List of The Great British Bake Off finalists (series 1–7)

The Great British Bake Off is a British television baking competition, produced by Love Productions. It premiered on BBC Two in 2010, then moved to BBC One in 2014, and then moved to Channel 4 in 2017. This list contains sections about annual winners and runners-up who appeared in the first seven series that aired on BBC.

The information seen in tables, including age and occupation, are based on the time of filming.

Series 1 (2010)

[edit]
Finalists of series one (2010)
Baker Age (on
show debut)
Occupation Hometown Result
Edward "Edd" Kimber 24 Debt collector for Yorkshire Bank Bradford Winner
Ruth Clemens 31 Retail manager/Housewife Poynton, Cheshire Runner-up
Miranda Gore Browne 37 Food buyer for Marks & Spencer Midhurst, West Sussex Eliminated in
final's 1st round

No baker was awarded Star Baker this season.[1][2]

Edd Kimber (winner)

[edit]

Edd Kimber (born 7 March 1985 in Bradford), the winner of the first series in 2010,[3] previously worked as a debt collector for a bank at the time of original airing. Since then, Kimber has written the following cookbooks: The Boy Who Bakes (2011; ISBN 978-0-85783-045-6), Say It with Cake (2012; ISBN 978-0857830975), Patisserie Made Simple (2014; ISBN 978-0857832436), One Tin Bakes (2020; ISBN 978-0-85783-859-9), One Tin Bakes Easy (2021; ISBN 978-0-85783-978-7), and Small Batch Bakes (2022; ISBN 978-1-914239-28-1). He was "resident baker" on The Alan Titchmarsh Show.

He came out while attending university.[4] As of 2011, he was living in Highbury, north London, with his partner Matt.[5][6]

Miranda Gore Browne

[edit]

Miranda Gore Browne, eliminated in the finals of the first series, was a buyer of Marks & Spencer at the time of original airing. As of 2017, she is a consultant for the National Trust and ambassador for Aga Rangemaster Group. She also hosts baking classes in West Sussex.[7] She wrote her cookbooks Biscuit (2012; ISBN 9780091945022) and Bake Me a Cake As Fast As You Can (2014; ISBN 9781446489178, 9780091945114). She also appeared in a video A Perfect Afternoon Tea (2014).

Ruth Clemens

[edit]

Ruth Clemens, runner-up of the first series, established her blog The Pink Whisk, which Kate Watson-Smyth of The Independent ranked 49th out of fifty "best food websites" of 2011.[8]

Series 2 (2011)

[edit]
Finalists of series two (2011)
Baker Age (on
show debut)
Occupation Hometown Star Baker
(count and weeks)
Result
Joanne "Jo" Wheatley 41 Housewife Ongar, Essex 1 (6th) Winner
Holly Bell 31 Advertising executive Leicester 2 (1st and 4th) Runner-up
Mary-Anne Boermans 45 Housewife Kidderminster, Worcestershire None Runner-up

There was no Star Baker on the seventh week as Paul and Mary felt singling out one baker when the results were incredibly close would not be right.

Jo Wheatley (winner)

[edit]

Joanne Wheatley (née Rutland; born 27 May 1969), the winner of the second series,[9] has started her own cookery school and written two cookbooks A Passion For Baking (2013; ISBN 9781780338774) and Home Baking (2014; ISBN 9781472109354). She has appeared in The One Show, performed cooking demonstrations on The Alan Titchmarsh Show and written a column in the Sainsbury's magazine. She writes for The Sun and various food publications.[10]

Wheatley is married to Richard, who was sentenced on 20 April 2010 to seven years in prison for a £60-million money laundering scheme. They have three sons together.[11][12]

Holly Bell

[edit]

Holly Bell, one of runners-up of the second series, worked in an advertising industry at the time of original airing.[13] She wrote her cookbook Recipes from a Normal Mum (2014; ISBN 978-1-84949-419-9)

Mary-Anne Boermans

[edit]

Mary-Anne Boermans (born 1964/65), one of runners-up of the second series, had been a housewife at the time of original airing and previously played women's rugby for Wales.[14] She wrote her cookbook Great British Bakes (2013; ISBN 9781448155019, 978-0-22-409556-3) and runs a blog Time to Cook.

