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00:00Mine's a virgin martini. Shaken, not stirred.
00:11The name's Bond. James Bond.
00:16On His Majesty's service. Silver service.
00:26There are Bond-themed dishes on today's menu, but which of our talented North West chefs will come out on
00:33top?
00:50Bond. Jack Bond. Leonard. Paul Leonard.
00:55Just getting into character, just making sure I'm ready.
00:58Let's nail to there. All the best, man. All the best.
01:03Jack and Paul are well-matched rivals.
01:05Both have Michelin-starred restaurants in the Lake District,
01:08and both have dishes inspired by James Bond and northern legends Wallace and Cromet.
01:14I feel like a right bunch of chickens.
01:18Their movie-themed dishes have already been scored out of ten
01:22by mentor chefs Lisa Goodwin-Allen and Akhtar Isla.
01:26I thought your storytelling was awesome.
01:29Jack was consistent, scoring eights across the board,
01:32but he made some basic mistakes.
01:35Coffee? Nope.
01:37No chips. I'm just going to have to serve them. I don't have any other choice.
01:40This year I've practised more than ever. I've gone over things.
01:42I've rewritten recipes, and hopefully I've got the winning combination.
01:45Paul's dessert was a disaster.
01:48You need to rethink the overall construction.
01:51But his main course went down a storm and scored a nine,
01:55and could do even better this time if he nails the cooking of his chicken.
01:59Back home I've got my wife and my two girls.
02:01I'm sure we'll be cheering us on, and hopefully today we can do them proud.
02:06Today's winner will have the highest total after their menus are scored by chefs Tom and Lorna and new judge
02:13Phil Wang,
02:14as well as a guest responsible for casting some of the movie industry's biggest stars.
02:21Good morning, chefs.
02:23Morning.
02:23Welcome to Judges Day. You've been here before, Jack.
02:26Yeah, the panic has set in a little bit earlier this time.
02:28I guess the main thing to remember about Judges Day is that your slate is wiped completely clean,
02:34and you have brand new palettes to impress.
02:37Yes, I wish you both all the luck in the world. Godspeed.
02:42Thank you very much. Thank you, chefs.
02:44They're getting ahead with some of their more time-consuming jobs.
02:48Jack's filleting his sea bass for his fish course.
02:52They need to dry the skin out as much as possible.
02:54The skin's not dry, then it sticks to the barbecue, then they don't get crispy skin,
02:58and it sort of affects the whole dish.
03:00Paul, having finished just behind Jack yesterday, is not hanging around.
03:04He's already cooked his crispy clavages
03:06and is rolling them into a balleteen for his starter.
03:11Be chill for long enough.
03:12You get a little bit tighter and look a lot nicer.
03:15And eat a lot nicer, a bit denser as well.
03:18So, do you find it a bit intimidating that you're going to be cooking for Tom?
03:22Everything this week's been intimidating, Matt.
03:23But it just tops it off at the end, doesn't it?
03:26Someone like that, the experience, in and out of a great brick menu,
03:29it's mad.
03:30I'm scared.
03:30I'm scared.
03:32Yeah, I mean, scared too.
03:36Our head judge is Tom Kerridge.
03:38He's a double banquet winner,
03:40and he runs the only two Michelin-starred pubs in the UK,
03:43as well as an impressive list of other eateries.
03:47What I'm looking for is the same that I look for year on year,
03:51and it is great food, cooked beautifully,
03:54a wonderful representation of the area and the region that they're from,
03:57with ingredients that absolutely sing.
04:00And then I look forward to the exciting bits and bobs that go with the theme.
04:05Joining Tom in the judging chamber will be the only woman with a Michelin star in Scotland,
04:11Lorna McNee.
04:12We have a roasted Isla Sky Languessine and a smoked bisque.
04:15Make it rain!
04:18And our brand new judge, a self-confessed glutton,
04:22who was so desperate for the most prestigious food judging job on TV,
04:26that he wrestled Ed Gamble for it,
04:28is stand-up comedian Phil Wang.
04:32Obviously, I'm a new judge.
04:34This series taking over from Ed Gamble.
04:36This is his locker.
04:37He's left some stuff in here.
04:40Ed's actually bald.
04:41People don't know that.
04:43Secret of TV.
04:44Well, he's certainly going to be big shoes to fill.
04:49Budget cuts, so this is actually my dressing room.
04:51See you in a bit.
04:53Jack's also tweaking one of the accompaniments to his main course.
04:57I'm almost going to make parmesan emulsion,
05:00but instead of using parmesan, I'll use Wensleydell.
05:03And that's going to go over the chips.
05:06Paul scored a disappointing six for his dessert yesterday
05:09and was criticised for not tempering his white chocolate,
05:12so he's putting that right.
05:15So as soon as I've got this done, I come in there.
05:17Not relaxed, but chill out.
05:19Oh, it certainly makes me feel a bit better.
05:24Hello, sir.
05:25All right, mate? How are you?
05:26Yes, I'm great. How are you?
05:27I am all right.
05:29I've had an excellent week because all four chefs were excellent.
05:32The two who have triumphed are particularly excellent,
05:36let me put it that way.
05:37What about the brief?
05:38Some really good punning, actually.
05:40I've got to say that you shall not bass.
05:43You're the rings, yeah, got that one.
05:45We came on holiday by mistake.
05:46I've done that before.
05:49That's what with Nail and I, right?
05:50There's a cracking beef grommet, that is cracking beef as well.
05:53Finishing at the bottom, shaken, not stirred.
05:55Now I know where we're going with that.
05:56And of course, Tom, we've got a new palette in the judges' chamber.
05:59We have, yes.
06:01Whang!
06:01Whole new energy.
06:02Looking forward to it very much.
06:04Brave new world.
06:07Jack's preparing the Delica pumpkin, which is the star of his starter.
06:11I'm going to break this down a little bit more than last time.
06:14It's because I want it to cook a little bit quicker.
06:16I'll take a bit more of the char flavour throughout the actual hummus.
06:23So I've just put the cabbages into a freezer in an ice bath just to get them as cold as
06:28possible, as fast as possible.
06:31Hey, Tom.
06:32Hey, Lorna.
06:33Hey.
06:34Hi, Tom.
06:35Welcome to the judging chamber.
06:36It's a pleasure to be here.
06:38It's a privilege.
06:38I'm really excited.
06:39The qualifications that bring you to this table?
06:42I'm a huge foodie.
06:43I grew up in Malaysia, which is a big food country.
06:46Big flavours, a real passion for food.
06:50This idea that every meal should be an occasion, should be an event, should be a triumph.
06:56Well, that's exactly what Great British Menu is.
06:57Every dish is an event, is an occasion, should be something very, very special.
07:02Have you had much info from Andy at all?
07:04It's been a very solid and strong week.
07:06I think there's been some good scores.
07:10No tens.
07:13Both chefs are now working on their canapes.
07:17Jack starts with a black garlic chutney.
07:20I'm really not happy with the canapes the first time around, so with this one, I'm going to make sure
07:25it's a little bit more acidic.
07:27I'm going to put more of it on and less waffle.
07:31Meanwhile, Paul is preparing beef.
07:34So we're using fillet.
07:36It's been there for about 52 days.
07:38I'm just going to make that little dressing that we made in the week.
07:43Any changes to a canapes, Jack?
07:44Yeah.
07:45I'm going to make it smaller and a little bit softer.
07:48I felt last time it was just a bit too crunchy and it dried out too much.
07:53Yeah, really?
07:54And Paul's assembling his beef tartare mix.
