Ben Starr

The Ultimate Food Geek

MasterChef 4 recap: Gordon’s Box and Boxes of Cupcakes (S4E6)

(PLEASE NOTE: This blog is not endorsed or approved by MasterChef or Fox, and they’d probably rather you didn’t read it.ย  The opinions contained within this blog post are my own pathetic, uneducated, and uninformed opinions and should not be treated as factual.ย  While I bore witness to the filming of the entire second season of MasterChef, I do not have any inside information about the filming of Season 4.ย  …well…not much, anyway…)

We’re back to the mystery box, and this time the contestants will be cooking alongside a famous chef.ย  There is much speculation over who it might be.ย  Bime is thinking Bobby Flay (who I had the privilege of cooking for in 2007 on the Rachael Ray Show) or Mario Batali or Anne Burrell.ย  Howard wonders if it’ll be Rachael Ray or Wolfgang Puck.ย  And…of course…it is Gordon Ramsay.ย  They pulled this prank on me in Season 2.ย  After winning the mystery box ground meat challenge with my Shepherd’s Pie, I went back into the MC pantry to learn my advantage.ย  Ramsay said, “Today you’ll be replicating a dish from the restaurant of one of the world’s greatest chefs.”ย  And I’m running through the list of greatest chefs alive…Grant Achatz, Alice Waters, Ferran Adria, Martin Picard, Carrie Nahabedian, Eric Ripert, Alain Ducasse, Jose Andres, Joel Robuchon, Guy Savoy, David Chang, Charlie Trotter, Thomas Keller, Susan Spicer…and Gordon steps forward and offers his hand to me.ย  “Hello, Ben…I’m Gordon Ramsay.”

I’ve been hearing from fans recently who have intuited from my blogs that I don’t respect Ramsay as a chef, so let me set the record straight:

I think Gordon Ramsay is one of the most brilliant chefs alive.

Did I believe this when I left to go on MasterChef?ย  No.ย  I had never even watched more than a full episode of a Gordon Ramsay show.ย  (Because I DO NOT watch TV.ย  And neither should you.)ย  I landed on the MasterChef set thinking of Gordon Ramsay as an actor.ย  True, he might have once been a chef.ย  But if you think about all the TV shows Gordon has in production all around the world, does he EVER get time to cook any more?ย  Of course not.ย  He’s a star.ย  An actor.ย  So even if he WAS a great chef at one time…now he’s a TV personality.ย  So promised myself to take everything he said as sensational TV fluff.

And while Gordon DOES occasionally spout complete untruths with vehement conviction…(in an eggs Benedict challenge in my season, he asked me if I was flavoring my Hollandaise and I said, “No, Chef, only lemon juice and a little cayenne,” and he said, “But true Hollandaise has shallot and vinegar in it,” and I said, “No, Chef, that’s Bearnaise,” and he proceeded to scream at me, purple-faced, “Hollandaise has a reduction of vinegar and shallot in it, BenStahh, how dare you challenge me, who are you to know about classical cuisine”…yada yada…)…that’s all borne from the fact that, as a TV chef and judge, he has to fill an endless vacuum of television time with critiques and comments.ย  So sometimes, he’s just wrong, for the sake of a tantrum that the audience will love, because he has to come up with SOMETHING to be angry or excited about.ย  It’s the nature of making television.

I learned, over the 2 months that MasterChef was filmed, that Gordon Ramsay is actually something of a savant when it comes to cooking.ย  Sometimes I tell folks that I think he may border on Asperger Syndrome, in which a large portion of the brain that is normally given over to processing the infinitely complex nuances of social interaction, instead focuses itself on a different area…famously mathematics or memory recall…but I think, in Gordon’s case, it’s the culinary arts.ย  Sometimes, in social situations outside the studio, Gordon seems to me to be rehearsing a practiced set of responses that he has learned is appropriate.ย  But put ingredients and a stove in front of him, and he becomes this artist the likes of which I’ve NEVER seen in person, and probably exists in only a handful of humans at any given time.ย  And the audience is about to catch a glimpse of that, and I’m a little peeved that it took MasterChef so long to feature this.ย  It is high time Ramsay cooks alongside the MasterChef contestants.

Inside the mystery box is a TRULY stunning black cod fillet.ย  Cod is historically one of the most common and popular of the fishes, due it its mild flavored, steaky, white fillets, but is now in imminent danger of overfishing.ย  Also in the box are black and white sesame seeds, shiitake mushrooms, baby beets, fresh ginger root, cauliflower, soy sauce, rice vinegar, panko bread crumbs, and miso paste…a popular Japanese ingredient made from fermented soy beans that’s so delicious I can eat it by the spoonful.ย  Also in the box, but not announced, appear to be shallots, sugar snap peas, mixed fresh berries, long grain rice, and something that appears to be white chocolate, but may be hearts of palm, bamboo shoots, water chestnuts, or some other similar round white disk.

I love the look on Ramsay’s face when he’s examining the box.ย  I secretly wonder if he knew the contents of the box before lifting it.ย  The jaded reality TV survivor in me says, “He’s had this menu planned out for a week, and has probably practiced it several times.”ย  The Gordon Ramsay lover in me says, “He refused to be told the contents of the box and he’s playing this game totally fair.”ย  Only Gordon and the producers know the answer.

I would do a miso-marinated cod fillet, crusted in panko and sesame seeds, on a crispy rice cake with oven-roasted cauliflower, beets pickled in rice vinegar, and beet green salad.

