The Great British Bake Off

For the most recent series, see The Great British Bake Off (series 6).
The Great British Bake Off
Genre Cooking
Baking
Directed by Scott Tankard (2012–13)
Andy Devonshire (2010–12, 2014–)
Presented by Mel Giedroyc
Sue Perkins
Judges Mary Berry
Paul Hollywood
Theme music composer Tom Howe
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 6
No. of episodes 54 (excluding 28 specials)
Production
Executive producer(s) Anna Beattie (2010–)
Richard McKerrow (2010)
Kieran Smith (2012)
Producer(s) Samantha Beddoes (2013–2014)
Amanda Westwood (2012)
Location(s) Cotswolds, Scone Palace, Sandwich, Bakewell, Mousehole, Fulham Palace (all 2010)
Valentines Mansion (2011)
Harptree Court (2012–13)
Welford Park (2014–)
Running time 60 minutes
Production company(s) Love Productions
Distributor BBC Worldwide
Release
Original network BBC One (2014–)
BBC Two (2010–13)
Picture format 16:9
Audio format Stereo
Original release 17 August 2010 (2010-08-17) – present
Chronology
Related shows The Great British Sewing Bee
MasterChef
Come Dine with Me
Great British Menu
Pillsbury Bake-Off
The Great British Bake Off: An Extra Slice
The Great Pottery Throw Down
External links
Website
Production website

The Great British Bake Off, often referred to as simply Bake Off or GBBO, and aired under the name The Great British Baking Show in the United States, is a BAFTA award-winning British television baking competition first shown by BBC Two on 17 August 2010. It is presented by Mel Giedroyc and Sue Perkins, and judged by cookery writer Mary Berry and professional baker Paul Hollywood. The competition selects from amongst its contestants the best amateur baker.

The programme was moved to BBC One for its fifth series after it became the most popular show on BBC Two. Its increasing popularity is credited with reinvigorating interest in baking throughout the UK. Many of its participants, including winners, have gone on to start a career based on bakery. The winners are Edd Kimber, Joanne Wheatley, John Whaite, Frances Quinn, Nancy Birtwhistle, and most recently Nadiya Hussain.

The programme has spawned a number of specials and spin-off shows – a celebrity charity series in aid of Sport Relief or Comic Relief, Junior Bake Off for young children (broadcast on the CBBC channel), and An Extra Slice aired on BBC Two after the Bake Off series was moved to BBC One. Its format was also used on the BBC Two series The Great British Sewing Bee. The format has been sold to many countries around the world where local versions of the show are produced. In July 2015, advertisements appeared online looking for teams of professionals to take part in a professional version similar to the amateur bake off, however this will be in groups of three with one of the three acting as 'head chef'.

Format

The series choose from the contestants a best amateur baker. The applicants to the show are assessed by a researcher, followed by an audition in London with two of their bakes and undergoing a screen test and an interview with a producer. A second audition involves the applicants baking two recipes for judges Mary Berry and Paul Hollywood in front of the cameras.[1] Ten contestants were chosen for the first series, twelve for the following two series, thirteen for the fourth, and back to twelve for the fifth and sixth.

In each episode, the amateur bakers are given three challenges: a signature bake, a technical challenge, and a show-stopper.[1] The three challenges take place over two days, and the filming takes up to 16 hours a day. The contestants are assessed by the judges who then choose a "Star Baker" for the week (introduced in series 2), and a contestant is also eliminated. In the final three bakers are left and a winner is chosen from the three.

Signature Challenge
This challenge is for the amateur bakers to show off their tried-and-tested recipes for bakes they might make for their friends and family.
Technical Challenge
This challenge shows who has enough technical knowledge and experience to produce the finished product when given only limited – or even minimal – instructions. The bakers are all given the same recipe and are not told beforehand what the challenge will be. The finished products are judged blind and ranked from worst to best.
Showstopper Challenge
This challenge is for the bakers to show off their skills and talent. The judges are looking for a bake that is both of a professional appearance but is also outstanding in taste.