07:57We'll just season it, just so I can get it set.
08:00When it comes to service time, it makes life a touch easier and we really need that today.
08:09Helping the judges score the dishes is a veteran casting director, responsible for casting James Bond's films since 1981.
08:18Timothy Dalton, Pierce Brosnan, Judi Dench and Daniel Craig all secured their roles on her watch.
08:26It's Debbie McWilliams.
08:28Hi.
08:29Hello.
08:29Hello there, Debbie.
08:30Hi, Debbie.
08:30Welcome to the judges' chamber.
08:32Thank you very much.
08:34It's exciting to be here.
08:35It's going to be a long day of eating.
08:37Jolly good.
08:38Really excited to be celebrating movies this year as well, which I know you've played a massive part in, so...
08:44I have.
08:45I've been doing it a long time.
08:47So what is the actual role of a casting director then?
08:50Well, you basically are there to fulfil the director's vision.
08:56Very often, the director won't have a clue who they want and leave it entirely up to you, which is
09:02also quite a responsibility, I have to say.
09:04Getting Daniel Craig across the line was quite something because he was not a popular choice at all at the
09:11beginning.
09:12The press were incredibly negative about him, and I think he was determined to prove everybody wrong, and I think
09:20he achieved that.
09:22Yeah, yeah, I think he was a phenomenal Bond.
09:29All right, chefs, you have four minutes to the pass.
09:32Yep, thank you, Andy.
09:34Keep checking in with each other.
09:35Make sure you're both ready to come up at the same time.
09:38Jack adds pine nut butter to his black garlic chutney-topped waffle, then pickled, fried and roasted hen-of-the
09:46-woods mushrooms.
09:47While Paul positions his beef tartare with sour cream dressing onto potato rösti, before garnishing with oxalis.
09:56It's your last minute, chefs.
10:04Yum, they look great, guys.
10:06Service, please.
10:08Thank you very much.
10:09Somebody grab you over the door for me.
10:10Absolutely.
10:14First one's out.
10:16It is definitely light camera action.
10:29Two canapes here, Debbie.
10:31One is an English rye waffle with black garlic chutney, pine nut butter, hen-of-the-woods variation.
10:37Chin-chin.
10:41What does hen-of-the-woods variations mean?
10:44Hen-of-the-woods is a mushroom.
10:46Ah.
10:46Feels like there's some dried and some kind of like semi-cooked.
10:50Yeah.
10:51And that black garlic as well.
10:53Chutney comes through quite nicely.
10:55What do you thought on the waffle?
10:56It tastes a bit stale from once with you.
10:58It's quite thick.
11:00It did take a while to chew.
11:02It was in my mouth for a long time.
11:03Yeah.
11:04Yeah.
11:04The variations of the hen-of-the-woods, I don't think there was enough variation in it.
11:08Yeah.
11:08Shall we get on to the next one?
11:10The potato rossi with beef tartare, sour cream and caviar.
11:16I think I need a bigger mouth.
11:19No, I like that.
11:20Maybe a touch over-seasoned.
11:22Yeah.
11:23A bit high, I would say, for sure.
11:24Yeah, again, a bit salty.
11:25A bit salty, but it was soft in the middle, crispy on the outside, the caviar comes through.
11:31I think I could have done without the caviar, actually.
11:33I think it would have been nicer.
11:34That is a sentence I never thought I'd hear.
11:40Well, look, we have to lift up whichever one we think we would go for and have again.
11:47Pick up our favourite.
11:48It's a resounding vote for caviar.
11:50Caviar wins.
11:51Who'd have thought?
11:57A unanimous win for Paul, who is up next with his starter.
12:00Having sliced his hispy cabbage valetines, he bastes them with an onion glaze.
12:07So these have just been charred on the barbecue, so I just want to get a little bit more flavour
12:11in there.
12:13It's a lot more sticky, a lot more caramelised on these guys now.
12:16So I just hope we're going to take the flavour a little bit more.
12:19Paul also finishes his onion sauce, which Lisa liked but said he shouldn't aerate.
12:25It's not going to be as airy as it was in the week, but we're still going to put a
12:29little bit more body behind it.
12:30So hopefully it carries through a touch more.
12:33So, Paul, are you going to be ready for your starter?
12:35Yeah, it's looking all right, mate.
12:36Cabbage is better than it was in the week. It's got real nice glaze to it.
12:39Onion sauce is a touch tighter.
12:40Sounds like you're onto a winner, Chief.
12:44Don't know, Pat. Surviving, mate. Surviving.
12:47So the first starter that's coming into the room is called Cracking Cabbage Gromit.
12:51And it's hispy cabbage cooked in seaweed stock on a bed of rye grains
12:55with grilled raw brassicas and fermented onion sauce.
12:59And it's inspired by Preston-born Nick Park.
13:02The dish celebrates his film, Wallace and Gromit, The Curse of the Were-Rabbit.
13:07Cabbage is a starter.
13:08All the starters this year, again, have to be plant-based.
13:11Oh.
13:12Oh, I was going to say, where's the cheese?
13:14Yeah.
13:15I like cabbage.
13:17I like those farty flavours, apparently, so...
13:20LAUGHTER
13:21Well, that's a good start to the day.
13:23Yeah.
13:23God will start with a fart.
13:25That's my family motto.
13:28Paul, you have five minutes to the pass, Chef.
13:31Thank you, Andy.
13:32Cabbage looks amazing.
13:33Look at that.
13:33Wow.
13:34A little bit more umptuous, hopefully.
13:36Yeah, yeah.
13:36Sex it up.
13:37Right, mate.
13:38So we're going to get a little bit of salsa verde in the bottom, please.
13:42Rye grains.
13:43You can just flatten them out for me, please.
13:46One minute left.
13:47Yeah, right.
13:48Glazed hispy cabbage is next.
13:51Topped with chard, kale leaves and pickled walnut ketchup.
13:55Make sure you get it exactly as you want it, yes?
13:58Yes, we eat.
13:59We don't miss what chard will.
14:00Just round the side, please, mate.
14:01Yeah.
14:02The fermented onion sauce finishes the dish,
14:05which is nestled into Paul's mum's hand-knitted cabbage leaves.
14:10Service, please.
14:26Wow-wee.
14:27That's beautiful.
14:28Mmm.
14:29It's knitted.
14:30Oh, I love this.
14:32These lovely knitted cabbage leaves are fantastic.
14:45Come on in, Phil.
14:46First day in here.
14:47What do you think?
14:48It's a good start.
14:49I absolutely love that.
14:50I thought it was delicious.
14:51I love hispy cabbage.
14:52I think it's done beautifully.
14:53Lovely char.
14:55I think that fermented onion sauce and the little pickle-y base.
14:58Just brought a little acidity to cut through the whole thing.
15:00Yeah.
15:02Look forward to farting that out later on.
15:05What about you, Debbie?
15:06It was crispy, and it was definitely tasty.
15:09I enjoyed that.
15:10I do find the actual hispy cabbage and all the bits in there
15:13just a bit too sweet.
15:15100% agree with you there.
15:16I love how it's presented.
15:17I think it's really good fun.
15:18But I think it lacks a savouriness, a crispiness.
15:22There's a bit of texture that's missing in it.
15:24I wonder sometimes, do we all have different taste buds?
15:26Because I didn't really get that sweetness.
15:28I mean, cabbage is a bit sweet anyway, isn't it?
15:31Yeah.
15:31Yeah, I wasn't bothered by the sweetness either.
15:33Harsh.
15:36That's me not getting the next bomb, then.
