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Mark Hix
Mark Hix
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Mark Ernest Hix MBE[2] is an English chef and restaurateur whose traditional English menus often feature foraged and local foods.[3] Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, Hix was based in London, but announced in January 2021 that he would be relocating to Dorset permanently after five of his restaurants were put into administration.[4]

Key Information

Early life

[edit]

Hix was born and raised in West Bay, Dorset.[5][6] His parents divorced when he was six; while his brother Kevin went to live with their mother, their father had custody of Mark.[7] His father was absent much of the time, so he spent a lot of time with his paternal grandfather, who was a jack of all trades: a chrysanthemum gardener, Bridport mayor, and bar owner.[7][6] Hix decided to take domestic science rather than metalwork because he heard it was a good place to meet girls; to his surprise, he won a cooking award not long after.[8][5][6] Though he considered becoming a professional golfer, he ended up attending the local Weymouth Culinary College instead.[1][8][6]

Career

[edit]

Hix moved to London from Dorset when he was 18[9] and his first job was in the staff canteen at the London Hilton on Park Lane.[7] He had his first head chef position at age 22.[10] Since then, he has worked at both The Ivy and Le Caprice, and became Caprice Holding's Chef Director in 1999.[11][7] After 17 years with the company, he left in 2007 to open the successful Hix Oyster and Chop House near the Smithfield market with business partner Ratnesh Bagdai.[7][11][12]

Hix Oyster And Chop House in Smithfield

Following the success of Chop House, Hix opened HIX Mayfair (previously The Abermarle),[12] which opened inside Brown's Hotel in 2008 and closed in 2017;[13][14][15] HIX Soho, opened in 2009 and closed in 2019;[16] HIX Belgravia, opened in London's Hotel Belgravia in 2011 and closed the following year;[7][8] and HIX City (previously Hixter City) in Devonshire Square, open 2013 to 2015.[14][17] The City and Soho locations also featured a Mark's Bar.[18][16] A third Mark's Bar, the first stand-alone location, opened at The Old Vic theatre in 2015 and closed in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[19][20]

HIX has also operated a number of restaurants outside his main London HIX brand. In 2005, while still working for Caprice, Hix opened The Rivington Bar and Grill, which he operated anonymously until Caprice later bought the restaurant.[16][21] It closed in 2017 and was replaced by the Blacklock Shoreditch.[22] The Tramshed, also in Shoreditch, opened in 2011 and Hixter Bankside in 2014; both closed when Hix's restaurants went into administration in 2020 in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.[23][24][13] The Tramshed had a basement art gallery and Bankside had a Mark's Bar.[25] Back home in Dorset, Hix opened the HIX Oyster and Fish House (2008—2020, 2020—present) and boutique hotel the HIX Townhouse (2014—2020), both in Lyme Regis.[12][26][27][28][29] He also previously operated a Champagne and caviar bar inside Selfridges on Oxford Street, which was open between 2010 and 2013,[12][30] and a small pop-up cocktail bar, opened in 2013 and now closed.[31] He and longtime friend Damien Hirst collaborated on the opening of Pharmacy 2, a revival of Hirst's Notting Hill restaurant Pharmacy (1997—2003), in Vauxhall next to Hirst's Newport Street Gallery.[32][13][33] Pharmacy 2 is now closed.[34]

In 2016, he went into business with hospitality group Westbury Street Holdings (WSH) and became a minor shareholder.[6][14] In April 2020, shortly after COVID-19 shutdowns began, WSH put Hix's restaurants in administration, which closed Hix Oyster and Chop House, Bankside, Tramshed, Mark's Bar, HIX Soho, and HIX Oyster and Fish House.[26] He claims this was done without his consent, input, or knowledge.[7][35] Prior to the closures, HIX restaurants employed 130 staff members.[6] Hix moved home to Dorset to regroup. Just two months later, Hix started the HIX Oyster and Fish Truck out of a converted Chevrolet ambulance he found on eBay for £8,000.[7][36][37] In July, he reopened the Oyster and Fish House[28] and was hired as the Director of Food and Drink and as art curator for 1 Lombard Street's reopening.[38] He has also purchased The Fox Inn in Corscombe from PJ Harvey's mother, a family friend, and opened the country pub in December 2020 on his 58th birthday.[4][7] The inn's restaurant features local ingredients.[36] Hix reopened Mark's Bar in Soho in October 2020.[36][39]

