Amir Khan and his wife Faryal Makhdoom tucked into a tray of food as they attended King’s Castle launch event on Sunday night.
The loved-up couple looked happier than ever as they made their star-studded arrival at the new eatery.
Amir, 37, gave the restaurant his seal of approval as he stuck a thumb up after delving into the tasty sandwich.
Faryal, 32, looked glamorous in an all-white ensemble, teamed with silver court heels as she arrived at the fast food restaurant.
Ex-boxing champ Amir cut a trendy figure in grey denim jeans and a black hoodie, teamed with Louis Vuitton trainers.

Amir Khan, 37, and his wife Faryal Makhdoom, 32, tucked into a tray of food as they attended King’s Castle launch event on Sunday night

The loved-up couple looked happier than ever as they made their star-studded arrival at the new eatery

Amir gave the restaurant his seal of approval as he stuck a thumb up after delving into the tasty sandwich
Amir shares Lamaisah, 10, Alayna, six, and four-year-old Muhammad with his wife of 10 years.
The married couple split their time between Dubai, London and Khan’s native Bolton.
It comes after Amir admitted he is putting his £11.5million luxury wedding venue up for sale because he does not know how to run it.
The former boxing world light-welterweight champion revealed there have not yet been any ‘serious’ offers for the Dubai-style tower which was dogged by problems before hosting its first wedding in May this year.
He insisted he was ‘getting good rent’ from the business but now wants to hand the property in Bolton over to someone else and focus on other projects.
Amir only opened the tower, which features glass walls, a waterfall and palm trees inside, earlier this year.
The venue named ‘The Balmayna’ sits next-door to an auto body shop and car wash in the heart of Bolton, and back in January it was surrounded by heaps of junk including broken fridges, settees and dirty mattresses.
Khan announced on X that he was putting it up for sale – describing it to potential buyers as having featuring ‘four floors, including three dedicated wedding floors and a rooftop events terrace’.
The former boxer, who won silver at the 2004 Olympics in Athens, invited interested parties to get in touch via email.


Faryal looked glamorous in an all-white ensemble, teamed with silver court heels as she arrived at the fast food restaurant

Amir indulged into a tray of food

Amir shares Lamaisah, 10, Alayna, six, and four-year-old Muhammad with his wife of 10 years

The married couple split their time between Dubai, London and Khan’s native Bolton

Amir’s £11.5million luxury wedding venue in Bolton has finally hosted its first marriage after a series of hitches
Now he has opened up on what prompted his decision to sell up, telling Action Network: ‘I’ve built it and now I want to move into something else. I want to buy more things and something different.
‘With the wedding venue, I don’t know how to run the wedding hall. For me it’s a business where I’m not going to be in it myself. I’m going to have to hand it to someone to else to rent it for me.
‘I’ve spent so much money on it but it’s not nice to not run it yourself. I really want to be hands on with this and I’m not. That’s the reason. I thought maybe I should start selling it and going to something else I can be busy with it. it’s just sat there and I’m collecting rent.’
Reports have estimated Khan’s investment into the venue at sums varying from £5million to £12.5million though he says it has been ‘making me money without doing anything’.
He has insisted he does not need to sell up, rejecting suggestions he has ‘gone broke’ – though acknowledged that living in Dubai, where he spends much of his time, was proving costly.
Amir said: ‘It’s a nice thing. You’ve set it up yourself and you’re getting good rent from there and is making good money but when you can’t be in a business and run it yourself or be part of the blood, sweat and tears then I think it is different.
‘I finished it all off and it looks beautiful with all of the weddings. It’s putting smiles on millions of people’s faces.’