15:42Jack's up next, but he's suffered a setback.
15:45He's badly cut his finger, but he's determined not to let it knock him off course
15:49and prepares pumpkin crumpets for his starter.
15:54These crumpets are looking good.
15:55They're looking like they're coming up.
15:56They're going to be super fluffy.
15:57If I can get them like I did for Chef Lisa Allen, then they'll be all great.
16:01So this dish is called Bruce Wayne's Breakfast.
16:05It's pumpkin hummus, pumpkin crumpets, pumpkin seed miso spread, pecan, maple and shiitake tea.
16:12The superhero blockbuster, the Batman, used the city of Liverpool to recreate the iconic Gotham cityscape.
16:18Nice.
16:19I'm a big Batman fan.
16:20This is living a dream for me.
16:21Can we open the letter?
16:22Oh, yes, to the Batman.
16:24Is it going to be a riddle from the Riddler?
16:26Oh, it's a ransom note.
16:29Yes, it's a description of the dish.
16:31Jack's happy with his shiitake tea, but the crumpets are another matter.
16:37These are f***ing.
16:39They're not light.
16:40They're not...
16:41Nothing's changed.
16:41I don't understand.
16:42I don't know what to do.
16:45I'm just going to try and dry them out, I suppose.
16:50And that's not all.
16:52He's mistakenly added a highly spiced pumpkin oil to his miso spread.
16:57It's getting spread on a crumpet.
16:59That's basically raw.
17:00So, ha, they won't like it.
17:04Have you ever cast a superhero movie?
17:07Superman 2 and 3.
17:09Wowee.
17:10With Christopher Reeve?
17:12Mm-hmm.
17:12That was my very first job on my own was Superman 2.
17:15It was a great start, I have to say.
17:18Debbie, how did you get into it in the first place?
17:20My mum took me to the cinema when I was five, and that was it.
17:24I was hooked from then on.
17:26I kind of knew that that was the world I wanted to work in.
17:29I would scour the newspaper every day to see what jobs were going.
17:32There was one line in the Evening Standard that said,
17:35Theatre seeks secretary.
17:37Failed the first interview, which was with the theatre manager.
17:41And she said, oh, but the casting director's looking for somebody.
17:44So I thought, oh, well, I'll go and say hello.
17:46And I sat in this room, and I just knew I was in the right place.
17:50And that was that.
17:56Jack, you all right, darling?
17:57Yeah, just some days aren't your day, you know.
17:59You're having a bit of a mare.
18:01How are your crumpets?
18:02Rubbish.
18:03I don't want to not serve them, because otherwise...
18:06No, you need to get them out there, don't you?
18:07Yeah, so they're just drying out, because they're just a bit doughy and flat and heavy.
18:11And what else has happened?
18:13Spiced pumpkin oil that's gone into my miso, so I'm just trying to bulk it out now.
18:16Oh.
18:16With some pumpkin seed, so it's not so spicy.
18:18So it's not too, so you're just trying to rebalance it a bit.
18:20Yeah.
18:21Don't let it throw you, darling.
18:22You're going to be fine.
18:26You have two minutes to the pass as well, Jack, but if you need an extra minute, just take it,
18:31chef, yes?
18:31Yep.
18:32Thank you, Andy.
18:33First into the bowl is the pumpkin hummus topped with pecans and shaved pumpkin.
18:38You can just pull these with a pair of tweezers just together and get them back into a circle.
18:43Just so you can keep track, you're due now, so you're going into extra time.
18:47Take the time that you need, though, Jack.
18:49Thank you, Andy.
18:49Jack dusts each dish with a Leek Ash Batman logo.
18:53That looks rubbish now.
18:56And the dish is served along with the shiitake tea and the pesky crumpets and miso butter.
19:03Lovely.
19:04And only two minutes late.
19:05I think that's pretty good, considering what you've just been through.
19:08Are we ready, Jack?
19:10Er, we're as ready as we'll ever be, so service, please.
19:12Come and grab the door, chef.
19:14Absolutely.
19:24Mmm.
19:25Wowee.
19:26Intriguing.
19:26Tea, mate.
19:27Yes, please.
19:27Love some.
19:28Ah, yes, this is the mushroom tea.
19:33Mmm.
19:33Very strong.
19:34Oh.
19:44Wow.
19:44Flavour-wise, it's proper punchy.
19:46It's kind of like a brutal assault of savoury, salty...
19:50It's like being kicked in the face by Batman.
19:52It is.
19:52But with flavour.
19:53Yeah, there you are.
19:54But...
19:54I mean, I'll go first with the but.
19:57The crumpet is a little doughy.
20:00It's not quite aerated enough.
20:02The miso spread is a bit gritty.
20:05Is that a word?
20:06Yeah.
20:07Well, it's a word.
20:08Is it the word?
20:09Yeah.
20:10I feel myself being quite excited about this dish,
20:13but still...
20:15There's still work to do on it.
20:16I think these two elements here for me are very good.
20:19I have got some.
20:20There's a vinegar reduction or something in here.
20:22I think that's really bringing out acidity in it.
20:25The textures of the nuts and the little sweetness,
20:27and I like the spice.
20:29And I think that this is...
20:29And the flavour of the shiitake tea is great.
20:31So I think these two are actually very good.
20:33Yeah.
20:33I just think that the miso spread's too salty
20:35and the crumpets are doughy.
20:36The shiitake tea, I think, is really, really nice.
20:38Oh, that's delicious, yeah.
20:39The tea's really great.
20:40Mm.
20:41About the best bit about it, I think.
20:43Who knew?
20:44Shiitake tea.
20:45Don't even talk to me till I've had my shiitake tea.
20:47LAUGHTER
20:52He rolls on to his fish course, and the star is Dover Sol.
20:56I really need to get this fish stuffed,
20:58otherwise I'm in trouble.
21:00He tops the fillets with Dover Sol mousse
21:02before lightly dusting with protein glue
21:05to secure another fillet on top.
21:08Stan Sol, you got an eight?
21:10I got an eight, yeah.
21:11I'm making a lovely Dover Sol,
21:12which is stuffed with Dover Sol.
21:14Is this your protein glue?
21:15This is just a little bit of glue.
21:17One of the pieces of feedback I know from Akhtar
21:19was that there was a bit too much.
21:21I went a little bit over on it to make sure...
21:24Just buckles and braces.
21:25Yeah, yeah.
21:26I've been a little bit more cautious with the protein glue.
21:28Yeah.
21:29What other feedback did Akhtar give you?
21:30So, the seaweed jam,
21:32I had a bit of a mare with it, to be honest.
21:33I bought some kelp, which was a bit tough.
21:35Right.
21:36So, I try and get the same vibe with it.
21:37I've changed it to sea lettuce,
21:39so I'm going to blend that and see how we get on with that.
21:41I'm assuming you're looking for those other two points here, Paul.
21:44100%.
21:45100%.
21:45We want the 10.
21:46Did you hear that?
21:48Just going to give the fish a little bit less time now.
21:52Just want to get that texture a little bit better.
21:54Seaweed jam's on reducing.
21:56I remember the sauce is on.
21:58Our first fish course is called Stan's Soul.
22:01Steamed Dover Soul stuffed with fish mousse,
22:04giroles, sea herbs, buttered greens,
22:07pickled kohlrabi and seaweed jam,
22:09served with a smoked shellfish sauce.
22:12This is inspired by Stan Laurel from Olverston,
22:14who is one half of the comic acting duo Laurel and Hardy.
