Bake Off’s Prue Leith opens up on dementia fears as she makes ’embarrassing’ claim

Bake Off’s Prue Leith opens up on dementia fears as she makes ’embarrassing’ claim

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Prue Leith, the cooking legend who became famous for her rendition of “The Great British Bake Off,” has admitted that she is becoming more forgetful as she ages and grows more frightened of her fears of developing dementia.

Great British Bake Off star Prue Leith has voiced her fears of developing dementia as she grows older as she admitted to being “embarrassed” by one thing in particular.

The Bake Off icon, who celebrated her 85th birthday earlier this year, has often been open about her thoughts on mortality.

Prue revealed that her mother, South African actress Margaret Inglis, lived with dementia for the last 15 years of her life before passing away in 2010, and she worries about facing a similar fate.

The TV host admitted to speaking to The Times that “I am definitely becoming more forgetful.” I mean, I don’t believe I have dementia, but I might (someday)”.

She also acknowledged that she had trouble remembering names and that she had no idea how to spell names. I believe I should remember them because I’m too selfish or something. And that’s frequently embarrassing. I mean, I’ve already forgotten yours.

Prue has penned a new book titled Being Old and Learning to Love It, set to be published in February. The book is a collection of essays discussing love, grief, work, fashion, and fame, reports the Manchester Evening News.

She claims that even after her death, her mother never lost her mind and never gave up until the very end. The mother-of-two added that she was okay despite being “horrible for the rest of us.”

Prue was previously married to South African author and developer Rayne Kruger, who passed away in 2002, and is now married to her second husband, retired clothing designer John Playfair. Following the agonizing passing of her brother David to bone cancer in 2012, which she described as “absolute agony,” she has been a vocal advocate for assisted dying.

Prue’s worries about her passing don’t seem to have an impact on her way of life.

She admitted to two months of weight-loss experimentation, but she never shed a single pound.

The famous person revealed that she would stop using them as soon as possible.

And Prue, who first appeared on Great British Menu before taking over from Dame Mary Berry on The Great British Bake Off, admits to enjoying two or three glasses of wine each evening and struggles to balance her drinking habits with her husband.

He hardly drinks now, and she claimed that I’m a great boozer. He’ll only consume half a glass of wine, which he’ll probably not finish, if I give him two or three glasses of wine each night. It’s a pity”.

In 1960, Prue relocated to London to study at the Cordon Bleu Cookery School after being born in South Africa.

Leith’s, her Michelin-starred eatery in Notting Hill, was founded in 1969 by her mother.

Before making her television debut as a judge on the BBC’s The Great British Menu in 2006, she transitioned into the food industry while managing her own business.

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Although her popularity on Bake Off increases her, her husband is obviously irritated by one aspect of the program.

She continued, “People think I’m just a cake maker, so it irritates my husband.” particularly because I don’t actually bake.

Source: Mirror

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