Ben Starr

The Ultimate Food Geek

MasterChef 4 Recap: Auditions #1 and #2

(PLEASE NOTE: This blog is not endorsed or approved by Fox or MasterChef, and they would probably prefer you not read it.  The blog entry solely reflects my opinions about MasterChef, having been a former contestant.  I do not have any inside knowledge of how MasterChef is produced.)

Here I am, 2 weeks after the premier of MasterChef season 4, just beginning to blog about the season.  I promise things will be more prompt as we go forward!  (However, my DVR hiccuped on last week’s episodes, so that blog may be a few days’ delayed while I find someone with a copy.)

I have to admit, I was loath to start watching this season.  The farther I get away from my own MasterChef experience, the more hesitant I am to continue identifying, and thus defining, myself with the brand.  While, it’s true, they do introduce new and exciting twists each season that get more and more ridiculously complex, I have to admit…I’m a little bored.  Luckily, the fan base doesn’t seem to be, as I’ve been poked and pestered for my blog for the past 2 weeks!  So we’ll see how this season goes.

The opening format is exactly the same.  From thousands of live auditions around the country, 100 home cooks have been brought to Los Angeles, and in theory they are the “best of the best.”  (Many of them, however, have been cast specifically to be made fun of by the judges, since MasterChef does not film their live auditions like American Idol does.  So they can’t REALLY bring the 100 best-of-the-best to LA, because there will be no one for the audience to laugh at.  This necessitates that some folks get cast so that the judges can laugh them out of the studio.  To see what I think of this phenomenon, read my guest blog about How To Watch a MasterChef Premier on Celebration Generation, the website of Marie Porter, a contestant on this year’s MasterChef who contacted me for advice before she left to be on the show.  This blog will be VERY fascinating to you if you’re interested in behind the scenes stuff.)

The show basically starts with Joe Bastianich burning a bunch of money.  Fake money, of course, but they are sending a signal to the contestants that they should be here for the glory, not for the cash.  And the glory is apparently embodied in a holy icon that will “ensure your culinary legacy,” according to Graham…the coveted MasterChef trophy.

Folks…last year I laughed out loud when they revealed the trophy, and I did the same this year.  It’s really, really, REALLY hard for people to get excited about a trophy.  Okay…an Emmy or an Oscar, maybe.  (I shuddered when I held the Emmy that my friend John won for producing Rachael Ray a few years back.)  Sure, the contestants themselves are excited about it because it would mean that they won.  But I can’t be the only audience member who thinks, “Really?  A trophy?”  Personally, I think the trophy is ridiculous and cheap and should be ditched.  How about a winning CHEF’S HAT?!?

The judges send a very simple and clear message to the contestants: “We only care about 1 thing: what you put on the plate.”  Sadly, this isn’t true, with MasterChef or ANY other reality TV program, for that matter.  But it IS the mythology of the show, so we’re supposed to believe it.

Well…to debate myself…perhaps it IS true that the JUDGES only care about what the contestants put on the plate.  One day, decades from now, I would love to sit down to dinner at my place with Gordon, Graham, and Joe…long after MasterChef has stopped airing or has moved on to other judges…and chat about what the show did to them.  Because MasterChef must affect the judges as viscerally as it does the contestants.  There are times when Gordon may really hate a dish, but because of the story arc of the show, he has to “like” it for the camera.  There are times when a passionate young chef stands before Graham, reminding him of himself when he was paying his dues on the line, dreaming of that first Michelin star he could claim was his own…but Graham has to shoot down that contestant because the show’s story arc requires it.  And I wonder what that does to them, as humans.  Over the past few seasons, a few of the contestants who have more integrity than I do have “called them out” on this issue…asking them for their HONEST opinion, rather than their camera one.  Calling their integrity into question for perhaps compromising their own food passions and identities to bow to the will of a producer, rather than fight for someone they might otherwise truly believe in.  (As you might imagine, these moments will NEVER make it to the screen.)  As someone with no spine who avoids conflict and confrontation at every possible step, I could never be one of those people.  But I personally know a few who have, and my admiration for them is unending.

So perhaps the judges, in their private hearts, do truly care only about what is on the plate.  I think that, largely, the feedback we see from the judges is actually  honest.  But there are, no doubt, times when the judges have to say things they don’t truly believe, in order to keep the show moving in a direction that holds the viewership and is gripping and shocking and emotional for the audience.

I digress.

In the first 2 episodes, we are fully introduced to only 14 people, only 11 of which are awarded aprons.  We catch a glimpse of maybe 20 others, some of whom get aprons, and most of whom do not.  There’s a gal cooking with her own breast milk.  A man cooking with “roadkill.”  A rabbit farmer who brings the whole rabbit, fur and all.  (I actually would love to meet her, she seemed really interesting.)  Even a guy who is deep frying roaches…”giant waterbugs” is what he calls them.  That’s the “gentle” term we use in Texas for people who are terrified by our massive roaches here.  These folks were cast to shock the audience, but when they left for Los Angeles, they each fully believed they had a chance to win MasterChef and were being taken seriously by the casting folks.  So my heart goes out to them after these episodes aired.  It’s also entirely possible that the roach guy wanted to cook something else, but the producers found out that he has cooked with insects in the past, and they asked him to deep fry the roaches, rather than making something he’s truly passionate about.  (Yes, that happens, too…not everyone gets to cook exactly what they WANT to cook.)  So before you truly laugh these people off your television screen, remember that their life turned upside down during the long and arduous casting process, and the supremely stressful week of filming the signature dish round.  And they went home dejected, cheated, feeling like they were taken advantage of.  It’s part of the ugly side of reality TV, and it’s one reason I’m so allergic to it.  I was fortunate to have been treated wonderfully, both in the casting process, the judging, and the editing room, and for that, I will forever be grateful.  Not everyone is so lucky.

