Great British Bake Off: Series Five: The Final

Well, here we are! The final, and three wonderful bakers are left. It’s been a vintage year for likeability, and Norm is basically already a national trejz. (Btw, remember those Mary B Janus mask images I requested be turned into a GIF? Two of you lovely people obliged – and the BBC totally nabbed the idea!) In case you haven’t seen the episode yet, I shan’t reveal the winner until the end…

Mel and Sue end the series with a high, being – inexplicably – in a rowing boat.

This makes me proud to be British.

We get a hasty recap of the series to date, and it seems extraordinary that it has featured on Newsnight and every newspaper cover across Britain. And then we segue across to the garden, which is now filled with children and loved ones moving about in slow motion.

These steps prove, once again, that they are not up to the job of providing climactic shots. There is a wisp of undergrowth, for old times’ sake.

#BringBackTheBridge

The tent feels extremely empty. It’s been a few moments since we had a recap of the series to date, so Mel and Sue launch into another one, interspersed with the finalists saying nice, vague things about each other. The most unfortunate of these is Nancy saying “The brief this week is bold, in your face – and that is Luis.”

It’s ok, Luis, she said BOLD. With an ‘o’.
(Simon… people in glass houses…)

The final episode means the final instalment of Blazer Watch (Bill Oddie is in talks to present this segment next year). Mary has gone full-on Cath Kidston, while the other three are recycling blazers from earlier in the series – grey, pink, and nothing, respectively.

And they’re forbidden from using the same hand postures as each other.

The final signature challenge is Viennoiserie – “croissanty things” to the rest of us – and all three bakers talk about how strange it is that this is the end. They have different ways of dealing with this. Nancy goes for “pretending they’re all behind me” (healthy), while Richard vows “never to do a signature again”, which is bad news for his autograph-hunting fans.

Luis is making – gloriously – a pain au… white chocolate, which makes me warm to him, as my French is equally hopeless. It’s a bit late in the day to be revealing those flaws that make viewers love you most, but better late than never. He keeps his food mixer going the entire time he’s talking to Paul and Mary. He’s keeping it cajz.

Our Nance, meanwhile, confides that she is using the mixer because she hasn’t got the strength any more, “then I just finish them off to make it look like I did it all them look smooth”. She wants an extra half an hour to make up for not having the males’ muscles. Where are Kate and her guns when you need them?

Kate could do this in half the time of the mixer.

Paul wanders up to Nance and announces “I’M YOUR MALE JUDGE”. He’s cottoned onto one joke during the series, and he’s not going to let it die. Not for him, the manipulation of humour into fresh and exciting new incarnations; as long as he can bellow the same two words over and over again, he’ll keep bellowin’. Nancy ignores him, and says she’s going to make an almond and raspberry croissant. It sounds delicious to me, but gets this Mary Berry Reaction Face:

“Almond AND raspberry? You… you maverick.”

I love Nancy so much. She agrees with Paul’s description of her other croissanty-thing as being a bit like a French tart in a Danish pastry (or something like that) and then raises her eyebrows as if to say “I haven’t a clue what you’re talking about”. She’s so relaxed. She is not intimidated by his steely blues. And he does seem to be getting his flirt on. It’s disturbing.

Richard “speaks French a bit London”. I love him too. He’s making pain au lait, and Paul says it’s too simple – dangerously simple. Er, I guess so?

Guess who’s back?

So we meet again, proving drawer.

Luis gives an in-depth instruction for making the croissant pastry, as though anybody at home would ever bother doing that. Richard has cheated and is painting his butter on, which gets mumbles of consternation from Perch Table Corner. Apparently it could be “too bready” for Paul, who notoriously hates bread.

Dangerously spready.

Richard also says that he wants to “make sure my layers don’t lose their layeriness”. That, word fans, is not a new word in Oxford Dictionaries.

Luis: “It’s not a good day to have a disaster.” (True)
Richard: “I must admit, pain au chocolat aren’t my speciality.” (Good…)
Nancy: “You’re trying to learn from me, aren’t you?” (Paul is not a man who likes to be teased, and I love that she doesn’t care at all.)

What a woman.

I’ve long doubted the honesty and capability of the proving drawer, and today I am proved right – as Richard has had to improvise a second drawer within it:

Prove this: you’re useless

There’s quite a lot of time to kill in this episode, so we get a montage of Nancy drinking water and Richard doing peculiar contortions, like he’s limbering up for a limbo.

I bet he’s thrilled that this got left in.

Luis puts his pastries in the oven saying “do or die”. I didn’t realise die was one of the options. This show just took a turn. And then he does a little body-pop, while Richard continues to create a showreel for his upcoming yoga DVD.

‘Build Yourself Healthy’

In the back of the tent, Paul is practising his Blue Steel:

As the series goes on, Paul gets meaner and (presumably to offset it) Mary gets nicer – so we’ve got to the point where Paul complains about more or less everything, from the chalkiness of Luis’ cream cheese to the edges of Richard’s pain au lait, while Mary cries “You tried!”, “You’re a baker!”, or “It’s the final!” She often tells someone that she likes the flavour, if she’s got nothing particularly nice to say, as though they were in any way responsible for the flavour of chocolate.

After the first critique, it’s not looking good for our Richard.

Mel’s intro to the Technical Challenge incorporates the long-awaited mash-up of Jane Austen and The Only Way is Essex (“on it like a Jane Austen bonnet”), and Mary announces that “it’s a really nice one… good luck!” Fiendish.

