Ben Starr

The Ultimate Food Geek

MasterChef 4 recap: Firefighters and Benedicts and the Return of Walmart (S4E7)

(PLEASE NOTE: This blog is not approved or endorsed by MasterChef or Fox, and they would probably you rather not read it.  The opinions contained in this blog are from a Season 2 competitor who witnessed the filming of virtually every episode of that season, but I have no inside knowledge of THIS season of MasterChef.  …well…at least I’m not sharing any!)

It’s group challenge day at Pasadena Centennial hall, with teams of 8 led by Bethy and Bime.  The teams will have 90 minutes to prepare a 10-ounce NY Strip steak, a sauce, and 2 side dishes for 101 off duty firefighters.  Bethy’s under special scrutiny because her father is a firefighter in Portland, and she needs to make him proud.

And then my biggest hope for this season of MasterChef is dashed.  Walmart returns to the show, and Graham and Joe wax poetic about how fabulous their ingredients are.  (I wonder when was the last time ANY of the 3 of them bought groceries at a Walmart?)

Before I go any further, I have to clarify that I, like apparently 60% of all Americans, am a Walmart shopper.  Along with its many evils, Walmart has done some amazing things, including bringing critical organic items, like organic cage-free eggs and organic milk, within the affordability range of just about anyone.  My relationship with Walmart is very similar to my relationship with MasterChef.  I don’t like the point they’ve come to: MasterChef becoming wildly sensational and focusing on drama rather than cooking…WalMart having run every small grocery market out of business in most areas of the country, so your only grocery options are Walmart or the breathtakingly pricey gourmet markets.  But I see such potential for good in both of them that I’m not standing up in complete protest/boycott.  Walmart single-handedly has the power to move every single farm in this country toward more sustainable, organic practices.  (And they ARE doing this, slowly but surely.)  MasterChef has the capability to inspire the next generation of chefs in this country, to educate its viewers about the importance of knowing where your food comes from, and to counteract the over-saturation of reality TV shows that highlight the worst in people and instead show teamwork, respect, integrity, and humanity.  (And they AREN’T doing this, but moving in the opposite direction rather rapidly.)  But they have potential, the both of them.  And if the people who hate them simply walk away in protest, the entities will do as they please.  Which is one reason I continue to blog critically about MasterChef AND Walmart, while maintaining objectivity and interaction with both.

Returning to Walmart…yes I shop there.  If I want to pay $3 for a head of cauliflower rather than $6, I have no other real options…it’s as simple as that.  One thing I do NOT buy at Walmart is meat, unless it’s bacon, or on very rare occasions, their all-natural Harvestland chicken, which is the only affordable chicken that is raised in a remotely humanitarian way.  The primary thing I get from Walmart is produce that I don’t have in my garden, staples like flour, sugar, and baking powder, and organic milk and eggs.  (And when my ladies start laying, I won’t have to buy eggs ever again.)  Nowadays I get most of my eggs from local farmers and my raw milk from Lucky Layla in Plano, so I don’t really go to Walmart that often any longer.

But what puzzles me about this endorsement is that one does not associate Walmart as a purveyor of premium ingredients, superb enough to be on a show called MasterChef.  No one is under the impression that the judges get their ingredients from there.  So when we see the judges raving about how great Walmart’s meat and produce are, it’s just…well…it’s laughable.  Walmart is the CHEAP place to get basic, mass-produced ingredients.  And for all the exclusivity the show spouts, their garish Walmart endorsement is in direct juxtaposition to that.  It’s just…well, it’s weird.

Now, I did learn that MasterChef is produced for a very specific audience, and chances are, you’re not among that audience if you follow me.  MasterChef is not made for foodies, for amateur or aspiring chefs, or for sophisticated eaters.  MasterChef is made for the folks in the middle of the nation who watch the Kardashians and Honey Boo Boo and Hell’s Kitchen, who are tuning in for tears and backstabbing and meltdowns, and who make their buying decisions based on what the television tells them.  Yes, there are fringe groups in the audience.  Like you and me.  But we make up such a tiny fraction of the overall audience that they don’t really CARE what we think about it.  (Because we’re not running out to buy those Walmart steaks, or those fancy pans they’ll be hyping in a few episodes.  We make our own decisions about what to buy.  We don’t trust the television.)  So we’re not important, in terms of the captive audience.  We are the minority.  I have less than 10,000 followers on Facebook.  Even Christine Ha, winner of season 3, who became an overnight sensation all around the world after winning despite being blind, has just shy of 66k followers (leaving ANY previous contestant far in the dust), while each episode has an average of between 5.5 and 6 million viewers.  That means that the biggest MasterChef star of all time (and probably for all eternity…I cannot fathom this year’s winner having such a devout following) has only attracted 1% of the show’s following.  Those are the us.  But we are small.  So don’t let it be a surprise to you when, several seasons from now, all the MasterChef contestants are living in a big house and we see more shots of them smoking and talking sh-t about each other, than we do of them cooking.  Because that’s what the massive majority of the audience wants.  It’s what they see on other shows.  It’s what they respond to, and what we have taught them to crave by producing such filth.

Me 'n' Alvin, checking out these Walmart steaks

But I STILL feel like, even the folks in Wichita, Kansas who shop EXCLUSIVELY at Walmart are still laughing at the screen when the judges fawn over Walmart’s superb meat.  It’s just hard to take a culinary powerhouse seriously when they are pitching Walmart.  Perhaps the show hasn’t been able to court any other sponsors large enough to support the production budget.  Who knows?  But, MasterChef: NO ONE thinks this is appropriate, whether they love Walmart or hate it.  It’s just awkward and silly.

After all the hoopla from fans last year over the sponsorship, they have Joe specifically assure the audience: “We only use the freshest, top-of-the-line ingredients here on MasterChef.”  I wonder how hard it was for him to say that?  I wonder how many of HIS restaurants source from Walmart?  The funny thing is, their food suppliers may be the very same ones that supply produce and meat to Walmart, but a savvy restaurateur like Joe would NEVER allow the Walmart brand to be associated with his restaurants, because it’s considered cheap, massive, impersonal, low quality, and, in a word…common.  This is less about reality (Walmart’s steaks may be really awesome) and more about brand perception.  And by continuing to ladle Walmart onto our television plates, MasterChef is associating all those adjectives with itself.  Not a smart move for posterity, in my humble opinion.

Perhaps Gordon realizes this.  He doesn’t say “Walmart” even once during this episode, while it seems to be every 5th word out of Joe and Graham’s mouths.  I wonder if that’s in his contract?

*steps off the soapbox*

Team selection begins, and Bethy chooses first.  Again, it’s Lynn.  Always the first to be picked.  This guy’s a dark horse, I’m telling you.  Bethy rounds out her team with Jessie, James, Howard, Jonny, Savannah, and Krissi.

Bime’s first choice is Jordan, followed by Eddie, Luca, Natasha, Bri, Beth, and Kathy.

There’s a twist, and Beth has the chance to steal a member from Bime’s team, and “gift” one contestant to him.  Bethy steals Eddie, because he is Bime’s best griller.  And she gifts Krissi to him.

