Categories
food

the history of masterchef

For over 30 years MasterChef has had one aim: to discover the country’s best food talent through a series of extraordinary cooking challenges, and watched over by some of the world’s most prestigious food judges. Let’s look into the history of this long running TV show, and the surprising disagreement that led to it’s creation. We’ll look at the judges, the tests, and the dishes that made MasterChef a staple of TV schedules.

Heads up: here’s a video version of this article, packed with clips!

This week MasterChef returned to our screens on BBC One for it’s 20th anniversary in the modern era.

With versions in over 60 productions across the world, broadcast in 200+ countries, MasterChef is watched globally by over 300 million viewers. The UK edition of MasterChef is about to enter it’s 20th year in it’s current incarnation. Contestants are expected to show off their skills, think on their feet, replicate famous dishes, demonstrate their culinary knowledge, and work a busy service in top-end restaurants.

Over a series of weeks the dozens of wannabe MasterChefs battle through a knockout tournament to impress the hosts and a revolving panel of critics, chefs, and former champions. The format is instantly recognisable and easy to dip in and out of.

But it didn’t have the most obvious of beginnings.

Britain does not have a great reputation for it’s food. There are many reasons for this which are beyond the scope of this video, but rationing through World War 2 and for many years after 1945, a lack of enthusiastic food culture, thinning of margins combined with a chase to the best price have led to UK cuisine being looked down upon. Many – myself included – are happy to boast about our superb produce, ancient and excellent methods, exceptional home-grown chefs, centuries of experience with roasting meats, diverse weather giving us superb conditions, and an overall homeliness and warmth to our cookery. However, the stigma persists.

The negative stereotype was an opinion shared by Mel Brooks, legendary film writer, actor and director responsible for some of the best comedies of the 20th Century. In the early 1980s during a production meeting at 20th Century Fox he was holding court and openly mocking British food with his creatives.

Mel Brooks

One person in that meeting was noted English director Franc Roddam. Franc is from County Durham in the North East of England. His biggest hit was the 1979 cult film Quadrophenia, the magnum opus for mods that inspires fashions and reunions to this day. Best of all it launched the career of Phil Daniels. Franc’s other most notable creation was TV series Auf Wiedersehen Pet, the story of working lads from the North East ekeing out a living working in Germany. It was off the back of these two hits in particular that found him in a meeting with Brooks and his coterie, pitching new ideas. In an interview with William Sitwell he said:

“Mel Brooks and his buddies were doing their usual level best to mock British food. They were a braying pack of creatives saying that there was no such thing as British cuisine, that if you wanted a good meal in London you had to go Italian or French or Indian. But never British.”

Franc Roddam

This argument struck a nerve in him and this kickstarted the idea of a cooking competition between amateur British cooks. With his reputation behind him Roddam was able to secure the attention of BBC execs and devised the cooking competition MasterChef.

Bostonian Loyd Grossman was chosen as host. Loyd was a familiar face on TV having devised and co-presenting Through The Keyhole, among other roles. He’d been the food critic for Harpers and Queen magazine since 1981 so he had the right balance of subject knowledge and presenting kudos.

Loyd Grossman on Through the Keyhole

“Before MasterChef, the only food programs were programs about how to cook. The brilliance of MasterChef was that it wanted to present food as entertainment. It was the first really entertaining, popular show about food, and then it took off and was the zeitgeist. It was exactly the right timing.” – Loyd Grossman

It wasn’t predicted to be a success by everyone. Loyd recalled in a meeting with a BBC Exec: “that’s a terrible idea. Who would want to watch people eat?“

Filmed in the TVS Television Theatre, the MasterChef of 1990 is difficult to recognise from the shouty-dashing-fryathon of today. Three cooks are challenged to cook a three course meal in two and a half hours, and allowed to bring up to five specialty ingredients or utensils. While I’m sure it didn’t feel like it for the contestants it always had a languid and relaxed pace. I can remember watching it on Sunday afternoons while putting off doing homework and feeling like the programme would last forever!

MASTERCHEF 1996.
L-R:LIZ FRANKLIN,WINNER NEIL HAIDAR,LOYD GROSSMAN AND CHARLOTTE BIRCHER.
COLLECT PICTURE BY ASSIGNMENTS 17TH JULY 1997.

Subtitled “the British Grand Prix for amateur chefs”, the programme ranged from 30 to 60 minutes and menus had a distinctly French flavour. In this pre-Marco Pierre White revolutionary world, the menus read back now they are very fussy and overworked for today’s tastes, but it was at the cutting edge in the nineties. Top chefs and restaurateurs of the day were guests brought on to eat and judge. Guests like Pierre Koffmann, Terence Conran, Egon Ronay, Michel Roux Sr, and many others.