In the first series, the location of the cast and crew move from town to town each week, but starting from the second series, the competition is held in one location in a specially constructed marquee. Interspersed in the programme are the background of the contestants as well as video vignettes on the history of baking. What each baker intends to bake during a particular challenge is illustrated using animated graphics. These graphics have been created by illustrator Tom Hovey since the show's inception in 2010.[2][3]

Series overview

Series Premiere Finale Winner Runners-up Average UK viewers
(millions)
1 17 August 2010 21 September 2010 Edd Kimber Miranda Gore Browne 2.8[4]
Ruth Clemens
2 14 August 2011 4 October 2011 Joanne Wheatley Holly Bell 4.0
Mary-Anne Boermans
3 14 August 2012 16 October 2012 John Whaite Brendan Lynch 5.0
James Morton
4 20 August 2013 22 October 2013 Frances Quinn Kimberley Wilson 7.4[5]
Ruby Tandoh
5 6 August 2014 8 October 2014 Nancy Birtwhistle Luis Troyano 10.1[5]
Richard Burr
6 5 August 2015 7 October 2015 Nadiya Hussain Ian Cumming 12.3
Tamal Ray

Series 1 (2010)

Series 1 of The Great British Bake Off saw ten home bakers take part in a bake-off to test their baking skills as they battled to be crowned the Great British Bake Off's best amateur baker. Each week the nationwide tour saw the bakers put through three challenges in a particular discipline. The rounds took place in various locations across the UK, with the final being held at Fulham Palace, London.

The three finalists were Ruth Clemens, Miranda Gore Browne and Edd Kimber. On 21 September 2010, Edd Kimber was crowned the best amateur baker.[6]

Series 2 (2011)

This year the number of amateur baker contestants increased to twelve. Unlike series 1, this year The Great British Bake Off stayed in one location – Valentines Mansion, a 17th-century mansion house in Redbridge, London.

This year all the finalists were female – Holly Bell, Mary-Anne Boermans, and the winning contestant Joanne Wheatley.[7]

Series 3 (2012)

A third series of The Great British Bake Off began on 14 August 2012.[8] The series was filmed at Harptree Court in East Harptree, Somerset.

For the first time, there was an all-male final. The finalists were Brendan Lynch, James Morton and John Whaite,[9] and the final was won by John Whaite in a surprise result.[10]

Series 4 (2013)

The fourth series of The Great British Bake Off started on 20 August 2013 on BBC Two. The series was again filmed at Harptree Court in East Harptree, Somerset.[11] The all-female final was won by Frances Quinn, with Ruby Tandoh and Kimberley Wilson as runners up.[12]

Series 5 (2014)

The fifth series of The Great British Bake Off began airing on 6 August 2014 at 8:00pm on BBC One. This series was filmed at Welford Park in Berkshire.[13] There were twelve bakers taking part. Mary Berry and Paul Hollywood returned as judges, whilst Sue Perkins and Mel Giedroyc continued to present the series. Richard Burr was awarded the largest number of star baker designations of any series so far, but was beaten by Nancy Birtwhistle in the final.

A spin-off show The Great British Bake Off: An Extra Slice, hosted by comedienne Jo Brand on BBC Two, was also launched as a companion series this year. Each episode was broadcast two days after the main show but later moved to the same night. The show includes interviews with eliminated contestants.[14]

Series 6 (2015)

The sixth series began on 5 August 2015[15] on BBC One, again from Welford Park in Berkshire. Spin-off show The Great British Bake Off: An Extra Slice returned for a second series, with Jo Brand as host. This series was won by Nadiya Jamir Hussain, with Ian Cumming and Tamal Ray as runners up.[16]

Incomplete bakes and other incidents

As of the fifth series, there have been three incomplete bakes.

Reception

Critical reception

The early reviews for the first series were mixed. Lucy Mangan of The Guardian wondered if "competitive baking [is] a contradiction in terms" and found the proceedings humourless.[20] Iain Hollingshead of The Daily Telegraph was scathing, describing the presenters as "annoying", the judge Paul Hollywood as looking "sinister without being interesting", and that the audience would be so bored that they "could certainly forgive the cameraman if he were to commit hara-kiri in a giant pool of egg and flour."[21]

However, reviews from the later series were more positive. Andrew Collins of The Guardian called it "the nicest show on television" and judged it the best TV programme of 2012.[22][23] Rachel Ward of The Daily Telegraph thought the programme "had just the right consistency of mouth-watering morsels, good humour, and fascinating history",[24] while Tom Sutcliffe of The Independent considered the contest "perfectly baked".[25]