Highlights of the 14 folks who are featured in these 2 episodes:

Natasha Crnjac, the gorgeous 26 year old, stay-at-home mom from San Diego who is convinced that people are judging her worth as a cook by her model-looks.  (Sweetheart…did you watch the last 3 seasons?  Attractive women won EVERY season.  So your good looks are a head start, not a stumbling block!)  Her empanadas with steak chimichurri look divine.  (Chimichurri is an Argentinian sauce made from finely minced parsley and herbs, plus olive oil and vinegar.  There are as many versions as there are cooks who make it.  Natasha’s looks great.)  Something that struck me about her presentation was that she offered the judges an alcoholic beverage (beer) and they actually drank it.  That hasn’t happened in previous seasons, to my knowledge.  On my season, the great Alvin Schultz actually made a VERY unique cocktail to pair with his dish, but the judges refused it.  Natasha’s beer came from a 750ml bottle and it looked like a farmhouse ale or saison…I’d be interested to know what it was.  She gets 3 thumbs up.  Natasha has a really cool blog, Frisky Mama: From Diapers to Demiglace, I want to be heard…

Christine Kim, an adorable 19yo gal charms us with her irresistable personality and sweetness, and I was drooling over her kalbi duck lettuce wraps, but Gordon and Graham turn her down.  A shame, but perhaps her ethnicity and name were against her from the beginning.  Kalbi is the Korean word for “rib” and usually refers to a preparation of beef short ribs that are marinated extensively before being briefly cooked.  Christine has taken the flavors from the typical kalbi marinade and applied them to duck, which to me sounds like yummy in my tummy.  The youngest contestant this season at 19, I’m sad she didn’t get a chance to fight with the bigger fish.

Brian Kohler, a fellow Texan, shocks the judges by cooking beaver, which he apparently traps here?!?  I don’t typically think of beaver in the Dallas area, but he seems quite comfortable cooking it.  Reminds me of Bourdain‘s new show, Parts Unknown, and the episode in Quebec where one of the world’s greatest chefs, Martin Picard, cooks up beaver to Tony’s delight.  Brian’s got himself a pair of VERY intense eyes, and there’s no denying his passion.  Though I’m intrigued when he says he cooks “roadkill” for his family every day.  If, by roadkill, he means game meat, I’d LOVE to be a guest at his table!  Bravo for cooking beaver, including the tail, for the judges, and he squeaks by with a single no from Joe.  (Infinite diversity of potential jokes possible regarding Joe and beaver at this point, but I shall leave that to the imaginations of my dear readers!)

Jordan Roots, a 29yo delivery driver from Minneapolis, stuns us all with his immaculately-plated ancho chile tostada and his poignant story about losing his mother to brain cancer, and how he now wears the apron he had given his mother as a kid.  In a triumphant display of editing, we see a fully dimensional character in Jordan…some confidence and perhaps a hint of cockiness (“I’m not seeing much technique out there” he says), but tempered by a very private moment where he collapses in the hall to weep after getting his apron before facing the crowd.  Kudos to the editing team, I wish we could see this many dimensions from EVERY character on the show, for nobody is as one-dimensional as they are often portrayed to be.

Another heart warmer is Adriana Guillen, a strikingly beautiful 26yo college admissions rep, originally from Mexico.  As she cooks, her family is “late” to arrive (though miraculously they have a camera crew in the car with them), but they surprise her just before she wheels her cart in for judging.  She had already spoken of how her mother taught her to cook, and the moment when she bends down to embrace and kiss her mother really got the waterworks going for me.  Adriana makes a nopales soup with dried shrimp croutons.  Nopales are the green pads of the prickly pear cactus, and are a staple in authentic Mexican cooking.  It can be VERY challenging to cook with them because they are very mucilaginous, like okra, which can be used with stunning results in the hands of a capable cook (ie…a perfect gumbo), but can also spell a sticky, stringy disaster if you don’t know what you’re doing.  The color of her soup is a deep red, derived solely from a combination of chiles.  No tomatoes in the soup at all.  I would have dived RIGHT into that bowl.  And now we get some feedback from the judges that I truly believe is staged…Gordon strikes her down, not because of what is on her plate (what about the statement that that’s the ONLY thing you cared about?!?), but because he thinks she’s too sweet for the “fierce” competition.  Hell’s Kitchen is fierce.  MasterChef is not.  While the editing may highlight contention between contestants, the MasterChef cast is a family, there’s no denying that.  You can’t live the stress of the show without growing intimately close with your fellow contestants.  This is simply a way to stress us out, thinking how unfair it would be if her food was good enough for the competition, but the judges don’t think she can handle the heat.  Joe saves her, in the end.

Then we meet George Mastrosavas,  the 33yo pizza joint owner from Ohio.  His Greek wedding soup is offensive to Joe because he used butter rather than the Greek staple olive oil, and the judges don’t give him the apron, but Gordon basically forces him to finally propose to his girlfriend on camera, because he’s apparently been carrying around the engagement ring in his pocket for 6 months.  Initially I thought this was completely staged, but the look on his girlfriend Maria’s face when he tearfully pops the question couldn’t be faked even by Meryl Streep.  She is absolutely STUNNED.  Great television.