The teams will have 90 minutes to prep for service.  Bime’s Red Team is making mushrooms and cauliflower puree and a “reduction sauce.”  (Reducing enough liquid for 101 servings is gonna take time, folks.)  They are not going to season their steaks (at least not beyond salt and pepper) and will rely on their sauce to flavor the steak, which upsets Gordon, but Bime sticks with the plan.  (Gordon doesn’t always give appropriate advice.)  This menu was supposedly conceptualized communally.  Bethy designates the menu for her Blue Team: potato and red pepper hash, asparagus, and she appoints James to make the best sauce of his life, so he immediately begins working on TWO of the best sauces of his life: a balsamic reduction sauce, and a chimichurri (basically Argentine pesto.)  Gordon freaks out when he learns they are prepping 2 sauces and gets upset when Bethy is too busy COOKING to come over and participate in a for-drama argument.  (You go, girl!)

Blue Team is going to rub their steaks with spices for extra flavor.  This is a good time to discuss.  I know that many purists say that spices cover up the flavor of the beef, and in order to let the meat speak for itself, salt and pepper should be the ONLY flavorings.  I guess I don’t like beef enough, then, because I’ve GOT to have garlic on my steak, at the very least.  My normal steak seasoning is salt, black pepper, garlic and onion powder, and red pepper flake, and just a bit of sugar to help get a nice dark caramelization.  The extra bulk of the spices helps build an incredibly flavorful crust on the steak that you just don’t get with black pepper and salt alone.  And always, ALWAYS charcoal.  The only acceptable way of cooking steaks without charcoal is on a cast iron griddle or heavy skillet, full contact, 700 degrees if you can get it there.  You actually get a BETTER sear with full contact griddling than you do on a grill, but you lose out on the lovely flavor from the charcoal.  And it produces an absolutely insane amount of smoke, so if you’re doing it indoors, the windows better be open and the fans better be on!  Propane grills are useless for just about every purpose.  It’s NO different than using a pan or skillet on your stovetop.  There’s no additional flavor.  The only benefit is that it’s outside, so the smoke goes into the air instead of into your kitchen.  But I always giggle when I see these houses with massive $5k propane drop-in grills in their outdoor kitchens.  Charcoal is the ONLY way to go for the serious cook.  Period.  (And for the record, NY Strip is one of my FAVORITE cuts.  It comes from a muscle between the ribs and the sirloin, and that muscle gets a bit MORE work than the ribeye or tenderloin, meaning more flavor, but it’s still tender.)

Serving 101 steaks simultaneously is a big order, especially on a grill the size the contestants are given.  (Many group challenges are sorta set up for disaster, equipment-wise.)  I don’t get a very clear shot of it, but it looks like they can churn out about 25 steaks at a time on that thing, so if they’re cooking at max capacity, that’s 4 “flights” of steaks to grill.  (Keeping watch over 25 steaks simultaneously is no walk in the park, either.)  The steaks appear to be about an inch thick, maybe a bit more, and if they’re smart, they’ll cook every steak to medium.  Yes, wise folk prefer their steak more rare.  And yes, many prefer it more done.  But if you open up the can of worms of cooking steaks to order for 101 diners, you’ll pull every last one of your hairs out, and service will suffer.  So you cook everything to medium, which is the best compromise between both ends of the spectrum.  So each flight of steaks is gonna take about 10 minutes to cook (about 3 minutes per side, sorta depends on the steak, the meat and grill temperature, and the fat content), plus time for adding them to the grill, flipping, and pulling them off the grill.  (And they’re gonna have to sit in a single layer while they coast after coming off the grill…if you stack them, their residual heat and thermal mass will continue cooking them to well done.  So that’s a bit of a logistical nightmare they’re gonna have to plan for.)  Then you have to plan for a quick return to a screaming hot grill just before service to warm them back up, just 30 seconds per side and then straight onto the plate.  So we’re basically looking at about 45 minutes to an hour before steaks can start being served, and that requires planning ahead.  At less than 30 minutes to serving time, Bethy’s Blue Team still doesn’t have steaks on the grill, which is bad news.

To complicate matters, at only 15 minutes to service (theoretically…that’s just how it was edited), Bethy decides to pick James’s chimichurri over his balsamic reduction, which doesn’t give him much time to produce enough sauce for 101 steaks.  So Team Blue is in crunch mode in the last stretch.  But they pull through and begin sending out plates more quickly and efficiently than Team Red.

I watched this episode with Jennie and Alvin and when we saw the teams using that fancy sauce funnel to plate their sauce, Jennie and I both did a little scream of excitement, as that would be SUCH a relief at FRANK.  And Alvin looked at us with playful disdain in his eyes and says, “You guys don’t use a sauce funnel?  …  Amateurs.”

Joe discovers that some firefighters aren’t getting complete plates from Team Blue, and he has to take one plate back to the kitchen to be sauced.  Suddenly he is FURIOUS and decides to sauce ALL the steaks in his vicinity with copious amounts of his own saliva as he screams at the team.  (*gag*)

Bime’s Red Team is apparently having trouble getting out the plates due to “lack of teamwork” (which could just be editing…team challenges are always chaos for BOTH teams).

Service ends and voting begins, and it’s a blind voting process, so the teams can’t tell which team is getting the most votes.  (This also would make it much easier to manipulate the results…not that such a thing EVER happens on reality TV!)

And the winner, with 68 out of 101 votes, is Bethy’s Team Blue.  Bime’s Team Red is headed to the pressure test, and all hell breaks loose when they are cleaning up.  Luca tries to be rational with everyone, Beth breaks into tears and proclaims that the cauliflower puree was “disgusting,” and Natasha takes that very, very personally and lashes out.  Bri rushes to comfort Beth, but the attitude is flying faster than Bastianich spit.

Thankfully, we get a break from the drama with yet another commercial about a Walmart “steakover.”  Where ON EARTH did they find the host for those horrid commercials, he is awful.  They could have found one of their own employees who would look more natural on camera.

The producers are really manipulating the pressure tests this season.  It makes it more intriguing and suspenseful for the audience, but it’s also a way for them to protect people they’re not ready to get rid of yet.  The judges save Bime, and give him the chance to save someone else, and Bime chooses Jordan, leaving the 6 remaining team members to battle it out in a pressure test repeated from my season: Eggs Benedict.

I rocked this challenge on my season.  I make Eggs Benedict all the time.  (But I ALWAYS make the English muffins from scratch.)  Graham says: “I can tell you for a fact that Eggs Benedict is an incredibly difficult, highly technical dish to perfect.”  I’m sorry Graham…I HAVE to disagree.  And I’m an amateur.  Anyone can poach an egg.  A 6-year-old can poach an egg perfectly.  It’s not about skill or luck.  It’s about watching the clock.  Period.  It takes less than 4 minutes to poach an egg perfectly.  And people always do it the wrong way.  The keys to a perfect poach are water that is BELOW the simmer.  Just sending up a few bubbles.  ABSOLUTELY NEVER at a full boil.  And don’t stir it, for Heaven’s sake, that just sends the white flying everywhere when it’s supposed to do the opposite.  Use the freshest eggs you can find, that’s the biggest secret.  (If they are old, crack them into a slotted spoon and let the really loose white drain off before you put them in the water.)  Crack the egg just above the surface of the water and let the egg slip into it…or crack them into a small cup and slowly pour them into the perfectly still water.  Nudge them gently with a spoon to make sure they don’t stick to the bottom.  3 minutes and 45 seconds later, remove them to an ice bath to stop the cooking.  That simple.  You don’t need to bother with vinegar…I know I used to champion that method, along with the pre-poach that Julia Child suggested.  But after poaching HUNDREDS of eggs for FRANK, I can tell you that you don’t need it.  Slip the raw, cracked egg into still, hot water for 3:45.  Perfection every single time.  The other tasks, which are also mostly mundane, are griddling the muffin (unless you make them from scratch, like I do), griddling the meat…and then, the ONLY potential pitfall, the Hollandaise.

