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  • Axios Austin

    How one Austin food critic balances his job and health

    By Asher PriceErica Pandey,

    26 days ago

    With the restaurant critic for The New York Times, Pete Wells, leaving his post for health-related reasons, we decided to check in on the well-being of the dean of Austin food reviewers.

    Why it matters: It's a glamorous job, but week after week of restaurant food takes a physical toll that is seldom discussed, Wells writes.


    • Wells decided to leave his job in part after a doctor's visit, where he learned that "my cholesterol, blood sugar and hypertension were worse than I'd expected even in my doomiest moments."

    The intrigue: "It's the least healthy job in America, probably," Adam Platt, former restaurant critic for New York Magazine, told Wells.

    • Platt said he's dealing with gout, hypertension, high cholesterol and Type 2 diabetes after his years of reviewing restaurants.

    What they're saying: Matthew Odam, the Austin American-Statesman's food critic since 2011, said he was told that his cholesterol "was higher than it needed to be" several years ago.

    • He decided he was "not going to have a breakfast taco in the morning or a burger at lunch unless I'm eating someplace new for work."
    • Also, while working, "you don't have to eat everything on the plate."

    Between the lines: "I eat out probably three to four nights a week and then some lunches," says Odam, who also writes features and news stories about the restaurant scene. He says Wells "probably eats out twice as much."

    • "I'm not having to eat at big, heavy French restaurants — my meals aren't as rich as his," Odam adds.

    Zoom out: It's not just our bodies. As we've reported , research shows that rich and processed foods affect our brains too.

    • Food can even be addictive, like alcohol or nicotine.

    The bottom line: "This has as much temptation as any job," Odam tells us.

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