Series 3 (2012)

[edit]
Finalists of series three (2012)
Baker Age (on
show debut)
Occupation Hometown Star Baker
(count and weeks)
Result
John Whaite 22 Law student Wigan 1 (2nd) Winner
Brendan Lynch 63 Recruitment consultant Sutton Coldfield 2 (4th and 6th) Runner-up
James Morton 21 Medical student Hillswick, Shetland Islands 3 (3rd, 8th and 9th) Runner-up

There was no elimination in the sixth, week after John sustained a major injury to his finger and could not complete the last bake. The judges therefore determined that it would be unfair to eliminate anyone.

John Whaite (winner)

[edit]

John Whaite (born 1988/89), winner of the third series, was a University of Manchester graduate student studying law at the time of the series.[15][16] Whaite was raised in Wigan. He also has two older sisters.[16] He attended the University of Oxford twice.[17]

After Bake Off, Whaite graduated with a law degree.[18] He then attended London school of Le Cordon Bleu.[19]

In January 2016, Whaite also established his eponymous cookery school, John Whaite's Kitchen Cookery School, a converted 400-year-old barn on his family's farm in Wrightington, Lancashire.[20][21] He appeared in ITV's Lorraine,[22][23] This Morning, What's Cooking?, The Alan Titchmarsh Show and Sunday Brunch. He also co-presented ITV's cooking competition series Chopping Block with Rosemary Shrager in 2016–17. He also regularly appeared as a guest of presenter Steph McGovern's Channel 4 talk show Steph's Packed Lunch.[24][25]

Whaite announced his engagement with his partner Paul Atkins, a graphic designer, in July 2017.[26][27]

Whaite was a contestant on the nineteenth series (2021) of Strictly Come Dancing, appearing as part of the first ever male same-sex pairing with professional Johannes Radebe.[28][29] Whaite and Radebe in December 2021 became one of two finalist pairs but then lost the contest to another pair, actress Rose Ayling-Ellis and dancer Giovanni Pernice, via public vote.[30]

Whaite wrote the following cookbooks: John Whaite Bakes (2013), John Whaite Bakes at Home (2014), Perfect Plates in 5 Ingredients (2016), Comfort: Food to Soothe the Soul (2018), and A Flash in the Pan (2019).

Brendan Lynch

[edit]

Brendan Lynch (born 1948/49), runner-up of the third series, was a semi-retired company director at the time of the series.[15] Two years after Bake Off, in 2014, Lynch was treated in four months for his chronic ulcerative colitis, to which he attributed stress during the Bake Off filming and consumption of his own bakes. Since then, he consumed nutritional supplements and reduced use of sugar, lactose and gluten in order to control the condition.[31]

Also, after Bake Off, Lynch taught cookery courses around the UK and baking skills to dementia-diagnosed people with classic recipes that they could remember from years ago, exhibited cooking/baking events at food festivals and cruises, and wrote recipes for British national newspapers. In early 2014, he was a judge at a local junior school's charity baking contest.[32][33]

James Morton

[edit]

James Morton (born 1990/91), runner-up of the third series, was a University of Glasgow medical student when he first competed.[15] When originally aired, he became a fan favourite for "his relaxed, laid-back approach and love of experimentation". In the finals week, his Signature bake's bottom was "soggy", and he baked five cakes instead of only one as instructed for his Showstopper, both of which failed to impress the judges.[34]

Since then, Morton graduated from the University with a medical degree in March 2015, qualifying him a doctor.[35] He also established his blog containing his recipes.[36] He is the son of Tom Morton, a broadcaster.[37]

Morton re-competed against Chetna Makan (series five), Howard Middleton (series four), and Janet Basu (series two) in the Boxing Day episode of The Great Christmas Bake Off 2016 special. Makan was crowned the episode's winner.[38]

Morton wrote cookbooks, including Brilliant Bread (2013) and Shetland: Cooking on the Edge of the World (2018) with his father Tom as co-writer. His book Brilliant Bread won the Cookery Book of the Year Award at the 2014 Guild of Food Writers Awards.[39] The 2018 critically-acclaimed book Shetland was criticised by some over what they perceived as a negative portrayal of Shetlanders, particularly Morton's poem.[40][41]