Cultural impact

The show is credited with spurring an interest in home baking, with supermarkets and department stores reporting sharp rises in sales of baking ingredients and accessories.[26][27] It was also credited with reviving the Women's Institute whose membership reached its highest level since the 1970s.[28] The show also boosted the sales of bakery books and the number of baking clubs, and independent bakeries also showed an increase in number. According to analyst, more than three fifths of adults have baked at home at least once in 2013 compared with only a third in 2011.[29]

TV ratings

The first series of The Great British Bake Off premiered in August 2010 with a moderate ratings of just over 2 million viewers for its first episode.[30] This was enough to place it in BBC Two's top ten for that week, and over the series the audience grew to over three million, with the semi-final and final both achieving first place in BBC Two's weekly ratings. During the second series, the ratings gradually increased, and it became a surprise hit with nearly 4 million watching each episode.[31] Week two was the last time that the show was out-rated by another BBC Two programme in the same week (it came second to the drama Page Eight); from then until the show's move to BBC One, every competition episode would be the channel's number one rated programme of the week. By its final episode it had averaged 4.56 million viewers, peaking at 5.1 million in its last 15 minutes.[32]

The ratings continued to strengthen in the third series, and the show began to beat its competition in its timeslot.[33] The final of the series where John Whaite was crowned the winner saw its highest rating yet, with an average of 6.5 million viewers that peaked at 7.2 million, which made it the second highest-rated BBC Two originated show after Top Gear since at least 2006.[34][35] The fourth series achieved some of the highest ratings seen on BBC Two. The viewer number for its premiere episode was more than two million higher than that of the previous series,[36] while the final episode was seen by 9.1 million viewers at its peak, more than twice the number of viewers on BBC One and ITV.[37] The final episode is the most-watched show on BBC Two since the present ratings system was introduced in 2002, beating the previous record set by Top Gear.[38] As a result of its high ratings, the show was moved to BBC One.[39]

After its move to BBC One, the opening episode was watched by over 7 million viewers according to overnight figures, beating the figure of 5.6 million for the opening episode of the previous year.[40] A "sabotage" controversy surrounding episode four helped the show gain its biggest ever audience of 10.3 million viewers, with 2 million people who watched it on BBC iPlayer.[41] The final of the show gained an overnight viewing figure of 12.29 million, then the highest viewing figure of the year for a non-sporting event on UK TV.[42] In the following year, the top ten ratings for 2015 was also dominated by The Great British Bake Off, with seven of the year's ten most-watched television programmes being episodes of The Great British Bake Off, topped by the final episode with 15.05 million viewers.[43]

Controversy

Product placement sanction

In September 2012, production company Love Productions was sanctioned by the BBC for product placement of Smeg fridges. The issue came to light after a viewer wrote to the Radio Times complaining of "blatant product promotion". After an investigation, the BBC said Love Production's loan agreement with Smeg did not meet editorial guidelines and was being revised for the third series, and that appropriate retrospective hire payments would be made.[44] The BBC asked Smeg to remove a notice from its website promoting its association with the show, which it has since done.[45]

Favouritism

During the fourth series, there were accusations of favouritism towards female contestants after the last man Glenn Cosby was eliminated from the show,[46] however similar claims were not made the previous year over the all-male final, or even the year before, when there was also an all-female quarter-final. The fourth series also suffered allegations of Paul Hollywood's favouritism towards Ruby Tandoh,[47][48] and personal attacks on Tandoh by various people including the chef Raymond Blanc.[49][50][51] Both Paul Hollywood and Ruby Tandoh denied the accusation.[52][53] Tandoh has since revealed that she is gay.[54]

Baked Alaska controversy ("Bingate")

In the fourth episode of the fifth series, there was controversy around the elimination of contestant Iain Watters. During the final show stopper round contestants were tasked with producing a Baked Alaska. Iain's ice cream was shown as having not set and in a show of frustration he threw his bake in the bin. The editing of the show suggested that another contestant, Diana Beard, had caused the failure by removing the ice cream from a freezer, and the perceived "sabotage" resulted in a furore on social media networks.[55] However, unseen footage broadcast in the accompanying programme An Extra Slice shows Luis holding the large floor freezer that contained Iain's ice cream open as he piped the sides of his own baked Alaska, while Mel warns him to pipe quickly and close the freezer. Later in the episode, when Iain removes his ice cream to begin the next step of his dish, it is still quite soft, indicating it went into the freezer he shared with Diana without being completely frozen. Various members of the cast posted comments in support of Diana[56] and a BBC spokesman later issued a statement that "Diana removing Iain's ice cream from the freezer for less than a minute was in no way responsible for Iain's departure."[57]