Gordon says he’d use the first 10 minutes for Hollandaise.  Another ridiculous remark.  Hollandaise MUST be served right after it’s made, unless it contains a stabilizer to keep it together over long periods.  The only practical way for a home cook to hold Hollandaise for 20 minutes is to pour it into a thermos (which I doubt they are provided).  Letting it sit at room temp, it will congeal, thicken, and possibly separate or “break,” requiring a last minute step to fix it.  Hollandaise should ALWAYS be prepared JUST before serving.  (Gordon knows that…he’s either trying to mislead the contestants or isn’t thinking at the moment.  Or maybe in his restaurants they use a Modernist approach to Hollandaise using stabilizers, or use a dry mix where you just add water, which is honestly what most restaurants do.)

The savvy contestant will poach 2 of the 5 eggs they are given RIGHT off the bat.  You can hold poached eggs in cold water for DAYS, then reheat them just before serving in hot water.  (And on MasterChef, it doesn’t really matter if you reheat them, because they’re not going to be eaten for an hour, anyway.)  10 minutes later, you begin to prep the ingredients for the Hollandaise.  You clarify the butter (or you cut the butter into cubes and get it in the fridge, if you’re making a whole-butter Hollandaise like I did).  You juice the lemons.  You separate all 3 eggs, but hold back 1 yolk for emergencies.  You whisk 2 egg yolks with salt and a bit of lemon juice to acidulate and get some air into them.  You prepare your water bath.  (OR you just be smart and get out the blender.  With a blender, it takes SECONDS to make perfectly-emulsified Hollandaise.  But no one has the balls to take this shortcut.  If they had, they SHOULD be applauded, but they open themselves up to illegitimate criticism from the judges for “cheating.”  I didn’t see anyone attacking the contestants for using a stand mixer to make cupcakes, which is most definitely “cheating!”  Jordan was consider to be at a disadvantage because he didn’t have a mixer.  Same thing here, EVERYONE should be busting out the blenders.)  You get a griddle surface ready for last-minute griddling of the muffin and meat.  You make the Hollandaise, giving yourself a few extra minutes to fix it if it breaks.  Then you griddle the muffins and meat for a minute per side, get them on the plate with the egg, and top with Hollandaise.  It doesn’t even take 30 minutes.  (I can make EB for 12, making the muffins FROM SCRATCH, in 45 minutes.  I did it last Sunday for neighbor Sharon’s birthday.  This is NOT a hard challenge.)

Beth is as confident as I was, because she also makes Eggs Benedict ALL the time at home.  (Typically, when they air that, it means that person is going to be eliminated.  When they aired me whooping with excitement when they announced it was Eggs Benedict, all my fans posted on Facebook, “NOOOOOO! That means you’re going home!”)

Adorable Bri admits that she has NEVER successfully poached an egg.  (Which, again, often portends great success in a challenge, because the producers LOVE to surprise us!)  Natasha is confident and is being smart by saving the sauce for the end, but Gordon tries to test her resolve by chastising her for waiting.

Krissi has hit a stumbling block as her Hollandaise has broken.  We catch a shot of her discarding her sauce, which is the LAST thing you do when your Hollandaise breaks or separates.  You get out a second bowl.  You crack your 5th and final yolk into the bowl, add a few drops of lemon, and whisk it like crazy, then you slowly whisk in your broken sauce.  60 seconds later, your Hollandaise is repaired.  Easy as pie.  (And that’s PROBABLY what she’s doing, but it’s edited to make us think she’s “starting over.”)  But the thing I love about Krissi is that she is ALWAYS composed.  She’s under extreme stress trying to get out a second mini-batch of Hollandaise, and she’s collected and focused, not frazzled or panicking.  That’s impressive.

Time is called, and the Benedicts are brought forth.  Kathy’s Benedict is perfect from the egg down, but there’s not enough Hollandaise.  For the record, Gordon likes his egg COMPLETELY covered with sauce, so that it’s not visible.  I always plate with a draping of sauce across the egg, so you have the contrast of the white with the golden sauce, but that’s not MasterChef quality.  So be forewarned, should you ever have to serve Eggs Benedict to Gordon Ramsay!

Luca’s eggs are undercooked.  It IS possible to underpoach an egg, if the white is still a bit runny.  The white needs to be solid all the way through, and the yolks needs to be molten but thickened.  (Underpoached eggs are REALLY tricky to work with because they’re so delicate.)

Natasha’s plate is disturbing.  One of her eggs has busted and leaked yolk all over the plate, and her Hollandaise was beaten too long, with too much butter and too little yolk, and it turned into Mayonnaise.  (She says it’s from too much vinegar, which might have contributed to the problem, but it’s the yolk-to-fat ratio that distinguishes Hollandaise to Mayonnaise.  Half a cup of butter can be emulsified into 3 yolks to make Hollandaise, while a full cup of oil can be emulsified into a single yolk to make Mayonnaise.)

Despite her confidence, Beth’s plate is also a mess.  She’s never broken a Hollandaise in her life, but hers is broken today, and her eggs are “slightly undercooked.”  She doesn’t make any excuses.  “I know, it’s awful.”  Good integrity, Beth.

Despite her inexperience with the dish, Bri’s Benedict is pretty perfectly executed, and is the most impressive of anyone in terms of plating.  And Krissi pulled through and plated enough Hollandaise, and she’s golden.

We get an EXTRA long shot of the judges deliberating on what to do, because 4 were so bad, they can’t decide who to eliminate.  Obviously Krissi and Bri are safe, but Beth, Natasha, Luca, and Kathy are on the chopping block.  Gordon says, “It was too close to call,” so after a brief scare when we think they are ALL being eliminated, it’s time for them to face off in the most dramatically over-extended pressure test in MasterChef history, which will take up a FULL ADDITIONAL episode, including a trip to Las Vegas, to determine which of these 4 needs to go home.  (This was obviously planned from the very beginning from a production standpoint…I’m curious what would have happened had only 2 of the contestants performed poorly, and 4 excelled.  But the producers have a sneaky little way of getting a fair idea of who will perform well and who will perform poorly on any given kitchen task.  I just can’t tell you what it is.  *wink*)

Please post your comments on the episode below, and if you’re not already subscribed, get yourself on my email list in the upper right corner of this page.  Lots of cool stuff coming down the pipe, including more Where Are They Nows from previous seasons, and an exclusive interview with a top-100 contestant who was ASKED to be on the show, rather than having to audition, but who doesn’t appear on the cast list and never appeared in the final edit.  You’ll love her story.