Krissi Biasiello is next, a 34 year old single mom and paralegal from Philly, struggling to make ends meet and sleeping on the couch in her 1 bedroom apartment.  She is very real, to me.  I wanna cook with her.  She talks about her son, who worships Gordon and dreams of becoming a chef.  She serves up a fontina-stuffed meatloaf florentine with “dreamy potatoes.”  I’m not crazy about meatloaf the way most Americans are, but hers looks delish.  Gordon brings in her son, who is just downright adorable (I hope he auditioned for MasterChef Junior) and he gets to meet his hero.  What a moment!  Krissi gets the apron.  Check our her wonderful blog The Rotund Chef.

Bime (Bee-mee) Cruz, a 35yo boxing coach from Mass, originally from Puerto Rico, immediately tells us about his 3 daughters, who are his inspiration for cooking.  Bime is a character, and his shrimp on a smashed plantain cake looks amazing.  Joe hates Bime, probably because Bime shows no fear of him.  (Joe, at least the character Joe, does NOT like people who aren’t afraid of him.)  Bime stares him down and says, “I’m your future rival, man.”  And that cemented their relationship.  Joe, in this bizarre and highly visible combination of fear, sheepishness, aggression, and defensiveness, insists that Bime is a “faker” and says that Bime cries “every 5 minutes.”  (I cried every 5 minutes, too…which did annoy Joe and he thought I was doing it for the camera, but when I dined at his unparalleled LA restaurant, Osteria Mozza, and tried the grilled octopus…which made me weep…I think he just might have found it endearing.  At least for a few seconds.)  Bime gets his apron, but I don’t see him and Joe holding hands any time soon.

Then there’s Jessie Lysiak, the pampered “southern Belle” from Social Circle, Georgia who is surreally beautiful and has a dreamy lifestyle as a yacht stewardess.  She serves up an impressive sea bass en croute, which is a fillet of fish baked inside a pastry shell…a challenging preparation for fish because the fish must be perfectly done and not overcooked, or undercooked, and the pastry must be crisp and perfect.  Gordon says something very puzzling to her about it.  He says her dish is stuck in the 1980s and he wished she’d brought something more contemporary.  “GORDON RAMSAY HAS LOST HIS MIND.” -Ben Starr, MC season 2.  Gordon has built his reputation on Beef Wellington, a beef tenderloin baked in pastry.  I really feel like that line came from him, rather than the control room, so I’m puzzled as to how his Beef Wellington is more contemporary than her Sea Bass en Croute.  Then Gordon does something unexpected…he leaves the room to return with 2 large fish, one of which he fillets and portions in front of her, and then asks her to perform the same…just to be sure she’s being honest about her proclivity for fishing.  She does it with a “Take that, Gordo” look in her eyes, and takes her apron triumphantly.  (I will never forget the moment, on MasterChef 2, when Gordon filleted a massive 3 foot long salmon in front of the cast.  It took him all of 30 seconds to flawlessly extract 2 perfect fillets from the salmon, leaving no waste.  That was a turning point in the show for me…the moment that I went from reacting to Gordon as if he was an actor, to reacting as if he was a chef.  Gordon IS an actor NOW, and can’t be in the kitchen very often any longer.  The fact that he could pull off that perfect filleting without doing it every day all day, just blew my mind.  He is truly a culinary savant.)

Along comes fellow Texan James Nelson, a 26yo who works in retail sales, and tells the story of losing both his parents recently, which he admits, in a moment of refreshing vulnerability, that this was a blow to his self esteem in the kitchen, since his parents were always championing his abilities.  He serves up a crispy pork belly with lentil hash, and reveals that his “food dream” (a new term we’re hearing left and right this season) is to open a gastropub.  For some bizarre reason, Joe and Gordon are insistent that the guy is too timid and has no fight in him and are hesitant to give him the apron.  They may be saying this for drama, or perhaps there was more in their un-aired conversations that convinced them of this, but the audience certainly isn’t viewing James that way.  They decide to give him the apron, much to Joe’s chagrin.  James sells his own line of spices, so check out the Bravado Spice Company!

Next we’ve got our big character for the season…our Felix Fang…our sex kitten.  The unforgettable Sasha Foxx, baby.  This 42yo gospel singer from Tuscaloosa is a goldmine of one-liners.  “I cook good, I look good, I smell good.  Everything I do, I do good, honey, you best believe that.”  She serves up fried cornish game hen with French crepes and orange maple glaze…and there’s bourbon in there somewhere.  “Put a little Sasha in your mouth, baby.”  Joe says: “That’s a lotta chicken.  And you’re a lotta woman,” and she replies, without a pause, “Mmmm hmmm…you told the truth about that.”  Gordon asks her, “What’s the secret behind your food?” and her reply, “I could turn around and you could really see what’s the secret behind me!”  Sasha gets her apron, and we get our first unforgettable character on MasterChef this season.  Though we all know someone like Sasha, and that passion runs in both directions…I could see her being a VERY polarizing, fierce contestant.