Morton also wrote baking columns for a Scottish tabloid Sunday Mail.[42]

Series 4 (2013)

[edit]
Finalists of series four (2013)
Baker Age (on show debut) Occupation Hometown Star Baker (count and weeks) Result
Frances Quinn 31 Children's clothes designer Market Harborough, Leicestershire 1 (7th) Winner
Ruby Tandoh 20 History of Art and Philosophy student Southend, Essex 3 (2nd, 6th and 8th) Runner-up
Kimberley Wilson 30 Psychologist London 2 (4th and 9th) Runner-up

Frances Quinn (winner)

[edit]

Frances Elizabeth Quinn (born 1981)[citation needed] is a British baker and children's clothing designer from Market Harborough who won the fourth series in 2013.[43] Her first book release was Quinntessential Baking.[44]

Quinn is an ambassador of the Cream Tea Society and is a frequent guest on UK radio and TV. She has appeared on the pages of Vogue, has baked for illustrator Quentin Blake, and has appeared on Pointless Celebrities with 2014 GBBO runner-up Richard Burr. Other clients include Jools Holland and Wimbledon Tennis Club.

In May 2020, it was reported that Quinn had been banned from Waitrose for shoplifting. An officer representing Leicestershire Police stated: "She admitted her involvement to officers and the matter was dealt with by way of a community resolution”.[45]

She is the youngest of five siblings, having three brothers and one sister.[citation needed]

Ruby Tandoh

[edit]
Ruby Tandoh in 2020

Ruby Tandoh (born 1991/92), runner-up of the fourth series, was a first-year University College London student, studying history and art at the time of filming.[46] She was also a former model.[47] Her grandfather came from Ghana. She grew up in Southend-on-Sea, Essex. Her mother is a school administrator; her father, a Royal Mail staff. She has three younger siblings.[48]

Allegations arose regarding Paul Hollywood's favouritism toward Ruby Tandoh,[49] resulting in personal attacks against Tandoh including by the chef Raymond Blanc.[50][51][52] Both Hollywood and Tandoh denied the accusation.[53] After Bake Off, Tandoh has written column articles for The Guardian,[54] The New Yorker,[55] Financial Times,[56] and Vice.[57]

Tandoh wrote cookbooks Crumb (2014; ISBN 0701189312), Flavour (2016; ISBN 0701189320), Eat Up! (2018; ISBN 1781259593), Breaking Eggs (2021), and Cook As You Are (2022). She also wrote an essay "Tikim Nang Tikim" for a collection book In the Kitchen (2020).

Tandoh admitted her many years of eating disorder in a 2016 interview.[58] She also wrote a one-off magazine Do What You Want, whose profits went to charities, including ones tackling eating disorders.[59]

Tandoh came out as bisexual in a 2018 interview with The Times.[60] She married her partner Leah Pritchard in September 2018.[61]

Kimberley Wilson

[edit]
Wilson at the British Library in 2022

Kimberley Wilson (born 1982/83), runner-up of the fourth series, was a psychologist at the time of filming.[46] Wilson was born when her mother was aged 22; Wilson's brother was born five years prior. Their single mother raised both Kimberley and her brother in East London.[62]

After Bake Off, Wilson has run a private clinic in Central London and wrote a self-help book titled How to Build a Healthy Brain (2020), her first book.[62] She hosts her own podcast Stronger Minds, which debuted in 2020.[63] She and Xand van Tulleken co-host a BBC psychology-based podcast Made of Stronger Stuff, which debuted in 2021.[64]

Series 5 (2014)

[edit]
Finalists of series five (2014)
Baker Age (on
show debut)
Occupation Hometown Star Baker
(count and weeks)
Result
Nancy Birtwhistle 60 Retired practice manager Barton-upon-Humber, Lincolnshire 1 (1st) Winner
Richard Burr 38 Builder Mill Hill, London 5 (2nd, 4th, 7th–9th) Runner-up
Luis Troyano 42 Graphic designer Poynton, Cheshire 1 (3rd) Runner-up

Because the judges were unable to agree, no-one was eliminated in the sixth week.