84 responses to “MasterChef 4 recap: Firefighters and Benedicts and the Return of Walmart (S4E7)”

  1. Cindy M Avatar
    Cindy M

    Ben – Thank you for your integrity … and, sharing your cooking insights. I love learning from you.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Well, thank YOU Cindy, for such a sweet remark!

  2. Timothy McHenry Avatar
    Timothy McHenry

    Hi, Ben! Big fan of yours here. It took me a while to subscribe to your blog, and even longer to comment on an article, if only because I’m afraid I’m one of those people who does get fooled by the editing rather easily. I try not to, but it’s hard! On a serious note, it’s very interesting reading the perspective of someone who has actually experienced the show, and knows how things work behind the camera. I agree with you that Lynn is a dark horse. Unfortunately, I’m worried he’ll fall into the same position of Season 2’s Erryn, or Season 3’s Mike, where he only really gets screentime on the episode he gets eliminated on. Either that, or the producers just don’t like him for some reason, which is also possible.

    I also have to ask, because I remember you mentioning Luca in the last blog post, and how you heard different stories from the competitors about his attitude compared to how he seemed on camera. Is that a good or a bad thing? I only ask because, from what they’ve shown me, he is one of my current favorites, and it would be a shame to find out that I only feel that way because that’s how the editors wanted me to feel.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Tim, I don’t think there’s any harm in thinking positively about someone based on how they are edited. The danger comes when you start to HATE someone because of the way they are edited. I’ve never met Luca. I’d like to. He seems adorable, friendly, and fun. And since I wasn’t right there on set to observe his behavior first hand, I don’t want to make any judgement calls on him.

  3. skippy Avatar
    skippy

    Thank you, Ben! I always learn so much from seeing both sides. I really hate that they are making it so obvious that they are trying to pit people against each other. It doesn’t have to be this way.

  4. john Carter Avatar
    john Carter

    Not all people from Wichita, Kansas shop at Walmart. I avoid them if at all possible. There aren’t many alternatives, but I will go to Wally World as a last resort. You were my favorite contestant on MC and I am so glad you are finding success. Someday I hope to be able to visit your restaurant. Also, thanks for blogging about the seasons. It is fun to read what others are thinking. I too am disappointed in the forced drama of the show lately…oh well. Take care!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Oh, John, I hope I didn’t offend you with the Wichita Walmart comment. Wichita was a city specifically mentioned by the producers when talking about their target audience. That’s the only reason I used it. I’ve actually NEVER been to Kansas, strangely enough. I’ve been to almost every state, and to more than 40 countries, but never Kansas. Strange…

      1. John Carter Avatar
        John Carter

        Oh gosh! Not offended in the least. Wichita is often times underrated, even by the folks who live here. There is lots to do and tons of culture, but you have to seek it out. I have heard before that Wichita has the one of the highest restaurant seats to population ratios in the country. Unfortunately, Olive Garden gets voted best Italian in the news paper contest because chains are so prevalent.

  5. StellaBlue Avatar

    Everything you’ve said, I said last night while watching the episode. Specifically the Walmart crap & Joe’s spit flying ALL OVER their darn food.

    I love MC and all, but it’s getting seriously… just way too dramatic and very “Reality TV”, instead of it being a cooking competition. I compare it to the American version of Kitchen Nightmares, versus the BBC version. American is ALL DRAMA and BBC is all about the cooking, the food, the restaurant. American television has gone down the dramatic crap hole, and has been for years.

    I still watch it because there are some amazing and talented people on the show. And I love to see the turn out – I just would love to fast forward through the bull crap!

    Love your review!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Awwww…thanks Stella! I totally agree with you.

  6. Eric G. Avatar
    Eric G.

    I appreciate the Wichita, Kansas mention in there Ben! hahaha You are absolutely right about me laughing at the screen at Walmart! Though you did forget to mention the forehead prints on my table when I was hitting my head on it after hearing Walmart, Walmart, Walmart for the 6th time lol I LOVE reading these 🙂

  7. Shahriyar Avatar
    Shahriyar

    As soon as I saw the eggs benedict show, I thought to myself, “zomg, Benstahhh is going to dissect this episode like a year 7 science class to a lamb kidney”

    Thanks Ben for even telling us how Gordon likes his EB!

    1. Ben Avatar

      HAHAHAHAHA…great comment, David, thanks!

  8. moosegeek Avatar

    I laughed out loud at your comments about “Bastianich spit”. Glad I’m not the only one who noticed that!

  9. Michelle Byrum Avatar
    Michelle Byrum

    Love your insight, Ben!!! Thanks for all of your tips. You are so spot on about Hells Kitchen and all of the tv garbage. I used to love Hell’s Kitchen but now I can’t stand to watch the drama so I always fast forward to the cooking parts.

  10. Skye Bachmeier Avatar
    Skye Bachmeier

    I’m cheap. I eat Walmart food. I don’t think the judges have ever eaten anything from there. I think gas grills were the stupidest invention on the planet. Charcoal or die!

    1. Ben Avatar
  11. katmgck Avatar
    katmgck

    Master Chef is never complete for me now until I read your blog. 🙂 And oh my YES, the Walmart plugs were outrageous! Thank you for being our touch stone to all the who’s, what’s, where’s and why’s. You are and will always be MY Master Chef.

    1. Ben Avatar

      You are SO SWEET!!! *hugs*

  12. Rodney Avatar
    Rodney

    Wow, I’m loving your blog even more and more! This season sure has taken a turn for the dramatics, kinda missing season 1 & 2… Looking forward to your next post!

  13. Anony Mouse Avatar
    Anony Mouse

    “But the producers have a sneaky little way of getting a fair idea of who will perform well and who will perform poorly on any given kitchen task. I just can’t tell you what it is.”

    Well, considering the food sits aound for nearly an hour before it’s tasted, it seems that pretty much every dish ever tasted on the show is pretty cold, solidified, and just downright awful. Seems they can pretty much pick and choose on every single dish in every single episode. I mean, sure, the baking challenges are probably pretty legit since an hour old cake is still fine, and the souffles -seem- to be tasted immediately, but pretty much anything else must be pretty nasty if not downright spoiled.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Yes, you are correct…this is ultimately how the show can be manipulated, because the judges can SAY anything they want about the food, regardless of how it truly tastes…because we, the audience, can’t taste it.

      But it’s visually obvious to us when a contestant’s dish isn’t well executed, EVEN if the flavors are good. When you’ve got 6 plates of Eggs Benedict, you can tell by looking at them which contestants succeeded and which did not. I’d be puzzled to see what would have happened if all but 2 of the pressure test candidates executed their Eggs Benedict well, leaving only 2 contestants up for potential elimination. Would they have taken those 2 to Vegas for both rounds of additional pressure test? I’m just curious how the pressure test planning fit in to the show’s production schedule. They kinda had to book rooms, reserve the restaurant, and all that stuff well ahead of time. So this “extra pressure test” was sorta set in stone before filming ever began. So what happens if the pressure test doesn’t yield the number of contestants they needed to move everyone through to this ULTRA pressure test in Vegas?

      1. Hetaira Avatar
        Hetaira

        You know what would have happened. Two more would have looked perfect, yet been tragically underseasoned. Such a shame. *shakes head, sadly…faith in a just God shattered by this turn of events*

        Their target demographic might not be that interested in culinary arts or analysis, but they’re not recovering from brain surgery either. It’s just bizarre that they tried to sell this as an impulse decision.

