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Fallouts and financial woes: inside Heston Blumenthal’s sinking empire

1 day ago
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Dinner by Heston was once one of the world’s most revered restaurants, known for its decadent and unusual dishes such as the “meat fruit”,But Heston Blumenthal announced this week that he is winding down operations at the two Michelin-star restaurant at the Mandarin Oriental hotel in Knightsbridge, London, saying it was because the tenancy had “finished”,However, current and former workers at Dinner claim the restaurant has been going downhill for years after Blumenthal fell out with his right-hand man, Ashley Palmer-Watts, who created the menu and ran the restaurant day to day before he left the business,“Closing the restaurant was not Heston’s choice whatsoever,” a senior source from the Mandarin Oriental told the Guardian,“The hotel chose not to renew the lease.

“It never performed particularly well after Ashley left, which is shocking as it was potentially the busiest and most successful two Michelin-star restaurant in the world,It went off the boil,When Ashley left, so did most of the core team,”He claimed the restaurant was “empty” on Sunday lunchtimes “which was extraordinary,If it’s not successful, even with two stars, it’s not bringing any money in, then, difficult decisions have to be made.

”A representative for Blumenthal disputed that the restaurant was underperforming, adding that it was a “highly regarded and popular part of our portfolio”.Blumenthal’s restaurant group, which includes the three Michelin-star Fat Duck in Bray as well as the Hind’s Head pub, has also been struggling with debts.Last year, SL6 Ltd, the company behind the restaurants, posted a £2.1m loss, up from £1.4m the previous year.

Directors at the company blamed “wage inflation” and “economic uncertainties” that “affect customers’ willingness to spend their disposable income” in the restaurant’s annual accounts.Last month, HMRC issued a winding-up petition against the firm.Blumenthal’s spokesperson said these accounts did not relate to Dinner by Heston, the finances of which were managed by the Mandarin Oriental, and added: “The SL6 payment to HMRC was paid in full, and the petition has been withdrawn.”Palmer-Watts has not seen or spoken to Blumenthal since he left Dinner.He is now working on projects including the award-winning London pub the Devonshire, which he co-owns and designed the menu for, and his own spirits line.

He learned the restaurant he founded was closing after reading about it in the press.“I thought it was a bittersweet moment because I had amazing times there creating that thing and it was an incredible experience,” he said.“It was a brilliant project and I loved it.”Palmer-Watts said he was pleased it kept going for so long after he left, adding: “I haven’t been there for six years and it still maintained its Michelin stars, and I think I can be proud that means I put down really good foundations in place that held it in good stead.”Sources at the hotel claimed they were planning to close it down last year, but Blumenthal asked if it could stay open until January 2027, in order to celebrate its 16th anniversary.

The Mandarin Oriental is in talks with top chefs including Jason Atherton and Anne-Sophie Pic to take over the space, the Guardian understands,A spokesperson for Blumenthal said: “The contract was always due to conclude in July 2026,Together with Mandarin Oriental Hyde Park, London, we agreed a six-month extension until January 2027, and jointly decided not to extend beyond that point,”Blumenthal was a pioneer of new ways of cooking, creating world-famous dishes including bacon and egg ice-cream and snail porridge, but also popularised triple-cooked chips and scotch eggs with a runny yolk; recipes which have been taken up by pubs nationwide,He also invented the use of liquid nitrogen in culinary settings, and popularised sous vide cooking.

Palmer-Watts helped him make his ideas a reality, for example the snail porridge came about because Blumenthal tried to make a snail sausage.However, when the pair cut into it, it had no structural integrity and the contents spilled into a puddle on the plate.Palmer-Watts suggested making it into a congee-type porridge instead, inspired by his travels in Asia.Several chefs who worked at the restaurant told the Guardian they rarely saw Blumenthal at Dinner, and that the day-to-day management was by Palmer-Watts, who was responsible for “translating” Blumenthal’s ideas into dishes that could be served to hundreds of diners a day.“Dinner was Ashley’s baby really, he was amazing,” said Will Murray, who worked at Dinner before opening his own restaurants, Fallow, Roe and Fowl.

“Working with Ashley at Dinner turned me from a completely undisciplined but passionate cook, to being a proper, disciplined chef,” he added,“Ashley, before he left, was the leader, our mentor,”Blumenthal said: “The suggestion that Dinner declined because of a falling out between Ashley and me simply isn’t accurate,Ashley and I had a long and successful working relationship, and I have a great deal of respect for him and the contribution he made to Dinner by Heston and to the wider business,He left the company in 2020, which was six years ago.

Restaurants evolve over time for many different reasons, but it would be wrong to attribute that to a personal dispute.”Chefs from the restaurant claimed there were disagreements between Blumenthal and the management of the Mandarin Oriental.They also noticed the restaurant’s star starting to fade when a host of controversies hit Blumenthal, including a creditors’ report in Australia that claimed the sister Dinner restaurant cheated workers out of $4.5m (£2.4m).

“I’m really sad it’s fallen on such hard times,” said a chef who worked at Dinner for years.“It wasn’t without its problems, the group has been struggling and there were big issues with leadership.”Another added: “We just tried to keep our heads down in the kitchen and not engage with any of the drama going on.There was mismanagement.”They claimed the restaurant also experienced downturns when Blumenthal lost his regular television gig on Channel 4, which had kept the chef and his restaurant in the public eye.

