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ForPrue Leith, there is one baker fromThe Great British Baking Showwho really takes the cake.
The judge ofThe Great British Baking Show— known in the U.K. asThe Great British Bake-Off— recently spoke to PEOPLE about the beloved show,a controversial story shared in her new memoir,I’ll Try Anything Once,and the most unforgettable contestant from the British baking competition series.
“I think as long as I live, I’ll never forget Rahul,” says Leith, author of the new cookbook,BlissonToast.
According to Leith, 82, there are many facets to Mandal that make him so memorable and his intellect is one of them. “He is really, really clever and yet, he’s like a shy little boy most of the time. He gabbles away and can’t stop talking because he’s nervous,” she says.
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Leith calls him “the sweetest man and an absolutely amazing baker. He continued to astonish us the whole way through with more and more exotic and crazy ideas and very good showstoppers.”
When talking about working onThe Great British Baking Show, the Netflix-distributed version that is currently in its 10th season, Leith admitts that she is not much of a baker herself. “I’m more of a savory cook, really. Of course, I have made thousands of desserts and lots of wedding cakes and I’m so interested in the skills, but that’s not what I would naturally do. I think they hired me because I have a great set of taste buds, not for my piping skills,” she says.
But, in sticking true to the title of her memoir, the chef says she would have gone onGBBSas an amateur chef had it been around. But she doesn’t think she would be triumphant. “I’d hate to be faced with one of the showstoppers, frankly,” she says.
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The chef made headlines last month because she recalled a time when hermother made her drown a litter of newborn kittenswhile growing up on their farm in South Africa.
“I became public enemy No. 1,” Leith told PEOPLE, looking back on the uproar. “They don’t read the story and they feed off each other. Somebody says, ‘My God! That woman drowns kittens!’ And it just spiraled from there.”
The traumatic story is part of Leith’s new autobiography, which also details her career opening several restaurants, founding culinary schools and writing food columns and cookbooks.
Her most recent project,Bliss on Toast, features 75 recipes and is something Leith started during the COVID-19 lockdown when she “realized very quickly that anything that tastes good the first time around tastes even better on toast the second time around.”
When asked about her vast career, Leith says the key to success is quite simple: “My whole career has been a matter of just being unable to say no. If somebody has an idea and I think it’s a good one, I want to do it.”
source: people.com