Nancy Birtwhistle (winner)

[edit]

Nancy Birtwhistle (born c. 1954) is a British baker who, in winning the fifth series in 2014 at the age of 60, became the oldest winner of The Great British Bake Off. Birtwhistle had applied to appear in the program in 2013 but was unsuccessful.[65]

Before taking baking up seriously, Birtwhistle was a Practice Manager at a GP surgery.[66] She was born in Hull,[67] lives in Barton-upon-Humber with her husband, Tim, and is a grandmother of eight.[68][69]

Birtwhistle has contributed to national papers such as The Daily Telegraph, has her own website, gives baking demonstrations across the UK and has appeared on BBC's Morning Live and ITV's This Morning to demonstrate some of her eco living and cleaning tips.[70]

Birtwhistle has released a number of books, focused on baking and eco-friendly living. In 2019, Birtwhistle released a self-published cookbook, Sizzle & Drizzle: Tips for a Modern Day Home-maker.[71] She also wrote Clean & Green: 101 Hints and Tips for a More Eco-Friendly Home (2021), Green Living Made Easy: 101 Eco Tips, Hacks and Recipes to Save Time and Money (2022), The Green Gardening Handbook: Grow, Eat and Enjoy (2023), and The Green Budget Guide: 101 Planet and Money Saving Tips, Ideas and Recipes (2024). In 2024 Birtwhistle announced that she would be release a second print of Sizzle and Drizzle with her current publisher and is due to be released in October 2024.

In 2024, Birtwhistle appeared on the CW show The Big Bakeover. In each episode she visits a struggling bakery and helps makeover the menu and premises alongside carpenter Erik Curtis[72]

Richard Burr

[edit]

Richard Burr (born 1975/76), one of runners-up of the fifth series, worked as a fourth-generation construction worker for his family building business, co-run by his father, at the time of the competition. At that same time, his mother worked as a bursar for a secondary school.[73]

Burr attended Queen Elizabeth's School, Barnet, a boys' grammar school. When he was a teenager, he worked at a bakery in Mill Hill.[73]

Burr graduated from Birkbeck, University of London in 2012 with his first-class honours degree in biodiversity and conservation.[73] As of December 2019, he works in conservation.[74]

Burr has a wife with three daughters.[73]

Burr wrote BIY: Bake It Yourself, released on 27 August 2015. He also has his own blog (https://richardburr.london).[73]

Luis Troyano

[edit]

Luis Troyano (late 1971 – late October 2020), one of the runners-up of the fifth series, owned a graphic design business at the time of competition.[75] He was born in Stockport, England to his Spanish-born parents, Maria and Manuel, who emigrated to the United Kingdom in the 1960s. He began working daily for his father's Italian restaurant after school at age 12. His father Manuel died of cancer when Luis was 16.[76]

After Bake Off, Troyano wrote a 2015 cookbook Bake It Great.[77] He opened The Hive Bakery in Poynton, Cheshire in 2016.[76]

In April 2019, Troyano had a cancer surgery, which he mentioned on Twitter. As confirmed by his agent on 5 November 2020 via Twitter, he died of esophageal cancer at age 48 on the week of 25 October 2020.[78] Until his death, he was married to Louise, also a graphic designer.[76][78]

Series 6 (2015)

[edit]
Finalists of series six (2015)
Baker Age (on
show debut)
Occupation Hometown Star Baker
(count and weeks)
Result
Nadiya Hussain 30 Full-time mother Leeds / Luton 3 (5th, 8th and 9th) Winner
Ian Cumming 41 Travel photographer Great Wilbraham, Cambridgeshire 3 (2nd–4th) Runner-up
Tamal Ray 29 Trainee anaesthetist Manchester 1 (7th) Runner-up

Nadiya Hussain (winner)

[edit]
Hussain in 2019

Nadiya Jamir Hussain[79] (née Begum;[80] born 25 December 1984), the winner of the sixth series, was a full-time mother and housewife at the time of the competition. Also, at the time, she lived in Leeds with her husband Abdal[81]—an IT specialist—and three children, and she studied for an Open University degree in Childhood and Youth Studies.[82] Her appearance on the show and ensuing popularity with audiences were deemed important steps toward shifting stereotypes about the Muslim community and acceptance about cultural diversity.[83][84][85]

