Celebrity chefs suck: UK Masterchef winner’s Mexican restraint chain Wahaca loses almost £5 Million after outbreak of noro hit staff and customers forced nine branches to close

This Is Money reports Mexican restaurant chain Wahaca has plunged into a £4.7m loss, blaming a norovirus outbreak which forced it to close nine restaurants.

The chain, which was founded by 2005 MasterChef winner Thomasina Miers, said sinking into the red was partly due to one-off costs of £700,000, which sent profits down from £600,000 a year earlier. Around 160 customers and a quarter of Wahaca’s staff were taken ill in October 2016 after it was hit by an ‘unprecedented’ outbreak of Norovirus.  

In all 18 of the 25 restaurants were hit and 11 including Canary Wharf, Covent Garden, Oxford Circus, Soho and White City, all in London, had to close. 

Wahaca co-founder Mark Selby later admitted it ‘changed the way they did business’.

He said July last year: ‘We’ve had to make some tough calls with our suppliers. We’ve had to say, we have to have absolute visibility or we can’t work with you.
At one stage we thought we were going to have to close every restaurant for four weeks,’ says Selby. ‘During that time sales plummeted 45 per cent, but if I’d had to close all sites, I don’t see how we would have survived.’ 

Selby got together with Thomasina Miers, the 2005 winner of the BBC’s MasterChef series, and together they opened the first Wahaca in Covent Garden in 2007.

Another worry for the chain is immigration post-Brexit. Only a quarter of Wahaca’s 1,200 staff are British. 

Selby said: ‘[We] opened in Chichester and found it really hard to find staff to work there, even in management.’  

Food safety fairytales: With over 400 sick, Wahaca says ‘we have never had such an unprecedented incident’

Mark Selby and Thomasina Miers, the co-founders of Brit-Mex restaurant chain, Wahaca, write that last week a number of our staff and customers were struck down by what is suspected to be the winter vomiting bug, norovirus.

wahacaWe assessed each case and when it became clear they were not isolated incidents, we got in touch with relevant officials at Public Health England and Environmental Health Offices. In tandem with that, we took our own precautionary measures – voluntarily closing affected restaurants, carrying out anti-viral deep cleaning at all of our restaurants, whether affected or not, and ensuring that any staff member who had reported illness remained off site until their symptoms had ceased for at least 48 hours.

Our amazing teams have worked tirelessly to ensure that we have done everything within our power to limit any risk to our customers and team members, and the situation remains under control and we continue to work with all local authorities to monitor this closely.

The majority of our restaurants are open and we hope to reopen the 4 remaining sites, on a case by case basis, as soon as we feel we are ready to do so.

We are incredibly sorry that people have been unwell. In the 9 years since we first opened Wahaca we have never had such an unprecedented incident, and we are doing everything we can to get to the bottom of how this may have happened.

And monkeys may fly out of my butt.

Winning food awards isn’t the same as not serving poop.

waynesworld-monkeys

About 400 sick: Vomit bug hits hundreds of UK Wahaca staff and customers, forcing it to shut nine restaurants

And this is why MasterChef sucks.

Hundreds of staff and diners at UK Mexican restaurant chain Wahaca have been struck down with suspected norovirus.

wahaca_carousel_1Public health chiefs tonight confirmed they had launched a national probe into the outbreak.

In total, 205 workers and 160 customers have fallen ill in vomiting bug cases linked to the popular restaurant chain.

Wahaca was founded by Thomasina Miers, who won MasterChef in 2005. It has 25 venues across the UK.

Nine of its restaurants across the UK were voluntarily shut down in the wake of the outbreak. Five have since reopened.

One of the restaurants affected was the chain’s branch in Canary Wharf, East London.

One diner struck down after visiting the venue said: “It was horrendous. I felt terrible. It took three days for me to recover.

“A friend I went with was ill on the Tube, they didn’t manage to make it home, it came on that quickly.”

A message to customers on the official website for the Canary Wharf restaurant today said: “We’re really sorry but due to unforeseen circumstances, we’ve had to close today.

“We hope to be open up again soon (and continue making money while you barf), please keep an eye here for updates.”

Public Health England has confirmed to the Daily Mirror that it had launched a major probe into the outbreak.