  14. Polly Esther Avatar

    Now I’m super eager to make Eggs Benny! But I have to say …. that wasn’t true Canadian Bacon, or as we call it up here, Peameal. That looked more like balogna to me. Is that typically how Back Bacon looks down there, Ben?

    1. Ben Avatar

      Yes, Polly, that’s what we call Canadian Bacon down here. A round slab of cured loin. It looks more like sausage or processed lunchmeat than real back bacon.

  15. Jennifer Allen Rossi Avatar

    I wish Masterchef would stop creeping into Hell’s Kitchen territory with the phony drama and finding new ways to put contestants into positions that will make them feel more negatively about each other than they would in a normal, straightforward competition. More focus on the food and the positives and less manufactured drama please! By the way, Ben, I really enjoy your recaps and your blog in general. I keep learning a lot from you!

  16. Timothy McHenry Avatar
    Timothy McHenry

    I agree, Ben. It’s good to know you are just as nice as the camera made you look on Masterchef! And I agree. I look at the chefs as television characters, in a way. I mean, I know they are real people, but at the same time, they are often edited to either be a different person (Christian, Krissi), or not even shown at all (Lynn). I support everyone in making their dreams a reality, and I get highly irritated when I see people make personal threats (I have, I’m sad to say, seen at least one person say they want to kick Krissi’s ass). To me, that’s taking things too far. The personas on screen are not like that of the people in reality, as anyone on this blog can attest to. It’s sad to think of the number of contestants who have to deal with people who don’t know them in real life attack them personally based on a heavily edited screen persona.

  17. Christopher Carrera Avatar

    Earlier today, I watched an episode of the UK version of MC called MasterChef: The Professionals, and I was astounded by the differences. Firstly, no Gordon Ramsay?! But seriously, this is what our MC should be.

    I watched the contestants recreate a dessert done by Michel Roux. The difference was that we got to see Chef Michel show them, step by step, how to make it. Then the judging started, and although none of them nailed it exactly, Chef offered constructive criticism AND plently of compliments on what they did right. There was no drama, no bickering between the contestants, it was what it is supposed to be: a cooking competition.

    1. Angel Avatar
      Angel

      Masterchef Australia is that way also, the judges are nice when they tell a contestant their food is off, even serving raw chicken won’t get them to yell.

    2. Ben Avatar

      Christopher, that show sounds like a dream! I would be on that in a heartbeat!

    3. kendallbotanicals Avatar

      Hey Christopher, where did you watch that UK version? Thanks, Roberta

      1. Sam Avatar
        Sam

        Lots of episodes of MC: Th Professionals are on youtube. I agree with Christopher. That show is one of the best cooking show contests I have ever watched. You actually learn by watching it. No drama. And almost every reality type show about food that I have watched coming out of the UK has been similar. I like them so much better than the US versions, especially kitchen nightmares. That is, in my opinion Gordon’s best show.

      2. Hetaira Avatar
        Hetaira

        They’ve been running a series of Professionals on BBC America the last week or so, too. I haven’t seen regular UK Masterchef but if it’s anything like this we are seriously losing out. One small but critical difference – going a couple minutes over time does NOT mean you don’t get to finish at all. There is no “oops, didn’t get it to the plate, now all your work is garbage, nyah nyah.” It counts against you if everything else is even, but the absurd pointless cruelty is just not there.

  18. Robert Morris Avatar
    Robert Morris

    You forgot one great way to cook a steak from your hometown. Over a hot mesquite wood fire. Add me to the list that would have loved to see you do the baking competition show currently airing, there is only about 10% of the drama and I think you would have killed it. They air a few snickers here and there from contestant to contestant but it is pretty clear they were just kidding around.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Well, Robert, a hot mesquite wood fire is the same thing as cooking on charcoal. Mesquite burns SO hot, but with minimal flame, and it mimics charcoal almost exactly, but with that amazing Texas taste! Mmmmmmm….

  19. laura luciano Avatar

    I am so glad you got on your soap box about Walmart. And we all know that Eataly here in NYC does not have Walmart steaks! This year it seems, the production has turned into a Hells Kitchen type of format — *sigh*.

    But even still we are all watching MasterChef. 🙂 BTW: I met Krissi at the NYC audition, she stood right next to me in the producers interview. She is portrayed pretty close to what you see on TV. In our group they took all the single moms. They were filling their single Mom quotas — Good for Krissi.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Wow, that’s interesting Laura! All single moms. Hmmm…

  20. Toni Sober Avatar
    Toni Sober

    Thank you, Ben, for confirming that I’m not TOTALLY crazy; not being a terrific cook, but having waited tables to put myself through college, I remembered the Hollandaise being the last thing made (and then having to grab that order and hustle my keister to the table while the chef was hollering at me to MOVE IT!). Listening to Gordon Ramsay had me scratching my head.

    Reality TV shows seem to have this “have fun watching other people suffer” attitude (gee, when will they bring back the Coliseum and the lions?), except for Amazing Race, so I don’t watch them; I was hoping that MC would be different, and I enjoyed the first two seasons. I had hoped that MC would provide inspiration and that recipes would be available (I made dinner for a couple who became first-time parents last month, and included 1/2 a loaf of your Dutch oven bread — Sober ate almost all the other half of the loaf (!!!) that afternoon, so I made a loaf each of several weekends thereafter – thank you for the recipe and instructions!), but sadly, no. I don’t mind the hawking of WalMart (being a small business owner, I recognize the need to advertise), and I wish that folks could be inspired to learn to cook good, healthy, yummy food without bursting their budgets (cornbread and beans is one of the best things IN THE WORLD; cheap and nutritious). I wish also that MC would ignite some interest in trying new foods; after years of living on a tight budget, Sober and I splurged and joined a CSA, and during the past year have discovered things like kohlrabi and spelt berries (which are not berries – goofy!), and enjoyed pasture-raised pork, beef, and chicken (another good buy; roast a chicken on Sunday, and make meals from it for several days thereafter).

    Thanks for blogging about MC; I will keep watching for and reading your insights, and see what good stuff I can glean from MC. I post a recipe each Friday for my clients and other Likers on my business Facebook page – two of them have been your Dutch oven bread (because it’s SO good, inexpensive, and so exceedingly easy to make), and your pumpkin carrot cake (not as simple, but still not difficult, and oh. so. very. very. yummy.).

    1. Ben Avatar

      I just adore you, Toni. This is a great comment. I’m with ya on the cornbread and beans. I was raised on that pennies-a-serving meal, many times a week, and still can’t get enough of it. Congrats on the CSA, that’s an AMAZING way to support local farmers and get access to a quality and variety of veggies and meat no grocery store could ever supply.

  21. Gregory Wright Avatar
    Gregory Wright

    Something that is really bugging me is how some contestants are getting so much HATE thrown at them on twitter and their fan pages. I know if someone followed me around for a day they could edit that any way they wanted to and make me into the nastiest person ever or an angel. Natasha is really getting the villain edit and so many people are gleefully throwing hate her way. On the MasterChef page everyone is jumping on the pic of her failed Eggs Benedict and crucifying her for it. It’s sickening. Jorden also seems to get a lot of hate, but he’s hilariously commenting back playfully. I really feel bad for the contestants, who’ve sacrificed so much to be there and be part of a show that entertains so many, only to be mercilessly mocked so publicly. People, don’t judge so harshly. These are regular people in a stressful situation and much like us…have bad moments. And sometimes that’s all the show airs out of thousands of moments.