Hussain is a second-generation British Bangladeshi, born and raised in Luton, Bedfordshire, where she attended Beech Hill Primary School, Challney High School and Luton Sixth Form College. She has five siblings: three sisters and two brothers. Her father, who originates from Beanibazar, was a chef and owned an Indian restaurant.[86]

After Bake Off, the Hussains moved to Milton Keynes, nearer to London, in order for Nadiya to pursue a culinary career.[81] Nadiya also worked as a contributing editor of BBC Good Food.[87] She also wrote her debut cookbook Nadiya's Kitchen (2016); children's books Nadiya's Bake Me A Story (2016) and Nadiya's Bake Me a Festive Story (2017), both of which also contains recipes; her novel The Secret Lives of the Amir Sisters (2017); and her autobiography Finding My Voice (2019).

Hussain appeared in her television shows The Chronicles of Nadiya (2016), Nadiya's British Food Adventure (2017), Nadiya's Family Favourites (2018), Time to Eat (2019), Nadiya Bakes (2020), and Nadiya's Fast Flavours (2021).[88][89] She also appeared as one of judges for the fourth series of Junior Bake Off on CBBC.[90]

In 2016, Nadiya was given the opportunity to bake the official cake for Queen Elizabeth's 90th birthday.[91] She was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2020 New Year Honours for services to broadcasting and the culinary arts.[92]

Ian Cumming

[edit]

Ian Cumming (born 1972/73), one of runner-ups of the sixth series, has been a travel photographer since the 1990s. Cumming's pictures appeared in various publications like National Geographic and British Airways ad campaigns. His father was an engineer.[93]

Cumming lives in Cambridgeshire with his wife, who is a doctor, and two children (one daughter and one son).[93]

Tamal Ray

[edit]

Tamal Ray (born 1985/86), one of runner-ups of the sixth series, was a trainee anaesthetist at the time of the competition. His parents emigrated from India to the United Kingdom in the 1970s.[94] Ray moved to Manchester with his parents while attending the Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School (Habs). He graduated from the Habs in 2004, and then from King's College London with a bachelor's degree in Medicine.[95]

After Bake Off, Ray appeared in one of January 2016 episodes of BBC's This Week supporting junior doctors' strike amidst government negotiations over pay and working conditions.[96][97] He also appeared in a one-episode medical programme Be Your Own Doctor (2016) with co-host Kate Quilton.[98] He also has written columns and published his recipes for The Guardian.[94][99]

Ray re-competed for the 2018–19 New Year's special against other previous contestants Candice Brown (series seven, winner), Kate Henry (series five), and Steven Carter-Bailey (series eight). Carter-Bailey was crowned the winner of that special.[100] He and another Bake Off contestant Kim-Joy of the ninth series attended the finale screening of the first series (2019) of RuPaul's Drag Race UK.[101]

Ray publicly came out as gay in autumn 2015.[102][103]

Series 7 (2016)

[edit]
Finalists of series seven (2016)
Baker Age (on
show debut)
Occupation Hometown Star Baker
(count and weeks)
Result
Candice Brown 31 PE teacher Barton-Le-Clay, Bedfordshire 3 (2nd, 5th and 8th) Winner
Jane Beedle 61 Garden designer Beckenham 1 (1st) Runner-up
Andrew Smyth 25 Aerospace engineer Derby / Holywood, County Down 2 (7th and 9th) Runner-up

Candice Brown (winner)

[edit]

Candice Brown (born 21 December 1984), the winner of the seventh series, was a PE teacher at Ashlyns School[104] at the time of the competition.[105] In her victory speech, she attributed her success to starting baking at four years old.[106]

Brown graduated from the University of Birmingham with a Bachelor's degree in teaching.[107][108] As reported in November 2016, after Bake Off, she left her job as a PE teacher at Ashlyns School, Berkhamsted in order to pursue a career in baking.[109]

She wrote the cookbooks Comfort: Delicious Bakes and Family Treats (2017; ISBN 1785037072) and Happy Cooking (2021; ISBN 9781529108330).

Brown occasionally cooks on the ITV daytime programme This Morning. She took part in the tenth series of Dancing on Ice on ITV in 2018, in which she was partnered with Matt Evers.[110] In 2019 she appeared in The Great New Year's Bake Off and on Celebrity Mastermind, which she won having taken Audrey Hepburn as her specialist subject.[111]

In 2018, Brown worked for a short time in the pub kitchen run by Tom Kerridge,[112] before taking up the lease, with her brother Ben, of the Green Man pub[113] in Eversholt, Bedfordshire.