Next up is Rudy Reyes, and there’s just no easy way to watch this segment.  Rudy is a 35yo hero from San Diego who was severely burned in the bad fires there in the early 2000s.  Going door-to-door in his neighborhood to help people escape, he ended up in the hospital with burns over 75% of his body.  The kept him in an induced coma for 2 MONTHS, and he spent over a year in the hospital recovering.  And rather than lapse into lifelong depression over this, Rudy’s belief is “I’m blessed.  I’m here for a reason.”  After recovering, Rudy had to re-learn to do everything in his life.  Rudy is serving up one of my personal FAVORITE dishes.  When you travel throughout the American southwest, you’ll see painted signs in front of people’s homes advertising “Navajo tacos” or “Hopi tacos” or “Indian tacos.”  They consist of a massive round of fry bread (like a giant, savory sopapilla), stuffed with meat and cheese and veggies.  Rudy has a perfectly-golden fry bread that he’s topping with buffalo meat and lime salsa.  It’s not the most refined thing that has been presented to the judges, but I can be honest and say that I’d tuck into that before ANYTHING else I’ve seen thus far.  I LOVE Indian tacos.  More than life itself.  Joe and Gordon strike him down because the dish isn’t sophisticated enough and the buffalo meat was too dry…but Graham, who shares my appetite, is his only advocate.  I’m not sure what to think about Rudy’s experience at MasterChef.  Perhaps if they had given him an apron, the audience would have cried wolf on sensationalism, especially since the winner of last season, the incredible Christine Ha (whose cookbook just came out…get it!) was visually handicapped.  Or, perhaps, his food just wasn’t up to caliber, and they wanted to prove that the contest is ONLY about the food.  We won’t ever know, but we can thank Rudy for his incredible outlook on life, for sharing himself with us on the show, and take those inspirational feelings he struck in our hearts and do good things for more people more often.

Next there’s a run of rejections, including 2 of my buddies, Matt Orsini from Dallas and Marie Porter from Minneapolis.  The fact that these two flash before your eyes for only 1 second each (you probably don’t even remember them) is an example of the VAST impact that the show has on the lives of ALL its contestants.  Matt and Marie’s lives were turned completely upside down for MONTHS.  Their relationships were pushed to the breaking point.  They left income and family for an uncertain future.  And these life-changing struggles are documented on the show with a flippant 1 second rejection.  And believe it or not, almost HALF of the 100 contestants will not even get that 1 second.  They won’t be aired at all.  This is another reason to read my blog entry about how to watch a MasterChef premier, because there are lots of folks out there who feel used and thrown away by MasterChef…who feel that the process was entirely exploitative of them…and my no-so-silent hope for ALL of those contestants is to look at what MasterChef did for you.  It made you look at your life and wonder if you were on the right path.  It gave you the hope that you could leave a bigger mark on the world.  You DON’T need MasterChef to help you do that.  If you have that dream, you follow it.  Your loved ones may not understand at first.  Beg them to stick with you.  But if you feel like you can change the world, or make it a better place, because of your love for food, to sink back into the routine of your old life is giving up and throwing in the towel.  Be extraordinary!

Next to last is Eddie Jackson, a 42yo former NFL player from Georgia, who, after tossing the pigskin around with Joe and Graham (with Gordon, a former pro soccer player himself, poking fun at “American football”), serves up jerked meatloaf with ginger and coconut sweet potato mash.  “Jerking” is a Jamaican technique that refers to a highly-spiced meat that is smoked or grilled.  I’ve had it all over the Caribbean, and it makes me drool each time I smell it.  He gets the apron from Joe and Gordon, with Graham surprisingly abstaining.

And last, but certainly not least, is a familiar face from last year, Luca Manfe…the strapping 31yo restaurant manager from NYC with the accent that makes all the ladies (and some of the men!) go weak in the knees.  We were dead certain that Luca would get an apron last year, with his sexy Italian cooking, but he didn’t.  And you’ll remember that EVERY year the judges invite back contestants…some are even “guaranteed” an apron next season.  And do they ever return?  No.  Do I know why?  Not for sure.  I do know that a contestant from my season who didn’t get an apron returned for auditions for season 3 and was basically completely ignored by the casting folks, as if he wasn’t even there.  Typically, a contestant is not welcomed back after all the gossip amongst their fellow contestants who made it far enough to know many of the show’s secrets.  So it never surprised me that the contestants who were “guaranteed” an apron next season never showed up.  But Luca has…which is intriguing to say the least.  Especially after Bastianich says, “Had you won last year, we’d probably be partners already in a restaurant in NY.”  I had to pause the DVR after that remark.  Joe has never talked like this with a contestant…especially not during the signature dish round.  He has extended particularly talented top finalists an invitation to intern in his restaurants.  But NEVER mentioned partnering with a contestant in a restaurant endeavor.  Joe partners with chefs like Mario Batali.  This was very, very bizarre.  Luca serves up a broccoli raab ravioli which looks divine, nestled in a Pecorino cream sauce, which the judges all criticize for being too grainy.  Pecorino is an aged sheep’s milk cheese that is known for not melting, even when grated on top of a hot dish.  The finest Pecorinos are aged well, which makes them even harder to melt.  (Younger Pecorinos melt satisfactorily, but don’t have much flavor.)  So Luca definitely chose flavor over texture, and while the judges point out that the texture is sub-par he DOES get the apron, and is well on his way to HIS food dream…a restaurant in NYC with his name in big letters over the door.  “L-U-C-A”  I can see that…

We’ve got 1 more round of auditions before the top finalists are revealed, and my DVR hates me and didn’t record it.  So I’m headed to Houston tonight to meet up with Alvin, Christine, and Michael Chen, and hopefully I’ll be able to rustle up last week’s episodes so I can be caught up before Wednesday.  If you enjoy my blog, please subscribe near the top right corner of the screen to make sure you don’t miss ANY of the insanity of this season!  I’ll also be featuring “Where Are They Now?” posts about your favorite contestants, all the way back to Season 1.  Don’t miss it!  And please, by all means…share your opinions below!