    I have a feeling that they contestants were told specifically how to make their eggs benedict, and those who normally would have done well, were cooking them in an unfamiliar way. Hence, their surprise failures. Kinda like someone a couple years back who failed cooking venison…;)

    1. Ben Avatar

      Greg, I haven’t had the time this season to interact with the contestants, so I haven’t seen this hate. That is really upsetting. I’ll start addressing it in my blog, though MY fans aren’t the type to seek out people and heap hate on them. That’s the primary fan base the show is made for, and the show must be loving it, unfortunately.

  22. Nick Shiraef Avatar
    Nick Shiraef

    Great, smart writing in this blog, as usual. Ironically for me, the show is becoming what the producers intended in the first place, a form of entertainment, nothing else. I started out wanting the best of both worlds, to be entertained AND educationalized (made up words are “in”). In the end, I think it’s important to accept that entertainment does have a certain exclusive value to it and I shouldn’t hate since that was the intention of the creators.

    BUT the question for me is HOW do those of us like me (and as far as I can tell, Mr. Starr), continue to make this fantasy world become a reality??? (the world where average Joes and Jennys and all their little Jr.s begin to truly care about the power of food in our homes). What kind of TV show would it take to create the ripple effect scenarios where we as a society consolidate all the latest food trends into an old-fashioned revolution? I’m still an idealist but I imagine a world like Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, except all the bright colored candy is replaced with ripe, locally grown vegetables, the rivers flow with fresh unpasteurized milk, and instead of oompa-loompas, a crew of mini restaurant chefs make it all happen under the direction of our generation’s Willy Wonka, Ben Starr.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Nick, your vision is EXACTLY the show I’ve been trying to conceptualize for several years. The only problem is that no network would buy it. (Or so the MC producers believe.) Networks take HUGE risks when they ply uncharted waters. It is far safer to bet on shows that are similar to other shows that have been successful. And the shows that are universally successful are the ones that show the breakdown of human character, the collapse of integrity. And apparently networks are potently allergic to concepts like “slow food,” “raw milk,” “organics and sustainability,” because that big central part of the country associates those things with liberal Democrats and will refuse to watch. So if we’re to bring that kind of an amazing show to television, which will celebrate the best in humans, reward those who have secretly lived lives of service to their communities or families, and make people yearn for the days when our food sources were unpolluted and unadulterated…we have a LONG road ahead of us. The show’s gonna have to be amazing, suspenseful, and shocking and trigger the same audience reactions that a show like Hell’s Kitchen does…but in a totally different way.

      1. Sam Avatar
        Sam

        Funny that they think those things are associated with liberal democrats. First of all, just about all of Hollywood is a bunch of liberal democrats. There are a few exceptions but for the most part, they are all liberals. I, for one, am a pretty conservative guy and generally lean towards conservative politics. At the same time, I love good food!! I would love to see more about organics and the like since I love good tasting food.

        Just so you know (in case you don’t already), one of the most successful TV shows of all time, Seinfeld almost got canned early in its run. It was one of those types of shows that was a bit out there in terms of what people supposedly wanted to see and it was slightly racy. The execs at NBC did not like the show and wanted to cancel it but for some reason didn’t. Not only was it massively successful but it is still relevant and I still find it to be the funniest show I have ever watched. These days, no TV network would EVER pick up a show like that and that explains the lackluster quality of TV shows today. I can’t stomach a full episode of pretty much any comedy on TV these days.

        1. Ben Avatar

          Sam, Seinfeld was “back in the glory days” of TV. Apparently network execs have become infinitely more paranoid and stoic about keeping with safe formulas. Extreme Home Makeover was also greenlighted back in the day when execs were known for taking more risks. And while the industry now considers that show sort of the “redeeming” supreme example of what reality TV SHOULD be, apparently no network exec would EVER greenlight such a project now. The profit margins are so much narrower now, with so many channels producing content, so networks are sticking with the formulas they know work.

  23. wardsgal Avatar

    AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA, Ben — I said EXACTLY the same things about Bastianich’s spit & the words “Wal-Mart” never dripping off my Hot Shar Pei’s tongue.

    1. Ben Avatar

      You know, everyone in my social circle now calls Gordon the “hot sharpei” thanks to you, Julie! Ha ha ha….

    2. Toni Sober Avatar
      Toni Sober

      Hahaha! Hot Shar Pei
      ! That is so “stunningly spot-on!” Gotta tell my assistant when we back into the office on Monday; she will laugh out loud!

  24. Mirna Avatar
    Mirna

    I never really feel tempted to watch tv amidst exam time but you’re blog is so good I just have to keep up with Masterchef so I can read it. Great insight and impartiality. Also I was waiting for an explanation for this weird Walmart thing!! And thanks for the tips on poaching eggs, been meaning to learn

    1. Ben Avatar

      Good luck with the exams, Mirna! *hugs*

  25. MsShay Avatar
    MsShay

    MC has sunk to such a low level that the only good reason for me to continue to watch it to enjoy Ben’s MC blogs.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Awwww…you’re so sweet. Maybe a real gem will emerge from the contestants this year, let’s hope!

  26. Ruth Avatar
    Ruth

    Pretty much everything you have said my fiance and I said/discussed while watching this week. So interesting the point you said about Gordon not mentioning Walmart though! I hadn’t thought of that. I work in marketing (nonprofit) so I find the whole MasterChef/WalMart relationship very interesting. This episode did make me think that Eggs Benedict is extremely challenging. I am barely even a beginner cook so had no idea. I was a little confused, though, because even though I have never made Eggs Benedict, I have had it at diners so was confused on how it could be that complicated!! Love your post and how you can show us what is *really* happening with “reality” TV!

  27. Holly Avatar

    I love your blog and never miss. Everything thing you have said here is spot on, right down to the embarrassment that I felt for the show when they were spewing Walmart love. Like any of the judges would step foot in a Walmart. My issue is that Masterchef is all about the drama and nastiness. I really love the franchise, but much prefer watching Masterchef:Australia or the UK versions. Those are all about teamwork and cooking. Masterchef Australia even airs the Masterclasses. I wish this show would get back in the kitchen! Love your stuff, Ben and I have Ben Starr struck ever since you forgot your secret ingredient!!!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Ha ha ha… Big hugs, Holly!

  28. Steve Avatar

    Gordon says, “It was too close to call,” so after a brief scare when we think they are ALL being eliminated,…

    I called that the “Game of Thrones” twist.

    Not that I expected they were really going to send four home; I had a feeling that that was a tease. And yep, it was obviously planned that way. However, it seemed pretty obvious at least three of the 4 had actually produced poor effects – you could see that they weren’t happy with their own efforts, and we could clearly see the eggs were a little undercooked in some cases.

    By the way, what does a source ‘splitting’ mean? Is it when the source looks granulated? I had assumed that was just the result letting it get cold.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Steve, a sauce breaks or separates when the fat comes out of it, and the remaining liquids and solids curdle together. It can look grainy, but it primarily looks oily and curdled.