The constants have an hour, but Ramsay says he doesn’t need that much time… “Honestly, there’s no great rush,” so he strolls up to the balcony to take in an overview of the contestants, then he pours himself some tea, and only after more than half the time has expired does he waltz up to his station and start cooking.ย  While we never see “beauty shots” of the contestants cooking, we get plenty of mind-boggling shots of Gordon, who handles knives and pans as if they are an extension of his body.ย  I’m telling you folks, YOU cook more often than Gordon Ramsay does.ย  He spends more time on an airplane than anything else.ย  The fact that he still has this kind of finesse NOT being in a kitchen 10 hours a day is truly astounding.ย  I am filled with utter glee watching Ramsay cook.

And Graham FINALLY gets to poke fun at Gordon’s accent as he narrates his dish.ย  “Mint in the dressing…and bahhzill,” says Gordon.ย  Graham whispers to Joe, as if Gordon was a lowly MasterChef competitor, “Bahhzill is actually pronounced ‘BAY-sill’ here.ย  I think he’s gonna go for the ‘orr-ray-GAH-noe.’ ”ย  And Joe can’t resist chiming in, “Oh, but he has no ‘toe-MAHH-toes.’”ย  And I had to pause the DVR to laugh for about 10 solid minutes.ย  They could have gone on.ย  “Fill-it is pronounced ‘fill-EH’ here.”ย  And straight on until morning.ย  Good stuff.

Time is called, and the contestants are still scrambling to finish, having had an hour to prep, while Gordon has plated 2 full portions in less than 30 minutes.ย  His dish is sesame seed crusted black cod on a bed of “fragrant rice” which appears to have peanuts in it (didn’t see those in the box), with caramelized cauliflower, and a roasted peanut “misoooo” sauce.ย  The contestants get to taste…what a treat!

Only 3 folks are gonna get tasted, like usual, and there are some really beautiful plates.ย  But before they announce the top 3, they have a “worst plate of the day” to announce.ย  And this brings back memories.ย  Because in the first two mystery box challenges, the judges bestowed that “worst plate of the day” upon no other than…me.ย  First for my roasted salmon with balsamic strawberry reduction, and second for my rice pudding with peach stone white wine sauce and walnuts candied in salted caramel brulee.ย  Both of which were, according to them, the most revolting things ever cooked in the MasterChef kitchen.

Today’s dis-honor is bestowed upon Howard…who seems to be shaping up to be the BenStarr of this season.ย  In touch with his emotions, so eager to please the judges that he overextends himself beyond his abilities, and very, very attractive.ย  Ha ha ha ha ha…ย  No, Howard, if you’re reading this, it’s obvious to all of us that you know what you’re doing, you’re just being ridden hard by the judges.ย  They did that to me, too, and I know EXACTLY how you feel.

And, for the record, what’s wrong with raw fish?ย  The BEST way to eat fish is COMPLETELY stone cold raw.ย  The more heat you add to fish, the worse it becomes.ย  The NEXT best way to eat fish, (behind stone cold raw), is BARELY seared on the outside, so you get that nice browned crunch, and stone cold raw on the inside, so you get superior flavor and texture.ย  Joe gets a chance to throw a tantrum and chunk Howard’s plate in the trash, but that’s ALL for the camera, folks.ย  There’s nothing wrong with EVER plating raw fish, unless your menu reads “well done fish.”ย  The rarer the fish, the better.ย  (As long as it’s fresh.ย  And if it’s not, no amount of cooking will fix it.ย  Don’t ever cook fish that’s not fresh enough to eat raw.ย  And if it’s fresh enough to eat raw, you’d better eat it raw!ย  Or just barely kissed with heat.)

Back to the top 3…the first home cook has been “consistently in the middle of the pack” according to Joe, and it’s James!ย  My fellow Texan.ย  He’s got 3 fillets of pan seared crispy skin black cod with toasted sesame cauliflower puree and shittake mushroom salad with miso vinaigrette.ย  The cook on James’ cod is perfect.ย  “Moist and glistening” according to Joe, two adjectives that are shamefully repeated throughout the rest of the episode.ย  (I’m not entirely sure I want to refer to ANYTHING I eat as “moist and glistening.”)ย  Joe says he has a great salt/acid balance, which is the biggest trick any chef has to master.ย  If you taste a dish and it’s missing “something,” the amateur reaches for the salt.ย  The master chef reaches for the vinegar.ย  Good for James…I think this guy is pretty brilliant and I can’t wait to meet him.ย  (I almost did last weekend!ย  Blog about my Houston MasterChef trip coming soon…)

Next in the top 3 is a dish similar to Ramsay’s dish, and it’s Beth.ย  She’s got a sesame crusted, pan-seared black cod with caramelized beets and cauliflower, with miso vinaigrette.ย  And let me say first of all that her cauliflower just MAY be better than Ramsay’s.ย  (Forgive me, Gordon.)ย  She’s got 1…count it…1 piece of cauliflower on her plate, but it’s probably the single most beautiful piece of cauliflower I have EVER seen.ย  It is, for lack of better words in the English language, pure perfection.ย  It could be framed.ย  (But it’s TOO pretty to talk about, apparently, because it’s prettier than Gordon’s, so it doesn’t get attention.)ย  Beth apparently knows the secret to “glistening” cod, as well, according to Ramsay.ย  He goes further to say that Beth’s fish is “One of the best dishes I’ve ever tasted in this competition so far.”ย  WOW, Beth!