In January 2021, he announced he would be relocating permanently to Dorset.[4]

Other ventures

[edit]

Hix collaborates with alma mater Weymouth College, which named their culinary programme Hix Academy in his honour[5] and sponsors the HIX Award, an annual art prize for emerging artists.[40]

Television and Publications

[edit]

Hix competed in the BBC television series Great British Menu in 2007, winning the South West England heat and beating the reigning champion, Michael Caines. In doing so, two of his courses were put forward for the public vote.[41] The main course was a crayfish and rabbit stargazy pie and, for dessert, a perry jelly with summer fruits with an elderflower ice-cream.[41] He has also appeared on Saturday Kitchen, Food and Drink, This Morning, Global Pulse, and the minidocumentary Mark Hix on Salt.[42][43][44]

In addition to his cookbooks, Hix has written for The Telegraph (2020—present), City A.M., GQ, The Independent (2002—2016), and Esquire UK.[45][46][47][26][8] In March 2021, he started hosting Soul Kitchen on Lyme Bay Radio with Neil Charlton.[46]

Controversy

[edit]

Popular British television chef Keith Floyd lunched at Hix Oyster and Fish House hours before he suffered a fatal heart attack in September 2009.[48][49] After Floyd's death, Hix offered a special on the menu called 'Keith Floyd's Last Lunch' which was seen by some as an appropriate tribute and was criticised by others.[49]

Personal life

[edit]

He and his ex Lara Cazalet have a daughter.[6] He also has twin daughters from a previous relationship.[6]

Honours and awards

[edit]

Hix was awarded an MBE in the 2017 New Year Honours for services to hospitality.[citation needed]

Cookbooks

[edit]
  • Eat Up: Food for Children of All Ages (ISBN 9781841151472, 9781856137768, 9780007146772, 2000)
  • Simple Ways to Success: British (ISBN 9781844000487, 2003)
  • Fish etc. The Ultimate Book for Seafood lovers (ISBN 9781844001125, 9781844001958, 2004)
  • British Food (ISBN 9781844002139, 2005)
  • Simple Art of Marrying Food and Wine (with Malcolm Gluck) (ISBN 9781845330798, 2005)
  • British Regional Food (ISBN 9781844002344, 2006), (ISBN 9781844005994, 2008)
  • British Seasonal Food (ISBN 9781844006229, 2008), (ISBN 9781844009435, 2011)
  • Easy Everyday British (ISBN 9781844007820, 2009)
  • Hix Oyster & Chop House (ISBN 9781844003921, 2010)
  • Fish Etc: The Ultimate Book for Seafood Lovers (ISBN 9781844009718, 2011)
  • Mark Hix on Baking: Savoury & Sweet Recipes (ISBN 9781849491242, 2012)
  • British Regional Food (ISBN 9781849491686, 2012)
  • Valeria Napoleone's Catalogue of Exquisite Recipes (with Valeria Napoleone and Jennifer Higgie) (ISBN 9783863351243, 2012)
  • Mark Hix: The Collection (ISBN 9781849493178, 2013)
  • Hooked: Adventures in Angling & Eating (ISBN 9781784725549, 2019)
[edit]