Gordon Ramsay on MasterChef

In this form the show continued until 2000 with host Grossman being replaced by chef Gary Rhodes for one tournament. Loyd was not happy with planned changes.

“They told me this summer that they wanted the show to switch channels, which I very strenuously object to.

“Then they said they wanted it to be less of a competition, which I think is totally moronic and then they decided that they didn’t want to do Junior Masterchef, which to me is total lunacy because everyone loved the show.”

It had a similar setup but with a more relaxed and modern studio. Unfortunately ratings declined and was cancelled after the 2001 series.

The names of the winners between 1990 and 2001 are below. I consider myself engaged with chefs and cooks but few of these names sound familiar to me now in 2024. I gave each name a quick Google and made a few notes on their selected achievements.

Year Winner
1990 Joan Bunting Did cookery demonstrations in the North East and columnist in local press.
1991 Sue Lawrence Became a regular columnist for Scotland on Sunday and Sunday Times, while also penning a number of cookbooks.
1992 Vanessa Binns Became a hotelier.
1993 Derek Johns Was already a successful dealer in fine arts, and continued this career after his win.
1994 Gerry Goldwyre Opened a restaurant in Edinburgh.
1995 Marion Macfarlane Did not pursue a career in food but remained in education.
1996 Neil Haidar Bounced around various jobs within the industry, including AA Restaurant inspector.
1997 Julie Friend Has run cookery courses, written books, been a private chef, run catering companies.
1999 Lloyd Burgess Did various cookery demonstrations and tutorials, and set up his own UK coffee roaster business.
2000 Marjorie Lang Ran various cookery classes and worked at several restaurants.
2001 Rosa Baden-Powell Recipe writer and sometime face of Alpro

In the early 2000s Roddam pitched a new format to the BBC working with Elisabeth Murdoch and her production company Shine.

In 2005 Franc Roddam along with other executive producer John Silver and producer Kate Ross revived the format under the title MasterChef Goes Large. In a post-Pop Idol, mid X-Factor world suddenly everything is brighter, louder and a veritable riot after the staid and fussy Grossman years. Instead of a single host, a pair was chosen to front the show. Chef and restaurateur John Torode would judge the cooking, beating out critic AA Gill for the role. It was felt that two chefs would unbalance the show, so commercial greengrocer Gregg Wallace was more of a ‘straight’ role as a keen diner. Gregg was known to TV producers, having originally presented Saturday Kitchen on BBC One, and Veg Talk on Radio 4. The show moved from a classic BBC studio to the working kitchens of City University London, with exposed brickwork and stacked shelves. Just in case you drift off, the soundtrack is pumping techno and buzzing EDM. There is a huge push on “changing your life” and “realising your dreams” which is repeated over and over again, with the grand prize being “to work in a professional kitchen.”

“Things felt different. We caught a new energy and hope that people had about the possibility to change careers.” – Kate Ross

In a change from the previous generation, rather than preparing one three course menu over one show, contestants went through a series of different rounds.

Series 1 to 9 followed a very similar template throughout the early heats. A handful of hopefuls start with ‘The Invention Test’. Would-be MasterChefs are given a range of ingredients and invited to come up with something on the spot – this round often gave us the most humorous results. In later years this would be replaced by the ‘Market Test’ where they can choose from a decent range of ingredients – though generous this can cause some cooks to select too many things and yes, more humorous things ensue. Then they would face ‘The Pressure Test’ where they would be thrown into a professional kitchen and pushed into a busy service to see how they cope. Inevitably they get the feedback that they were too slow but did OK by the end. A ‘Final Test’ where they would cook their own 2 course meal under a strict time limit.

Over the years the rounds would change to freshen up the format and demonstrate different aspects of the participants. ‘The Calling Card’ would be a more welcoming first round, so that they can begin with showing off a dish they know really well, hoping that it shows off their personality. A ‘Reinvention Test’ where a previously used ingredient would be used again. Very common would become a test where they must cook two courses for three critics or former contestants. A ‘Palate Test’ in which they taste a dish and unpick all the ingredients they can name. A ‘Critics Choice’ where a restaurant critic sets a challenge using a particular ingredient or method.

Once we’re out of the heats the gloves are off and all sorts of challenges start to emerge. Contestants cound find themselves faced with a mass catering challenge, make a well-known chef’s signature dish for the chef themself, or fly abroad to work in a completely unique kitchen environment.