The final top 3 dish has a glaze that the judges liken to a glaze in one of the “best Japanese restaurants anywhere in the world, which is shocking considering this glaze was made by an Italian.”ย  Truly.ย  In fact, it’s one of the most shocking things I’ve EVER heard.ย  (Sarcasm inserted here…as if Italian people are genetically incapable of cooking Japenese food.)ย  So Luca heads down with his stunning plate of pan seared black cod (fillets carefully stacked in leaning-tower-of-Pisa fashion) with butter braised shiitake mushroom, and sugar snap peas on top of a puree that isn’t narrated for us.ย  There is much talk about Luca’s miso sauce, and I’d love to taste it.ย  Miso is yet another ingredient that packs an incredible umami punch.ย  “Umami” is the Japanese term for the 5th flavor that the human tongue can distinguish, in addition to salty, sweet, sour, and bitter.ย  In the English language, the best word we’ve come up for it is “savory.”ย  Discovered by Japanese scientists in the early 20th century, but still strangely not taught in Human Biology class in the US, the human tongue can distinguish only 5 flavors…the 4 taught in grade school (sweet, salty, sour, bitter) and the 5th type, glutamates.ย  (ALL other flavors are distinguished by the nose.)ย  Asian cuisine gave birth to the now-maligned flavor enhancer “monosodium glutamate” or MSG.ย  But there are natural sources of glutamates, particularly the byproducts of natural fermentation.ย  Miso is one of them.ย  As is fish sauce, Vegemite/Martmite, anchovy paste, soy sauce, “nutritional yeast,” Worcestershire sauce…ย  The skilled chef can combine these sources of intensely savory flavors into sauces that are supremely exquisite.ย  And Luca has apparently done this.ย  So congrats, Luca, for playing outside the Italian box and scoring big with the judges!

And the winner is…LUCA!ย  And he heads back into MasterChef kitchen to discover his advantage in the elimination challenge.ย  And this challenge will be all about dessert.ย  Again.ย  This MasterChef season has been very dessert heavy.ย  (I guess I was cast in the wrong season!)ย  He has a choice between cookies, cupcakes, and layer cakes (the example Gordon presents is frosted with a disgusting puke-green icing).ย  Luca is safe from elimination and doesn’t have to cook, and he chooses cupcakes as the challenge for his competitors.

I gotta take a second and say that, while I love to bake desserts and it’s probably what I’m best known for, I just don’t get the whole cupcake thing.ย  I don’t get Cupcake Wars.ย  I don’t get why people are so obsessed with them.ย  That is all.

In addition to Luca’s many challenges, he gets to steal a mixer from someone’s station.

Okay, producers…really?ย  This is what we’ve descended to?ย  Now we’re going to actually let contestants penalize other contestants that they don’t like, by removing their most fundamental baking tool?ย  Granted, cookies, cupcakes, and cakes were baked LONG before there were electric mixers.ย  During the airing of my breakout episode in season 2 where I baked my now-famous pumpkin carrot cake with cream cheese frosting and candied hazelnuts, I actually baked the cake for a watch party in a home in Seattle that had NO electric mixer (hand or stand) and had to whip the egg whites by hand, cream the butter and sugar by hand, whip the frosting by hand…but still.ย  This is encouraging unfair advantage, animosity, and is basically promoting cheating.ย  As Marie Porter, a season 4 contestant who you don’t know because she wasn’t featured at all, so wisely said: “We need to be encouraging people to have empathy for each otherโ€ฆ not training the masses to lack it.”ย  Some of you may love this surprising move by the producers.ย  Personally, it disgusts me.

Luca pulls the mixer from Jordan.ย  Luca says that it’s payback for Jordan saving himself in the previous team challenge pressure test.ย  (Is it ANYONE’s position but “God” to penalize someone for their transgressions?ย  I didn’t like Jordan’s decision any more than the next guy, but I’m in no position to punish him for his actions.)

Immediately, the group is divided into the over-achievers who are gonna make 50 different varieties of cupcakes in an hour and a half…and those amateur bakers who are gonna be lucky to churn out a single type of cupcake in that time.ย  If Jordan has baked alot, he probably knows that he can produce a perfect cupcake without having to whip egg whites or cream butter and sugar.ย  There are plenty of acceptable cupcake recipes where you simply stir the ingredients together and rely on the power of baking powder to give you a light-textured cupcake.ย  But he may be relying on education from the show which taught him the creamed-butter-and-sugar method…or the folding-in-whipped-egg-whites method.ย  But anyone who has ever made a box of storebought cupcakes knows that all you need to make a great cupcake is a bowl and a spoon.ย  Nevertheless, Jordan is frantically creaming butter and sugar together by hand, and Jordan…I know what a workout that is.ย  It’s not fun.

There’s a friendly-fire exchange between the two, and Luca reveals to us, “I’m not the joker everyone thinks I am.ย  I’m here for business.”

I have to pause at this moment and apologize to Luca, who I’m dead certain couldn’t care less about my blog and isn’t reading it, for knowing both the way the show is editing you, and for knowing what your fellow competitors think of you based on your actions on set.ย  One of the drawbacks to being a warm, welcoming personality is that, as soon as the show is finished filming, almost EVERY contestant contacts me to vent and decompress.ย  Luca couldn’t be more adorable when you watch the show.ย  Heck…even *I* want to marry the guy.ย  But the way he is edited, compared to how he allegedly behaved on set, are very, very, very different.ย  So if I’m a little extra harsh on you in my blogs, Luca, blame your fellow competitors!ย  Ha ha ha…

Howard is first to be judged, and he has Tahitian vanilla bean cupcakes with white chocolate buttercream.ย  Howard’s cupcakes are frosted appropriately, despite their lack of impact on the screen.ย  I’m fed up with the indulgent excess of frosting on television cupcakes.ย  Let’s exercise a bit of restraint, people!ย  Joe torments poor Howard at first, and we think he’s going home.ย  Then he reveals that Howard’s cupcakes are pretty much perfect.

