Inside The Factory viewers all have the same complaint as Gregg Wallace sees how ice cream is made

VIEWERS of Inside The Factory were all left complaining about the same thing as Gregg Wallace got stuck in watching how ice cream is made.

Fans of the show – which looks into the behind-the-scenes of some of the nation’s favourite foods – slammed the Masterchef star for being “irritating” and “loud”.



Fans all had the same complaint as Gregg looked into ice cream production

Viewers slammed the star as “shouty” as they watched on Wednesday

On Wednesday night, greengrocer Gregg, 57, visited a family-run ice cream factory in rural Aberdeen to see how they made their vanilla-flavoured goods.

The star joined in at various points in the production line, from the milking of the cows to the machines boxing up the soft whip to be shipped to supermarkets.

However, viewers were left rubbed up the wrong way by the episode, which saw Gregg overly excited as he dipped into ice cream at various point.

Slamming him as “like a five-year-old child”, fans said they had to tune out of the show because they “had enough” of Gregg’s presenting.

“Gregg Wallace really is an irritating a**e,” one slammed on Twitter. “WOW, and stop shouting. Please stop shouting.”

A second agreed: “I’ve had enough, I can’t watch this child presenting,” as a third wrote: “Stop shouting and being so f***ing rude to people!”

“Gregg Wallace is like a five year old, laughing boy,” a fourth penned, as a fifth concluded: “Great programme ruined by three shouty, annoying presenters.”

Last month, fans were left scratching their heads as Gregg and his co-star Cherry Healey explored the world of tortilla chips.

While Gregg went to the factory that makes Doritos, Cherry also explored how crisp packaging is transforming to be better for the environment.

Cherry explained how hard it is for crisp packets to be recycled due to the thin layers of plastic, before visiting a factory that was helping a different brand produce the first plastic-free crisp packet in the UK.

The process saw the factory workers turning sustainable wood pulp from South America into a film that looks like plastic but is biodegradable.

The segment featured lots of shots of the different elements of the process, but the presenters didn’t name the crisp brand using the game-changing packaging directly.

It left viewers desperate to know where to find them, with one writing on Twitter: “Which brand is that using the compostable bags ? And why doesn’t everyone?”


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