22:17The dish references are seen in Bonnie, Scotland from 1935,
22:21where Stan cooks fish over a candle using bed springs.
22:24Isn't that how you always cook it?
22:27I remember as a kid, I used to watch those black and white movies again and again and again.
22:31It used to make me laugh out loud, cry with laughter.
22:35I never saw much.
22:36It was before my time.
22:37Unlike you, Tom.
22:40I wasn't quite around in 1935.
22:48That's the seaweed jam medley, sea lettuce.
22:51You have four minutes to the pass, chef.
22:53Yes, me.
22:54How's the croissant, Paul?
22:56Yeah, she's all right.
22:57She feels a bit more delicate.
22:59Pickled kohlrabi is added, followed by giroal and sea aster.
23:05So, you're at time, chef.
23:06You are due on the pass now.
23:08Take the extra two minutes.
23:09Is that what you need?
23:10One minute, please, Andy.
23:11OK.
23:12The dish is served with a shellfish sauce,
23:14and for Tom, a smoked tomato sauce.
23:17The finished plates are painstakingly tucked up in bed
23:21in honour of the Laurel and Hardy film.
23:25Who knew putting a piece of salt to bed was so tricky, exactly?
23:28It doesn't get done often, I think.
23:30Yeah.
23:31You ready, chef?
23:32Let's get it out of here.
23:33Service, please.
23:37Ooh.
23:39Special effects have been at work.
23:42Oh, wow.
23:43It's a bed.
23:44Ah, look at the springs.
23:46I just realised how funny.
24:00Well, I'm afraid to say it's a nul point for me.
24:04Really?
24:05How come?
24:05The fish didn't taste as if it had been cooked, really.
24:08It was kind of tough.
24:09It was all a bit one note, maybe, flavour-wise.
24:12It was just kind of like a salty sea taste throughout.
24:15I really like it, if I'm honest.
24:16I think it's really tasty.
24:17I do think the temperature can be looked at on it to be hotter.
24:20I thought the little pickled discs of the kohlrabi were really nice.
24:23I thought the saline flavour was good.
24:26Yeah, I enjoyed it.
24:27I love the presentation.
24:28The piece of fish, I think, is beautifully cooked.
24:30Andover sole is quite a meaty fish.
24:33However, there's big issues with temperature.
24:36For me, everything is too cold.
24:39Makes it feel that it is raw.
24:42It's a cold-water fish that feels like it's still in cold water.
24:46Also, is anyone else really nervous about getting sauce on the upholstery?
24:49It is difficult to eat from.
24:51That is a good point.
24:52And when was the last time you had Dover sole in bed?
24:54Oh, well, that's how you're asking.
25:00Jack's drawing a line under his starter course and is now focused on fish.
25:06I'm going to get rid of that out of my head, that last course,
25:08and win the next three, you know.
25:11I'm going to make sure the fish is perfect and get back on track.
25:15He's preparing the barbecue to cook his bass, which has the title role in his dish.
25:21You shall not bass.
25:24Yeah, correct, yeah, yeah.
25:25I love this.
25:27Brilliant inspiration.
25:28Sir Ian McKellen.
25:29How did you do with scoring with this?
25:30You got an eight.
25:31The sauce, too intense, too powerful.
25:33It was a lot happening.
25:34I've taken the caviar out.
25:35Yes.
25:36So reduced the fat level in there.
25:37I feel like your energy's shifted from a little bit of a panic.
25:40Just keep reaching for that, you know, BAFTA.
25:42Let's get it, babe.
25:43Absolutely.
25:44Let's get it.
25:44Yeah.
25:46Grill's gone super hot, which is great.
25:48So I've got a nice little crackle going on there.
25:51The second fish course is called You Shall Not Bass,
25:56and it's barbecue bass, charred leeks with smoked almonds,
26:00smoked sauce finished with lily putt capers,
26:03lemongrass oil and pickled trout roe.
26:07And it's a celebration of actor Sir Ian McKellen,
26:10who's from Burnley, who played Gandalf in Lord of the Rings.
26:14Fan of Lord of the Rings?
26:15Big time.
26:16Fan of sea bass?
26:17Not as much as a, like, Lord of the Rings,
26:19but maybe this will change that.
26:21No, mine's definitely the other way around.
26:22Really?
26:22You prefer bass to...
26:24Lord of the Rings?
26:25To Tolkien?
26:26Yeah.
26:26There's so many iconic moments.
26:28Yeah, crispy skin, beautifully cooked.
26:30You're still talking about the bass?
26:31Oh, yeah, sorry.
26:35It's got a blistering on it, which is what I want.
26:36I want the smokiness to not only come from the fish and the sauce.
26:40If I want it to come from that, it's quite important.
26:44Barbecued leeks are plated, followed by toasted almonds.
26:48Quite disappointed with the start, to be honest,
26:50but I can't have my son see that you just give up, you know?
26:54You've got a push, man.
26:58You have five minutes to the pass.
27:01Might be a little bit early.
27:03OK.
27:04Happy with your fish?
27:05I am, yeah.
27:06The fish is served on hot rocks,
27:08accompanied by the new reworked smoke sauce.
27:12You ready?
27:13Service, please.
27:13Lovely.
27:15Hopefully cast some spells my way.
27:16Yes.
27:21Lovely.
27:22Did you do that with that?
27:24Do it again.
27:25It's still going.
27:26It's still going.
27:26Lorna, are you all right, mate?
27:29That cabbage is working.
27:38The visual, the noise, the excitement.
27:40Lorna's smoky under table.
27:42Loved it.
27:44Bass is back on the menu, boys.
27:46Yes.
27:53Well, if this is a fair reflection of the Lord of the Rings movie,
27:56I might have to go back and revisit it.
27:58This is delicious.
28:00Mm, I agree.
28:01It really is nice.
28:02The fish, the way it's cooked, I think, is beautiful.
28:04That kind of, like, crispy skin,
28:06the char from it being cooked kind of on coals and barbecue.
28:09See the sauce when you eat in the sauce?
28:10It's got that warming.
28:11It almost feels like you're sitting around a fire.
28:13You're Simon Frodo camping, you know?
28:17Simon Frodo.
28:18She's the one with the big feet.
28:19The big feet.
28:19Big feet.
28:20Yeah, I remember them.
28:21I really, really enjoyed that.
28:23For me, the fish tasted really delicious.
28:26Very nicely cooked.
28:27And all the flavours underneath,
28:29which I thought I wouldn't like,
28:30indeed I have liked very much.
28:32The wizard stood firm on the bridge,
28:35the pure white light of his staff glowing.
28:37He would not let the fellowship succumb to the flame.
28:41You shall not pass!
28:44What do you think, Debbie?
28:45To get the part?
28:49You'll call me.
28:50You'll call me.
28:51I'll call you, yeah.
28:55Jack will be serving his main course first
28:57and get straight on with parboiling his chips,
29:00which proved to be his Achilles heel
29:02when he overcooked them for Lisa.
29:05I'm going a little bit bigger on the chips,
29:07just so I can get them a little bit fluffier on the inside.
29:15Meanwhile, Paul is preparing the potato element
29:18of his main course too.
29:23So the lady who cast Daniel Craig,
29:25who we'll be celebrating today,
29:27is obviously Simon Judges.
29:28Jamie, how do you feel about that?
29:29Nervous, but it's also an opportunity, isn't it,
29:31to get on a film?
29:33You've got a chance.
29:34Daniel Craig, for me,
29:35was one of my favourite Bonds.
29:36A northern Bond.
29:38That's what we like.