Malcolm is next, whith his buttermilk cupcakes with mascarpone frosting and rum-banana cream.ย  Malcolm, you’re speaking my language with “buttermilk.”ย  It’s my favorite ingredient next to pumpkin, and I can’t live without it.ย  The instant I run out of buttermilk, I freak out.ย  I can’t cook without it.ย  One other pet peeve that I HAVE to stop and mention, because it’s a pervasive error that even professional chefs make: the pronunciation is “MAH-scar-PONE-eh.”ย  There is no other pronunciation.ย  Only that one.ย  Anyone who pronounces it “MAR-ska-pown” is in glaring error.ย  Slap anyone who says that.ย  It’s time we teach people that it’s not okay to say “expresso” (ahem, Joe) or “marscapone” or “sherbert” or “chee-POLE-tay.”ย  (If you think of any other rampantly mispronounced ingredients, please post them in the comments below.)ย  Graham notes that the texture isn’t quite right: “It looks and feels like they were made out of Saltines or something.”ย  Malcolm put the rum-banana cream on the inside of the cupcakes, and any time you stuff a cupcake before it’s baked, you’re walking a fine line.ย  Gordon tells Malcolm they’re “gross” because they have a weird tart/acid flavor on the inside.ย  (That could be just for the camera.ย  Malcolm could tell us.ย  On camera he claims the blame himself, which is incredibly noble.)

Bime is next, with his vanilla cupcakes.ย  He’s got 2 frosting presentations, one where chocolate frosting dominates, and one where vanilla frosting does.ย  His cupcake box looks pretty professional.ย  The judges are impressed.

Kathy is next, and she has gone all out.ย  She’s got 4 types of cupcakes…vanilla, vanilla with peanuts on the bottom, and vanilla with chocolate peanut butter on the bottom…and then apparently a 4th variety that doesn’t get narrated.ย  Her frosting is colorful, to say the least, but nothing that I’d consider out of the ordinary after a visit to any local bakery.ย  Joe is puzzled by her “flavors on the bottom” technique, and doesn’t like her frosting, but we don’t hear Graham or Gordon’s opinion.

Next up is Bethy, and she’s an overachiever, too!ย  Bethy’s got an infinite variety of cupcakes in her box.ย  One is a “Bananas Foster” cupcake with banana cream on the inside of the cupcake, with caramel and “MAR-sca-pone” frosting.ย  (Come on, Bethy, you’re smarter than that!)ย  One is a “Raspberry Limeade” cupcake with lime buttercream frosting.ย  (THAT sounds like a cupcake I would eat.ย  And I never eat cupcakes.)ย  One is an “Almond Chocolate Cupcake” with hazelnut liqueur and toasted hazelnuts.ย  Gordon is literally blown away by the presentation and the taste.

Jessie is next, and due to problems in the challenge, she had to start over…but without enough time to bake normal-sized cupcakes, she had to resort to a mini cupcake pan.ย  So when her box is opened, she has dwarf cupcakes hiding in the box, which Graham likens to the old “Whack-a-Mole” game.ย  Joe tries to challenge her on the size, and she boldly says, “There’s 12 there!”ย  Good girl.ย  Despite the diminutive size, Jessie has 2 different types of cupcakes: vanilla bean with cream cheese frosting, toasted hazelnuts, and while chocolate; and a chocolate coffee liqueur cupcake with cream cheese frosting and chocolate covered espresso beans.ย  The judges have a largely negative response, claiming a dry, dense texture.ย  (For the record, they look like every other cupcake I’ve seen cut open.)

Now the judges are dying to taste Jordan‘s cupcakes, which were made without any electrical support.ย  He’s got vanilla bean cupcakes with basil on the inside, and strangely enough, he’s also got this weird frosting I’m not familiar with called “MAR-sca-pown.”ย  (I am literally about to gouge my eyeballs out of their sockets with a chopstick if I hear that mispronunciation one more time.)ย  His cupcakes are topped with a miniature chocolate cayenne truffle, a slice of strawberry, and some basil chiffonade.ย  A VERY interesting play on flavors, and I can’t venture a guess as to how it would taste without actually tasting it.ย  (Jordan, please come to my house to make these cupcakes for me.ย  I promise you can use my Kitchenaid.)ย  Gordon invites Luca to taste the cupcakes before anyone, and he is an honest good sport.ย  “100% safe,” he says, “They are delicious.ย  Can I keep it?”ย  If you have a DVR, though, go back and compare the texture of Jordan’s cupcake to the textures of the cupcakes the judges complained about and called “dry.”ย  Indistinguishable texture.ย  They ALL look dense.ย  Another reason we can’t always be entirely certain that reality TV food critiques are totally genuine.ย  The audience can’t taste the food, so the critique can really be anything they want it to be.

The 2 best cupcake presentations will be team leaders in the next challenge, and the lucky winners are Bime and Bethy (who is deemed the ultimate winner).

This is an elimination challenge, and they have to axe someone.ย  The 3 worst are called forward: Malcolm, Kathy, and Jessie.ย  And after much agonizing reality TV angst…the axe falls to Malcolm.ย  And strangely enough, 2 out of 3 eliminations in the season thus far have been African Americans, all 3 were people of color.ย  Which I find very, very bizarre.

Cupcakes are tricky, and easy to misjudge based solely on appearance.ย  So I can’t say if Malcolm’s elimination is justified.ย  But I can say that we didn’t seen enough of Malcolm to really get to know him.ย  He hails from Jamaican descent, and I can without a doubt say that the Jamaican culture has produced some of the greatest cuisine in the Western Hemisphere, and I look forward to seeing what Malcolm shows us next.ย  Follow him on Twitter and like him on Facebook.

So I’m FINALLY caught up on MasterChef blogging, and I can assure you, there are exciting things to come, including my next installation of MasterChef: Where Are They Now?…featuring the astonishingly talented Sharone Hakman from season 1 of MasterChef.ย  Subscribe to my blog near the upper right corner of your screen so you don’t miss a thing, and chime in on the comments below to let me know what you thought of this episode!

