It’s basically the best job in the world, right? A food critic gets to go to endless restaurants of their choice, eat what they like and write up their findings for a newspaper (who will foot the bill if the restaurant doesn’t).

And so it follows that the Instagram accounts of your favourite critics will be joyous and uplifting things, illuminated by mouth-watering flat lays and snippets of fun industry gossip.

But, as the pandemic wreaks havoc on hospitality around the world (it is estimated that 30,000 pubs and restaurants in the UK did not reopen after the first lockdown), is the role of the critic under siege?

Besha Rodell, who writes restaurant reviews for The New York Times, says: ‘I’ve always viewed the job of a critic as a consumer advocate to a certain extent. What’s important culturally to be supporting and calling out? What is happening in the scene? I don’t know that, for me, those things will change too much.’ Let’s hope she’s right.

In the meantime, here are the restaurant critics whose accounts will add spice to your Instagram experience. (Warning: these bad boys could make you pretty hungry.)

Jay Rayner



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I’m actually very nice. And before I play the piano I always wash the blood off my hands. Talking of which, because our Oct 17 JR Quartet gig has been sold out for ages we’ve added another one @crazycoqs on Oct 26. Link to my live shows page in profile. If you can’t get to London to see us live we’re streaming our Oct 17 gig. You can watch from home. Plus I’m doing my one man show My Last Supper at zedel throughout the first week of November and, on Dec 3, @jw3london. All of these fabulous dates are on that live shows page. Do join me. #live #jazz #performance #onemanshow #zedel #piano #jazzlife

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The Instagram feed of The Observer food critic is choc-a-bloc with mouthwatering pictures of restaurant- and home-cooked food alongside many a plug for his (very good) podcast series, Out to Lunch with Jay Rayner. Every now and then a delightful image or clip of Rayner playing jazz on the piano sneaks in, too.


Grace Dent



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My Christmas Dinner secrets ????in this week’s soaraway Saturday Feast. LINK IN PROFILE. ???????????????????? @guardianfeast Photo HRH @lizziemayson

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Dent gives good Instagram. Her stylish feed is witty and glamorous and features fewer shots of food that you might imagine (though the ones that are there are exquisite). The Guardian restaurant critic has a book, Hungry: A Memoir of Wanting More, coming out this autumn. If it’s anything like her Insta offering, it’ll be worth a good peruse.


Fay Maschler



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#challenge accepted #solidarity #opportunity to post foxy photo from a long time ago

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In 1972, Fay Maschler won a competition to become The Evening Standard’s restaurant critic. She’s done the job ever since. Full of culinary and life advice, her Instagram feed befits the grande dame of the restaurant scene. Her tips for surviving lockdown were poignant and amusing. Her recipe suggestions are inspirational. And her holiday snaps are very inviting.


Giles Coren



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Amazing hotels tonight at 8pm on BBC2. I think anyway. Is it July 12? It may feature me looking like this performing a chinese tea ceremony or it may not - depending on prevailing political sensitivities in the edit...

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There is many a string to Giles Coren’s bow, and he showcases them all on Insta. Think gripping glimpses into family life, pretty pictures of restaurant tucker and a hearty helping of Covid rage every now and again.


Gizzi Erskine



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I’m SORRY for the me spam, but I’m feeling reeeel good for the first time in a long time. Thanks to the snapper @louhayter_ @rixo #humansofrixo

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If Instagram could have created the perfect food account, it would look something like Gizzi’s. Gizzi in sexy underwear brandishing a mixing bowl? Tick. Her own delicious recipes photographed in her super kitsch home? You bet. Cute shots of her kittens? Absolutely. She is everything we expect of a champion of food in 2020. Don’t miss her latest book, Restore: A Modern Guide to Sustainable Eating.


Marina O’Loughlin



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Self-medicating with roast chicken and home-made chips in the sunshine. Rage dissipated, if only temporarily.

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This feed is particularly difficult to look at when you’re hungry. The Sunday Times restaurant critic – who has, in the course of her 20-year career, won several major industry awards – makes every olive, every chip, every cocktail look divine on Instagram. She particularly loves a carb, does O’Loughlin, and somehow manages to make a simple doughnut look stylish.


Tim Hayward



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Light, informal Dorset lunch ????

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The FT restaurant critic Tim Hayward sure has an eye for design. His Insta feed is like an interiors magazine. He turns a Negroni into a work of art. He recently published a book entitled Loaf Story: A Love Letter to Bread (copies of which feature often in the feed). Reviewing the book, Jeremy Lee said: ‘Hayward illuminates each page with his thoughts and love of food in the most endearing of voices.’ Expect exactly that from his Instagram feed.

By Becky Ladenburg
October 2020

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