29:39Maybe one with a slight Liverpool accent
29:41who lives in the Lake District.
29:42Right.
29:43Halfway mark already.
29:45It's gone quick.
29:46It's gone really fast, hasn't it?
29:48How are you, Debbie?
29:48Well, yes, I'm full already.
29:51There's a lot more food to come,
29:52so we'll just have to pace you through this next bit.
29:54Hello, Mr Kerridge.
29:55How are you, sir?
29:56Do you know what?
29:57There's been some really good,
29:59technical, strong cookery.
30:01One fish course I thought was magic.
30:03Mr Wine, how have you found the first half?
30:05I've had worse starts of the day.
30:07Of course.
30:08Oh, yeah.
30:08It's been pretty sensational.
30:10Lorna, how's the storytelling?
30:12I think you can definitely visualise
30:14what they're visualising.
30:14I think there's definitely strong chefs
30:16because I think the food cookery has been great.
30:18That's big chat coming from Lorna McNeil,
30:20let me tell you.
30:21Debbie, have you enjoyed the food?
30:23My tastes tend to be rather simple,
30:26so this is quite a kind of assault on the senses,
30:30shall we say.
30:30Quite a cacophony happening.
30:31It is, but enjoyable nonetheless.
30:33So far, so good, I would say.
30:35So far, so good.
30:36The role that you play
30:37in bringing these wonderful movies
30:39that we're celebrating to life,
30:40I feel like it's a role that was perhaps
30:43underappreciated in the past
30:44but is now finally getting its due.
30:46You hit the nail on the head.
30:48It's getting slightly better.
30:50This year will be the first time
30:51a casting director will receive an Oscar.
30:54Oh.
30:55And that is a real milestone
30:57because then it's like you have earned your place
30:59at the top table,
31:00which I've always felt that we should have had.
31:02So, there's a second half to come.
31:04More beautiful food.
31:06I hope you enjoy this part too.
31:09Thank you very much.
31:12Main courses are underway
31:13and as Paul builds his boulanger potatoes,
31:17Jack starts cooking his beef fillet
31:20and is also attempting to amp up the flavour
31:23in his beef fat carrots
31:24to address one of Lisa's criticisms.
31:28So, I'm just searing the carrot now
31:29to give it a bit more flavour.
31:31It's also going to give it
31:32a little bit more of a texture change as well.
31:35Cracking beef grommet.
31:37Now, you scored an eight for this dish.
31:39I did, yeah.
31:39Tell me about Lisa's feedback for you.
31:41She mentioned about the Wensleydale
31:43and it was a concern of mine at the start
31:44that Wensleydale cheese doesn't really melt
31:46but I can't do a Walson grommet-themed...
31:48Without using Wensleydale.
31:50Yeah, so what I've done
31:50is I've made Caesar dressing
31:52but instead of using parmesan,
31:53I've used Wensleydale.
31:54So, that's going to go over the chips.
31:56Which was another issue.
31:57They were over last time.
31:58Yeah.
31:58It was very disappointing.
32:00You want to give Tom Perry's good chips,
32:01that's for sure.
32:01Big Fat Ten would be nice, wouldn't it?
32:03Oh, I'd go away, I'd be.
32:04Big Fat Chick Fat Ten.
32:06Who would you choose as the next James Bond now?
32:08There's loads of actors who I think could do it.
32:10All through the time that I've worked on it,
32:13anybody who you ever read about in the press
32:15is never who is going to get it.
32:18Ah.
32:19I doubt it will be any of the ones
32:21that are being touted around at the moment.
32:23Oh, interesting.
32:23They're not usually the people
32:25who you are pursuing at that time.
32:27There might be a reason why Ed Gamble
32:29isn't here anymore.
32:34I think I'm attached by a piece of string
32:36to my fryer.
32:37I keep going back to it.
32:39They haven't changed colouring on super dark yet,
32:41which is really good news.
32:43So, yeah, it's looking better.
32:46He tops his seared beef fat carrots
32:49with pulled beef cheeks.
32:51Pretty luxurious.
32:52I've added some fresh mustard into it as well.
32:55Super rich, so I'm not putting too much on.
32:59I feel like I'm back in the lab.
33:00I studied engineering, as you can tell from my face.
33:02Lorna.
33:04So you wrap it around there and tighten.
33:06And this, I'm guessing, goes there.
33:08And close the circuit.
33:10Finally.
33:12Wahey!
33:13And the banquet light is lit up.
33:15Our first main course of the day
33:17is called Cracking Beef Grommet.
33:18And it's a beef fillet with a beef fat carrot
33:21with beef cheek, beef fat chips
33:23with Wednesdaydale cheese
33:24and beef sauce finished with ox tongue
33:26and bone marrow
33:27with sides of chargrilled courgette
33:30and braised hispy cabbage.
33:31Again, inspired by Nick Park,
33:33filmmaker and animator from Preston, Lancashire.
33:36My head's too big.
33:37Join in the fun.
33:38You don't mess with perfection.
33:39I've got to be honest, it suits you, mate.
33:41It really does, actually.
33:41Yeah, it brings out your eyes.
33:45Jack assembles his courgette salad,
33:47layering the charred ribbons
33:49on top of courgette puree
33:50with diced courgette and mint.
33:55Okie dokie, that's six minutes
33:57till Cracking Beef Grommet
33:59needs to hit this path, Jack.
34:00Yep.
34:02How are the chips?
34:03Oh, they're a good colour.
34:04Yeah, a lot better.
34:05Much nicer colour.
34:06Make sure you leave some of those behind.
34:08Just to test.
34:09Yeah.
34:10Just to test.
34:11Just to test.
34:11The chips.
34:12Just drop them one last time.
34:14Yeah.
34:15Straighten them off.
34:19Season it, Jack.
34:20A little bit.
34:21Two minutes to the past, Jack.
34:23Is that your Wednesdaydale sauce?
34:25It is, yeah.
34:25So Wednesdaydale-style sauce.
34:27Looks very inviting.
34:29The beef is plated
34:31and the dish is served
34:32with the courgette salad,
34:33chips and braised hispy cabbage.
34:36Oh, that looks so good.
34:38Service, please.
34:46The banquet-o-matic.
34:48The banquet-o-matic, belted Galloway.
34:49Handsome, isn't it?
34:50Lovely eyes.
34:51I don't think we're eating the eyes.
34:52Ahh.
35:00Delicious chips.
35:02Mmm.
35:04Very crunchy on the outside
35:05and very soft inside.
35:07They're proper, like, beef fat chips.
35:09Yeah.
35:10Go on then, Lorna, what do you think?
35:11I really love the chips and the chips are great.
35:13I think the beef actually tastes really nice for being that kind of leaner fillet cut.
35:16It does taste very nice.
35:17I just don't know if it excites me that much, to be honest with you.
35:20The beef fat chips, I think, are an absolute triumph, flavour-wise.
35:24I think they're a little fatty.
35:26The beef fillet is fantastic.
35:28The sauce I've spilt all over the table is magic.
35:30The carrot is delicious.
35:31The cheek is fantastic.
35:33I'm not quite sure about the courgette salad.
35:36The cabbage is better than the salad, I think.
35:37I quite like that the chips are really fatty
35:39because the beef itself is so lean, it kind of complements it in that way.
35:44Yep.
35:44And the Wensleydale sauce, I thought the cheese sauce would be too rich,
35:49but because it's got that tang, it does balance out quite nicely, I think, with the meat.
35:54I'm not sure what the vinegar emulsion is for.