49 responses to “MasterChef 4 Recap: Auditions #1 and #2”

  1. Andrea Avatar
    Andrea

    As I said on FB, nothing like reality to shatter the unreality of the show. Some people weren’t given a chance when they most deserved it, and some others do. However, we’ll have to see what happens regarding the “chosen few” this year, and whether they have “what it takes.”

    Also, enjoy Houston!

  2. Gregory Wright Avatar
    Gregory Wright

    Every year it seems to be less about the food, but I always do my best to yank it back that direction for myself. I already made Both Luca and Adriana signature dishes. I have to tell you that Adriana has definitely solved the problem of the gooey slimey cactus with her clever method I never heard of. It really is a shame that so many talented cooks are not getting the airtime, and the folks brought in for humor are. And I feel sorry for them, because many don’t know they are the joke. That’s why I salute every single one who took time out of their lives to cook their hearts out, so I can be entertained by the show. I always enjoy your view of things and find it more interesting every year…the view, not the show…

  3. MaryAnn Avatar
    MaryAnn

    What I really noticed already is that it seems like Adriana and Chrissy have been made into the “villians” already and I did not care for their very vocal trash talking of each other. I don’t watch a cooking show to see the contestants talk about how much they hate each other! Previous seasons it was milder, you knew 1 chef didn’t like another and there were some comments but not like we’ve seen this year.

    Also I noticed that Joe Bastianich has really kicked up his own rude factor. He’s always seemed the toughest to me, kind of the Simon Cowell of Master Chef, bt I felt he was overly harsh with many people and his insistence during the tryouts of wanting to know if somoene was “real” or did you just make this dish to impress the judges was very irritating. It’s like he was stuck on one note. He never bothered me before because I felt he was honest and truly wanted to help the contestants, but I didn’t get that vibe this year. Maybe I’m wrong and things will change, but I have my doubts.

    If they keep on with the hating and the rudeness I may just change the channel.

    1. Gregory Wright Avatar
      Gregory Wright

      I think you might mean Natasha, she and Krissy seem to be going at each other, not Adriana.

      1. MaryAnn Avatar
        MaryAnn

        You are exactly right Gregory, thanks for correcting me! I can’t believe I got their names wrong.

    2. Ben Avatar

      And you can ALWAYS just change the channel, MaryAnn, that’s what’s great about being a TV watcher. Unfortunately, the contestants can’t change the channel on the experience!

  4. wardsgal Avatar

    Oh, Ben, you know how I love you! But, really, Natasha is “the gorgeous 26 year old”? Not on the inside, unless this is MC at work making her the villain, & not on the outside, either. Many of the other contestants are SO MUCH more attractive than she is (inside & out). In my experience, if you have to tell everyone how gorgeous you are, you really aren’t. She’s been a real disappointment for me this season. (But the skirt she wore for her audition was cute!) Maybe I’ll be swayed to changed my mind, but I doubt it. I hope you meet her & can speak from experience. All your other friends from the show(s) that you speak highly of I felt a connection with, even through the tv screen. Not this one, though.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Well, I haven’t seen ANYTHING of Natasha except her audition, so you’re a couple of episodes ahead of me. We typically like most of the top 18 (er…19) in their audition, and they don’t start editing them as good or bad until they begin to interact as finalists.

    2. Gregory Wright Avatar
      Gregory Wright

      Try to give her the benefit of the doubt. Editing can really make anyone look bad, and producers love to ask leading questions. It’s TV. They need to create characters, as Ben has said many times.

  5. wardsgal Avatar

    PS I’m sorry — I should’ve also said thank you so much for doing this for us! I know we all love reading your stuff & looking at things from your perspective! XOXOXOXOXOXO

  6. Kim Avatar
    Kim

    Great blog Ben! You can usually find episodes of the show on youtube 🙂

  7. jenevieves Avatar

    I completely fell in love with Luca!! haha probably along with every other woman in america… 😛

    I love, love, love your recaps. Please keep doing them!! I so enjoy watching the episode knowing you are going to rehash and spell out all the little intricacies that I may have missed.

    I feel like with Joe they are playing him to be meaner than he actually his… he seems like a huggable teddy bear in person, haha. When Sasha was talking with him his face was priceless.

    1. MaryAnn Avatar
      MaryAnn

      I love Luca too and wanted him to make it on the show so badly. When Ramsay kind of strung him along I felt terrible for him because I thought he was sending him home. And Ben, I second jenevieves comments about how great it is that you’re doing the recaps, thank you very much!

  8. Kris Wilson Potter Avatar
    Kris Wilson Potter

    Your insight has helped me adjust my expectations on the show but I still see it as a culinary journey. There are talented people on the show now as in the past and as the weeks unfold we’ll see who can and who cannot make the cut. Those oddly unfortunate castings who forget to blink for the cameras do play a part in the drama and I get that. I’m in the media too, Ben, and you have to keep people interested. Let’s be “FRANK”, food is only part of what they do on this show. As for me I’ve made the choice to follow the show Julie and Julia style. Last week they made their best lamb dish. I’ve never made lamb so today I invested in two racks to force myself to learn something. (Expensive lesson!) Every week I plan to cook something from the show as a way to challenge myself and I’m using the CIA book “The Professional Chef” as my textbook which was a Christmas gift so stuffed full of knowledge I hardly know where to start.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Great comment, Kris! Yeah…2 racks of lamb can be PRICEY! (I get my lamb at the Middle Eastern halal market, where it’s MUCH cheaper than at the gourmet place.) I’m so glad you’re using the show as a learning opportunity. And, man, that CIA book is DENSE! I have it, too…

  9. Christina Brummett Avatar

    After watching the first four episodes, I have one question that has been nagging me. Why do all the contestants with long hair keep it down? I mean, it’s all over the place! After working in restaurants and such in the past, it just leaves me twitchy to see the one contestant with the goatee, and like 5 people in the kitchen with long hair flowing all over the place…an apron is great, but it doesn’t keep you from shedding!