Notes

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Mark Hix MBE is an English chef, restaurateur, and food writer renowned for championing through his emphasis on local, seasonal ingredients, , and sustainable sourcing. Born in West Bay, near in Dorset, Hix developed a passion for simple country cooking from his grandparents and began working in kitchens at the age of 12. Hix trained at Weymouth College before advancing through prestigious London establishments, including roles as commis chef at the Hilton and Grosvenor House Hotel under Anton Edelmann, chef de partie at The Dorchester under Anton Mosimann, and head chef at The Candlewick Room by age 22. In 1990, he became executive head chef for Caprice Holdings, overseeing iconic restaurants like Le Caprice and The Ivy for 18 years until leaving in 2008 to launch his own ventures. His restaurant empire began with HIX Oyster & Chop House in Smithfield, London, in 2008, followed by expansions including HIX Soho (2009), HIX Selfridges (2010), HIX Mayfair (2011), Tramshed (2012), and Hixter Bankside (2014), alongside the HIX Oyster & Fish House in Lyme Regis, Dorset. Many of these closed amid the COVID-19 pandemic by 2020, with the Oyster & Fish House reopening in 2020 before closing again in December 2024; he now focuses on experiential dining at Mark's Kitchen Table in Charmouth, Dorset, offering catch-and-cook and wild food events. As an influential advocate for British producers, Hix has authored 12 cookbooks, including British Regional Food (2008), and contributed columns to publications like The Independent, Esquire, GQ, and The Telegraph, where he promotes home-grown ingredients and straightforward yet elevated dishes. In 2014, he founded the Hix Academy at Weymouth College to train the next generation in hospitality, blending education with practical experience from his London operations. His contributions to the industry earned him an MBE in the Queen's New Year Honours List for services to hospitality and catering.

Early years

Upbringing

Mark Hix was born on 10 December 1962 in , . His parents divorced when he was six years old, after which his father gained custody; Hix has described his subsequent relationship with his mother as distant. Raised primarily by his father in a home overlooking the bay, Hix also spent significant time with his paternal grandparents, whose influence was profound. His grandfather Bill, a former mayor of and pub owner, provided a model of community involvement and energy, while family dynamics emphasized in the coastal setting. Growing up in the seaside community of West Bay, Hix developed an early appreciation for local and British produce through hands-on experiences like and observing the local trade. He often went and prawning with school friends, catching his own supper and becoming fascinated by the sea's rhythms, from calm days to storms; his father's friends included commercial fishermen, such as the father of a schoolmate who owned a trawler specializing in queen scallops. At his grandparents' home, he was exposed to simple country dishes prepared by his grandmother using affordable, seasonal ingredients like cheap cuts of meat and home-grown vegetables—his grandfather cultivated tomatoes in their garden—fostering Hix's interest in food preparation through watching and assisting in the kitchen. These formative influences in Dorset's coastal environment shaped his lifelong culinary philosophy centered on fresh, regional ingredients and resourcefulness. This groundwork led Hix to pursue formal catering studies at Weymouth College as a teenager.

Education

Hix attended school in the Weymouth area, where he chose to study domestic science rather than metalwork, initially viewing it as an opportunity to meet girls. However, he soon discovered a genuine passion for cooking and earned a school prize for his culinary efforts, marking his first recognition in the field. At age 16, Hix enrolled at Weymouth College in Dorset for a two-year course, a path he pursued partly due to limited alternatives after school. His coastal upbringing in Dorset had already exposed him to local ingredients, but the structured program deepened his interest. During his studies from 1979 to 1981, he gained foundational skills in British and international cuisines, completing City & Guilds certificates in general , food service, and alcoholic beverages under influential tutors like Laurie Mills. These college experiences proved pivotal, convincing Hix to commit to a full-time career in ; upon graduating at age 18, he relocated to to seek professional opportunities in the culinary industry.

Culinary career

Early positions

In 1981, at the age of 18, Mark Hix relocated from Dorset to following his training at Weymouth College, where he began his professional career as a junior chef in the staff canteen at the . This entry-level role involved basic tasks such as preparing staff meals, providing him with an initial immersion into the fast-paced environment of a major hotel kitchen. Hix quickly progressed through several prestigious London kitchens, building foundational skills in high-end culinary operations. He moved to the and then to , where he worked under the mentorship of executive chef Anton Edelmann, honing techniques in precise preparation and modern European presentation. Subsequently, he joined the Mr Pontacs restaurant group as a , advancing rapidly to his first head chef position at the Candlewick Room in the at age 22 in 1984, where he earned early recognition including a mention in a guidebook for his innovative approach. This rapid promotion demonstrated his aptitude for leadership and creativity in British-inspired dishes, emphasizing seasonal ingredients and technical accuracy. In 1990, at age 27, he assumed the head chef position at Le Caprice, where he refined his command of contemporary techniques, focusing on elegant, ingredient-driven plates that blended European precision with British flair, such as refined and preparations. These roles at Le Caprice solidified his reputation for meticulous execution and innovation in high-profile settings, laying the groundwork for his influence in London's dining scene through the 1990s.