35:57I'm sure in your engineering degree,
36:00there would have been many a times you've put something together
36:02and it hasn't quite worked, is that right?
36:03How did you know that?
36:05Is it because I have a Korean comedy now?
36:11It's Paul's main course next.
36:13He coats the chicken crown in chicken fat, butter, truffle, lemon and herbs before roasting.
36:21So, I'm just going to cook the chicken at a slightly lower temperature,
36:26just after Lisa's suggestion, which will take slightly longer,
36:29but hopefully it doesn't have that little bit of dryness on the outside that Lisa didn't like.
36:34So, just listening to her feedback.
36:36He pan roasts cauliflower florets in curry powder.
36:40Hey, Paul. Hey, Andy.
36:42Look at that collie. Beautiful.
36:44You scored a nine for this.
36:45Yeah, a lot of work, to be honest.
36:47That was pretty great.
36:47And Lisa had a couple of little hints, didn't she?
36:50Yes, yeah. I rushed the chicken a little bit last time,
36:52and Lisa said it sort of like was a touch dry over resting on the side.
36:55So, I'm going to lower temperature on that.
36:57And then just finish it with a blast.
36:59Cheese fondue is going round with cauliflower.
37:00That gorgeous crispy chicken skin on top of the cauliflower, that's still there, right?
37:04So, I've changed that to the carrots.
37:06Interesting. Because I thought it was maybe a little bit lost,
37:08because you had to dig deep into the cauliflower.
37:10So, because the carrots are in smoked chicken fat,
37:13like a camber roll carrot from a film.
37:14That's a great idea.
37:15I've just put that on there with some crispy sage in there.
37:17So, as long as I've still got the crispy chicken skin.
37:19I promise you, it's still there.
37:19OK, you're fine, you're fine.
37:20I'll give it back to you.
37:23So, this next dish is called We Came On Holiday By Mistake.
37:26It consists of roast chicken based in brown butter,
37:29confit thigh, peas, baby leeks and a pea puree,
37:33Boulanger potatoes, confit carrots with a crispy chicken skin,
37:36cauliflower cheese topped with truffle,
37:38and a chicken and truffle gravy.
37:39Inspired by Withnail and I,
37:41a comedy about two out-of-work actors who travel to Penrith.
37:45Withnail and Marwood are given a live chicken by a local farmer,
37:49which they struggle to turn into dinner.
37:51The chef feels that this is the dish that they should have cooked.
37:54I think it's fun.
37:54I think it's a bit of Withnail and I fan fiction.
37:58Paul prepares the crispy chicken skin for service
38:01and gets the bird out of the oven to rest.
38:04The skin looks amazing, though.
38:05I'm pretty happy.
38:06It's gotten nice and dry, to be honest.
38:08It's just that weird stage of pulling it all together now.
38:11Tops cauliflower cheese with a lavish grating of cheddar.
38:15You have seven minutes to the pasture.
38:17Oh, so you put truffle on top of the cauliflower now.
38:19Yeah, it was just lying around.
38:21First onto the plate is pea puree.
38:25Is that OK?
38:26Perfect.
38:27Confit shallot is next.
38:31Lettuce, baby leeks and peas follow with a confit chicken thigh on top.
38:37Happy with all the new things, Paul, yeah?
38:39Yeah, I think so.
38:42Yeah, the skin's banging.
38:43Four minutes to the pasture.
38:45Yeah, we will on our way now, please, aren't we?
38:47The dish is served with chicken mayonnaise sauce
38:50in with-nail-esque beer bottles
38:52and the cauliflower cheese and carrots on the side.
38:57It looks amazing.
38:58Look at that.
38:59Service, please.
39:07Oh, wow.
39:09For a moment, I thought we were all going to get a whole chicken eat.
39:13Oh, sorry.
39:15Oh, that looks nice.
39:16Got to be honest, as far as roast chickens go, this looks great.
39:20I love all the herbs.
39:22What's a boulanger?
39:23I've not heard of boulanger.
39:25Boulanger potatoes are cooked with, basically, onions and stock.
39:29You cook it really long and slow in the oven
39:31until it all, like, becomes caramelised and delicious,
39:33so you've got really nice savoury potatoes.
39:46Have you tried that?
39:47Mm-hm. Yeah.
39:48It's lush.
39:50How do you get chicken skin to be that crispy?
39:53Good produce to start with.
39:55A little bit like you were trying to get good pork skin,
39:57nice crackling, very, very similar.
39:59It's all delicious.
40:00The carrots are gorgeous.
40:02They are, aren't they?
40:02Really nice sweetness to them.
40:04I think what's really nice about the dish is,
40:05it's got those rich points, it's all well-cooked,
40:07like, every element's really well-cooked,
40:09but then you've got the sweetness and freshness of the peas
40:11and the carrots, it all helps break all that richness down as well.
40:14Mm-hm. And a bit of tang in the gravy as well.
40:17Yeah. To cut through it all.
40:18I think possibly the cauliflower cheese was one thing too many.
40:23If you're going to have one thing too many,
40:25I'd like it to be cauliflower cheese covered in truffle, though.
40:28I mean, I think this dish is great.
40:30It's an exemplary piece of cookery.
40:32You're drinking the gravy like soup.
40:33The sauce for me is the real triumph.
40:35The cauliflower cheese is wonderful, it's a great addition.
40:37The boulanger potatoes are absolutely beautiful, deep, rich.
40:40The gravy in it is just so delicious.
40:43Carrots are beautiful, the peas, the sweetness, all of it is lovely.
40:47My only criticism, the chicken is just a touch overcooked for me.
40:52I thought the confit thigh, although delicious and luxurious,
40:55felt a bit dry to me. The breast felt spot-on to me.
40:59I think it depends what part of the breast you get, to be honest.
41:02It's a very, very good roast chicken dish, but is that all it is?
41:06Is it just a roast chicken dish?
41:08No, it's much more than that.
41:11OK.
41:12It's a very special chicken dish. I've never had skin like that before.
41:16And all the other things around it, I think, complement it so well.
41:25Jack's kicking off his pre-dessert by churning his brioche ice cream
41:29and making a blackberry and blackcurrant compote,
41:31adding lemon zest and sugar and changing it up with a splash of bourgeois.
41:37Another bit of feedback on my pre-dessert yesterday
41:40was to make it a little bit more refreshing.
41:44Paul's honey palate cleanser went down well with Lisa,
41:47so he's hoping for the same reception today.
41:50So this is just a honey ice cream.
41:52So we're just putting it into a nitrogen just to get
41:54a little bit of a different texture on the pre-dessert.
41:57Three minutes to the pass, chefs. Three minutes.
41:59I'll be ready if you're ready.
42:01If you're going to be ready, then I'll be ready.
42:02Shall we be ready? Let's be ready.
42:05The compote is first into Jack's bowl, followed by fresh blackberries.
42:12Paul starts with a sea buckthorn curd, followed by natural yoghurt.
42:16Last minute, please, chefs.
42:18Brioche ice cream is next for Jack, topped with blackcurrant wood oil
42:22and a shake of soba cha, a Japanese buckwheat tea.
42:27And Paul finishes with some oat crumble,
42:30the honey ice cream droplets and a sprinkling of bee pollen.
42:38A little quick choreography there.
42:41Yeah. Service, please.
42:42Service, please.
42:50So we have the Kiercino Royale.
42:53Brioche ice cream, blackberry and blackcurrant compote,
42:56fresh blackberries and blackcurrant wood oil,
42:59inspired by Casino Royale, starring Daniel Craig, born in Chester.
