When Appetite Changes, Experience Design Must Follow

Confession: I can’t handle a seven-course tasting menu anymore. Not because I don’t want to. Because I physically can’t.

Roughly 8% of U.S. adults are now on GLP-1s (I’m one of them). Many projections suggest this number will at least double before the end of the decade. Meanwhile, restaurants are leaning further into longer formats: pop-ups, collaborations, seven, nine, even twelve-course tasting menus.

On a GLP-1, your relationship with food changes fundamentally. By the third or fourth course, it becomes a negotiation with your own body – pacing yourself, staying present, trying not to hit a physical wall before the meal is over. And when that wall comes, no amount of beautiful plating or brilliant technique can pull you back into the experience.

For the record: I haven’t lost interest in the experience. In 2025, I ate out over 200 times across 99 restaurants in 10 cities. This isn’t about cost (although that merits a post of its own). It’s simply about stomach capacity.

When I dine out, I’m not paying for calories alone. I’m paying for the chef’s point of view, the service, the room. Multi-course menus work against that now; increasingly, they’re enough to make me pass entirely.

I don’t want to pass.

The industry has always adapted to how people eat. This feels like a natural next adaptation. It raises a simple question: How can a “full experience” feel complete without being physically overwhelming?

  • A tighter menu that delivers the same creative ambition in fewer courses?
  • Formats designed for sharing without sacrificing the integrity of the chef’s vision?
  • Portions scaled to the experience, not the other way around?

Whatever form it takes is less important than the principle: preserve the arc without overwhelming the guest. As more diners’ appetites change, formats will inevitably shift. I know I’m not the only one who will welcome it.

Photo by Jason Leung on Unsplash

Author

  • Arlene Wszalek is a strategist, advisor, speaker, and cultural observer. She  has lived and worked in both the U.S. and the U.K., and her expertise spans media, entertainment, technology, travel, and hospitality. Follow her on LinkedIn here.