Caprice Holdings

In 1999, Mark Hix was appointed Chef Director at Caprice Holdings, where he took on the responsibility of overseeing the menus across the group's portfolio, including flagship venues such as The Ivy, Le Caprice, J Sheekey, and Scott's. In this executive role, Hix managed culinary operations for up to nine restaurants as the group expanded, ensuring consistency in quality and style while drawing on his prior hands-on experience at The Ivy and Le Caprice. During his tenure, Hix played a pivotal role in innovating the group's offerings by incorporating seasonal and local British ingredients into modern British fare, such as adapting classic dishes like the Crispy Duck and Salad at The Ivy—using fresh, homegrown —and introducing creative items like Nero at Le Caprice, inspired by regional influences but rooted in accessible, high-quality produce. These updates emphasized simplicity, authenticity, and a twist on traditional recipes, aligning with a growing appreciation for British in the late 1990s and early 2000s. His approach helped elevate the group's menus beyond continental European staples, promoting dishes that highlighted sustainable, regionally sourced elements like monkfish and seasonal herbs. Hix's leadership significantly bolstered Caprice Holdings' reputation as a premier destination for celebrity dining and sophisticated modern , with venues like The Ivy and Le Caprice becoming synonymous with high-profile clientele enjoying brunch favorites such as Eggs Arlington. Under his direction, the restaurants maintained their allure as cultural hotspots in London's hospitality scene, attracting stars and influencers through reliable, innovative dining experiences. He held the position until , when he departed to launch his own independent ventures.

Independent ventures

In 2008, following his departure from Caprice Holdings, Mark Hix launched his first independent restaurant, Hix Oyster & Chop House, in , in partnership with businessman Ratnesh Dadwani. The venue emphasized classic British chophouse fare alongside oysters, drawing on Hix's expertise in sourcing high-quality ingredients developed during his tenure at Caprice Holdings. It quickly became a success, establishing Hix's brand as a proponent of sustainable, regionally sourced produce. Hix rapidly expanded his portfolio, opening additional sites that highlighted and British ingredients. In the same year, he debuted Hix Oyster & Fish House in , Dorset, overlooking the harbor and specializing in local catches like scallops and Dorset oysters to promote coastal . This was followed by HIX Soho in 2009, and HIX in 2011 at , which offered a fine-dining of British classics using elements and seasonal produce. These venues underscored Hix's commitment to and regional sourcing, such as and heritage meats, to revive traditional . In 2016, Hix entered a notable partnership with artist to open Pharmacy 2 at Newport Street Gallery in , , a playful, art-inspired space reviving Hirst's original 1990s Pharmacy concept with Hix's menu of British dishes like pickled herrings and . By the mid-2010s, Hix's empire had grown to around ten venues across and Dorset, including Tramshed and HIX City Social, all prioritizing ethical sourcing and local flavors to elevate British .

COVID-19 impact and recovery

The severely impacted Mark Hix's restaurant empire, leading to the administration of his company WSH & Mark Hix Restaurants Limited in April 2020 and the subsequent closure of five venues: Hix Soho, Tramshed, Hix Fish House, Hix Oyster and Chop House, and Hixter . These closures resulted in approximately 130 redundancies and marked the end of Hix's extensive portfolio, which had been a cornerstone of his career prior to the crisis. In response, Hix announced his permanent relocation to Dorset in January 2021, shifting his focus to regional operations amid the industry's broader challenges. He had already begun rebuilding in the area, reopening The Fox Inn in the nearby village of Corscombe in December 2020 following a lease acquisition earlier that year, and relaunching the Hix Oyster & Fish House in Lyme Regis in July 2020 after its initial closure in April. To sustain operations during lockdowns, Hix launched the HIX Oyster & Fish Truck in Morcombelake in June 2020, a mobile venture selling fresh seafood directly from local Lyme Bay fishermen, which provided flexibility and direct community engagement. This pivot emphasized sustainable, hyper-local sourcing and helped Hix adapt to reduced dine-in capacity across the UK hospitality sector. The Hix Oyster & Fish House closed permanently in December 2024 after 16 years of operation. By 2025, Hix's recovery emphasized personal reinvention through experiential dining events at Mark's Kitchen Table in , Dorset, offering catch-and-cook and wild food experiences, alongside writing, , and collaborations such as pop-ups at . In March 2025, he served as a guest speaker at University's Culinary Salon in , where he collaborated with students on hands-on cooking sessions, inspiring future hospitality professionals with insights from his career transitions. In June 2025, Hix joined The Clink Charity as a culinary , hosting a fundraising dinner at HMP Brixton's to support prisoner rehabilitation through culinary training, aligning with his advocacy for accessible food education. This regional focus, coupled with his ongoing writing and events, underscored a broader sector recovery characterized by localized operations, supply chain adaptability, and community-oriented initiatives rather than large-scale urban expansions.