More than 800 complaints were lodged with the BBC over the incident and some also complained to the communication watchdog Ofcom.[58]

Innuendo

A number of viewers complained to the BBC feedback show Points of View in the fifth series about the "constant smutty remarks" from the presenters Mel and Sue.[59][60] This series was seen as having more innuendos than previous ones; some reviewers noted the "extra pinch of saucy spice" and "the increasingly filthy-minded hosts Mel Giedroyc and Sue Perkins",[61][62][63] while the Daily Mail argued that the "smutty" innuendos made the show no longer fit for family entertainment.[64] The series 3 winner John Whaite however argued that innuendo is part of what made the show a success,[65] whilst judge Paul Hollywood described the innuendos as banter in the spirit of the Carry On films and is a part of British culture,[66] a view shared by others.[67][68]

Awards and nominations

The Great British Bake Off was nominated for a Rose d'Or in the Lifestyle section of the 2012 competition and won.[69][70] The programme has been nominated a number of times in various categories for the BAFTA awards and won in 2012 and 2013.[71][72] It also won the 2015 National Television Award for Skills Challenge Show.[73]

Year Award Category Recipient Results Ref.
2012 Rose d'Or Lifestyle The Great British Bake Off Won [74]
BAFTA TV Awards Features Anna Beattie, Andy Devonshire, Simon Evans, Richard McKerrow Won [75]
YouTube Audience Award The Great British Bake Off Nominated [71]
2013 Features Anna Beattie, Kieran Smith, Amanda Westwood, Scott Tankard Won [76]
Radio Times Audience Award The Great British Bake Off Nominated [76]
National Television Award Factual Entertainment The Great British Bake Off Nominated [77]
2014 BAFTA TV Awards Features Anna Beattie, Amanda Westwood, Samantha Beddoes, Simon Evans Nominated [78]
National Television Award Factual Entertainment The Great British Bake Off Nominated [79]
2015 BAFTA TV Awards Features Anna Beattie, Samantha Beddoes, Andy Devonshire, Simon Evans Nominated [80]
Radio Times Audience Award The Great British Bake Off Nominated [81]
National Television Award Skills Challenge Show The Great British Bake Off Won [73]
2016 National Television Award Challenge Show The Great British Bake Off Won

International broadcast and versions

The UK version of The Great British Bake Off is broadcast in many countries and it has been sold to 196 territories as of 2015.[82] The format has also been sold to 20 territories by 2015, making it the third most successful BBC format after Dancing with the Stars (Strictly Come Dancing) and The Weakest Link.[83] Many of these shows have been successful.[84][85] The Junior Bake Off format has also been sold to Thailand.[86]

The fifth series was aired as Season 1,[87] and then the fourth series as Season 2[88] in the United States on PBS, as The Great British Baking Show.[89]

International versions

Current and upcoming versions include:[90]

