Whitney Miller
Whitney Miller | |
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Born |
Whitney Leigh Miller[1] June 1, 1988 Poplarville, Mississippi, USA |
Culinary career | |
Cooking style | Southern food, Baking, Pastries |
Award(s) won
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Website | |
www.whitneymiller.net |
Whitney Leigh Miller (born June 1, 1988) was the winner of the first season of the US version of MasterChef in 2010.[2] Miller was named the first ever American MasterChef winner by MasterChef judges, Gordon Ramsay, Graham Elliot, and Joe Bastianich.
Profile
Miller grew up in a very food, faith, and family-oriented environment, always in the kitchen cooking with her mom and two sisters or her great-grandmother. Benefiting from her great-grandmother's inspiration in Southern hospitality and cooking large Sunday dinners for extended family and friends, she aspired to be a great cook from an early age. Because of her talent with desserts on Fox's MasterChef, she was deemed the "Pastry Princess." Her cooking style encompasses using fresh ingredients and putting her own modern twist on Southern classics.[3]
Season 1 of MasterChef (US, 2010)
Miller entered the competition as a small town girl home cook and a college student from Poplarville, Mississippi. She first appeared in episode 2 of MasterChef (US). Despite being young (22 years old), she mentioned she has great ambition and being young doesn't mean she doesn't have that much experience as anybody else in the competition. In the 14 episodes, she won three mystery box and elimination challenges, and five of her dishes were chosen in the top 3, one of which led her to the finale.
In the finale, Miller's final dishes were sweet shrimp on crispy corn bread with black eyed pea purée for the appetizer, country fried chicken for the entrée, and a white chocolate bread pudding for the dessert. In what the judges described as a "difficult, but unanimous decision," and for having better overall execution of her final three dishes, Miller was chosen as the first US winner of MasterChef. She won a quarter of a million dollars, a personalized cookbook and the prestigious MasterChef trophy.
Miller wrote her MasterChef cookbook, Modern Hospitality: Simple Recipes with Southern Charm, which was released in July 2011.[4][5]
In 2011, Miller returned as a guest in season 2, episode 9, of MasterChef (US), where the contestants had to replicate one of her signature dishes, crispy catfish with homemade slaw and sweet potato fries.
Professional career and highlights
Miller has been featured across the globe in Southern cuisine cooking promotions, including The St. Regis Tianjin in China. In January 2013, Miller was featured as the opening night chef (the first Southern chef) at Chefdance 2013 within the Sundance film festival, cooking for celebrities such as Kenny Loggins and photographer to the stars, Norman Seeff.
Miller's professional career includes developing recipes and/or creating videos for companies such as SousVide Supreme in the US and Malaysia, magazines such as Clean Eating and Southern Living, and nonprofits such as the Mississippi Girl Scouts of America. She has conducted guest cooking classes at Viking Cooking Schools in Mississippi and recently, in February 2013, Surfas in Costa Mesa, California. Working with Panera Bread as the featured food expert, in July 2013, she hosted an online chat, giving cooking and entertaining tips.
Miller acted as a frequent guest host for ABC's Birmingham Talk of Alabama's TV cooking segment. She utilizes her seasoned palate as a judge for food competitions such as the 2013 World Food Championship held in Las Vegas. She also created recipes for California Olive Ranch and participated in Food Blog South 2014 in which she gave samples of her olive oil biscuits.[6]
Her recipes have been featured in the MasterChef and Ultimate MasterChef cookbooks. She is a food writer of magazine articles for Flavors (Atlanta), Taste of Home, Southern Living, and Eat. Drink. Mississippi. Her recipes, articles, and book promotions have appeared in People, Women's Health, Masterchef, Clean Eating, and Cooking Light magazines as well as online at Self, California Olive Ranch, and SousVide Supreme.com.[7] and also in national publications such as People, Cooking Light, Spirit of Women, and Masterchef magazine.[8]
References
- ↑ https://twitter.com/whitneymillerMC/status/343440040715759616
- ↑ "MasterChef" Winner Whitney Miller Victorious Despite Chicken Mishap
- ↑ http://whitneymillermc.blogspot.com/p/about-me.html
- ↑ Miller, Whitney (2011). Modern Hospitality: Simple Recipes with Southern Charm. Rodale Books. p. 192. ISBN 978-1-60961-352-5.
- ↑ Miller, Whitney. "Facebook Page". Retrieved June 11, 2011.
- ↑ http://whitneymiller.net/about
- ↑ http://whitneymillermc.blogspot.com/p/about-me.html
- ↑ http://whitneymillermc.blogspot.com/p/about-me.html
External links
Preceded by None |
MasterChef winner 2010 |
Succeeded by Jennifer Behm |
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