Brown announced her split from her husband Liam Macauley in June 2020, whom she married in 2018.[114]

Jane Beedle

[edit]

Jane Beedle (born 1954/55), one of runner-ups of the seventh series, is a garden designer. Her company has worked on London gardens, including ones of Bromley. Beedle's grandfather owned a bakery in Hastings. She has a younger brother.[115] She also has a husband with a son and a daughter.[116]

Beedle re-competed against Andrew Smyth (series seven), Liam Charles (series eight), and Flo Atkins (series eight) in the 2018 Christmas special of Bake Off. She was crowned the special's winner.[117]

Andrew Smyth

[edit]

Smyth in 2019

Andrew Michael Smyth (born 1990/91), one of runners-up of the seventh series, is an aerospace engineer for Rolls-Royce Holdings in Derby, designing jet engines.[118] He was born in County Down, Northern Ireland, to his parents Nigel and Kay and has one brother, Jamie.[119][120] He sings tenor especially for a choir group in Derby.[120]

Smyth graduated from Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge in 2013 with a degree in Engineering.[118][120]

Smyth re-competed against Jane Beedle (series seven), Liam Charles (series eight), and Flo Atkins (series eight) in the 2018 Christmas special of Bake Off. Beedle was crowned the special's winner.[117]

In 2021, Smyth was one of the executive producers of a Netflix baking competition series called Baking Impossible.[121] He also served as a judge on the show.[122]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

General

[edit]