57 responses to “MasterChef 4 recap: Gordon’s Box and Boxes of Cupcakes (S4E6)”

  1. Shahriyar Avatar
    Shahriyar

    Correct me if I’m wrong, but isn’t the show supposed to provide all the equipment required for the challenge. I feel as if Jessie was unfairly treated when her cupcakes came out a little small.
    Bollocks I say, the box they were stored in was too BIG!

    1. Ben Avatar

      I believe her problem was that her first batch didn’t turn out to her liking, so she had to bake a second batch, and there wasn’t time for normal-sized cupcakes to bake and cool, so she grabbed a mini muffin pan. Of course we couldn’t taste her cupcakes, but the size made her an “easy target” for the bottom 3 simply because the audience could visible see the difference between her cupcakes and the rest.

      Regarding what the show is “Supposed” to do, they don’t promise ANYTHING in their contract. In fact, you agree to let them manipulate you on EVERY level, even to deliberately deceive you about the entire purpose of the whole show.

  2. Cameron Scott Ennes Avatar
    Cameron Scott Ennes

    Great post please keep them coming n_n, as for ingredient mispronunciation, i have heard people refer to Gouda cheese as Goda, pronounced
    like Yoda. Not a lot of culinary types where i live.

    1. Ben Avatar

      GODA! Weirdness. Thanks for sharing!

  3. steve Avatar
    steve

    The 3 worst are called forward: Malcolm, Kathy, and Jessie. And after much agonizing reality TV angstโ€ฆthe axe falls to Malcolm. And strangely enough, BOTH eliminations in the season thus far have been African Americans.

    What about Adrianna??

    And a bit no-win for them, to be fair; if they hadn’t picked Malcolm, the first three eliminations would have been woman.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Ah! Thanks Steve. I wrote that at 2am and was exhausted. Cheers!

  4. Mac Avatar
    Mac

    Hey hot stuff…I’m baffled by cupcakes as well. I honestly don’t get it. Too much fluff and fawning over something so mundane. Just my humble opinion.

  5. CC Avatar
    CC

    Really? We’re complaining about the coincidence of the first two being African-American?

    Jeesh, you’re entitled to your own opinion, but aren’t we stretching it now? I know this show is edited out the wazoo, I know this show is part cooking, part fantasy, but it appears that you’re basically calling all these people racists. If you didn’t mean it that way, maybe you ought to clarify.

    And for the record, I’ve never met Gordon Ramsay, so I don’t know if he’s on the autism spectrum, but given that I have Asperger’s syndrome myself, I sincerely hope you researched what it is before claiming that. We’re not all savants by a long shot and I’m a little tired of the stereotype. Too many people have the idea that if we’re not savants, we can’t really be Aspies.

  6. Minda Avatar
    Minda

    Those mascarpone mispronunciation drives me bonkers, too. Like when people say ha-la-pee-no for ha-la-pay-nyo (Jalapeรฑo) or pronounce the g in guacamole. But I digress.
    I’m glad someone else got as excited as I did watching Gordon cook. I actually teared up and rewound it several times. This is why I love having the BBCA channel so I can watch him cook on “The F Word” (and interact with his children on some episodes–that’s delightful.)
    Thanks for another great post! Can’t wait to hear more about what happened backstage.

    1. Ben Avatar

      CHIPOTLE! That’s another people always mispronounce. Drives me bonkers. They say “chee POLE tay” instead of “chee POTE lay.” Grf… Thanks for your comment, Minda!

  7. Andrea Avatar

    Don’t gouge out your eyes, Ben! Those mistakes aren’t worth it. We all have pronunciation pet peeves. >_<.

    I enjoy a cupcake once in a while, but I prefer to skip the frosting because my sweet tooth diminished with the years. I also don't quite understand why there's a cupcake boom in the last years. Still, Bethy's did look amazing.

    As much as I respect Ramsay, and was almost rapt looking at him cook in this episode, to me, he has become a diva (or divo? My Italian's rusty), and that's pretty much what theyre looking for: drama and more drama. Still, mY respect for him stems not only from his culinary prowess, but for many other reasons.

    I'm looking forward to your recaps, as always. Greetings from your fan in Colombia :).

    1. Ben Avatar

      Awwww…thanks so much, Andrea! I always love your comments.

      1. Andrea Avatar
        Andrea

        I think my heart just skipped a beat due to that. I’m truly honored that you like my comments!

  8. J.T. Avatar
    J.T.

    Do the chefs get some some of recipe guide before hand? There are people who said that they never baked cupcakes in their life, but they seem to produce decent looking cupcakes. While you can go off recipe in cooking, I know you really can’t when it comes to baking. If the chefs know how much flour, sugar, etc to use without looking at a recipe, that is pretty amazing.

    1. Ben Avatar

      JT, all MasterChef competitions around the globe include a LOT of intense education. Most other shows actually incorporate that education into the edit of the show, so that the audience sees the contestants being taught things like how to make cupcakes. Because the Fox audience is wanting something more sensational and less educational, those classes aren’t included in the show. But they are still being taught! You learn A LOT on MasterChef.

      1. KarenKaren Avatar
        KarenKaren

        Oh this is an interesting nugget of information. I like that the contestants are also being taught as they go – more so than is shown (although I’d love to *see* that education as well.)

  9. Leah Avatar
    Leah

    Ben – Though I’ve been following you on Facebook for a whole now, this is the first time I’ve read your blog. I just wanted to say that I really enjoyed reading this. You have a very engaging manner of writing and I will certainly be back for more.

    I have to say, I am equally baffled by the whole cupcake thing. Cake is a whole lot easier to eat, and just as tasty!!