    1. jenevieves Avatar

      I totally wonder the same thing! I’ve worked in a kitchen for years and we get absolutely crucified if a hair is found in food…or even if our hair happens to be down one day. I mean, I know reality tv is all about being stylish, but gosh..

      1. MaryAnn Avatar
        MaryAnn

        Absolutely agree! Hubby & I both commented on that. The other thing I wonder is how so many chefs smoke like chimneys when they need such good palates. Thought smoking dulled your taste buds?

        1. Ben Avatar

          MaryAnn, Gordon asked each of the finalists in my season many times if they smoked. I think SOME chefs look down on other chefs who smoke, but it’s fairly common. According to Alvin Schultz (who is sitting next to me right now), LINE COOKS are actually the heavy smokers. And it does dull your taste buds.

          1. MaryAnn Avatar
            MaryAnn

            Thanks for that information Ben. I thought maybe since I didn’t smoke I noticed it more than most.

    2. Ben Avatar

      Christina, none of the long-haired contestants on my season were ever offered hair nets, EXCEPT that when we were cooking for the public (not the judges) in group challenges we were required to wear hats. Many of the top 18 in my season pulled their hair back when cooking. The top 18 go through the same food safety course that is required for all professional food handlers in the US, but the top 100 do not, so many of them may not know. Also…on TV, looks are important.

  10. steve Avatar
    steve

    her family is “late” to arrive (though miraculously they have a camera crew in the car with them),

    Haha, exactly!

    I thought while watching the episode, “Why don’t they just ask the camera crew for directions, they must know Los Angeles?”

    1. Ben Avatar
  11. Kara Will Avatar
    Kara Will

    I know what you mean. My hair comes to my shoulders, but I have to wrap it in a tight bun while cooking to keep it out of the food.

  12. Reina Martinez Avatar
    Reina Martinez

    Hi Ben, i left you a message earlier today but i don’t see it posted! i Hope i did’nt saw anything i should’nt have about being on this years show?

  13. Jamie C. Baker Avatar

    I didn’t begin watching Masterchef until the second season. I went in S2 sure that you would win, Ben, and went into S3 sure of Christine’s success, but always keeping an eye on the beautiful Becky. Right now, I am clueless on S4! I’m pulling for Luca, but I don’t know if he makes a good enough character for the producers to want him to go the distance. I would love for Masterchef to be stripped of the desire for drama and to focus on the food.

    I’ve worked in many restaurants and I feel confident in saying that kitchens have enough drama on their own!! Masterchef doesn’t need to try and make things MORE dramatic, they don’t need to create characters out of people who are already charismatic, and they don’t need to play to the audience. Burn the script, let the judges speak freely, and don’t get too creative with the editing, and I guarantee the show would be more interesting, honest, and more successful.

    I’m glad you decided to blog about this season (I adore reading your point of view on the competition) and I hope that we see more raw footage as opposed to the constructed drama. 🙂

  14. Reina Martinez Avatar
    Reina Martinez

    I was a top 100 contestant on Master Chef 4 this year & an experience it was indeed! I was eliminated while trying to make top 40! I met some incredible friends & don’t regret anything! (Except not getting an apron LOL) I was rooting for u season 2 by the way! PS i’m half Brazilian too! 🙂

    1. Ben Avatar

      Reina! I’ve seen you on the show! It’s an honor to have you comment on my blog. I’d love to meet you sometime!!!

  15. Tommy W Avatar
    Tommy W

    Benn:

    Your writing skills impress me as much as your sensibility and culinary skills. I really enjoyed reading this little recap. Like you, I wish reality television was a bit more authentic. Not an episode goes by that I don’t find myself pulling out my hair wondering how decisions are made behind the scenes. The stories I could share from my brief stint in MC3 would open a few eyes… but then again what’s to gain by pulling back the big curtain? Nothing. I had certain expectations going into season 3 and many things seemed legit – at least until I started noticing how very very wrong some decisions were and then the great denouement – it’s entertainment couched in a flamboyant, and sometimes contrived competition. I think for me, my priceless moment was having to give the flavor elevator a crash course on properly cooking certain shellfish while Sandee B. winked at me, and then wondering – why the hell did I just do that? LOL

    1. Ben Avatar

      Tommy, I’m sitting here with Christine and Michael from MC3, and they send their love. Wonderful comment, brought back many fond memories of both the Flavor Elevator AND the amazing Sandee. All the best!!

  16. johnsosp2013 Avatar
    johnsosp2013

    I will say, I always love your perspective when it comes to Masterchef. I do respect that your are distancing yourself from that time on Masterchef, but I really value your opinion when it comes to the various food options and challenges for each season. I think Masterchef is the most enjoyable Ramsay US show and you added to that fun!

    For my money, I think a guy is going to win the competition this year. I was really impressed by Johnny, Bime, and last chef up for an apron you’ll see in Episode 3. I have a good feeling about this season when it comes to the competition and (mostly) the fair play that’ll go on between the characters.

