“Cook time 2 min, delivery time 8 min”, Bombay Shaving Company’s Shantanu Deshpande raises alarm over quick food delivery market

Founder and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Bombay Shaving Company, Shantanu Deshpande has raised concerns over growing addiction of quick food delivery in India and called it a health epidemic in making. 

In a LinkedIn post, Shantanu Deshpande said, “We are suffering from the biggest epidemic of poor nutrition and unhealthy processed and ultra processed food which is high on palm oil and sugar. Our grains have lost nutrition over last 50 years as we prioritized agricultural yield for nutrition.” He criticised the reliance on processed and ultra-processed meals and also addiction to junk food. 

In the post, Shantanu Deshpande cited a conversation with a founder of a quick commerce for food firm and expressed his shock at the amount of time it takes in cooking and delivering the food order. “Cook time 2 min, delivery time 8 min. A ‘qcom for food’ founder told me this and I lost my mind,” he said.

 » Read More

Related Articles

Nasdaq jumps 1% as tech stocks surge, S&P 500 ends higher as cool inflation data calms tariff jitters

U.S. stocks advanced on Wednesday as cooler-than-expected inflation data helped stanch a sharp selloff, while the escalation of U.S. President Donald Trump’s chaotic, multi-front tariff war kept gains in check. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq closed in positive territory, the latter enjoying a muscular boost from tech and tech-adjacent momentum stocks. The blue-chip Dow

EXPLAINER | Why an MF-insurance combo product may not be a good idea

The markets regulator recently said it plans to release a consultation paper on a new product that combines mutual fund schemes with term insurance. Given the underwriting concerns & implementation challenges, fund houses may not be too enthused, explains Ananya Grover Are there any bundled products in the market? There are already similar bundled products

Maximising output the ONGC way

The traditional exploration approach in oil and gas sector is expensive, risky, and prone to mistakes, as it heavily relies on human fieldwork. Even drilling dry holes hit oil and gas companies where it hurts – their wallets. The investment poured into geological assessment, drilling and testing goes up in smoke when the well doesn’t

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe
- Advertisement -

Latest Articles

Nasdaq jumps 1% as tech stocks surge, S&P 500 ends higher as cool inflation data calms tariff jitters

U.S. stocks advanced on Wednesday as cooler-than-expected inflation data helped stanch a sharp selloff, while the escalation of U.S. President Donald Trump’s chaotic, multi-front tariff war kept gains in check. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq closed in positive territory, the latter enjoying a muscular boost from tech and tech-adjacent momentum stocks. The blue-chip Dow

EXPLAINER | Why an MF-insurance combo product may not be a good idea

The markets regulator recently said it plans to release a consultation paper on a new product that combines mutual fund schemes with term insurance. Given the underwriting concerns & implementation challenges, fund houses may not be too enthused, explains Ananya Grover Are there any bundled products in the market? There are already similar bundled products

Maximising output the ONGC way

The traditional exploration approach in oil and gas sector is expensive, risky, and prone to mistakes, as it heavily relies on human fieldwork. Even drilling dry holes hit oil and gas companies where it hurts – their wallets. The investment poured into geological assessment, drilling and testing goes up in smoke when the well doesn’t

Infosys is helping clients optimise AI investments

Enterprise AI is driving business transformation, with over 50% of AI use cases delivering impact, according to Infosys. Success is highest in professional services and tech, while financial services face regulatory hurdles. Satish H C, EVP, chief delivery officer, Infosys, tells Padmini Dhruvaraj, that the company is investing in small language models, Agentic AI, and

Blackstone aims to double India exposure: CEO

Global private equity giant Blackstone will double its exposure in India over the next few years to $100 billion, co-founder, chairman and CEO Stephen A Schwarzman said on Wednesday. “India has been a great market for us, giving us best returns globally. We are not rigid about the (allocated) investments in India,” Schwarzman said during