    I hail from Michigan (Metro Detroit), but I am now living in Muscat, Oman. If ever I find myself in your neighborhood, I would be honored to make your acquaintance.

    Also, this isn’t so much a mispronunciation, but I lived in Canada for four years and everyone there calls mozzarella “mozza,” which always annoyed me for some reason.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Hi, Leah! Thanks so much for reading my blog, and I’m so happy you’re gonna stick around! I certainly do hope I’ll find myself in Oman in the near future, that’s a corner of the world I’ve never explored. Cheers!

      1. Leah Avatar
        Leah

        If you do come to Oman, you MUST email me and let me know. It would be an honor to meet you and show you the city (I’m in Muscat). It’s very lovely here.

  10. juliephilippe Avatar

    Hi Ben!

    Did you know you’ve got fans in Brazil?

    I discovered the show a few months ago and just loved it. And when I got to that season, I loved you! Your ethics, light-spirit, you cooking vision, everything! I wish every reality TV show was based on your point of view.

    I’m also loving to know about the “behind-the-scenes” details. I’ve always wandered why no plate that is presented to the judges seems to have hot smoke (since very often they’re plated on the very last second). Now I know! Damn beauty shots! I can swear I heard Gordon scream at someone on your season that “food dies if it stays on the window for too long!”. Didn’t he?

    Anyway: love the “Where are they now” idea as well. It’s lovely to hear about some people we learned to admire throughout the seasons.

    I also read abou the “Thank you for coming” project in LA and thought it could be interesting for you as a possible development for FRANK: http://www.coolhunting.com/culture/thank-you-for-coming.php

    Lots of hugs from Brazil!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Bom Dia, Julie! I LOVE my Brasilian fans, and I do know there are a lot of them. My partner is from Sao Paulo, and we visit there often. My family down there was so excited when the show finally aired, they were like celebrities because they knew me. It was great fun. I’ll check out this LA project, thanks for sharing!!

      1. juliephilippe Avatar

        Amazing! I live in Sรฃo Paulo, too. Anytime you come down here and wanna have a FRANK Brazil Edition, I’ll be the first to sign up for the lottery. And if you want to hang out, talk about brazilian ingredients or have some local dish prepared by me and my boyfriend (he is form Bahia and they have a gourgeous flavor profile up there), let us know. It would be THE HUGEST HONOR.

        1. Ben Avatar

          Oh, Julie, I’ve had food from Bahia and it is AMAZING! I really love spicy foods, and many of the traditional Brazilian foods aren’t spicy enough for me. But the food from Bahia! WOW!

  11. Gregory Wright Avatar
    Gregory Wright

    I HATE, HATE, HATE that Ramsey got in there to show off his skills. For me the show is about those home cooks. It was even worse that he sat around drinking tea just so he could show them all up in less time. Narcissistic behavior at it’s worst. I’d love to see a new show where Gordon Ramsey cooks for us to watch. But not here. This season the home cooks are getting the shaft so badly. They are not being shown cooking, their food isn’t being shown and the amount of bold faced lies about their food is shocking. That being said, I give MAJOR props to Jorden for muscling though the butter to make frosting and a killer cupcake. And if Luca had to take someones mixer, he made the right choice. Jorden is tough competition, one of the ones who could probably survive the loss of the mixer anyway and did deserve a little spanking for saving himself earlier. But that’s just my petty sense of justice. But, any respect Jorden may have lost from me (not that he’d care) was gained back with his cupcake performance.

    1. Ben Avatar

      I didn’t think about it this way. At least from a contestant’s perspective, it’s delightful to see the judges put their skills where their mouth is. They spend all this time sitting around criticizing your food and your technique, and you secretly wonder “Could they ACTUALLY do any better if they were in my shoes?” So I would have been utterly DELIGHTED to have ANY of the judges cook along side us in a challenge.

      1. Gregory Wright Avatar
        Gregory Wright

        If they DID include some of the education given to the contestants in the broadcast, THAT would be an ideal time to do it. Sort of like the Fillet Demo in your season. But this way just took away from the contestants and made them look oh so inferior. It’s no shock that Ramsey can cook circles around them, why rub their noses in it on national TV? Off set, I would kill to cook next to Chef Ramsey or Chef Elliot.

  12. Krispy McGrumpypants (@happyphantom) Avatar

    I would think that Jordan’s cupcakes would actually be BETTER, due to lessened chances of overbeating them.

  13. Polly Esther Avatar

    Hi Ben! I loved watching you in Season 2, but I have to say that I love your blog even more! I’ve worked in the service industry all my life and never took the time to learn how to cook for myself (I just took advantage of the fact I could have my meals cooked *for* me instead). Luckily I ended up with a guy who I affectionately call the Kitchen Wizard. It’s funny to say that I watch MasterChef and many other reality cooking shows (the only reality shows I watch) and find it kind of like Science Fiction. You’ll understand why in a few seconds. Having never paid attention to ingredients or cooking techniques, I find it utterly fascinating that my fella can just grab a handful of ingredients, mix stuff together, and create a pot of magic. I think I love MC so much (as much as I can for reality tv!) because it boggles my mind how every contestant practically knows how to make ANY dish …. and it’s quite the range at times! Reading your blog along with the episodes really makes me want to know much more about all things culinary. Your passion for food flies off the pages here – it’s wonderfully refreshing! My fella is great at boosting me up and tells me that since I love Math so much, I should try my hand at baking, since it’s more an exact science as opposed to being able to improvise with regular cooking. Do you have any advice for an aspiring baker – best way to start, websites or baking recipes to check out first, what ingredient or utensil/appliance can be my best friend? Thanks for listening to me ramble! And please let us know if you’re ever coming up to Toronto, Canada – would love to see you. And keep heading towards your dream! ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. Ben Avatar

      Polly, WELCOME to my site, and what an entrance!! Regarding advice for a new baker, you might wish to start where I did. Biscuits. You’ll find the recipe here: https://benstarr.com/recipes/buttermilk-biscuits/ along with a video that will help you, step by step. Biscuits were the first thing I mastered…granted around the age of 8. It will teach you how to work with dough, how flour behaves once it is hydrated, and if you can master the perfect biscuit, you’re already light years ahead of cakes and cookies, and in position to tackle butter pastry next.

