A determined group of professional chefs wander down an fairly
unconvincing alleyway and into an even less convincing locker room, the
design of both illustrating unnerving similarities between big-budget
reality television and low-budget erotica.
A montage of the
preceding week follows, and we are reminded of Matt, the guy with the
unsanitary hat who encouraged everyone to follow their dreams, and
Anthony, the guy with the undignified exit who encouraged everyone to
shut the hell up.Don't make another silicone mold without these
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Cassie
tells us that when she puts on her chef whites she becomes a different
person, and that's who she really is. In light of this identity crisis,
we are all slightly confused as to who is speaking to us right now – is
it Cassie the talented young chef, or is it Cassie the person in
ordinary clothes who cannot cook at all?
The irrepressible force
that is Marco Pierre White welcomes everyone to the kitchen in a syrupy
baritone. Poetry flows from his mouth and a dangerous charisma radiates
from his very core. The women of Australia wonder whether it's really
all that healthy to be so attracted to someone who is almost certain at
some stage to murder them horribly.
A brand new challenge awaits
our chef-hopefuls – the "Reinvention Test". Each week the contestants
must take a classic dish that is perfectly fine the way it is and
artfully mold it into something that contains far more adjectives.
As
the winner of the previous challenge, Akuc must pull a knife from a
block to decide which dish all the contestants will tackle. A swift draw
of steel later and we find out that it's that most classic of classics –
fish and chips.
Marco describes his adolescent experiences by
the seaside as “dreamy”, “magical” and “special” and it takes us all a
moment to realise with horror that he is not actually talking about fish
and chips AT ALL.
Akuc is despondent. Being from Sudan, she has
never eaten fish and chips, let alone cooked them. In fact, she's never
even seen a fish or been in the same room as a potato.
Cassie
is in much higher spirits. She has the unique experience of growing up
around fish and chips, so this challenge is one that plays right to her
particular strength of having eaten ordinary foods.
Cooking
commences, and after a false start and a stern word from Matt Preston,
Rhett is struggling to come up with an inventive dish. This is
surprising to everyone but most of all to Rhett, who by his own frank
admission is so amazing that he should be finding this challenge a walk
in the park.
Coop is crafting some ingeniously crispy parsnip
chips into a collar, which will be filled with an aerated fish mousse.
He's struggling with his mousse, but that difficulty is nothing compared
to his struggles as a young father with a heart of gold, trying hard to
get the best medical care for his sick daughter. As we are shown scenes
of Coop playing with his young girl, we discover that Marco isn't the
only one that's good at making people cry.
Akuc again reminds us
that she's never eaten fish and chips before, and Rhett again reminds
us that he is awesome; and for some reason, I don't think it's the last
time we've heard either of these two pieces of information.
Chrissie
tells us that she has to get her dish on the plate or she's going home.
With this revelation it's reassuring to know that after nine separate
series of MasterChef over the past five years, the importance of
actually serving food to the judges is something we've been intuitive
enough to correctly pick up on.
She's cooking her fish en papillote,Buy today and get your delivery for £25 on a range of plasticmoulds
for your home. which is French for “incorrectly”, and Marco strolls
over to advise her that she's doing pretty much everything wrong.
Rhys,
having learned almost nothing from the five-course seafood tasting
plate that sent Anthony home last week, is making five separate elements
for his reinvented fish and chips. The major difference of course being
that Rhys' dish involves beer and coconuts, so I have to confess that
I'm a little excited.
Akuc now tells us that she's never made
batter before, because that's another thing they don't have in Sudan. It
would seem appropriate at this time to point out to Akuc that, rather
than just the experiences of her early childhood in the Sudan, in this
challenge she is also allowed to draw inspiration from her many years of
training as a professional chef in some of Australia's best kitchens.
Marco
approaches Akuc and tells her that her idea of frying fish in batter
and serving it with fried potatoes sounds very original. Akuc thanks
him, because apparently they don't have sarcasm in Sudan either.
Ninety
minutes is almost up and Marco paces back and forth through the
kitchen, repeatedly shouting the number “15”. We assume is the amount of
time remaining, but before we can clarify he knocks 246 toothpicks onto
the ground, reminds everyone that he is an excellent driver, and
informs us that “Qantas never crashes.”
A few frantic moments
later and the challenge is over. Rhett summons every ounce of modesty he
has in his body to tell us that his dish is amazing and that it should
be on the menu at his restaurant. And with that it's on to the tasting.
Coop
is first up and his food is cooked impeccably, but Matt's seen it all
before. He's disappointed that Coop hasn't used his time in this
challenge to invent an entirely new method of cooking. In the interests
of full-disclosure I should mention that I have worked with Coop before,
and that this may be influencing my opinion that this criticism of Coop
has exposed Matt as a heartless monster.
Akuc comes forward
with a plate of battered fish and deep-fried potatoes, bringing the list
of things we now know that are not present in Sudan to: fish, chips,
batter, sarcasm, and the concept of “reinvention” itself.
Cameron
has not actually cooked any food, but his impressively architectural
diorama of a castle and a lighthouse wins him a gold star from the
judges.
Rhett's crispy fried coral trout wings with taro chips and a chili-ginger sauce is a winner,Source drycabinets
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five-element dish has succeeded where the now-eliminated
chef-to-the-stars Anthony had failed.Features useful information about fridgemagnet tiles. We can only imagine what colour Anthony is turning at home as he watches this.
Chrissie
has not fared so well and the judges are not impressed with her fish
and chips that she has reinvented to, well, fish and chips. She bursts
into tears and Marco puts his arm around her, whispering into her ear.
After
months of advertisements espousing Marco's prowess at forcing people to
cry, we are now expected to believe he is equally good at making them
stop. Right now, I would not be at all surprised if back at home he had a
large room just full of tiny vials of tears – all neatly labeled and
catalogued by name, date and reason for issue. He just comes across like
that kind of guy.
Cassie's deconstructed English classic is a
hit with the judges, drawing praise for the little mound of malt
vinaigrette foam that identifies this dish as “modern” and distinct from
all the years that the human race stupidly ate food that hadn't been
turned into gels or foams.
The top three dishes in this
challenge belong to Rhett, Cassie and Rhys, and today Rhett has emerged
victorious, despite his crippling lack of self-belief.
Akuc and
Chrissie are the bottom two, and Marco tells us that in this competition
a dish that is “good is not good enough”. Neither, apparently, is dish
that is “not good” and Chrissie is told she's going home.
Chrissie
cries. Bonny cries. Akuc cries. Some other people probably cried too
but I couldn't see them because I think I was crying.Creative glass tile
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We've
often been told of Marco Pierre White's past success in making Gordon
Ramsay cry, but what we weren't told is that, in fairness to Gordon, it
would appear that Marco just makes everyone cry. Whether it is the
intimidating projection of his iron will or an overwhelming personal
odour of onions, we cannot know through the medium of traditional
television.
Chrissie exits the MasterChef kitchen for the last
time, disappointed with the fortunes of the day, but with her head held
high in the knowledge that just last week she won praise from one of the
world's best chefs and one of the world's best food critics for her
berry and almond tart.
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