Media and publications

Television appearances

Mark Hix first gained prominent television exposure through his participation in the BBC series Great British Menu in 2007, where he represented the South West England region in Series 2. Competing against Michael Caines, Hix won the regional heat, advancing to the national final with dishes emphasizing modern interpretations of British cuisine. His performance in the competition, which aired across multiple episodes, highlighted his expertise in regional ingredients and earned him praise for innovative yet traditional approaches. Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, Hix made regular guest appearances on popular BBC cooking programs, including and Market Kitchen, where he demonstrated recipes centered on seasonal and local British produce. On , hosted by James Martin, Hix featured in episodes such as one in 2007 alongside , showcasing dishes like those from his time at The Ivy, and continued with appearances into the 2010s, often focusing on accessible home cooking with foraged or market-sourced elements. Similarly, in Market Kitchen, he contributed segments on sourcing from British markets, such as preparing bar snacks in a 2009 episode, underscoring his commitment to fresh, regional ingredients. These spots allowed Hix to share practical techniques for elevating everyday British foods. Hix also appeared as a guest on The Great British Food Revival, a series aimed at celebrating and preserving culinary traditions, where he advocated for sustainable sourcing practices. In his contributions, he emphasized the importance of local producers and ethical ingredient selection to support and reduce , aligning with the program's mission to revive overlooked British staples. Over time, Hix's television presence evolved from the high-stakes competitive format of to more educational roles in guest demonstrations, fostering audience engagement with British cooking without hosting any major series of his own. This shift reflected his broader career focus on promoting accessible, ingredient-driven cuisine to wider audiences.

Writing career

Mark Hix began his prominent writing career with a regular recipe column in The Independent's magazine, starting in 2002 and continuing for 14 years until 2016. His contributions emphasized seasonal British ingredients, often incorporating foraged elements like and hedgerow berries to highlight underappreciated local produce. For instance, in a 2012 article, Hix explored creative uses for , advocating for sustainable fishing practices and regional sourcing to elevate everyday British seafood. In 2020, Hix shifted his primary column to The Telegraph Magazine, where he has maintained a weekly feature to the present day, focusing on regional British cuisine and the challenges of the hospitality industry. His pieces frequently address post-COVID recovery in the sector, such as a 2020 column detailing the financial strains of lockdowns on independent restaurateurs while promoting resilient local supply chains. Hix's Telegraph work also spotlights Dorset's artisanal producers, including a 2022 article recommending small-scale makers for holiday feasts, from cheese artisans to foragers, to underscore the value of hyper-local, sustainable sourcing. Beyond these ongoing columns, Hix has contributed articles to outlets like and , often stressing in British food systems. In a 2017 Guardian piece, he discussed his collection of kitchen tools tied to traditional British cooking methods that minimize waste and support eco-friendly practices. For , Hix penned a monthly column until around 2015, with contributions like a 2014 essay on the joys of as a means to connect with sustainable, wild-caught ingredients. Hix's writing has notably shaped public discourse on local sourcing, particularly through examples celebrating Dorset producers. A 2010 Independent article highlighted five sustainable "heroes," including Dorset's Broad Oak Farm for its Label Rouge chickens, promoting ethical farming as essential to revitalizing British agriculture. Similarly, in a 2019 Independent feature, he detailed interactions with fishermen, encouraging readers to prioritize community-based to foster and economic support for coastal artisans. These pieces have amplified awareness of and regionalism, influencing chefs and consumers to prioritize over imported goods.