The set would move locations over the years: from Ram Brewery in Wandsworth with it’s industrial feel, to 3 Mills Studio which gave it arguably it’s most cinematic look from 2014 – 2023. For the 2024 series filming for MasterChef has moved to a new bespoke set in Birmingham as part of the BBC’s drive to improve its regional reach putting it at the vanguard of it’s programmes.

There’s subtle changes in the tone too over the decades: in the mid-2000s negative feedback was harsh and pointed; as reality TV grew up we saw more constructive criticism and less outright insults. In later years you also get small glimpses into the camaraderie between the contestants which helps soften the edges.

The show has also seen success by spinning off the format into different flavours. This includes the inevitable celebrity version running since 2006, as well as The Professionals (my personal favourite) where chefs from inside the industry show off what they can do. Michel Roux Jr, Monica Galetti, Marcus Wareing, and Anna Haugh have presented this series over the years. The format is much the same, though asking Professionals to think on their feet and recreate one of the host’s recipes under a strict timeline is a thoroughly insightful round. There have also been versions for younger cooks, with Junior Masterchef popping up over the years, and Young Masterchef which started in 2023.

There are dozens and dozens of localised versions for different countries – too many to list here – but the principle of an elimination reality cooking show remains the core.

MasterChef has produced some excellent talent in it’s history, with almost all of the champions continuing their career in food, writing cookbooks, and opening restaurants. And not just the winners, much like other reality competitions runner-ups have had plenty of success too.

I can’t list the achievements of all the winners but here’s a few headlines. Almost all of them wrote a book or picked up newspaper columns.

  1. The first winner of the modern era was Thomasina Miers, who created her chain of Mexican cantinas Wahaca.
  2. Second series champion Peter Bayless became a private chef and food writer.
  3. Series 3 gave us Stephen Wallis who became a private chef and consultant.
  4. James Nathan of series 4 served as head chefs for many top places.
  5. Mat Follas apart from being the jolliest of winners set up numerous restaurants.
  6. Dhruv Baker from series 6 did a spot of stages and became a food writer.
  7. Series 7’s Tim Anderson turned out a bunch of books (his latest comes out this year!).
  8. Shelina Permaloo won series 8 and has written books, columns and frequently appears on TV.
  9. 2013’s Natalie Coleman became a successful chef in many restaurants.
  10. Ping Coombes won series 10 and became a Malaysian food ambassador and runs cookery courses.
  11. Series 11 winner Simon Wood achieved a boyhood dream and runs Oldham Athletic Football Club’s kitchens.
  12. Jane Devonshire runs regular food courses and works food events.
  13. Saliha Mahmood Ahmed wrote a well-received cookbook but continued her career in the NHS.
  14. Kenny Tutt won in 2018, opened a restaurant and offers private dining.
  15. Irini Tzortzoglou got busy writing books and giving talks and representation in the kitchen.
  16. In 2020 winner Thomas Frake launched his fine-dining at home service. Tom Rhodes, Winner in 2021, creates recipes and offers private dining.
  17. Series 18 winner Eddie Scott is about to release his first cookbook.
  18. Our newest champion Chariya Khattiyot is opening her first restaurant in Surrey in 2024.

But apart from giving us something entertaining to watch whether in genuine joy as we cheer along, or the schadenfreude of a dish gone wrong, MasterChef has done something else in the UK specifically: given us vocabulary to talk about food. Whether it’s cooking at home for ourselves or others, or eating out at restaurants, MasterChef has democratised the language of food.

Look at the dishes put up by contestants in the first few series in the early rounds – usually a protein, claggy sauce and token veg. In 2023? Fish tacos three ways, tempura curry leaves, crab tortellini, roasted chicken with black beans, and food from all over the world. The diversity of the contestants is incredibly broad – not just box-ticking, but people bringing recipes from their authentic selves done their own way.

“You’ll think I’m mad, but it’s about the democratisation of food. At that point good food was only for rich people. It was like, ‘No, hang on a second. Let’s democratise this.'” – Franc Roddam

What’s your favourite MasterChef memory? Let me know in the comments.