Country Local title Host(s) Judges Channel Premiere
 Australia The Great Australian Bake Off Shane Jacobson
Anna Gare[91]
Dan Lepard
Kerry Vincent
Nine Network[92] 9 July 2013
Claire Hooper
Mel Buttle
Maggie Beer
Matt Moran[93]
LifeStyle Food 13 October 2015
 Belgium De MeesterBakker
(The Master Baker)
Rani De Coninck Sofie Dumont
Bernard Proot
vtm 4 April 2012
 Brazil Bake Off Brasil – Mão na Massa
(Bake Off Brazil – Hands-on)
Ticiana Villas Boas Carolina Fiorentino
Fabrizio Fasano Jr.
SBT 26 July 2015
 Denmark Den Store Bagedyst
(The Great Bake Fight)
Timm Vladimir Mette Blomsterberg
Jan Friis-Mikkelsen
DR1 28 August 2012[94]
 Finland Koko Suomi leipoo[95]
(The whole of Finland bakes)
Anne Kukkohovi Mika Parviainen
Sami Granroth
MTV3[96] 24 September 2013
 France Le Meilleur Pâtissier[97][98]
(The Best Baker)
Faustine Bollaert Cyril Lignac
Jacqueline Mercorelli
M6[99]
RTL-TVI (Belgium)
26 November 2012
 Germany Das große Backen
(The great Baking)
Britt Hagedorn (2013)
Meltem Kaptan (2013)
Enie van de Meiklokjes (2014)
Enie van de Meiklokjes (2013)
Andrea Schirmaier-Huber
Christian Hümbs
Sat.1 1 December 2013
 Ireland The Great Irish Bake Off Anna Nolan[100] Biddy White Lennon
Paul Kelly[101]
TV3 19 September 2013
 Italy Bake Off Italia – Dolci in forno[102]
(Bake Off Italy – Sweets in the oven)
Benedetta Parodi Ernst Knam
Clelia d'Onofrio
Real Time[103] November 2013
 Netherlands Heel Holland Bakt
(All of Holland bakes)
Martine Bijl[104] Robèrt van Beckhoven
Janny van der Heijden
MAX (NPO 1) 5 June 2013[105]
 Norway Hele Norge Baker
(All of Norway Bakes)
Line Verndal Pascal Dupuy
Øyvind Lofthus[106]
TV3[107] 10 March 2013[108]
 Poland Polski Turniej Wypieków
(The Polish Baking Tournament)
Marta Grycan
Piotr Gąsowski
Katarzyna Skrzynecka[109]
Bozena Sikoń
Tomasz Deker[110]
TLC 10 October 2012[111]
 South Africa The Great South African Bake Off[112] Anne Hirsch
Donovan Goliath
Shirley Guy
Tjaart Walraven
BBC Lifestyle 8 October 2015
 Sweden Hela Sverige bakar[113]
(All of Sweden Bake)
Tilde de Paula Johan Sörberg
Birgitta Rasmussen
TV4 (Sjuan) 20 September 2012
Hela kändis-Sverige bakar[114]
(Celebrity All of Sweden Bake)
11 November 2014
(Series 1)
21 May 2015
(Series 2)
 Turkey Ver Fırına Burcu Esmersoy Arda Türkmen
Emel Başdoğan
TV8[115] 20 October 2014[116]
 Ukraine Великий пекарський турнір
(Great Bakers Tournament)
Yuri Gorbunov[117] Serge Markovic
Catherine Ahronik
Olga Ganushchak
1+1[118] 1 September 2013[119]
 United States The American Baking Competition[120][121] Jeff Foxworthy Marcela Valladolid
Paul Hollywood
CBS[122] 29 May 2013[123]
The Great Holiday Baking Show[124] Nia Vardalos
Ian Gomez
Mary Berry
Johnny Iuzzini
ABC 30 November 2015[125]

The Great Sport Relief Bake Off

The Great Sport Relief Bake Off
Genre
Presented by
Judges
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 3
No. of episodes 12
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Production company(s) Love Productions
Release
Original network BBC Two
Picture format 16:9
Original release 10 January 2012 (2012-01-10) – present

Episode viewing figures from BARB.[126]

Series 1 (2012)

     Finalist      Winner
Episode No. Signature Challenge Technical Challenge Showstopper Challenge Contestants Airdate Viewers
(millions)
1 Traybake Wholemeal Cheese Scones Meringue Dessert Sarah Hadland 10 January 2012 3.52
Joe Swift
James Wong
Angela Griffin
2 Savoury Flan Banana & Chocolate Chip Loaves Layered Cake Arlene Phillips 11 January 2012 2.79
Fi Glover
Saira Khan
Gus Casely-Hayford
3 Classic Crumble Coffee & Walnut Cake 24 Miniature Tarts Anita Rani 12 January 2012 2.56
Pearl Lowe
Alex Deakin
Alex Langlands
4 Trio of Baked Biscuits 6 Sausage Rolls Covered Tiered Occasion Cake Angela Griffin 13 January 2012 3.43
Fi Glover
Anita Rani

Series 2 (2014)

     Star Baker
Episode No. Guest host Signature Challenge Technical Challenge Showstopper Challenge Contestants Airdate Viewers
(millions)
1 Sue Perkins 12 Sandwich Biscuits Tarte Tatin 3D Novelty Cake Michael Vaughan 13 January 2014 4.37
Samantha Bond
Bonnie Wright
Johnny Vaughan
2 Jo Brand 12 Gingerbread Biscuits Chocolate Cake Banoffee Pie Kirsty Young 14 January 2014 5.07
Jane Horrocks
Greg Rutherford
Jason Gardiner
3 Omid Djalili Traybake Iced Ring Dougnuts Layered Cakes Michael Ball 15 January 2014 5.02
Emma Freud
Jamelia[127]
Victoria Pendleton
4 Ed Byrne Pizzas Eccles Cakes Tiered Cakes Rochelle Humes 16 January 2014 4.94
Alistair McGowan
Doon Mackichan
Helen Skelton