    I do agree that Joe has probably kicked up his rude factor a bit with those comments towards Bime. I actually did catch Marie during that quick cycle of edits. (Caught the blue hair!) I wish she had gotten through. I remember the first time I had a British Pudding/Treacle like that. It’s incredible, but again, a snide comment by Joe hurts. Also, Gordon proves that he loves to play that fake-out game with Luca. All those years of Hell’s Kitchen have taught him how to control people’s expectations like an actor.

    Can’t wait for more episodes this season and your tremendous commentary!

  17. Rebecca K. O'Connor Avatar

    But did you know that MasterChef also manages to f–k up the lives of people who never had any intention of being on MasterChef?

    I’m still trying to figure out how I got talked into two months of sheer hell, jumping through hoops with no compensation and being tortured… the worst of which was watching people who weren’t “cast” like me having their dreams crushed. (No I didn’t have go through the rigamarole to be a top 100 contestant, but I thought the point was just to add something fun to the auditions –not to be a part of a massive lie.)

    I wasn’t dreaming a cooking dream, but I’m a falconer and I got talked into coming on the show to fly a falcon for the judges and to cook a dish with the hopes I could talk about America’s disturbing lack of connection/love for their food sources. This is something that means a whole hell of a lot to me and that I have spent my adult life going on about. —only to end up entirely on the cutting room floor for my efforts. — Not that the network tells you this. You find out you’re not in the show AFTER you watch the show and they have urged you to promote it. And I know I sound like a poor sport… but I’m trying to say more, really.

    I would never put a wild bird through all that stress –and believe me, a sound stage is the worst possible place for an actual hunting falcon. (as opposed to a Hollywood Animal Wrangler’s trained bird.) I exploited my most prized and hard-won relationship. I am disappointed in myself. I grew up around Hollywood. I know better. And I got nicked by razor in an arena where people were gutted and I’m ashamed that I was even a part of it.

    There are better ways to get to your dreams, gorgeous people. The way you get there will involve low blows and brutal unfairness, but when you get there through hard work, perseverance and integrity, you’ll be able to sleep at night. You’ll be proud of yourself. Anyone who wins MasterChef is having trouble sleeping at night… They are wondering if it was worth it. I don’t see a way around that.

    Want a miracle. Buy a lottery ticket. More people win the lottery than spend a season on MasterChef. Want to make the world a better place? Stop allowing Hollywood to make millions of advertising dollars on television shows where producers Svengali people’s dreams in order to avoid paying writers or actors at the expense of genuine good people who get twisted and crushed for the sake of “entertainment”. I’m embarrassed that I didn’t fully understand this when I went it. Apparently, being “smart enough” not to apply to be on a reality show doesn’t make me any smarter in the end or any less culpable.

  18. Tommy W Avatar
    Tommy W

    I think what people need to grasp about shows like Masterchef, the Taste, etc., is that they are first and foremost designed to entertain – it’s not a true competition in the spirit of the word. If you think it is, you shouldn’t be there.

    Not unlike casting a film, the producers have to balance the ability of a contestant to entertain an audience- to engage them- in addition to be able to at least passably cook. Think about how many “perfectly poached eggs” have impressed Gordon…. Last time I checked, most line cooks at Denny’s can pull that off in their sleep. My mom, who can ruin toast, can poach an egg to Gordon’s satisfaction. A runny yolk makes for good TV, but impresses me as much as deep frying a twinkie.

    In our season, I knew Christine would do well. I tasted her food and it was delicious – AND more importantly- she made for great television. It was perfect combination of personality, good looks, human interest, and cooking ability. In all honesty, Frank was my pick for the win from day one, but there are too many factors that can make or break the best of them. I also knew Monti would do well. She’s a lovely girl with a good back story and a great on-camera personality. (She never did thank me for cooking her nuts for her after she burned the first batch for her romesco – and then I get eliminated despite every bit of goodness sopped from my plate when I returned to my station!!! LOL. C’est la vie.)

    To complain about the rigors of the process seems a bit out of place. I knew going into it that it would be nightmarish – lack of sleep, illness, homesick, etc. I anticipated most of it and was smart enough to get budyy buddy with the bartender at the Doubletree from day one. (I actually bought some of the bottles of burbon and had him stash them for me). And yet as bad as it was at times, I still find myself auditioning for new shows (still waiting on a final word from NBC – cross your fingers). I also seriously considered raising bloody hell if I was cut knowing full and well that my dish crushed those of some other folks; I honestly believed that if I made a big and entertaining enough stink on camera that the producers would reconsider, but as we waited for hours in the back and tried to whisper among ourselves so the wranglers wouldn’t see I came to a realization – I was so sick at that point that I was on the verge of going to the hospital – AND, I knew that it was not my competition to win. Without tooting my horn too much I know I’m fun to be around, have a kind heart and I can cook circles around some professional chefs, but so are many other people. There were some fine cooks that made it through as well as some shaky ones. But as I sat there rationalizing the possible outcomes, I knew there was NO WAY an attorney in his 40’s from FL would win Masterchef – it’s simply was not in the cards – but the journey was still priceless. I really appreciate that the producers gave me the opportunity to give it a go. (Thanks Yaz!)