Cookbooks

Mark Hix has authored more than a dozen cookbooks since the late 1990s, establishing himself as a key figure in promoting British culinary traditions through accessible recipes and a deep appreciation for local producers. His works consistently emphasize regionalism, , and , drawing on his experiences sourcing ingredients from across the to highlight forgotten dishes and modern interpretations of classics. These books not only provide practical cooking guidance but also serve as cultural explorations of Britain's diverse food heritage, encouraging readers to support makers and foraged elements. Among his early publications, The Ivy: The Restaurant and Its Recipes (1997, co-authored with ) offered an insider's look at the celebrated venue, featuring over 100 recipes that blended sophistication with British , reflecting Hix's tenure as head there. Similarly, Le Caprice (1999) extended this approach to another iconic spot, focusing on elegant yet straightforward dishes using fresh, high-quality ingredients. Fish Etc. (2004) shifted attention to seafood, with recipes celebrating sustainable catches like Dorset crab and oysters, underscoring Hix's coastal roots and advocacy for responsibly sourced marine produce. Hix's exploration of British identity deepened in British Regional Food (2006), a seminal text that toured the UK's producers and revived regional specialties such as Cornish pasties and variations, earning the Guild of Food Writers’ Award and an André Simon Book Award Special Commendation for its role in elevating awareness of local foods. This was followed by British Seasonal Food (2008), which won the Guild of Food Writers’ Cookery Book of the Year in 2009 and further championed eating in sync with nature's cycles through chapters on ingredients like and . Later volumes, including Hix Oyster and Chop House (2010) and Mark Hix on Baking (2012), applied these principles to specific formats, with baking recipes incorporating foraged flavors and oyster-focused dishes promoting underutilized British shellfish. His most recent, Hooked: Adventures in and Eating (2019), intertwines 50 recipes with personal fishing anecdotes, reinforcing sustainable seafood themes while blending memoir-like storytelling with practical cooking. Across his bibliography, Hix's cookbooks have had a lasting impact on British culinary literature by bridging professional techniques with home cooking, inspiring a renewed focus on and reducing reliance on imports—evident in titles like The Simple Art of Marrying (2005) and Mark Hix: The Collection (2013), which compile his philosophy into versatile, producer-driven repertoires.

Other activities

Philanthropy and

Mark Hix co-founded the Hix in partnership with his , Weymouth College, in 2014, establishing a training program designed to develop aspiring young chefs in the principles of modern . The academy operates through The Avenue restaurant on campus, where students gain hands-on experience in a professional setting, focusing on the use of fresh, local ingredients to create high-quality, sustainable dishes. This initiative has been ongoing since its launch, providing practical to enhance skills in and promote regional culinary traditions. Through the Hix Academy and related efforts, Hix has sponsored culinary workshops and training opportunities that emphasize the importance of local produce and sustainable sourcing practices. These programs aim to equip participants with knowledge of British ingredients and ethical production, fostering a new generation of chefs committed to environmental responsibility. For instance, academy sessions incorporate foraged and regionally sourced elements to highlight and reduce . In June 2025, Hix joined The Clink Charity as a culinary ambassador, supporting its mission to rehabilitate incarcerated individuals through vocational training in hospitality. In this role, he hosted a fundraising dinner at The Clink restaurant in HMP Brixton in July 2025, collaborating with inmate chefs-in-training to create a bespoke menu featuring seasonal, produce-led dishes, thereby raising awareness and funds for the charity's life-changing programs. Hix has also made contributions to food sustainability causes, including support for initiatives that aid local producers and environmental conservation. He has backed campaigns like Farms Not Factories, advocating for better and sustainable farming to benefit small-scale producers over industrial operations. Additionally, through events such as the festival in , which raised over £11,000 for the Fishermen's Mission in 2023, and raffles benefiting the Devon Environment Foundation, Hix has directed funds toward protecting coastal ecosystems and supporting fishing communities.