Series 3 (2016)

     Star Baker
Episode No. Guest host Signature Challenge Technical Challenge Showstopper Challenge Contestants Airdate Viewers
(millions)
1 Mel Giedroyc Canapés Paris–Brest Trophy Cake Jason Manford 27 January 2016 6.03
Maddy Hill
David James
Samantha Cameron
2 Jennifer Saunders American Muffins Football Pie Tiered Cake Ed Balls 3 February 2016 7.44
Victoria Coren Mitchell
Chris Kamara
Kimberley Walsh
3 Ed Byrne Savoury tarts Chocolate and Beetroot Tray Bake 3D Biscuits Geri Horner 17 February 2016 TBA
John Simpson
Jermaine Jenas
Louise Redknapp

The Great Comic Relief Bake Off

The Great Comic Relief Bake Off
Genre
Presented by
Judges
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 2
No. of episodes 8
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Production company(s) Love Productions
Release
Original network BBC Two (2013)
BBC One (2015)
Picture format 16:9
Original release 21 January 2013 (2013-01-21) – present

Series 1 (2013)

     Star Baker
Episode No. Signature Challenge Technical Challenge Showstopper Challenge Contestants Airdate Viewers
(millions)
1 Shortbread Custard Slices Portrait Cake Jo Brand 21 January 2013 4.17
Stephen K. Amos
Lorna Watson
Ingrid Oliver
2 Iced Biscuits Bakewell Tart Gateaux Warwick Davis 22 January 2013 4.44
Duncan Bannatyne
Simon Reeve
Andy Akinwolere
3 Scones Chocolate Eclairs Novelty Cake Ellie Simmonds 23 January 2013 4.34
Kirsty Wark
Julia Bradbury
Bob Mortimer
4 Chocolate Biscuits Lemon Meringue Pie Comic Relief Birthday Cake Claudia Winkleman 24 January 2013 4.39
Ed Byrne
Martha Kearney
Helen Glover

Series 2 (2015)

     Star Baker
Episode No. Guest host Signature Challenge Technical Challenge Showstopper Challenge Contestants Airdate Viewers
(millions)
1 Sue Perkins Giant Cookie or Biscuit 12 Mini Fruit Tarts Tiered Chocolate Cake Dame Edna Everage 11 February 2015 7.75
Joanna Lumley
Jennifer Saunders
Lulu
2 Mel Giedroyc 24 cupcakes 20 profiteroles Marble "Building" Cake Jonathan Ross 18 February 2015 8.39
Zoe Sugg
Gok Wan
Abbey Clancy
3 Jo Brand 24 Shortbread 6 Mini Pork Pies Triple-tiered Pavlova Sarah Brown 25 February 2015 7.92
David Mitchell
Michael Sheen
Jameela Jamil
4 Ed Byrne Tray Bake 12 Crumpets Vegetable Self Portrait Cake Alexa Chung 4 March 2015 8.21
Victoria Wood
Chris Moyles
Kayvan Novak

Transmissions

Regular series

Series Start date End date Episodes
1 17 August 2010 21 September 2010 6
2 16 August 2011 4 October 2011 8
3 14 August 2012 16 October 2012 10
4 20 August 2013 22 October 2013 10
5 6 August 2014 8 October 2014 10
6 5 August 2015 7 October 2015 10

Specials

Title Start date End date Episodes
The Great British Wedding Cake 20 April 2011 1
The Great British Bake Off, Masterclass 6 October 2011 13 October 2011 2
The Great British Bake Off, Revisited 20 October 2011 1
The Great British Bake Off, Masterclass 22 October 2012 25 October 2012 3
The Great British Bake Off, Revisited 23 October 2012 1
The Great British Bake Off, Christmas Masterclass 18 December 2012 1
The Great British Bake Off, Easter Masterclass 26 March 2013 1
The Great British Bake Off, Class of 2012 22 October 2013 1
The Great British Bake Off, Masterclass 29 October 2013 1 November 2013 4
The Great British Bake Off, Christmas Special 17 December 2013 1
The Great British Bake Off Masterclass 9 October 2014 16 October 2014 4
The Great British Bake Off, Class of 2013 12 October 2014 1
The Great British Bake Off, Christmas Masterclass 16 December 2014 1
The Great British Bake Off, Class of 2014 4 October 2015 1
The Great British Bake Off Masterclass 12 October 2015 23 October 2015 4
The Great British Bake Off, Christmas Masterclass 17 December 2015 1

