[ad_1]
Gino D’Acampo’s My Pasta Bar chain goes under with £5m debts: Italian TV chef calls in liquidators after firm lost thousands every year over its decade in business – as staff are owed £37,000 in wages
- Gino D’Acampo’s My Pasta Bar chain calls in liquidators amid £5 million debts
- Celebrity chef makes around £2 million a year from television work across ITV
- Restaurants located in Fleet Street, Leadenhall Market and Bishopsgate, London
- Chain inspired by ‘Gino’s own experience of the fresh food markets of Naples’
Gino D’Acampo’s My Pasta Bar chain has gone under after running up debts of £5million, with the Italian TV chef calling in liquidators after the firm lost thousands over its 10 years in business – while staff are still owed £37,000 in wages.
Mr D’Acampo, 45, is understood to earn around £2 million annually from television work, including hosting Family Fortunes and regular appearances on This Morning.
He is also a former winner of ITV’s I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!.
However, the celebrity chef’s chain owes £4,939,332 to 49 creditors, in addition to £113,975 to HMRC and £37,887 in staff wages, according to paperwork lodged with Companies House.
Accounts from the parent company show it has £1.65m in investments, which includes £821,494 in property, The Sun reports.
Celebrity chef Gino D’Acampo pictured on the set of ITV’s This Morning
All three of the My Pasta Bars are located in London. The first opened in Fleet Street in 2013, followed by Leadenhall Market and Bishopsgate
Gino D’ Acampo My Pasta Bar in Leadenhall Market, London, one of three restaurants in the city
Gino (centre) pictured with Fred Sirieix (left) and Gordon Ramsay (right) while filming Gordon, Gino, Fred Go Greek for ITV
Gino also hosts Family Fortunes on ITV and is believed to earn around £2 million from his television work
All three of the My Pasta Bars are located in London.
The first opened in Fleet Street in 2013, followed by Leadenhall Market and Bishopsgate.
Inspiration for the restaurant chain was taken from ‘Gino’s own experience of the fresh food markets of Naples’, while it also contains his ‘own breakfast rotolini pastries, authentic antipasti, salads, pastries, speciality breads and Italian desserts’.
His separate restaurant chain, named Gino D’Acampo with venues in Birmingham, Manchester, Harrogate, Liverpool and Hull, is unaffected.
That chain, though was bailed out by Iceland supermarket boss Sir Malcolm Walker after facing losses even before lockdown struck.
They are now listed as being part of the Individual Restaurant Group, which is run by Iceland bosses.
Mt D’Acampo’s agency has been contacted for comment.
The chef grew up in Naples, before moving to the UK and opened his first restaurant age 21.
He told The Daily Mail yesterday that it is important to bank memories, not money, in relation to his work-life balance.
Gino said: ‘Well, I can see you run here, you run there. The danger is that by running everywhere, you’re missing out on the many beautiful things the world has to offer. My suggestion is to stop running, stop working and enjoy what you’ve built up.’
‘Now I work for six months running my restaurants, then we spend half the year at our vineyard in Sardinia. I don’t do one day more of work than I do of holiday.
‘Otherwise, I see myself as a failure as a father and a husband, because I don’t give enough time to the people around me. I’d rather bank memories than money.’
Advertisement
For the latest headlines, follow our Google News channel
[ad_2]
Source link