What are your memories of the 2010 final? Drop a comment below! Did you root for the scientist, the dad, or the project manager?
Tim is the runaway commercial success story of the 2010 cohort. He founded Bad Brownie —a brand that turned gooey, boozy, over-the-top brownies into a multi-million pound empire. You can buy his brownies in Waitrose, Co-op, and airports across the UK. He proved that losing MasterChef can be the best thing that ever happened to you. (He also still cries, but now it’s into a pile of cash.) The Verdict: 2010 Was the Last "Pure" Season Looking back, the 2010 finalists represent a turning point. They were hobbyists, not influencers. Dhruv cooked from the soul, Alex cooked from the brain, and Tim cooked from the heart. They didn't have social media managers or sponsored knife sets. masterchef 2010 finalists
But let’s be honest—our memories get fuzzy. Was the "sous vide" machine the villain? Did someone cry over a panna cotta? (Yes.) What are your memories of the 2010 final
Fifteen years. It’s hard to believe that a decade and a half has passed since the series that changed the culinary television landscape forever. While MasterChef had been on air before, the 2010 season (Series 6 in the UK, or Season 2 in the US) was a golden era of raw talent, emotional backstories, and dishes that actually made you want to cook. Tim is the runaway commercial success story of
A "Banoffee Pie" that made Gregg Wallace see God.
His "surf and turf" with a vanilla and celeriac puree that left the judges confused but intrigued.