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MasterChef: The Professionals





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MasterChef: The Professionals is a BBC television competitive cooking show which aired on BBC Two from 2008 to 2019, and on BBC One since 2020. It is a spin-off from the main MasterChef series, for professional working chefs. Introduced in 2008, Gregg Wallace and India Fisher reprised their roles as co-judge and voiceover respectively. Michel Roux Jr., a two-Michelin-star chef, assisted, from 2009, by his sous-chef Monica Galetti. Since 2011, Sean Pertwee has taken over Fisher's role as voiceover.

MasterChef: The Professionals
GenreCooking
Written byFranc Roddam
JudgesGregg Wallace
Monica Galetti (2009–2021, 2023-)
Marcus Wareing (2014–)
Michel Roux Jr. (2008–14)
Anna Haugh (2022)
Narrated byIndia Fisher (2008–10)
Sean Pertwee (2011–)
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series15
No. of episodes292 (inc. 4 specials)
Production
Executive producersFranc Roddam
Elisabeth Murdoch
Carla-Maria Lawson
Running time30–60 minutes
Production companiesShine TV and Ziji Productions
Original release
NetworkBBC Two (2008–19)
BBC One (2020–)
Release25 August 2008 (2008-08-25) –
present
Related
MasterChef

In 2014, Roux Jr left the show due to "a conflict in commercial interests".[1] Marcus Wareing replaced him.[2] In 2022, Galetti announced that she was leaving the show; she was replaced as a judge by Anna Haugh for the 2022 series.[3] On 23 March 2023, it was announced by Galetti on Instagram that she would be returning to the show as a judge for the sixteenth series, and she did so when it was broadcast from 23 October 2023 onwards.[4]

Format

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Typically, the show runs for seven weeks and twenty-five episodes (reduced to eighteen from Series 15 onwards) transmitted from early November until Christmas, although the precise number of shows per week, number of contestants, the running order and nature of the challenges and the number of chefs eliminated at each round has varied from series to series. There are four weeks of "heats" (the final show of each week being a quarter final), a "knockout" week, a semi-final week and a finals week. Below is a synopsis of a typical series:

Heats

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Each heat week begins with six chefs per show (this was cut to four per show in Series 15). The three (or four) remaining chefs then participate in the quarter-final at the end of that week.

Quarter final

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Knockout Week

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Typically 10 chefs are left by this stage. The precise challenges have varied over the series. In Series 15, Knockout Week was dropped and the competition progressed directly to the semi-final, but it reappeared in Series 16.

Semi-finals

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Finals Week

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Series guide

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Series 1 (2008)

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

Series 2 (2009)

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

Series 3 (2010)

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

Series 4 (2011)

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

Series 5 (2012)

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

Series 6 (2013)

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

Series 7 (2014)

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

Series 8 (2015)

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Series 8 began airing on 10 November 2015. It was won by Mark Stinchcombe.

Series 9 (2016)

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Series 9 began airing on 8 November 2016. Scottish chef and college lecturer Gary Maclean was crowned the winner.

Series 10 (2017)

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Series 10 began airing on 7 November 2017. In the final, aired on 21 December 2017, Craig Johnston was crowned champion. The other two finalists were Louisa Ellis and Steven Lickley.

Series 11 (2018)

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Series 11 began airing on 6 November 2018. In the final, broadcast on 20 December 2018, Laurence Henry was crowned the champion.[18]

Series 12 (2019)

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Series 12 began airing on 5 November 2019. In the final broadcast on 19 December 2019, Stu Deeley was crowned the champion.

Series 13 (2020)

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Series 13 began airing on 10 November 2020. This was the first series to air on BBC One, following the move from BBC Two. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, the series was shortened to just 18 episodes and featured no challenges that took place outside the MasterChef kitchen to ensure social distancing was maintained. In the final broadcast on 17 December 2020, Alex Webb was crowned the champion.

Series 14 (2021)

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Series 14 began airing on 8 November 2021. In the final broadcast on 16 December 2021, Daniel Lee was crowned the champion.

Series 15 (2022)

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Series 15 saw significant changes to the format of the show with the departure of Monica Galetti (although she did appear as a guest on the Chef's Table round), and her replacement with Anna Haugh. The duration of the show was cut from six weeks to five (although the series aired over a longer period due to broadcast of 2022 FIFA World Cup games in November), with the number of contestants reduced, the removal of Knockout Week and some changes to the challenges. Nikita Pathakji was crowned the champion.

Series 16 (2023)

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Series 16 began airing on 23 October 2023. Monica Galetti returned as a judge alongside Marcus Wareing and Gregg Wallace, and the number of episodes was increased to 21. Tom Hamblet was crowned the champion.