      1. Polly Esther Avatar

        Thanks so much, Ben! Is it funny that I want to find the perfect apron *before* I start baking? HAHAHA I’ll give these a shot as soon as I can and let you know how they turned out. You’re the best! ๐Ÿ™‚

  14. Kara Will Avatar
    Kara Will

    How do you fill cupcakes? When I saw this challenge my first thought was “Cannoli Cupcakes!” I’d like to try them, but I’ve never filled cupcakes.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Kara, there are 2 ways to fill cupcakes, one is before they bake, the other is after. To fill them before, only fill the cupcake cup about 1/2 full. Then scoop in 1 Tablespoon of filling. Then cover the filling thoroughly with cupcake batter to just below the rim of the cup. This MAY affect cooking time, but it depends on what’s in the filling. And you can’t always trust the toothpick method for testing if the cupcake is done, because if the filling isn’t supposed to solidify, it may come out on the toothpick even when the cake part of the cupcake is done. Filling a cupcake AFTER baking is a more professional way. The simplest way is to poke your pastry bag down through the top of the cupcake and squeeze. Not much filling can be squeezed in using this method, so many professionals use a tool (an apple corer works beautifully) to pierce down into the cupcake and remove some cake from the center. Then they pipe in filling, and the frosting covers the hole!

      1. Shahriyar Avatar
        Shahriyar

        I just had a mouth orgasm

  15. Mindy Avatar
    Mindy

    Haaa! I started reading this and wondered if (and hoped that) you would address the OFF pronunciations of mascarpone. Indeed! Yea! Crazy! I always look forward to your “take” on the shows. Thanks for giving us the scoop on your thoughts!

  16. Donovan Avatar
    Donovan

    I am not sure why the judges freaked out about the size of Jessie’s cupcakes. Have you ever been to Baked by Melissa? Jessie’s cupcakes would be mammoth-sized compared to those puny cupcakes!!! Oh well – she lived for another day – meaning hers did actually taste better than the others.

  17. Michael Trail Avatar
    Michael Trail

    Why didn’t they show everyone’s cupcakes being judged?

    1. Ben Avatar

      Michael, there’s not time to show everyone being judged until they get down to about 6-8 contestants. They pick the best and worst to feature.

  18. Marie Porter Avatar

    So I held off on reading your reviews til I posted my own (Yeah a week late… http://www.celebrationgeneration.com/blog/2013/06/12/masterchef-recap-season-4-episodes-5-6/) …

    I find it fascinating to read how similar we are on some things (I was ready to scream over the extra “r” in “Mascarpone”!), and how completely opposite are views are on some other things!

    Also: No way in hell is Ramsay an Aspie. I mean… not in a million years. Sorry Ben!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Well, you’re certainly more qualified to answer than question than I am! Ha ha ha… But there’s no denying the fact that he is socially awkward, and has instant, perfect physical recall of tasks he only does sporadically. Maybe there’s another way to describe that more appropriately.

      1. Sam Avatar
        Sam

        I hear your point, Ben, but don’t forget that Ramsay lived and breathed cooking for 20+ years. It really doesn’t surprise me that he can do it very well now. Also, I have heard him in interviews talking about how he still finds time to practice and if he wouldn’t, he wouldn’t be able to keep up the same level. That said, I don’t think someone who did it all day long for so long needs the same amount of practice to stay proficient. Something to consider. As far as him being socially awkward….I haven’t met the man and you have so I won’t argue the point but, as you said with Joe, he has a family that he loves and that loves him and I have seen British TV shows where he interacts with them. It seemed like he has at least as good a relationship with his family as most people I know. Keep the posts coming, Ben!!

        1. Marie Porter Avatar

          Hrm, I’m not sure I’d even say he’s socially awkward. Granted, I haven’t seen him actually socialize… but he seems to have a grasp on communication, interaction, etc – he just doesn’t care.

          I wouldn’t be surprised if he has some sort of narcissism as the underlying issue – that he is simply “above” social norms of how to treat people. It would definitely explain some of his conduct this season (stuff that did not get aired). There’s nothing about his speech, demeanor, movement, or even his syntax that’s at all aspie, but beyond that – narcissism is the best guess I have. I am not a psychologist ๐Ÿ™‚

          Interesting thing though. If he had been Aspie, that might have explained the look he gave me when I walked in. I tweeted to him recently to ask him what that was all about, but he never replied!

          Sam: Aspies are perfectly capable of love, being loved, and maintaining loving relationships ๐Ÿ™‚

          1. Sam Avatar
            Sam

            That comment was in reference to him being socially awkward. I have about as much clue about Asperger’s syndrome as you have about …. well… pick something you dont know about ๐Ÿ™‚

  19. Missy Avatar
    Missy

    I, too, noticed that the first four people eliminated were people of color. I appreciate you, Ben, for considering that lens and don’t think it connects automatically to racist judging as a previous comment suggested. Racism is a system where someone is benefited simply by the color of their skin (and doesn’t always revolve around sinister motives… In fact, most racism today lacks sinister motives and instead is just the result of doing things the way they have always been done while shutting down honest conversations about race). It’s totally legit–even helpful– to ask if race plays a part in the competition. I don’t feel like it was an accusation in any way. (I happen to be a white woman myself, for the record). It is definitely a reminder that judging is subjective, not to mention that all the pressure tests thus far have focused on very European-American cuisines!

