MasterChef: The Professionals

MasterChef: The Professionals
Genre Cooking
Written by Franc Roddam
Judges Gregg Wallace
Monica Galetti (2009–)
Marcus Wareing (2014–)
Michel Roux Jr. (2008–14)
Narrated by India Fisher (2008–10)
Sean Pertwee (2011–)
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 8 (aired to date)
No. of episodes 140 (inc. 2 specials to date)
Production
Executive producer(s) Franc Roddam
Elisabeth Murdoch
Carla-Maria Lawson
Running time 30 or 60 minutes
Production company(s) Shine Television
Distributor Ziji Productions
Release
Original network BBC Two
Picture format 16:9
Original release 25 August 2008 (2008-08-25) – present
Chronology
Related shows MasterChef
External links
Website

MasterChef: The Professionals is a BBC television competitive cooking show aired on BBC Two. It is a spin-off from the main MasterChef series, for professional working chefs. Introduced in 2008, Gregg Wallace and India Fisher reprised their roles as co-judge and voiceover respectively. MasterChef judge John Torode was replaced by Michel Roux Jr., a two-Michelin-star chef, assisted, from 2009, by his sous-chef Monica Galetti. Since 2011, Sean Pertwee has taken over Fisher's role as voiceover.

On 11 March 2014, it was announced that Roux Jr had left the show due to "a conflict in commercial interests".[1] Three months later his replacement was announced as Marcus Wareing.[2]

Format

Typically, the show runs for seven weeks from early November until Christmas week, with four episodes per week, although the precise number of shows, number of contestants, the running order and nature of the challenges and the number of chefs eliminated at each round varies greatly from series to series. There are typically four weeks of "heats" (the final show of each heat week being a quarter final), a "knockout" week, a semi-final week and a finals week. Below is a synopsis of a typical series:

The Heats

Each heat week begins with six chefs. The three remaining chefs then participate in the quarter final at the end of that week.

Quarter Final

Knockout Week

Typically 8-10 chefs are left by this stage. The precise challenges have varied over the series.

Semi Finals

Finals Week

Series guide

Series 1 (2008)

Derek Johnstone won the first series on 19 September 2008, and went on to take a job with Michel Roux Jr at Le Gavroche restaurant in London.

Series 2 (2009)

The second series began on 14 September 2009 at 8:30 pm on BBC2 and was won by Steve Groves on 22 October 2009.[3] On 6 June 2010 the series was awarded a BAFTA in the Features category at the British Academy Television Awards 2010, fending off competition from The Choir, James May's Toy Stories and Heston's Feasts.

Series 3 (2010)

The third series began on Monday 20 September 2010, the eventual winner being 30-year-old Claire Lara from Liverpool.[4] She was pregnant at the time.[5]

Series 4 (2011)

The fourth series began on 7 November 2011, with India Fisher's voiceover replaced with Sean Pertwee (it was initially believed that previous narrator India Fisher had a sore throat). The series concluded on 15 December 2011, with finalists Steve Barringer[6] and Claire Hutchings[7] being beaten by winner Ash Mair,[8][9][10] 34, from Tasmania. He cooked a final three-course menu comprising a starter of roasted monkfish tail with lentils and Basque piperade; roast rump of lamb with braised lamb neck potato croquette; and a dessert of Spanish bread and butter pudding with vanilla parfait. This was the first series where two semi finalists were put through to the final from the same semi final heat. This resulted in 4 finalists for the first time and in the cook off Oliver Farrar,[11][12] was knocked out from the finals week.

Series 5 (2012)

Series 5 was first broadcast on 5 November 2012, with the final aired on 13 December 2012. Sean Pertwee continued to provide the voiceover. The title was jointly awarded (for the first time in MasterChef history)[13] to Anton Piotrowski, head chef of The Treby Arms, Plymouth and freelance event caterer Keri Moss of South London. The third finalist was Oli Boon.

Series 6 (2013)

Series 6 started in November 2013. In the final, broadcast on 12 December 2013, Steven Edwards was crowned the winner.[14] The final task was to prepare a three-course meal for judges Roux Jr, Galetti and Wallace.[15] The two other finalists were Scott Davies and Adam Handling.[16]

Series 7 (2014)

Series 7 started on 4 November 2014. In the final, broadcast on 23 December 2014, Jamie Scott was crowned victor.[17] The other two finalists were Brian McLeish and Sven-Hanson Britt.

Series 8 (2015)

Series 8 began airing on 10 November 2015.

Series 9 (2016)

Series 9 began airing on 8 November 2016.

Winners

Year Winner(s)
2008 Derek Johnstone
2009 Steve Groves
2010 Claire Lara
2011 Ash Mair
2012 Keri Moss
Anton Piotrowski
2013 Steven Edwards
2014 Jamie Scott
2015 Mark Stinchcombe
2016

Transmissions

Series Start date End date Episodes
1 25 August 2008 19 September 2008 20
2 14 September 2009 22 October 2009 29
3 27 September 2010 2 November 2010 17
Special 8 November 2010 (Michel's Classics) 2
4 7 November 2011 15 December 2011 24
5 5 November 2012 13 December 2012
6 4 November 2013 12 December 2013
7 4 November 2014 23 December 2014 21
8 10 November 2015 24 December 2015 22
9 8 November 2016 December 2016 21

International adaptations

Legend:      Still in production        No longer airing  

Country Name Host(s) Judges Network Air dates
 Australia MasterChef Australia: The Professionals
  • Matt Preston
  • Marco Pierre White
  • Guest judge
Network Ten 20 January 2013 – 17 March 2013
(Season 1)
 Brazil MasterChef Profissionais Ana Paula Padrão
  • Erick Jacquin
  • Paola Carosella
  • Henrique Fogaça
Band 4 October 2016 – 13 December 2016
(Season 1)

See also

References

  1. "Michel Roux Jr leaves MasterChef: Professionals over business conflict". Digital Spy. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  2. "MasterChef: The Professionals - Marcus Wareing joins as new judge". Digital Spy. Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  3. Thomas, Liz (23 October 2009). "Masterchef: I almost quit cooking after my father's death, says winner Steve Groves". Daily Mail. London.
  4. "Claire Lara crowned winner of MasterChef: The Professionals". Daily Mail. London. 2 November 2010. Retrieved 2010-11-03.
  5. "Pregnant Merseyside chef Claire Lara through to final of Masterchef: The Professionals – Wirral News". wirralnews.co.uk. Retrieved 2010-11-02.
  6. "Steve Barringer's recipes" on the BBC Food Website
  7. "Claire Hutchings's recipes" on the BBC Food Website
  8. "Ash Mair's recipes" on the BBC Food Website
  9. "Professional MasterChef winner is crowned". BBC News. 16 December 2011.
  10. Chris Harvey, "MasterChef: the Professionals, BBC One, who will win it?", The Telegraph, 15 December 2011
  11. "Oli Farrar's recipes" on the BBC Food Website
  12. "Oliver Farrar Head Chef" on the Handbook.com website
  13. Paul Martinovic (13 December 2012). "'MasterChef' finishes in a draw for the first time in history". Digital Spy. Retrieved 2012-12-14.
  14. "Professional MasterChef 2013 winner revealed". BBC Media Centre. 12 December 2013.
  15. "MasterChef: the Professionals, the final, review". Daily Telegraph. 12 December 2013. Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  16. "MasterChef: The Professionals 2013 - Steven Edwards crowned winner". The Independent. 12 December 2013. Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  17. "Masterchef winner Jamie Scott's 'incredible' winning dish". BBC. 24 December 2014. Retrieved 25 December 2014.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.