Specific

[edit]
  1. ^ Harvey-Jenner, Catriona (14 September 2017). "10 ways the first series of The Great British Bake Off was TOTALLY different to what it's like now". Cosmopolitan. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  2. ^ Youngs, Ian (24 November 2020). "The Great British Bake Off: How has the show changed since series one?". BBC. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  3. ^ "Take a look at what past Bake Off winners are up to now". Independent.co.uk. 7 October 2014.
  4. ^ Kimber, Edd (6 November 2022). "The Great British Baking Show winner Edd Kimber on his new cookbook and seducing with sweets". Queerty (Interview). Interviewed by Wexler, Matthew. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  5. ^ Rainey, Sarah (9 December 2011). "Edd Kimber: the great British baker". Archived from the original on 12 January 2022.
  6. ^ Wade, Prudence (25 August 2022). "Bake Off's first ever winner Yorkshire's Edd Kimber on baking in small batches and small pleasures in times of hardship". The Yorkshire Post. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  7. ^ Singh, Anita (31 October 2017). "You don't have to win The Great British Bake Off for it to change your life (and we're the proof)". The Daily Telegraph. ProQuest 1958061451. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  8. ^ Watson-Smyth, Kate (16 July 2011). "The 50 Best Food Websites". The Independent. p. 4. ISSN 0951-9467. ProQuest 876970128.
  9. ^ "Jo Wheatley is a food writer and TV baker who rose to fame as winner of the second series of The Great British Bake Off". Retrieved 21 April 2019.
  10. ^ "Take a look at what past Bake Off winners are up to now". Independent.co.uk. 7 October 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
  11. ^ Bloxham, Andy (24 October 2011). "Husband of Great British Bake Off winner in jail for money laundering". The Daily Telegraph. p. 13. ISSN 0307-1235. ProQuest 900153600. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  12. ^ Chittenden, Maurice (23 October 2011). "Bake Off winner's husband in jail over £60m plot". Sunday Times. p. 15. ISSN 0956-1382. ProQuest 900107785.
  13. ^ Whittle, Natalie (20 December 2012). "TV home baking helps new ventures rise". Financial Times. p. 12. ISSN 0307-1766. ProQuest 1242174239.
  14. ^ Kinchen, Rosie (9 October 2011). "We're all away with the fairy cakes". Sunday Times. p. 7. ISSN 0956-1382. ProQuest 896756727.
  15. ^ a b c Singh, Anita (16 October 2012). "Great British Bake Off judge: I'd rather have a McDonalds". The Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. ProQuest 1112118038. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 22 March 2021. The title of the print edition is "Cakes then a burger for afters for TV baker" (p. 15).
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  17. ^ Whaite, John (27 August 2019). "'GBBO totally derailed me': John Whaite on life after winning The Great British Bake Off". The Daily Telegraph (Interview). ProQuest 2280921373. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 17 April 2021.
  18. ^ Lepard, Dan (8 October 2014). "The insider's guide to winning Great British Bake Off by those who know". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. ProQuest 1609063925. Retrieved 16 April 2021.
  19. ^ Kidd, Patrick (22 October 2013). "Rolling pins at dawn over Raymond Blanc's Bake Off tweet about Ruby Tandoh". The Times. ProQuest 1443623169. Retrieved 16 April 2021.
  20. ^ "John Whaite: Baking is self-care to me says former Bake Off winner". Irish News. 19 October 2019. Retrieved 17 April 2021.
  21. ^ "About the School". John Whaite's Kitchen. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  22. ^ Helena Kealey (5 August 2014). "Bake Off: the winners reveal their secrets". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  23. ^ "John Whaite". ITV. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  24. ^ "John Whaite Tried Paddle Boarding Live On Steph's Packed Lunch And You Can Guess How It Turned Out". HuffPost UK. 30 June 2021.
  25. ^ "Steph's Packed Lunch - All 4". Channel4.
  26. ^ Parker, Olivia (17 September 2014). "John Whaite: 'It's nice to be emotionally detached from Bake Off'". The Daily Telegraph. ProQuest 1562574740. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 17 April 2021.
  27. ^ Semple, Ross (21 July 2017). "Bake Off winner John Whaite announces engagement to long-term boyfriend". Attitude. Retrieved 17 April 2021.
  28. ^ "Meet star baker John Whaite our fourth Strictly signing for 2021!". BBC. 5 August 2021.
  29. ^ Percival, Ash (19 September 2021). "Strictly Fans Rejoice As John Whaite And Johannes Radebe Become Show's First All-Male Pairing". HuffPost UK. Retrieved 19 September 2021.
  30. ^ Swain, Marianka (18 December 2021). "Strictly Come Dancing 2021 Final, live: Rose and Giovanni lift the Glitterball in emotional finale". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved 10 January 2022.
  31. ^ "Great British Bake Off contestant can't eat his own cakes". The Daily Telegraph. 23 September 2014. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 28 April 2021. Print edition available at ProQuest 1564285685.
  32. ^ Bourke, Fionnuala (8 October 2014). "Great British Bake Off: Former finalist Brendan Lynch offers sage advice to this year's contestants". Birmingham Live. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  33. ^ Laws, Roz (5 August 2015). "What happened to The Great British Bake Off contestants from Birmingham and Midlands?". Birmingham Live. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  34. ^ Frost, Vicky (16 October 2012). "Great British Bake Off: John Whaite is surprise winner". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
  35. ^ "Able baker now doctor". The Times. 26 March 2015. p. 18. ISSN 0140-0460. ProQuest 1666695172.
  36. ^ "Great British Bake Off winners: where are they now?". The Telegraph. 10 September 2019. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 27 April 2021. The 8 October 2014 version available on ProQuest 1609221845.
  37. ^ "Aye Write! festival highlights: our pick of the line-up". The Times. 2 March 2019. Retrieved 27 April 2021. Print edition available on ProQuest 2187154337.
  38. ^ Wightman, Catriona (26 December 2016). "The Great Christmas Bake Off: Who had the best Boxing Day ever by getting crowned Star Baker?". Digital Spy. Retrieved 24 September 2021.
  39. ^ "Awards 2014 Winners". Guild of Food Writers. 6 June 2014. Retrieved 24 September 2021.
  40. ^ Murrie, Ewan (11 October 2018). "Bake Off finalist James Morton's book stirs up Shetland". BBC. Retrieved 24 September 2021.
  41. ^ Grant, Katie (11 October 2018). "Bake Off finalist faces heat from Shetlanders over 'unscrupulous baby seal bludgeoners' poem". iNews. Retrieved 24 September 2021.
  42. ^ "James Morton's Sunday Mail baking column". Graham's: The Family Dairy. 18 April 2013. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
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Further reading

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