  29. Andrea Avatar
    Andrea

    All I can say is that when they said ‘Eggs Benedict’, I had a flasbhback of THAT episode in your season and your very excited shout. Couldn’t help smiling.

  30. Minda Avatar
    Minda

    I, too, was so excited for the Ben Starr, er, Eggs Benedict challenge. I learned to make that dish because of your episode (& YouTube video on poaching eggs!). So I couldn’t wait to read your blog. I’m so glad you mentioned the blender for the Hollandaise–while I’m glad I learned the old way for technique’s sake, the blender makes me a much nicer person lol.
    The editing is crazy this year…although I’m not sure I’d ever be buddies with Natasha in real life, they made her seem rabid. I felt like we didn’t get the whole story on the “disgusting” comment.
    Great post as always!

  31. Jamie C. Baker Avatar

    Ben,
    Do the judges give the contestants any guidance beforehand when going into a challenge like this, or is it up to the contestants to figure out how to make EB if they have never done it before? I was trying to figure out whether or not they received a little bit of help because it seems a little odd that everyone would know exactly what to do and in the order to do it in, considering they are all home cooks and able to do things on their own terms at home. I see the judges helping at times (ex. “___ should be in the oven now,” “___ needs to be mixed with ____”) and I’m deathly curious to know if they get more help than we see. I hope you can answer 🙂

    1. Ben Avatar

      Jamie, thanks for your question. I can’t give full disclosure on this due to my contract. But I can tell you that if you watch MasterChef versions from other countries, you’ll see that the contestants are constantly given Master Classes for different dishes they will end up preparing on the show in the future. MasterChef USA is no different, but the AUDIENCE the show is produced for is different. The Fox audience doesn’t care about learning how to cook, they want to see suspense, drama, and food being spit out and thrown away. So this is the part of the MC experience that makes it to the screen. The contestants are literally put through culinary school behind the scenes of the show. When they say, “I’ve never poached an egg” what that means is “I’ve never poached an egg before coming on this show.”

      1. Jamie C. Baker Avatar

        That clears a lot up, Ben. Thank you!! 🙂

        1. jezziebezzie Avatar
          jezziebezzie

          Great question Jamie! That was exactly what I wanted to know, too. How does one even know how to begin a Hollandaise if they’ve “never” made it before? I wondered if they got offscreen instruction at some stage, or if they had access offscreen to a recipe we couldn’t see. I know there’s a ‘fabulous library of cookbooks’, but you’re kinda boned if you were only reading up on bechamel that morning, ya know?

          1. Ben Avatar

            Well, like I said in another comment, when someone says, “I’ve never made Hollandaise before” what they REALLY mean is, “I never made it before I came on MasterChef.” If the show forces you to cook something specific (like in a pressure test), it will not be the first time you’re exposed to it. However, for things like Mystery Boxes with weird ingredients, you’re on your own.

  32. Tim Avatar
    Tim

    Hey Ben, first time poster here! I love Master Chef (first started watching during your season), and never miss an episode, though the whole Wal Mart love fest is embarrassing. I’m not any kind of chef, or even a cook, but I do enjoy reading your takes on preparing, cooking, and eating food. One of these days, I’ll work up the nerve to try something fancy (for me that means not out of a can or box). Thanks for sharing, and keep me on your mailing list!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Thanks so much, Tim! Welcome to the community. *hugs*

  33. Marie Porter Avatar

    Fun fact: My MasterChef roomie, Alexandra… she was one of the people who had to carry a Walmart bag in, for the auditions. She was SOOO upset by it, and was basically one of the last people that would ever buy at Walmart.

    I don’t think they ever showed her with the bag, in the end… but she was dreading it for months!

    1. Ben Avatar

      HAHAHAHAHA! Poor gal. Yeah, when I did Rachael Ray’s thing back in 2007, our first sponsor was Walmart and we had to race through a Supercenter to buy groceries, and then get interviewed about how amazing it was. I think all my coastal friends laughed their asses off and didn’t speak to me for a year after that.

  34. Shawna Avatar
    Shawna

    “But the producers have a sneaky little way of getting a fair idea of who will perform well and who will perform poorly on any given kitchen task. I just can’t tell you what it is. *wink*)”

    You’re killing me Ben! I’m so curious now!

  35. John W Hall Avatar
    John W Hall

    I LOVE seafood. So living in Central Texas, regular as clockwork twice a month I get this deep-rooted urge for seafood – which I usually cook myself. But here’s the thing, one time every year I see a Red Lobster commercial on TV and I am bamboozled into believing that if I went there, the food might actually look like the plates on TV and be oozing succulent deliciousness. Every year I succumb and every year I leave, shaking my head and doing the mantra thing…. Never again, never again…….

    All of which to say that I’m getting the same vibes about the Walmart steak. I mean it’s in a black package and everything so it has to be every bit as good as the Black Angus from back home………. and now Joe is extolling the many virtues of the amazing quality of this brand of steak………. my resolve is cracking……… I can’t stop myself from picking up the car keys………. got to try a Walmart black pack prime ultra first grade steak……… HELP!!

    1. Ben Avatar

      HAHAHAHA… Don’t resist it, John. Go grab yourself one of those steaks. (You know, only one in 6 steaks is good enough to be called a Walmart steak!) Cook it up and let us know how it was!

  36. John W Hall Avatar
    John W Hall

    OK SO I AM NEVER GOING TO TRUST ANOTHER WORD THAT COMES OUT OF THE MOUTH OF JOE BASTIANICH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Encouraged by your reply Ben, I bought a one inch thick one pound ribeye steak from Walmart, brought it home and grilled it off to medium rare – 135 degrees and not a nickle more. The flavor for a ribeye was disappointing to say the least, but it was tougher than any sirloin I’ve ever eaten – and a full third of the steak was inedible due to fat & connective tissue. I mean I know a ribeye should have some nice striations, but this was just taking liberties.

    All I can say is that if only one steak in six is good enough to be called a Walmart steak then a) I obviously got number seven, and b) i’ll buy the other five from HEB in future – their meat cutters actually know something about meat!

    PS I have the photographic proof in my safe deposit box at the bank………

    1. Ben Avatar

      Ha ha ha… John, THANK you for sharing your experience! I’ve had one other fan also give into the temptation….and their report was shockingly similar to yours. I confess that while you’ll find me in Walmart about twice a month, I still haven’t purchased ANY beef there since my season of MasterChef aired. But two trials with the same results is pretty darn convincing…

  37. Tracey Avatar

    Thanks for the heads up on Lucky Layla Farms, I’ll try to get over there and try some fresh milk! I hate the drama but I love cooking shows. Fortunately, BBC America has been airing the UK MasterChef lately, so that’s nice. I think poor Kathy really got robbed. Her dish was perfect except for too little sauce and that’s equivalent to screwing the dish up entirely? Pffft.