“We didn’t really do much on Instagram or social media, Heston preferred to keep an exclusive feel but that doesn’t bring in customers these days,” one chef said.Blumenthal’s spokesperson added: “There is no basis for claims of mismanagement or leadership failures.Dinner by Heston has maintained Michelin recognition and an international reputation for excellence throughout its residency.”
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Casey’s review of adult social care offers hope | Letters

Louise Casey may have the power of words behind her (The blistering speech that tells me Britain’s social care deadlock can finally be broken, 10 March), but what she’s uncovered is a truth that local authorities have been voicing for years: the national care service will fail unless ministers stabilise the local systems that underpin it.Key Cities (a cross-party network of UK local authorities) has long been calling for an urgent funding reset for the social care system. And while the Casey commission’s reforms are welcome, what’s still missing is the transition plan to enable councils to make this happen. A key part of the government’s NHS 10‑year plan must be a significant expansion of joint commissioning, across regional and national scales. This collaboration will finally end the costly push‑pull between those who fund and those who deliver care and, vitally, lay the foundations for effective transformation from local to national provision

1 day ago
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Give mayors more powers to tackle youth unemployment crisis, says Alan Milburn

Mayors across England should be given greater powers to tackle the youth unemployment crisis and avoid the “long-term scarring” of regions outside London, the government’s work tsar has said.Alan Milburn, who is leading a major review into increasing inactivity among Britain’s young people, said the issue could not be solved by Whitehall alone.Most of the nearly 1 million young people not in work, education or training (Neets) are in the north and Midlands. Eight of the 10 local authorities with the highest number of Neets are in these two regions.In an interview with the Guardian, Milburn said: “Local authorities and mayors have an absolutely critical role to play because they’ve got convening power – they can bring together schools, the colleges, the employers in an area

1 day ago
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Patients face long journeys for medicines as pharmacies cut weekend hours

People who need to obtain medication at the weekend are having to undertake long trips because more pharmacies are cutting their opening hours on Saturdays and Sundays.One in six pharmacies in England have reduced their hours at weekends since 2022, with some shutting altogether, as a result of “unsustainable” pressures on their budgets.The cuts mean that overall more than 20% of weekend opening hours have been lost, which has left pharmacy services increasingly unavailable, according to the National Pharmacy Association (NPA).That has forced some patients to go to an A&E or urgent treatment centre to get the morning-after pill, or an emergency prescription or advice on how to treat a minor ailment.Rural areas such as Devon, Cornwall and the Lake District were particularly affected, although in cities such as Manchester and Leeds there had also been less weekend opening, the NPA said

2 days ago
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Hundreds of thousands of NHS staff in England attacked and harassed, survey shows

Hundreds of thousands of NHS staff have been attacked, harassed, bullied, or subject to racism, latest NHS figures show.The health service’s 2025 staff survey found that one in seven had experienced violence from patients or the public, while more than a quarter reported harassment, bullying and abuse, the highest levels in three years.Given that the NHS in England employs 1.5 million people, this would equate to about 217,000 experiencing violence and more than 380,000 reporting harassment and bullying in 2025 alone.Sexual harassment has also reached record levels, the figures show

2 days ago
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Life with my autistic sons: ‘How do you explain all the worries, the sleepless nights?’

When James Hunt began posting about his boys online, it was a way to describe the emotions and experiences of their extraordinary lives. In sharing his family’s joy and struggles, he realised they weren’t aloneMy conversation with James Hunt begins the usual way: an exchange of hellos, followed by the most mundane of questions. “How are you?” I ask.Although he responds predictably – “I’m all right … I’m good” – we both know that underneath this answer lurks a whole world of experience, and the plain fact that some people’s everyday lives are lived in extraordinary circumstances.Six months ago, this fortysomething father was leading the kind of life that might have caused plenty of people to break into small emotional pieces

3 days ago
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Proposed law change will protect abusive men who push women to suicide, campaigners warn

Men whose abusive behaviour drives women to take their own lives are more likely to get away with their crimes because of proposed law changes, justice campaigners say.Ministers want to make it harder for inquests to pass verdicts of unlawful killing, which have been crucial in getting justice for women who killed themselves after suffering abuse.In October last year, Georgia Barter was found to have been unlawfully killed after suffering a decade of domestic violence and abuse. In 2023, an inquest found that Kellie Sutton, whose death was classed originally as a suicide, was unlawfully killed after suffering domestic abuse.The unlawful killing verdicts followed campaigns by the families of the women

3 days ago
sportSee all
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France 48-46 England: Six Nations 2026 rugby union – as it happened

about 11 hours ago
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France win Six Nations with last kick as Thomas Ramos sinks England in thriller

about 11 hours ago
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F1 cancels Bahrain and Saudi Arabia GPs because of Middle East war

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Townsend endures familiar script with Ireland’s green energy overpowering Scotland | Luke McLaughlin

about 14 hours ago
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Wales run riot in Cardiff to crush Italy for first Six Nations win since 2023

about 14 hours ago
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Wales 31-17 Italy: Six Nations 2026 rugby union – as it happened

about 14 hours ago