Winners

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Year Winner(s)
2008 Derek Johnstone
2009 Steve Groves
2010 Claire Lara
2011 Ash Mair
2012 Keri Moss
Anton Piotrowski
2013 Steven Edwards
2014 Jamie Scott
2015 Mark Stinchcombe
2016 Gary Maclean
2017 Craig Johnston
2018 Laurence Henry[18]
2019 Stuart Deeley
2020 Alex Webb
2021 Daniel Lee
2022 Nikita Pathakji
2023 Tom Hamblet

Transmissions

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Regular series

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Series Start date End date Episodes
1 25 August 2008 19 September 2008 20
2 14 September 2009 22 October 2009 29
3 27 September 2010 2 November 2010 17
4 7 November 2011 15 December 2011 24
5 5 November 2012 13 December 2012
6 4 November 2013 12 December 2013
7 4 November 2014 23 December 2014 21
8 10 November 2015 24 December 2015
9 8 November 2016 22 December 2016
10 7 November 2017 21 December 2017
11 6 November 2018 20 December 2018
12 5 November 2019 19 December 2019
13 10 November 2020 17 December 2020 18
14 8 November 2021 16 December 2021 22
15 2 November 2022 11 December 2022 18
16 23 October 2023 8 December 2023 21

Specials

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International versions

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Legend:   Still in production     No longer airing  

Country Name Host(s) Judges Network Air dates
  Australia MasterChef Australia: The Professionals
  • Marco Pierre White
  • Marco Pierre White
  • Guest judge
  • Network Ten 20 January 2013 – 17 March 2013
    (Season 1)
      Brazil MasterChef Profissionais Ana Paula Padrão
  • Paola Carosella
  • Henrique Fogaça
  • Helena Rizzo
  • Band 4 October 2016 – 13 December 2016
    (Season 1)
    5 September 2017 – 5 December 2017
    (Season 2)
    21 August 2018 – 11 December 2018
    (Season 3)
    13 September 2022 – 8 November 2022
    (Season 4)
      Paraguay MasterChef Profesionales Paola Maltese
  • Eugenia Aquino
  • José Torrijos
  • Telefuturo 9 September 2019 – 23 December 2019
    (Season 1)
      Ukraine MasterChef. Profesionaly
    МастерШеф. Професіонали
    Hector Jimenez-Bravo
    Yelyzaveta Hlinska
    Volodymyr Yaroslavskiy
    STB 2 March – 1 June 2019
    (Season 1)

    29 February – 18 July 2020
    (Season 2)

    See also

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    References

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    1. ^ "Michel Roux Jr leaves MasterChef: Professionals over business conflict". Digital Spy. 11 March 2014. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  • ^ "MasterChef: The Professionals – Marcus Wareing joins as new judge". Digital Spy. 11 June 2014. Retrieved 11 June 2014.
  • ^ Shennan, Rhona (13 May 2022). "Monica Galetti: why did former MasterChef judge leave show, who is replacing her, where is her restaurant?". National World. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
  • ^ Dreyer, Pete (28 March 2023). "Monica Galetti returns to MasterChef: The Professionals for 2023". SquareMeal. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  • ^ "Pregnant Merseyside chef Claire Lara through to final of Masterchef: The Professionals – Wirral News". wirralnews.co.uk. Retrieved 2 November 2010.
  • ^ "Steve Barringer's recipes" on the BBC Food Website
  • ^ "Claire Hutchings's recipes" on the BBC Food Website
  • ^ "Ash Mair's recipes" on the BBC Food Website
  • ^ "Professional MasterChef winner is crowned". BBC News. 16 December 2011.
  • ^ Chris Harvey, "MasterChef: the Professionals, BBC One, who will win it?", The Telegraph, 15 December 2011
  • ^ "Oli Farrar's recipes" on the BBC Food Website
  • ^ "Oliver Farrar Head Chef" on the Handbook.com website
  • ^ Paul Martinovic (13 December 2012). "'MasterChef' finishes in a draw for the first time in history". Digital Spy. Retrieved 14 December 2012.
  • ^ "Professional MasterChef 2013 winner revealed". BBC Media Centre. 12 December 2013.
  • ^ "MasterChef: the Professionals, the final, review". Daily Telegraph. 12 December 2013. Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  • ^ "MasterChef: The Professionals 2013 – Steven Edwards crowned winner". The Independent. 12 December 2013. Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  • ^ "Masterchef winner Jamie Scott's 'incredible' winning dish". BBC. 24 December 2014. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  • ^ a b Pinchess, Lynette (21 December 2018). "Nottingham chef Laurence Henry is crowned MasterChef: The Professionals champion 2018". Nottingham Post. Local World. p. 4. Archived from the original on 21 December 2018. Retrieved 21 December 2018.
  • ^ "BBC Two – MasterChef: The Professionals: Michel's Classics".
  • ^ "BBC One – MasterChef: The Professionals, A Festive Knockout, Episode 1". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  • edit

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    Last edited on 3 April 2024, at 04:02  





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