma Freud will use local produce to display their culinary prowess.
The director of films like Notting Hill and Love Actually is Curtis, who resides in the neighborhood of Walberswick.
The festival will take place over the weekend of July 20–23.
According to broadcaster Freud, Suffolk is the warmest and most magical county in all of Britain, with expansive skies, breathtaking beaches, and a populace that radiates kindness. Also amazing are its culinary marvels. .
"Many members of my German Jewish family arrived in Suffolk at the beginning of the 1930s and were treated with warmth. .
"Nearly a century later, we're still around. On July 20th, we would love to welcome and feed you the Suffolk way in our lovely tent. ".
Fresh seafood for the main course, a welcome drink made with ingredients from a pub's allotment, and a starter of cheese from Jonny Crickmore at the Fen Farm Dairy are all on the menu.
They will also serve Suffolk crullers, a light fried dessert made of choux pastry, according to Freud.
It could be the best dessert you've ever had, she said.
Curtis has previously expressed his love for Suffolk. He first gained notoriety for writing for BBC comedies like Not The Nine O'Clock News and Blackadder. Later, he wrote and directed Four Weddings and a Funeral and About Time.
He said that Walberswick, where he spent lockdown, was the subject of his book That Christmas and that he felt "amazingly lucky" to have a home there.
According to him, Suffolk and The Beatles are the subjects of his upcoming film Yesterday.
Pulp, George Ezra, Paolo Nutini, The Kooks, and Siouxsie are among the performers at this year's Latitude festival.
The event's organizers reported that all day tickets for Sunday were gone.