43:07Mmm, that's kind of woof.
43:09What do you think, Debbie? Does it remind you of Daniel Craig?
43:11Not really.
43:13I'm sort of making my eyes curl.
43:16Oh, it's clean, it's acidic, it's sweet.
43:19My only thing is, the brioche ice cream that I was really looking forward to,
43:22it's just kind of like cold and creamy. I can't really taste any brioche.
43:26Actually, I really like that brioche ice cream. I've never tasted anything quite like it.
43:30It's really subtle, that brioche flavour, but it gives a plainer base for all the other
43:33bigger flavours to sit on top of. I really like it.
43:36Big flavours in those berries, I think, and then cut through by the creaminess of the ice cream.
43:40OK, shall we go on to the next one?
43:42A Taste of Honey.
43:43Honey ice cream, sea buckthorn curd, yoghurt, raw honeycomb and bee pollen,
43:48inspired by A Taste of Honey from 1961, a drama set in Salford.
43:59Slightly underwhelming for me. I think normally when you have sea buckthorn,
44:02I'm waiting for this kind of like English passion fruity, punchy kind of kick that comes through
44:07that I normally find a bit offensive and not very nice. It's not there. I'm not offended by it,
44:12but that also means that I can't taste it. I love the honey, but I'm not quite sure that
44:16that has the same taste impact as the first one. Yeah, it was all right.
44:22But I like the crunchiness of the taste of honey.
44:25So if we can all hold up our favourite pre-dessert.
44:31Yeah, unanimous. Here we go.
44:36A clean sweep for Jack, and he's up first with the final course dessert.
44:40He gets his tuiles underway, making double the amount so he can add extra crunch.
44:47Another texture. That can only be a good thing. This is recommended by Chef Lisa,
44:52and you know, she's queen of desserts, so I'm going to take all the advice I can get.
44:59Hey, Jack. Hello. Can you believe you're at desserts already?
45:02I mean, blink and you'll miss it, right? It's a beautiful dish,
45:05inspired by Slumdog Millionaire. Yep. From Danny Boyle.
45:07I think I was really touched by it. It was the moment when he goes back and he sees his
45:11friend
45:11who's been blinded, because blind beggars make more money. So my dish is all about using sensors,
45:17using your other sensors, not just your eyes. So heightening everything else for somebody.
45:21Yes. And you've got all these beautiful fragrant spices running through everything.
45:24Have you made any changes in that regard? Yeah. So, you know, high risk, high reward.
45:29I'm going to blindfold people. Oh, good idea. I think so.
45:32There'll be, you know, the smells of a spice market. Lovely. It's a great dish. You've got an eight.
45:36Yeah, yeah. Again, yeah. Come on now, come on now. Let's get up to the top of this hill.
45:40That's all we want, isn't it, Jack? Yeah, just once, please. Just once, just once. Give the man a break.
45:45Debbie, we just had a pre-desert that was inspired by Casino Royale, which is a film you cast.
45:50Obviously, the big denouement is the poker game. The actors who we cast in that scene didn't play poker,
45:57so I put it upon myself to do as much research as I possibly could and went to an awful
46:02lot of casinos and learnt an awful lot about it.
46:06I found a little room where we could all go and at lunchtime or any time anyone wasn't doing anything,
46:11they came and we played poker.
46:12So everyone was obsessed with poker by the end of it. And afterwards, several people said to me, that's the
46:18best poker scene we've ever seen.
46:23Very good. Ice cream's done.
46:25Jack's Cremo custard, flavoured with chilli and orange, is combined with chocolate chips.
46:31I'm just going to wait for it to set and then I can start assembling everything.
46:38For our first dessert, we have Follow Your Nose, orange and chilli dark chocolate cremeux,
46:43chocolate tuile, aerated milk chocolate, chai masala ice cream, liquid shortbread,
46:48jeera biscuit and cinnamon and orange caramel. This is inspired by the blockbuster movie Slumdog Millionaire,
46:54directed by Danny Boyle, originally from Lancashire. The dish references the scene in the film where
46:58Dev Patel's character escapes being blinded. What's your thoughts on eating a dessert blindfolded?
47:04It's going to be all down my top.
47:10Jack, you have four minutes to the pass, Chef. I'll be ready, Andy.
47:14The cremeux is first to the bowl, followed by the double layer of tuile sandwiched together with caramel.
47:21Lots more caramel on this one. Next, jeera biscuit. So you go...
47:26One, two, three, four. Liquid shortbread and aerated chocolate. Jack toasts the spices.
47:34And finally, chai masala ice cream. You've got two minutes, Jack.
47:40I'll be up in two. Great. The ice cream is feathered with more caramel
47:43and sprinkled with orange zest. Do you want to put some smoked salt on them?
47:48Do you want me?
47:51OK. Uh, service, please. Looks beautiful, Jack.
47:58Slightly unnerved and stressed by this situation, I've got to be honest.
48:01Yeah, I know. If you all are gone when I take this off,
48:04I'll be very angry.
48:13It's very Christmassy.
48:14I can smell the orange. Cinnamon, orange...
48:18Wood? Burning wood?
48:19Anybody tasted eating it yet? Eating what?
48:22I want to try it with the mask on, as the chef intended.
48:28Ah!
48:39I might eat all my food like this.
48:41I might have beans on toast like this.
48:45It was...
48:46It was good.
48:49Actually, I really enjoyed the smells at the beginning.
48:52There's lots of textures and things going on.
48:54There's lots of flavours. It's not unpleasant. I liked it a lot.
48:58It's interesting. It's probably the best way of describing it.
49:01Mm. I thought it was absolutely delicious.
49:04I particularly like the chocolatey stuff at the bottom.
49:07It's still got a chilli kind of spice taste in my mouth,
49:09and I'm not sure that I want that with my pudding.
49:13I really like the ambition of the flavours and trying to go for sort of more
49:16off the beaten track flavours for dessert, these spices and things.
49:19I thought the texture was really good. The biscuit was lovely.
49:23I didn't particularly like the flavour of the ice cream,
49:26but I think that that's a personal thing.
49:28My biggest thing is I don't think it's a banquet dessert.
49:31I don't think it's spectacular enough for a banquet.
49:33If you're comparing this to Great British menu banquet-winning desserts
49:37of the past, it's not up there.
49:40Mm. Gosh, you're hard to please you.
49:43I'm not.
49:48Paul's dessert is the last dish of the day, and having dropped points on this course in the week,
49:53it's crucial he does better this time.
49:56Shaken, not stirred.
49:58Not your favourite moment either.
50:00Harley, it was rough this week with that one.
50:01I don't know.
50:02It was rough.
50:02What was your score?
50:03Six.
50:04Which was low for you?
50:05Low, but generous, I thought.
50:06So I can't complain.
50:09Have you made changes? What are they?
50:11We've got the sponge, and I'm going to soak it with some coffee liqueur.
50:14Nice.
50:14Get a little bit of boozy element in there, which I think will bring another dynamic.
50:17Absolutely. Always helps.
50:18Salted chicory caramel is going to go in between the layers as well, just to add another layer.
50:22Change the mascarpone cream to a little bit of a creme fraiche mousse.
50:25Still got the poker chip on top, but I've changed the chocolate to a less percentage cocoa butter.
50:30Chicory ice cream I've taken the salt out of, and I've taken some of the chicory essence as well,
50:34so it's not as bitter.
50:36So it's not as strong, it's not as bitter.
50:37Our guest judge of course, Debbie, is the casting director for James Bond films.
50:41It's like more pressure.