Selected sources:

https://masterchef.com/pages/about-us

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/food-and-drink/features/franc-roddam-interview-masterchef-bbc-anniversary/

https://www.banijayrights.com/programmes/10196

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MasterChef_(British_TV_series)

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/food-and-drink/features/loyd-grossman-reveals-huge-battle-get-masterchef-commissioned/

https://open.spotify.com/episode/50qisrfBer62OAGxqtDBh6?si=9d99b0626bcb4eae

https://www.lovefood.com/news/58677/the-lovefood-interview-loyd-grossman

https://www.thecaterer.com/news/foodservice/masterchef-an-interview-with-john-torode-and-gregg-walace

https://yougov.co.uk/topics/entertainment/explore/tv_programme/MasterChef

“MasterChef 1995” – Loyd Grossman (Vermillion, 1995)

Categories
food restaurant review

my favourite things from 2023

Join me as I look back over they year with some of my (and your!) favourite projects at BigSpud HQ from 2023.

Sea bass at the Blacksmiths, Isle of Wight

The sea bass dish as they serve it at the Blacksmiths pub

The best meal I had all year was at a pub overlooking the north coast of the Isle of Wight. The Blacksmiths is an absolute treat, with me wanting to try every dish. The sea bass was a delight, crisp and fresh, with a sweet and savoury bread salad. I cannot tell you from an ingredients list alone how delicious it was. It was perfect. I only regret that I don’t live closer so I can go there for dinner every day.

Marco Pierre White’s fondant potatoes

Marco Pierre White has defined the second half of the year for me; I’ve read loads of his books, watched his programmes, made his recipes. Understanding what makes this titan of restaurants tick has been fascinating. I’ve dug into his personality and uncovered the simplicity that lies at the core of his cooking, and fastidious attention to detail to replicate recipes repeatedly. This fondant potato recipe was a real insight into how he works.

Steak ‘n’ Snails

Continuing the Marco Pierre White theme, I made the recipe that he made as tribute to old friend Anthony Bourdain. It’s a very umami affair, with fast-cooked steak, meaty mushrooms and plump garlicky mushrooms. I made this on a rainy November evening and it was just the thing to pep me up – it’s the parsley that makes it, “washing the palate” as Marco says.

Biography of Keith Floyd

It’s fair to say this video biography of Keith Floyd I made didn’t quite land as well as I’d hoped – I’d put a lot of work into it, reading two of his autobiographies and watching every programme of his I could find. It’s a fascinating story of boom and bust and just going for it at every turn – it’s only nine minutes so give it a watch if you’ve any interest in how TV cookery has changed over the years.

Chicken, sweetcorn and chorizo pizza

After a trip to Gordon Ramsay’s Street Pizza Kitchen I became obsessed with the combo of chicken, sweetcorn, and chorizo. It’s an absolute winner.

Chicken, sweetcorn and chorizo pizza

Recreating Heston’s meat fruit

I’ve been meaning to make this for the longest time. I finally got around to it… and it was quite the disaster! I got the gelatine ratio wrong and overworked it, leading to a mis-shapen sloppy mess. Watch the video to see how it turned out.

Heston’s meat fruit

Most popular with you

Meanwhile, what were the top posts from 2023 that kept you coming back this year?

Beef dripping sauce – After a trip to steak restaurant Miller & Carter I had to have a go at recreating their signature sauce. After a few goes I’m really pleased with this rich, indulgent gravy.

Onion loaf – and hot on the heels of beef dripping I also made the crispy, savoury side dish.

Brined leg of lamb – this proved very popular as most people associate brining with white meats. But a salty bath for lamb brings out the deep savouriness that matches it perfectly.

Philly cheese stack – I don’t mind McDonald’s, but I’ve definitely grown bored of their predictable menu. But in Autumn they came out with a burger laced with cheese sauce and fried onions. I recreated it and it’s absolutely bang on.

Cornershop curry – this Jamie Oliver recipe is warming, tasty, and can be made very easily with stuff you have in the cupboard. A great mideweek-er.

Thanks for coming along for the ride in 2023. I look forward to sharing more food adventures with you in 2024!

Categories
chicken chorizo food spring onion sweetcorn

chicken, chorizo and sweetcorn pizza

I recently took a trip to Gordon Ramsay’s Street Pizza in St Paul’s. They offer a bottomless pizza option where the pizza is cooked constantly and is then brought round. Grab a slice of what you like!

The pizzas were all great. Even the ham and pineapple was a step above – shredded gammon, strips of pineapple but the fresh pecorino was the finishing touch.