    In hindsight, I think most contestants look at the experience as unique and one they would definitely repeat. I was able to engage in a hobby that I am passionate about and have three great chefs tell me my food was off the charts. (But I already knew that 🙂 ) I even managed to shut down Gordon Ramsay when he suggested I was arrogant to use the term “tomato caviar” – so I told him to blame Jose Andres who coined the term and he clammed right up as Grahmn swallowed a scallop and gave me a chuckle and a wink! Shows like this are an opportunity for those who have the fortitude to put up with the nonsense to test their creativity, meet some wonderful people, enrich their lives in general, and if they are a bit lucky, perhaps launch a career. I have never bought a lottery ticket convinced I would win – but one can always hope. 🙂

  19. Sylvie Avatar
    Sylvie

    Martin Picard is frightingly brilliant! i would love to see him as a guest on master chef (he would probably scare the hell out of the contestants so he is quirky), or the guys from Joe Beef, (Fred and Dave) i know that Gordon at least knows Martin`s restaurant as he visited it when he came to montreal.

    looking at the show, i was always wondering if the tense atmosphere was made up or if it were real. also, Ben, how do they do the interviews they insert in the show. is it done afterwards asking you how you felt at the time or do they pull you out in the middle of a task?
    HUGS Ben!

    1. Tommy W Avatar
      Tommy W

      Interviews are done after the daily filming is done for the most part. You get to pretend you don’t know what happened until they ask the appropriate question…and then of course there is creative editing. 🙂

    2. Ben Avatar

      Tommy answered it, Sylvie! All interviews are done after the challenge is over…sometimes DAYS after the challenge is over, depending on the shooting schedule. And I would LOVE to see Martin Picard on MasterChef. I just got his cookbook in the mail yesterday. What a genius!

  20. Matt Orsini Avatar
    Matt Orsini

    Ben,
    Thank you so much my friend for not only the shout out but also the depth and realness you bring to the show! You make people see what only us contestants have. They can understand how much more is involved than what they would see just from watching it. I am blessed to have you as a friend and thank you for your powerful words on the show!
    Matt

    1. Ben Avatar

      Cheers, Matt! Glad to have you in the MasterChef family now!

  21. Rene Avatar
    Rene

    Fool me once…As a viewer who only watched the show because a friend was going to be on, I was more than a little ticked off that she was never told she had ended up on the cutting room floor. I have been a game show contestant, and it was a great experience. Explaining away the producers’ ill treatment of contestants by saying that the audience doesn’t understand how TV works is a load of manure. Master Chef will never know or care how much trouble my friend went to rounding up viewers for that episode, but know this: I will never watch the show again, and I’ll tell every fan I know the reason why.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Rene, this is one of the reasons I’ve been advocating that MasterChef change the format from 100 initial contestants to 30. People’s entire lives get turned upside down to be on the show, and half of them don’t make the final edit, which is really devastating. I’m so sorry for your friend…

  22. Silvia Avatar
    Silvia

    About Luca and Bastianich… I can only say they come from the same region (Bastianich’s winery, which I have visited, is about 30 miles from where Luca comes from) and that Bastianich seems to really like the guy… I don’t know, maybe they met in NY or even in Friuli and got to know each other before the show…

  23. Steven Avatar
    Steven

    I’ve been watching The Voice a lot and I love the idea of judging acts blindly based purely on their merit. I personally think Masterchef really needs to adopt something where the judges arent allowed to look at the people auditioning, taste their food blindly, and say yes or no based on that. And I think that needs to happen for ALL the rounds- the judges are forced to judge the food blindly and not based on creating drama or w/e. I know that doesnt give much opportunity to create sob stories or laugh at the cooks but I think itll make it more fair. Thoughts? 🙂

    1. Ben Avatar

      “Blind” judging in reality TV is not really blind. All the judges have an earpiece through which they get information from the producers in the control room.while most nlind decisions are probably made truly blind, if something needs to be adjusted for the storyline, it can be

    2. Thomas Wright Avatar

      Steven, if I understand you correctly, you would like it to be a fair and honest contest? LOL. That’s not going to happen any time soon. The Taste appears to be more fair than some, but I still have my doubts as to how much input and communication the judges have with the producers. Entertainment value sells advertising space and advertising pays for the show. Therefore the shows producers need to guarantee as much entertainment value as possible which simply can’t happen in a completely fair contest.

      1. Ben Avatar

        Easily the most succinct summary of reality TV I’ve ever read. We can’t fault it for what it is. Gotta head to the county fair to find out if your cooking skills are stellar. Reality TV is not a real competition.

  24. Tom Avatar
    Tom

    Wasn’t there a show with Nigella on American TV? The contestants had to create one tablespoon (the goofy ones..used for banquettes) of food and that was supposed to be tasted blind? The interesting part was that there were prof. chefs and amateurs to compete against each other. But again, we don’t really know to what level that show was constructed,

    1. Andrea Avatar

      That’s precisely The Taste. The other judges were Tony Bourdain, Ludo Lefevbre (sp?) and Brian Malarkey.

  25. Roula Avatar
    Roula

    Could I ask you something?
    I have two questions. I auditioned last year and did very well. I got to the next auditions but was not asked to go on the camera audition. This year I tried again but did not make it to the next audition. I was hoping to get somewhere this year (tried for season 6 & 7).
    My questions:
    1. Do you know if they like people auditioning for a second time?
    2. How many auditions until you actually make it on the show?
    Thanks

    1. Ben Avatar

      Roula, just because they didn’t cast you after previous auditions doesn’t mean they won’t in the future. They HAVE cast people after multiple years of auditions. I can’t tell you how many rounds/levels of auditions you will have in any given year before you are officially cast…that changes all the time.

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