See also

References

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  2. Liv Siddall (1 November 2013). "Illustration: We interview the artist behind the Great British Bake Off, Tom Hovey". It's Nice That.
  3. "Tom Hovey".
  4. Rachel Moss (15 October 2013). "The Great British Bake Off moves to BBC1". Daily Telegraph.
  5. 1 2 Stephen Price (22 January 2015). "BBC1 rises to the challenge". Broadcast.
  6. Sarah Rainey (9 December 2011). "Edd Kimber: the great British baker". The Daily Telegraph.
  7. Liz Thomas (5 October 2011). "Young grandmother who honed cooking skills making cakes for sons crowned Great British Bake-Off winner". The Daily Mail.
  8. "Food on BBC Two". 26 April 2012
  9. Emily Hill (13 October 2012). "The fabulous Bake Off boys... as definitely NOT seen on TV!". The Daily Mail.
  10. Vicky Frost (16 October 2012). "Great British Bake Off: John Whaite is surprise winner". The Guardian.
  11. "Bake off is back in August". Paul Hollywood (Twitter). 22 April 2013. Retrieved 25 April 2013.
  12. "It's easy as pie for Frances! Viewers' shock as outsider whisks her way to Bake Off victory with a rainbow picnic pie and wedding cake inspired by Shakespeare". dailymail.co.uk. 22 October 2013. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
  13. "Great British Bake Off 2014: 10 things you need to know". The Telegraph. 6 August 2014. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
  14. Patrick Munn (23 July 2014). "BBC Two Orders 'Great British Bake Off' Companion Series Fronted By Jo Brand". TV Wise.
  15. "When is The Great British Bake Off on?". Telegraph. 22 July 2015. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  16. "The genius of The Great British Bake Off". Guardian. 7 October 2015. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  17. Alasdair Glennie (20 September 2012). "Bloodbath at the Bake Off! Star of BBC2 show slices his finger during strudel round". The Daily Mail.
  18. Stephanie Weaver (4 September 2013). "Deborah's desserts fail to impress on Great British Bake Off". Northamptonshire Telegraph.
  19. Hannah Ellis-Petersen (28 August 2014). "Great British Bake Off: Iain Watters speaks out as Diana Beard quits". The Guardian.
  20. Lucy Mangan (18 August 2010). "TV review: The Great British Bake-Off, The Making of King Arthur and Ideal". The Guardian.
  21. Iain Hollingshead (18 August 2010). "The Great British Bake Off, BBC Two, review". The Daily Telegraph.
  22. Andrew Collins (24 August 2012). "The Week in TV: The Great British Bake-Off, Red or Black? and The Last Weekend – video". The Guardian.
  23. Andrew Collins (17 December 2012). "Why The Great British Bake Off is the best TV programme of 2012 – video". The Guardian.
  24. Rachel Ward (17 August 2011). "The Great British Bake Off, BBC Two, review". The Daily Telegraph.
  25. Tom Sutcliffe (17 October 2012). "Last Night: The Great British Bake Off, BBC2". The Independent.
  26. Roya Nikkhah (9 September 2012). "Great British Bake Off sees sales of baking goods soar". The Daily Telegraph.
  27. Liz Thomas (6 October 2011). "Warning, may contain nuts! Great British Bake Off viewers shocked by 'explicit' image of male squirrel". Mail Online.
  28. Laura Cox (9 February 2013). "The Mary Berry effect: How the Great British Bake Off revived the Women's Institute". Daily Mail.
  29. Sarah Rainey (12 Oct 2013). "How the Great British Bake Off changed Britain". The Daily Telegraph.
  30. John Plunkett (18 August 2010). "TV ratings: 2m like the taste of The Great British Bake Off". The Guardian.
  31. Vicky Frost (3 October 2011), "The Great British Bake Off gives BBC ratings a big rise", The Guardian
  32. John Plunkett (5 October 2011). "The Great British Bake Off final leaves sweet taste for 5m viewers". The Guardian.
  33. Jason Deans (10 October 2012). "Great British Bake Off beats Holby City with best-ever ratings". The Guardian.
  34. "Seven million watch The Great British Bake Off". The Daily Telegraph. 17 October 2012.
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