  38. KarenKaren Avatar
    KarenKaren

    Still reading (slowly) backwards in time. I’m finding this all very interesting. Perhaps you’ve said this in an earlier blog, but I had assumed the contestants had to sign some kind of non-disclosure agreement since there seemed to be so little online about contestants behind-the-scenes experiences. I had assumed a lot of what I’m reading on your blog here, was going on (editing to inflate drama, etc.) The only reality shows I watch are the ones I call the “creative” ones. Where contestants compete in areas where they are passionate and creative. Such as Project Runway. I tend to cringe when either (real or manipulated) backstabbing / bickering / whatever happens. And I cheer when what appears to be true integrity and helping each other occurs. (Such as Carla on one of the Top Chef episodes; she won me over just by insisting on helping other contestants.)

    I admit to raising my eyebrows pretty damn high when I first saw one of the placement ads for Walmart on MC. I was like, “really?” I’m expected to believe that the professional chef hosts of this show cook with Walmart food? I very much doubt that. It just makes me sad (and cringe) to think of even more commercialization. Oh well.

    Interesting what you said about charcoal over propane. Makes total sense. What about the Treager wood pellets? Are they closer to charcoal?

    1. Ben Avatar

      Karen, ANY natural wood fire is far superior to gas because of the flavor! Wood pellets are no exception.

  39. Catherine Avatar
    Catherine

    Why the hate for Wichita Kansas? Home of some great restaurants, tons of local farmers markets, ethnic groceries…. I live in an even smaller Kansas city with a Wal-Mart and NEVER shop for food there. We have local independent butchers, custom slaughterhouses and incredible produce year-round. Come visit Kansas sometime. We likely grow a lot of your food.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Oh, Catherine, I have NO hate for Wichita! It was just mentioned over and over again by the show’s producers…apparently Wichita embodies the target MasterChef audience.

  40. Alyssa Avatar
    Alyssa

    Hi Ben! I’m a big fan here! Love your blog and have even attempted some of your recipes! I have been watching Masterchef since season 1 and your season was my favorite hands down. No I do not watch Honey Boo Boo and I avoid anything with the name “Kardashian” attached to it. So I guess I’m not the typical audience! I am just a girl who likes to cook and finds the concept interesting. Honestly I have noticed the show kind of going downhill the last 2 years…. its become more about the drama between contestants and less about the actual cooking. And they don;t show everyone’s dishes anymore!! I’d rather see what each contestant made during an elimination challenge rather than 10 minutes of the judges tasting 1 persons dish. They just drag it out and sensationalize it now. Yet I am still hooked!!

    I am glad to hear your real opinion on Walmart. I swear I think the 3 judges must choke down vomit every time they mention these “amazing” steaks from Walmart!!! Do they actually use Walmart meat or do they just show the package for endorsement purposes and use something else??

    Also I have always wondered what happens to all of the meals the judges don’t taste (such as mystery box challenges) Does everyone just have a big sampling party when the cameras shut off? Even the meals they do taste- they take 3 bites and throw the rest away? It just seems like a lot of food and ingredients must get wasted on that show, which makes me sad when there are so many hungry people in the world. Last week with the pigs heads- They had 12 pigs heads just for the “scare tactic” and then cut up parts of the pigs head which the contestants actually used for cooking. Were those pig heads just tossed after that? I hope they were able to use them elsewhere but upsettingly I am sure they were just for show.

    Last question… how much of the show is staged? It seems like it has gotten worse and worse. Especially because Joe can’t act fro sh*t so I can tell when he is trying to!!

    Anyway you rock and are one of my favorite contestants ever!

    -Alyssa

    1. Ben Avatar

      Hi, Alyssa! Thanks for your comment. There is a considerable amount of food waste with ANY food TV show. The plates that the judges taste are discarded after tasting. All the food left over on the cooking stations after the challenge gets eaten by the crew. And I believe this year they are donating extra pantry items to food banks and shelters. But things like the rest of the pigs heads were, in all likelihood, discarded, unless the culinary crew decided to salvage them for stock.

      How much of the show is staged? That depends on what you mean by “staged.” Sometimes the judges have to stop and re-take a critique. Shots like the contestants walking onto the set of a group challenge is typically filmed several times. What you see in 45 minutes took several days to film. And there is heavy manipulation of the story arc by the producers. But it’s certainly not FAKE…the contestants ARE cooking to save their lives. And at least THEY do not know who is being eliminated until it happens.

  41. elisheva Avatar
    elisheva

    For the record, there is a tremendous amount of food waste in culinary school as well. I went to the French Culinary Institute in NYC (one of the better cooking schools in the country) and the amount of food simply thrown away is astonishing. Due to health regulations, food that has already been cooked cannot be donated, so if it isn’t eaten by students or staff (or taken home), it is tossed. At one point, half my class skipped the Monday after a major holiday weekend and we were cooking lamb that day – there were more than double the amount of shanks needed for the dish and the chef instructor told us to feel free to take the extra shanks home as they’d otherwise be tossed. It was an every day occurrence that people would make three, four, five dishes and they would go directly into the garbage after being examined by the instructors. Sometimes people took leftovers home, but often beautiful meals went straight to the trash in large quantities. Food waste is a terrible thing, but it’s certainly not limited to TV (and my understanding is that on most sets, as Ben stated, the crew eats whatever they can).

    1. Ben Avatar

      This is a fascinating comment, thank you so much! I’ve been told similar things about culinary school by some teachers and students. How was your overall experience at FCI?

      1. elisheva Avatar
        elisheva

        FCI is a mixed bag. It really depends on what you want to get out of cooking school. I went in having already worked professionally as a private chef and small-scale caterer. I had classmates that said they’d never cooked so much as an omelet in their life. There were young people who were just starting out, bright-eyed and eager to embark on a culinary career. There were 40 and 50 and 60-somethings that had made their fortunes in other areas and were simply looking to enhance their own cooking skills. What I personally found is that the school is great for giving you a foundation in cooking if you don’t have one (and if you are willing to learn, not everyone is) and for teaching you how to work in a professional kitchen. There are some instructors there that are absolutely wonderful; intelligent, skilled, generous in spirit and teaching. There are some egotistical assholes who make it clear that they aren’t interested in really instructing students they don’t ‘like’ and who don’t seem to tremendously enjoy teaching. I personally found it a difficult structure as what made me a great private chef (innovation, independence, and an inability to fit within a ‘mould’) made me a ‘challenging’ student to work with. Make no mistake, they are training you to be able to turn out 100 identical plates, each made to the specifications of that exact recipe as it has always been made (and they will admit that a lot of the recipes in the workbooks are lousy as-written!). At one point I was even reprimanded for my choice in socks, which were apparently far too flamboyant for the kitchen (until then, I didn’t think anyone could hate vibrant polka-dots or rainbow stripes!). They cut you very little slack, because the professional kitchen you’re eventually working in won’t either. I can’t compare to other programs out there since I haven’t experienced them, but given the extremely high cost of the big-name culinary schools (I think it was 40k when I attended), I would consider very carefully exactly where that education will get you that a few years in a commercial kitchen (or even cooking adventurously in your own) would not.

        (Lest you think it’s all bad, they did have one day of class devoted exclusively to wine tasting! Who could complain about that?)

  42. Tiger Gray Avatar

    The criticism of Jordan’s dish upset me, because I feel you can tell by just looking at it that it’s amazing. I feel like they wanted to go for the drama of having the front runners hit the bottom and that’s how they twisted things.

Leave a Reply