Collaborations and awards

Mark Hix has sponsored the annual HIX Award since its inception in 2012, an art prize aimed at emerging artists, particularly recent graduates and students, to support their early careers through cash prizes, studio costs, and exhibitions at his HIX . The initiative reflects Hix's interest in bridging culinary creativity with , often integrating artist works into his restaurant spaces to foster interdisciplinary inspiration. In 2016, Hix collaborated with artist Damien Hirst to launch Pharmacy 2, a pop-up restaurant at Hirst's Newport Street Gallery in London, reviving the aesthetic of Hirst's original 1997 Pharmacy venue with pharmaceutical-themed decor and a British-focused menu emphasizing fresh, seasonal ingredients. This partnership extended Hix's pattern of artist collaborations, including subsequent pop-up events such as dinners paired with exhibitions, like the 2024 Fishy Tales project with illustrator Nettie Wakefield, which combined seafood menus with custom artwork inspired by British marine life. Hix received an MBE in the for services to the hospitality industry, recognizing his contributions to elevating through innovative restaurants and sustainable sourcing practices. He has also earned multiple honors from the Guild of Food Writers, including the Cookery Book of the Year in 2009 for British Seasonal Food, which highlighted his advocacy for local and foraged ingredients, and the Recipe Writer of the Year in 2023 for his Telegraph Magazine column.

Controversies

Keith Floyd tribute

On 14 September 2009, television chef enjoyed his final lunch at Mark Hix's Hix Oyster and Fish House in , Dorset, mere hours before suffering a fatal heart attack at his partner Celia Martin's home in nearby . The celebratory meal marking Martin's 65th birthday featured champagne cocktails, oysters with potted Morecambe Bay shrimps, a bottle of Côtes du Rhône, roast (served in place of the ordered due to a kitchen error), and with jelly, totaling £120. In response to Floyd's sudden death, Hix introduced a promotional special at the replicating elements of the , including a dish named "partridge dressed as " to honor the mix-up Floyd had taken in good humor. Known as "Keith Floyd’s Last Lunch," this menu offering extended the tribute by featuring Floyd's chosen items, positioning it as a to the influential broadcaster who had dined there unannounced. Hix further commemorated Floyd through a published feature in , sharing recipes for the and from the lunch, alongside two of Floyd's signature dishes, emphasizing Floyd's pioneering role in television cookery. The initiative elicited mixed reactions within the culinary community and media. While some praised it as a fitting homage to Floyd's bon vivant spirit and contributions to chef culture, others decried it as insensitive and exploitative, capitalizing on a recent for . Hix defended the gesture, stating that "Keith would have loved it," framing it as an authentic nod aligned with Floyd's irreverent style rather than mere commercialization. The episode fueled broader discussions on the ethics of tributes, highlighting tensions between personal admiration and perceived opportunism in the high-profile restaurant world.

Decking dispute

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Mark Hix installed outdoor decking at his restaurant, Hix Oyster & Fish House in Lyme Regis, Dorset, taking advantage of relaxed planning rules that permitted temporary structures to support social distancing and outdoor dining. The £20,000 wooden deck, measuring approximately 40ft by 26ft, was erected on council-owned land in Lister Gardens, providing panoramic views of Lyme Bay and enabling the restaurant to accommodate more customers during restrictions. In December 2022, Town Council rejected Hix's application for retrospective permission to retain the decking permanently, citing its visual impact on the heritage site and its encroachment into a public amenity space in the gardens. The council extended the temporary permission until March 31, 2023, but ultimately ordered its removal, arguing that the structure detracted from the area's aesthetic and public use despite initial pandemic allowances. Hix launched a public campaign against the decision, including a Change.org petition titled "Save Mark Hix's Decking" that garnered over 6,500 signatures in support of retaining the structure for its economic benefits to local tourism and jobs. He criticized the councillors as "petty" and unsupportive of small businesses, accusing them of being anti-business and threatening to reconsider his contributions to the town, such as event sponsorships. Following the council's final ruling in a January 2023 extraordinary meeting, Hix lost the planning battle and began removing the decking by late March 2023, describing it as a "sad day" that highlighted significant hurdles for small businesses recovering from the . He reflected on the financial strain, including lost revenue from bookings like weddings. The Oyster & Fish House continued operating until its closure on December 7, 2024.

Personal life

Mark Hix has three daughters: twins and , born in 1994, and Isla, born in 2012. He resides in Dorset, , as of 2025.

References

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