Sponsored by Sainsbury's (© Sainsbury's)
Updated: 11/09/2012 09:04 | By Nikki Haynes, contributor, MSN Food
The Great British Bake-Off: what you need to know

James Morton



James Morton (© Love Productions, BBC, Tony Merritt)
Next
Previous
Previous
  • The Great British Bake Off (© Amanda Searle, Love Productions)
  • Mary Berry (© Love Productions, BBC, Tony Merritt)
  • Paul Hollywood (© Love Productions, BBC, Tony Merritt)
  • Cathryn Dresser (© Love Productions, BBC, Tony Merritt)
  • Brendan Lynch (© Love Productions, BBC, Tony Merritt)
  • Danny Bryden (© Love Productions, BBC, Tony Merritt)
  • James Morton (© Love Productions, BBC, Tony Merritt)
  • Manisha Parmar (© Love Productions, BBC, Tony Merritt)
Next
Love Productions, BBC, Tony MerrittShow Thumbnails
Previous7 of 17Next
Share this Gallery

At 21, James is the youngest of the bakers. But don't write him off because of his age, he's one of this year's potential winners. He's been a favourite since the start, excelling in difficult techniques and impressing with interesting flavour combinations. He's a medical student and treats the kitchen like a laboratory. He thinks that medicine is very similar to baking as it involves marrying science and nurture.

8Comments
11/09/2012 08:37
avatar
I enjoy this prgramme because I like baking and cooking.  I think it is encouraging people to try their hand at making a Victoria sandwich cake from scratch rather than using a packet mix or, worse, a synthetic shop-bought cake.  With a bit of effort, most of us can manage to turn out a batch of cup cakes - this programme demonstrates how straightforward it is.  And that can only be to the good.
11/09/2012 08:40
avatar
How come MSN can block my previous comment (I have since re-worded it) because it looked like it contained spam or a  hyperlink (I couldn't find any, but there you are) but they can allow all those dating website messages on here?  As somebody commented yesterday, it must be because they earn revenue from the dating websites.  And I find that distasteful.
11/09/2012 10:51
avatar

Normally there's a repeat on BBC HD on a Saturday afternoon/early evening, so that those of us who can't watch on a Tuesday get a chance to catch up.  Last Saturday there wasn't, which means that I've missed what has become a very good show to watch.

For those of us without Sky, or who can't be bothered with BBC i-player, there seems no way of getting a repeat.  Such a shame, given the amount of tired old nonsense they endlessly flog to death.  Another repeat of "Flog It", anyone?

 

30/09/2012 12:28
avatar
And yet Hughie here you are commenting. Pompously an all.
11/09/2012 14:27
avatar
what we want to know about cheap cooking shows is absolutely NOTHING
11/09/2012 13:41
avatar
Why all this fuss about what used to be taught in schools as home economics?  The fact is we now have a generation of people so used to buying pre made items at supermarkets that making these simple items seems like brain surgery to some of them.  Celebrity chefs are brain dead but it seems too many people now think they are somethign special when all our mothers and grand mothers in the past could do all of this without breaking a sweat.  I personally am sick of these idiotic patronising brain dead programmes that seem to appeal to an apathetic soul less generation of peolle that just don't get off their arses and think that reality TV is real and that they can become famous for being a complete knob and when we promote idiots like Jamie Oliver (he really is a moron why can't people see this, just listen to the way this mockney fool talks, he's made money from old rope and isn't bright enough to see this and believes his own crap now, our apathy has created these people, did anyone actually see that xmas programme when he pretended to take his granmother from behind when she bent down in front of the cooker on national TV and you fools still buy his books which is regurgetated rubbish from old cookery books?) the day of true celebrity chefs with a personality and intelligence like Flloyd have long simce gone and that void is now filled with the flock of morons we have now and far too many useless moronic programmes which are just cannon fodder for the true purpose of TV these days which is advertising or putting across a particular political point i.e. the media.  Really there should be no TV licence today in the UK as there is no quality to rely on now and even the BBC uses advertising revenue so the licence fee is just a further insult as they tell us the BBC produces quality programmes, no it does not in fact is is worse than even channel 4 these days.
Report
Please help us to maintain a healthy and vibrant community by reporting any illegal or inappropriate behavior. If you believe a message violates theCode of Conductplease use this form to notify the moderators. They will investigate your report and take appropriate action. If necessary, they report all illegal activity to the proper authorities.
Categories
100 character limit
Are you sure you want to delete this comment?
  • Creative baking shortcuts

more on msn food