50:42If it wasn't enough pressure anyway, I think that adds to it.
50:45So one of the most quoted lines from James Bond is the last pudding, shaken not stirred.
50:52Chocolate and coffee ganache, soaked muscovado sponge, creme fraiche mousse and chicory ice cream with coffee syrup.
51:01Inspired by James Bond's love for martinis and the Casino Royale film, but no vodka.
51:10Paul demoulds his new tempered chocolate-coated poker chips.
51:14I think they look all right. I think they're definitely going to be an improvement.
51:18He adds another layer of sponge on top of creme fraiche mousse.
51:23One in doubt. Bring out the coffee look here.
51:30More creme fraiche mousse and the new caramel before the poker chips are adorned with red cocoa butter.
51:39The new salted chicory ice cream is dished up.
51:43All right, Paul, that's three minutes to the pass, Chef.
51:47Wait.
51:48Paul adds the tuile layer to the stack and Jack finishes the ice cream with chicory caramel and a grating
51:55of chocolate.
51:57The pots are sunk into the poker boxes and the poker chips and ice cream complete the picture.
52:05Look at that. Bang on time as well. Well done.
52:08Would you like to send the last dish of the day?
52:11Service, please.
52:28Oh, wow.
52:29Oh, wow. Look at that. That's amazing.
52:32What a lot of trouble somebody's gone to. Well, presentation amazing.
52:39Well, it goes real deep.
52:41I wasn't expecting it to sink right down like that.
52:48I think presentation is amazing. I think it really stands out.
52:54Unfortunately, the dessert is a bit one-dimensional.
52:57My favourite part was the chicory ice cream, if I'm honest.
53:00I really like that.
53:01I think I'm completely the opposite, because it's the ice cream I don't like,
53:05but the chocolate spongy pudding, I think it's delicious. So there.
53:11I thought the ice cream was a delightful surprise.
53:13I thought it was refreshing and interesting.
53:15And I thought the chicory went well with the coffee flavour.
53:17And that's kind of what I would be looking for in a dish called shaken, not stirred.
53:21You want something called refreshing in a martini glass.
53:24I've got to be honest, I folded my hand quite early.
53:27Awesome.
53:27I wasn't that impressed with it.
53:29The ice cream I thought was delicious. I thought it was creamy, rich, smooth,
53:32good flavour, but the actual spongy cake bit itself,
53:36I thought was a little dry, a little bitty.
53:38There was a real bitter undertone in there.
53:41The effort and the energy that's gone into the presentation is magic.
53:44The actual hand I've been dealt and I think is a good one.
53:50There's a little bit of me, I think, underestimated for GBM Kitchen.
53:53You lose all sense of everything when you're in there.
53:57You're just so focused on four plates.
54:11Hello. Hey, Chefs.
54:13Hey, Chefs. Hey.
54:14How you doing? Good. Happy now.
54:17Knackered.
54:18He always tells you the truth.
54:20It's excellent.
54:20How's that? He goes, awful.
54:23I mean, it's been a lot.
54:24It's been a tough week, to be honest, and today was just topped off.
54:27Well, you could sense really in here that there was like a real kind of synergy of
54:31the dishes coming together.
54:32And also a couple of things that were really, really interesting.
54:35So, who cooked You Shall Not Bass?
54:37Yeah.
54:37I mean, what a dish.
54:38For me, I thought that was amazing.
54:40Flavour profiles that were really interesting and different and burst.
54:44It was exciting.
54:45It was vibrant.
54:46I thought it was a really, really great dish.
54:49So, who cooked We Came On Holiday by mistake?
54:52That was me.
54:53Oh, I thought it was absolutely brilliant.
54:55It was my favourite of all the dishes.
54:58I thought it was so tasty.
55:00The chicken was incredible.
55:01I was really, really impressed by it.
55:03Thank you very much.
55:05Well, look, Chef, we're not going to make you wait any longer.
55:08Andy has got the results.
55:11So, the winner of the North West of England, and going through to cook at finals, is...
55:25Jack.
55:26You did it.
55:30You did it, Jack.
55:32Well done, Chef.
55:33Are you pleased, relieved, back there again?
55:36Honestly, I did not think at all that that was me.
55:42You had quite a roller coaster of a day in the kitchen, didn't you?
55:45I have, yeah.
55:46I think everything that could go wrong in half an hour went wrong in half an hour.
55:49Heck, congratulations, Jack.
55:51I gave your Bastish my top marks.
55:52I thought the theatrics were great.
55:54It's a real contender for the banquet, and the sauce is insanely good.
55:58And, Paul, commiserations are coming second this time round.
56:00But what a performance.
56:01That chicken dish was truly sensational.
56:04It blew us all away, and I'll be thinking about that gravy for a while.
56:07Ha-ha.
56:07Oh, thank you very much.
56:08And the thing that impressed me so much was the presentation of everything was so beautiful.
56:15Um, who knitted the cabbages?
56:19Oh, that would be my mum.
56:21I sent her hearty congratulations.
56:23I thought they were absolutely beautiful.
56:25Thank you very much.
56:26Well, Debbie, it's been an absolute pleasure to have you here.
56:29Have you had a good day?
56:30I have.
56:30I hope that all persuades you to come to the banquet, please.
56:33I would love to.
56:34Thank you very much.
56:35The banquet's going to be a nibble full, Jack.
56:37Fantastic.
56:37I'll get my mum to set up the bedroom.
56:42Pull the sofa out.
56:43Chefs, one last time.
56:45Congratulations, Jack.
56:46Commiserations to you, Paul.
56:47It's been an absolute joy to have you both in that kitchen.
56:50Honestly, thank you.
56:51Thank you very much.
56:52Thank you very much.
56:52Thank you very much.
56:53Congratulations.
57:00Wow.
57:01There's going to be so many people that are going to be so proud.
57:03You know, I've got all my family.
57:05I've got my wife, Beth, and my son.
57:07I cry.
57:08And then, yeah, my mum is going to be so proud.
57:11Zero bitterness or anything like that, he nailed it.
57:14And he's more than deserved.
57:15And I'm super proud that he's representing the North West.
57:17I will be doing absolutely everything I can
57:20to make sure that I'm on that board come finals week.
57:25Do you know what?
57:26You did say it was going to be a strong day of cookery.
57:28And we had some wonderful dishes there.
57:30And what surprised me the most is we had some exceptionally great ingredients
57:35with some correct cooking and everything about it was beautiful.
57:38And then every now and then we got some left field flavours
57:40and something that came out of nowhere.
57:42Yeah.
57:42And Jack's fish course, I thought, was outstanding.
57:45Something just a little bit different.
57:46I loved it.
57:47But I actually think that chicken dish was just beautiful.
57:51I think desserts on both of the chefs were perhaps nowhere near as strong as the rest of their cooking.
57:57Inspired, thoughtful, excellent, heartfelt cookery from both of them.
58:00Jack won in the end.
58:01I think he's got a couple of great foundation dishes there that are possibilities for banquet.
58:06I think that fish dish is a real strong contender and also his pumpkin dish.
58:10His starter I thought was very, very good.
58:11Very tasty.
58:12Just needs a little bit more fluff on his crumpet.
58:14Who doesn't want to be a little more fluff on their crumpet on that note?
58:17I think we'll leave it.
58:18Yeah.
58:19All done.
58:22Well done, mate.
58:23No, mate.
58:25Thanks, buddy.
58:27Take it all away, mate.
58:28Congratulations.
58:29Cheers.
58:59Cheers.
59:00Cheers.
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