The Great British Bake Off Wednesday 8.00pm BBC1 s h o t e x c l u s i v e ly for radio times by
Nicky Johnston
secret of our success
The
They’re our favourite double act, but what have Mary Berry and Paul Hollywood learnt after four years of Bake Off ? And what’s their favourite cake?
Mary Berry and Paul Hollywood examine three cakes made by the show’s home economist Faenia Moore. She’s a brilliant baker — it was our idea to get her to make two dodgy cakes!
our years after she started on The Great British Bake Off, Mary Berry has finally got used to wearing jeans. She admits that her hair and make up are a lot more – shall we say – attended to these days. And people come up to her in supermarkets and show her pictures of their cupcakes. Meanwhile, Paul Hollywood also has a huge fan base, and like her, has got a bit smarter. “No, I haven’t. I am absolutely the same,” says the silver-haired, blue-eyed baker. “Common as muck.” “You are not,” says La Berry, twinkling at him. “You now wear smart shirts with proper collars. And proper cuffs. Don’t you remember, when we first did Bake Off, you used to often appear with those… polo shirts?” she continues, despairingly. “Doesn’t he look lovely now?” She looks at him as one might a naughty child. “Really stylish with your sleeves turned up, and a nice collar. No, he wasn’t like that at first. Now he looks smashing. I have noticed other people doing it like him, and I like it.” Hollywood grins at her. She twinkles back. Of course the chemistry between the comforting home baker from the Home Counties and the rough diamond from the professional kitchen is one of the secrets behind The Great British Bake Off, about to launch into its fifth series, and now upgraded to BBC1. What has changed for the two since the show began? Precious little, they say. It’s still about people baking stuff for Mary and Paul to taste. Except the stuff that is being baked now is really quite spectacular. Just as Berry and Hollywood have scrubbed up somewhat during the past four years, so has the baking public. It’s not fairy cakes and Battenbergs any more. Everything is “laminated” this and “drizzled” that, with ingre-
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and the winner is…
rosie millard
dients not even heard of when the show began. “I have learnt from the Bake Off,” says Berry, who speaks of the show as if it were a solid object. “Last year I learnt about freeze-dried raspberry powder. Because I don’t research my recipes on the internet, I knew nothing about it. Then I went home and tried it out with my recipes.” She looks at me, perhaps hoping I’m about to go home and try it out myself. “You don’t have the wetness from the raspberry, you see, and there is a very strong powder from freeze-dried raspberries that can run through ice cream. It gives a very intense taste.” I look at Hollywood. Is there anything he has learnt from the show? “Me?” he says, incredulously. “No! I’m a profes-
weights & measures
• 535 blocks of unsalted butter and 74 blocks of salted butter were used by this year’s contestants. Along with… 1,440 large eggs (120 dozen) and 960 medium eggs (80 dozen) 306.5 kg sugar 78.5 litres of milk 80 litres of cream 22 kg chocolate 24.9 kg nuts 24 types of flour 19 types of sugar 600 piping bags and 200 rolls of kitchen paper towel were used during filming 34 — the number of times Paul Hollywood said “overworked” during judging 10 lbs — the average weight gained during the series per crew member
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sional baker. But as a group, the standard has gone up phenomenally this year. Very professional,” he says hastily. “This year they have watched the series. And they have concentrated on their bakes,” says Berry of the 12 contestants. “And not the peripherals. Which is good. We can only judge them on the bake. Not on ribbons or extra sauce, or sprinkles, or things they have made around to create the atmosphere. The bake is the atmosphere and that is what we taste. The viewer can’t, of course, taste, and the taste is very important. And we are the only two people who can describe that.”
absolutely ‘ Itheamsame –
common as muck p a u l h o l ly w o o d
’
Four years on, and Berry is as svelte as ever. She shakes her head carelessly as if to say: keeping your shape while tasting up to 36 different bakes a day? Child’s play! “It’s terribly important to taste absolutely every bake properly,” she says. “So you eat very lightly after that, for a day. Just a few salads. And then back to normal eating.” Her slightly more solid counterpart, who has previously admitted that doing Bake Off has had a ruinous effect on his middle, rolls his eyes. “Yeah, well I do marathons all the time. And I love muesli. Can’t you tell?” She gives him a withering look. One thing that hasn’t changed is Berry’s firm enthusiasm for being the doyenne of home cooking. “I am just so lucky because this is doing something I really love. I love the Bake Off, e
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the RT interview by