Chinese eatery apologises for weighing diners

Chinese eatery apologises for weighing diners

'Overzealous' response to Xi's new campaign to cut down food waste

Chinese diners are being urged to order “one less plate”, after President Xi Jinping made a speech urging the nation to stop wasting food and embrace thrift. (AFP Photo)
Chinese diners are being urged to order “one less plate”, after President Xi Jinping made a speech urging the nation to stop wasting food and embrace thrift. (AFP Photo)

BEIJING: A restaurant in China has apologised for its controversial policy of asking diners to weigh themselves before entry in an overzealous response to a new national campaign against food waste.

The beef restaurant in the central city of Changsha was heavily criticised on social media as soon as it announced the policy on Friday.

Customers were asked to stand on scales and scan their data into an app that recommended food choices based on their weight and the dishes’ calorific value, according to a report by the state-run China News Service.

President Xi Jinping this week urged citizens to stop wasting food, as the coronavirus pandemic and serious flooding last month have led to a rise in food prices.

In response, regional catering groups have urged customers to order one dish fewer than the number of diners at a table — an attempt to overturn the ingrained cultural habit of ordering extra food for group meals.

Signs were displayed in the beef restaurant reading “be thrifty and diligent, promote empty plates” and “operation empty plate” — referring to the nationwide campaign — according to photos published in local media.

In a swift backlash, hashtags related to the incident have been viewed over 300 million times on the social platform Weibo.

The restaurant said it was “deeply sorry” for its interpretation of the anti-waste campaign.

“Our original intentions were to advocate stopping waste and ordering food in a healthy way. We never forced customers to weigh themselves,” it said in an apology posted online on Saturday morning.

Chinese state media has also waged war on viral binge-eating videos, known as mukbang, while livestreaming platforms have promised to shut down accounts promoting excess eating and food wastage.

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