  20. Steve Avatar

    SPOILER for EPISODE 7…

    By the way, ep seven starts with a team challenge, and guess who gets picked first….

    Lynn.

  21. Emily Avatar
    Emily

    Oh goodness expresso is the most ANNOYING mispronunciation to me!!! Probably because I used to work in a coffee shop. Glad to hear I’m not the only one who goes crazy when I hear that ๐Ÿ˜‰
    Love your blogs, as usual! They’re probably the reason I’m going to keep watching MasterChef this season. For some reason its just not holding my attention as much as it did seasons 1-3

    1. Ben Avatar

      I hear ya, Emily! *sigh* Thanks for sticking around!

  22. Stacey Avatar
    Stacey

    Mispronunciations also drive me a little bonkers. Valen-TIMES Day is one that gets under my skin. Sorry folks, but there is no M in Valentine. I live in Oregon, which for some reason is difficult to pronounce. It’s pronounced Orygun (a common bumper sticker around here). Oregon hasn’t GONE anywhere!

    I’ll step down off my soapbox now.

    I loved your post, and enjoy hearing about what happens behind the scenes. I am liking MasterChef less and less. It’s edited to only see the bad sides of the contestants, which is really off-putting. I stopped watching halfway through the most recent episode. I found that I couldn’t bring myself to root for anyone because I haven’t seen their actual personality.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Fascinating, Stacey, and I couldn’t agree more. I’m having to force myself to watch this season, it’s just so hokey and sensationalist, and I’m not really connecting with anyone the way I have in the past. Where’s the really sweet ones? It’s probably Jessie but they’re not showing it.

  23. KristenS Avatar

    I agree about the turnabout in editing. I only started watching at season 3 (sorry I missed you, Ben!) and enjoyed the focus on the food, seeing a softer side of Ramsay, and the collegial relationships between the contestants. Somewhere toward the end of last season, when they tried to set up rivalries and brought back an eliminated contestant was when they started to lose me. This season is just one big ol’ drama-filled mess. It is not good TV. (BTW, I’m really gung-ho on The American Baking Competition – very focused on technique and results). I gave up after last week.

    My descriptor for “umami” is “meaty”. A really good PhแปŸ is full of umami. MMmm….PhแปŸ.

  24. J.T. Avatar
    J.T.

    I also have Asperger Syndrome, and I think the comment you made about Ramsay is intriguing. I’m usually pretty good at noticing other Aspies, but since I haven’t met him personally and he’s rarely shown actually cooking, it’s hard to make that judgement. What about him makes you think his culinary interests border on the obsessive? After all, any top chef would certainly be required to have a large interest in food.

    1. Ben Avatar

      JT, I know VERY little about Asperger Syndrome. A friend has a 6yo with it, and until I met Marie Porter (a top 100 contestant this season who has AS), I didn’t know any adults with it. Only what I see on documentaries, etc. But I can tell you that off-camera interactions with GR tend to be a little strange, as if he is rehearsing social scenarios he has practiced before. (An AS trait that I have often heard of.) Off camera, he tends to crack jokes that seem to come completely from left field, which he finds hilarious, but others find awkward (or sometimes STUPENDOUSLY offensive, far more offensive than anything he’s ever said on TV.) This could, of course, simply result from the pressure of celebrity. He’s definitely the Michael Jackson of the chef world, in terms of supercelebrity. I doubt any other chef on earth comes close to his popularity and prevalence.

      This, coupled with the fact that he seems to have superhuman skills despite RARELY being in the kitchen any longer, is what triggered my assumption that he might be mildly AS. I am not a doctor, and don’t have enough knowledge or skills of EITHER AS or cooking to make this assumption. It’s uneducated in its entirety. It just makes it easier for me to understand all of GR’s quirks. He is one of a kind. A genius. And very, very bizarre.

  25. John W. Hall Avatar
    John W. Hall

    Just one word – “Worcestershire.” I’m English, came to Texas 16 years ago, and have still avoided saying “y’all” or “To-mate-o.” Worcestershire should never be pronounced “Wor-ses-ter-shyre” it is “Woos-der-sheer” Please spread the word!!

    1. Ben Avatar

      John, I can’t believe I didn’t address this in my blog post. You’re totally right. I even made a YouTube video on the pronunciation of Worcestershire.

  26. Laura Avatar
    Laura

    Hi! I’m really enjoying reading your blog posts; thanks so much for taking the time to write them out! And I fully agree with you about how disgusting it is that the producers are encouraging such antagonistic behavior among the contestants. I really admire your fair and cooperative attitude!

    As for mispronounced ingredients, the ones that always drive me up the wall are Japanese ingredients. The first syllable in “ponzu” rhymes with “bone,” and I can’t believe how many people pronounce it like it rhymes with “lawn”!

    It’s also a bit of a relief to hear you mention the judges saying things with extreme conviction even when they aren’t right. Even more than them being wrong sometimes, I’m amazed at how often they seem utterly convinced that there is ONLY one correct way to do just about anything; if that’s the case, then how can anyone be creative? But they are experts, and so sometimes I tend to think that I’m just wrong when I disagree with them; I’m glad you put it out there that a lot is just for the camera, for some drama.

    Sorry this comment is sort of rambling! I just really enjoy your blog posts and thought I’d let you know, instead of just lurking! This is only my second time commenting but I’ll try to reply a bit more!

  27. Sam Avatar
    Sam

    I just remembered a word that gets me upset every time. It’s not cardamaN, it’s cardamoM.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Yeah, Sam, I hear that one every once in awhile…even from chefs!

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