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Heston Blumenthal: Weight-loss drugs are ruining restaurants but I take them too

Heston Blumenthal: Weight-loss drugs are ruining restaurants but I take them too

Times01-08-2025
One of cooking's greatest innovators has a bleak prediction for the future of the already beleaguered restaurant industry. 'It's going to get much worse in the next six months,' Heston Blumenthal warns.
In an interview with Times Radio, the chef, 59, said the rise in popularity of weight-loss drugs would lead to serious changes in dining habits. 'Wegovy, Ozempic, Mounjaro — you still enjoy food, but they stop appetite. So what's going to happen is people are going to want smaller portions,' he said.
As labour, ingredients and fuel costs have all increased, diners ordering less means smaller margins for restaurants, and smaller appetites are also leading to a decline in desire for the highly profitable tasting menus at fine dining restaurants such as Blumenthal's three-Michelin-starred the Fat Duck restaurant. The creator of molecular gastronomy admitted he was worried for the future of his industry, 'without doing something about it', but said: 'I'm formulating [a plan]. In my head, it is formulating as we speak.'
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