However the one I loved was chicken and chorizo, with a sweetcorn puree base. It was a perfect combo! So much so, I had to make it myself:

Print

chicken, chorizo and sweetcorn pizza

Course Main Course
Prep Time 2 hours
Cook Time 5 minutes
Servings 23 people

Equipment

  • pizza stone

Ingredients

  • 400 g strong flour
  • 1 teaspoon dried yeast
  • 2 teaspoons sea salt
  • 250 ml lukewarm water
  • 2 teaspoons extra virgin olive oil

For the sweetcorn puree:

  • 198 g tin sweetcorn
  • 2 teaspoons creme fraiche
  • lemon juice

Other toppings:

  • 50 g mozzarella
  • 100 g shredded cooked chicken
  • 5-6 slices chorizo
  • 2 spring onions
  • coriander or parsley to garnish

Instructions

  • To make the pizza dough, combine all the ingredients in a bowl and then turn out on to a worktop. Knead thoroughly for 10 minutes until stretchy and elastic. Form into 2-3 balls and put into an oiled bowl. Cover with a teatowel and leave to rise in a warm place for 90 minutes.
  • Meanwhile make the puree. Blitz all the ingredients together and season with salt and pepper. Push through a sieve to remove the skins and keep refrigerated until needed.
  • After 90 minutes, preheat the oven as high as it will go with a pizza stone in. Roll out the dough on a floured surface. Add the sweetcorn puree and add the other toppings to taste. Cook for 4-5 minutes until golden and risen. Serve immediately.

Video

Categories
book review food

my favourite cookbooks of 2023

Gifting time is here! Check out my choices for the cookbooks of the year.

Diet and sustainability has never been higher in the agenda. While these are important topics for anyone nerdy about their food, despite money worries people are asking these questions about their dinner. And the cookbooks of today reflect that.

Here’s a selection of some books I’ve enjoyed most this year. It’s not been an easy shortlist, so let me know what I missed.

Quick note: if you love to cook but hate sifting through recipes, try out Eat Your Books. With over 2.5 million recipes indexed Eat Your Books will help you figure out exactly what to eat for dinner tonight, based on the books you already own. Build shopping lists, add your own recipes and more. Jane has always been a big supporter of BigSpud and I highly recommend her site – try it out now and use code EYB2330 to unlock a free one month Premium membership.

The Extra Mile


Few things crush my soul more than knowing we have to stop at a motorway services on a road trip. If you’re in the mood for Burger King, Starbucks or KFC then you’re fine, but even then you’ll be rinsed on price compared to the high street. Thankfully then I discovered this book, refreshed every year, aiming to compile brilliant farm shops, cafes and delis just off the motorways. I’ve discovered a couple of gems from it this year, not least of which the incredible Waitrose farm cafe. This book now sits in my glove compartment permanently, and would make a perfect gift for UK drivers.

Buy The Extra Mile from Amazon

The Actually Delicious Air Fryer Cookbook

 

Poppy O’Toole is a national treasure in the making. I can’t wait for her to be completely mainstream and present The One Show or something. Her book from a couple of years ago was one of my favourites that year, and I immediately preordered her air fryer book when it was available. And it doesn’t disappoint. There’s no new ideas or ground-breaking flavours here, but inspiration to use the now-ubiquitous appliance in different ways.

Buy The Actually Delicious Airfryer Cookbook from Amazon

Made in Bangladesh

 

In the UK Bangladeshi food means one thing: British Indian Restaurant food. What most of us think of us ‘having an Indian’ or ‘having a curry’ means curries derived from the Bangladeshi cuisine. And even then it has evolved over ~40 years to satisfy the most people possible. What a treat then is Made In Bangladesh, a love letter to the perfume, the aroma, the joy of Bangladeshi cuisine. There are so many different layers and ideas across the Indian continent and we don’t do enough in the UK to educate ourselves in these varieties. This would be a good first step for those looking to expand their ‘curry’ repertoire.

Made in Bangladesh from Amazon

Honourable mention: White Heat 25

OK; this edition is from 2015, a reprint of a 1990 book. But I just had to include this book as no other book has influenced me more in the kitchen this year. I was always aware of Marco Pierre White (who isn’t?) but I’d never really know what he was about nor knew that much about him. Doing a little research for a YouTube video this year I got hold of this from the library, read it cover to cover in an hour, then immediately bought my own copy. Yes the photography is somewhat dated and hilariously cliched now but it still burns with passion and charisma. The writing and the recipes are electric and inspire completely – what more do you want from a book about food?

Buy White Heat 25 from Amazon

That was my year in cookbooks – what were your favourite books this year?

Previous years’ lists:

The 2022 cookbook list

The 2021 cookbook list

The 2019 cookbook list

The 2018 cookbook list

The 2017 cookbook list

The 2016 cookbook list

The 2015 cookbook list

The 2014 cookbook list

The 2013 cookbook list

The 2012 cookbook list

The 2011 cookbook list

The 2010 cookbook list

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