It is a nice one – I like that it goes back to basics, and they’re making 12 mini Victoria sandwiches, 12 mini scones, and 12 mini tarte aux citrons. All those ‘minis’ make me think of Bridget Jones’ mum, but it’s good to get them to do something that people might actually want to make at home – and after last week’s terrible technical challenge, it’s a good’un. But… all that in two hours. Eek.

The instructions apparently just say ‘make these, innit’, but the uniformity in shape and size across everyone’s results, up to being judged on whether or not the tarts have ‘citron’ scrawled across them, rather belies this statement. As does the concentration with which Nancy is staring at her sheet. In fact… surely that’s more than one sheet?

I feel betrayed.

Mary says they want “sheer perfection; that’s all”. Paul says they’re after ‘bare basics’, but his accent makes it sound like ‘Burr basics’ – c’mon, Richard Burr, you can do it!

Nancy “I MAKE LOADS OF JAM” Birtwhistle is in her element. Yes, I know their surnames, what of it?

The only problem with this challenge, as a viewer, is that we have to sit through Mel, Sue, and the bakers earnestly telling us how to make a Vickie sponge and shortcrust pastry, which is hardly new information. Although I said that in the office today, and half of them said they didn’t know how to make a sponge cake. The youth of today. (Yes, somehow I am one of the oldest in the office.)

The biggest crisis is Richard putting too many eggs in his scone mix, but it is quickly rectified. Part of me longs for people from previous series, like Rob (who’d drop absolutely everything on the floor at least twice) or John (who’d compare the whole situation to platitudes with the complexity of Dolly Parton lyrics). These guys are pretty calm about the whole thing.

Oh, but wait. It’s the tarts that are causing the problems. In amongst Mary’s “they should know these like the back of their hands” and Luis’ “If you can’t do these, you shouldn’t be here”, Richard has whispered a confession that he’s not made them before. Neither have I, Rich, neither have I.

In other news: Richard wanders around the tent,
staring at the back of his hands in perplexed bewilderment.

Oh dear, and his jam isn’t set well. “But,” he adds optimistically, “it’ll taste like jam!” He’s banking on Mary’s flavour comments, isn’t he? Almost knocking over his mixer with a piping bag doesn’t help especially.

How do they fare?

Luis: no glaze on his scones, Vic sponges “have an attempt at some piping work”, and the tarts don’t get a good reception.

Nancy: good feedback for all her bakes, but the scones are a little dry, and, in the cake, SHE HASN’T PIPED HER CREAM. “I think, when you’re trying to impress, you do pipe,” says Mary. It’s like she’s watching my every movement.

Richard: good scones, no piping in his cake like an animal, and his ‘tarte au colon’ (was Paul witty? What happened?) have curdled.

Richard seems out of the running now, coming third; Luis is second, and our Nance is first.

Also: her make-up is looking great this week, we agreed in my living room.

Richard is a little heartbreaking in his interview, about how he wishes he’d done better. Aw, Rich, we still love you.

What is the showstopper? Well, it seems to be the Windmill Challenge. It’s actually a pièce montée, which incorporates sponge, choux, petits-fours, and sugarwork. Lawks. We haven’t had many decorative/’scene’ things this year, so it’s nice that we get to finish with this sort of thing – although strange that all three bakers are basically obsessed with windmills, or towers in Poynton that look like windmills. The best moment, of course, is when Mel says that it “has to taste increds”.

“I’m trying not to think that it’s the final, and you could win at the moment” – could I, Luis? Could I? Why did nobody tell me? The pressure! The pressure!

Mary says “I think of the ones I’ve seen in 18th-century and 19th-century… pictures”, She’s making the age jokes too easy.

She doesn’t look a day over 204.

Richard is making something about Mill Hill – which, I believe, is where Our Vicar’s Wife is from. Is that right, Mum? Are you and Richard related? IS HE MY UNCLE?

He’s putting every ingredient under the sun into this cake, and it’s sounding fab. Although (spoilers) the colouring pencils man is being generous with the shade of green he uses in the picture.

Would that it had been that colour.

Look. I’m not saying that the BBC make all of their decisions based on my thoughts and opinions, but this series has been very light on History of Cake and, more damagingly to my recaps, light on Wow, They Live In Houses Just Like You! No recreational jogging; no ‘Beca is married to her husband’. I’m sort of sad, but pleased that we end the series with Remembrance of Things Past – such as Richard wearing a pair of mighty fine specs:

We also learn the previously-unknown fact that Richard is a Builder (why weren’t we told?) and get the sweetest ever interview with his wife Sarah, who says how proud she is of him. It is adorbs, and I shed a little tear.

And we cut to him saying “I am a ginger-lover – I did marry one!” Oh, you two.

Nancy – whilst saying “I’m just throwing it all in,” in her perfectionist way – manages to fling flour all over the place with her mixer.

National trejz.

She’s making the Moulin Rouge windmill, and tells Paul that he has to think of burlesque, at which he looks lost in reminiscence. Then Nancy adds that it’s ‘sinister’, unnervingly.

Nancy once took a dog to Crufts, we learn:

And was also once Princess Diana, apparently.

We are told that her eight grandchildren support her – while being shown a picture which only has five children in it – and then a couple of said grandchildren say adorable things. Luis – you’ve got a lot to live up to in your VT.

Luis is making a mining wheel, which is basically a windmill, isn’t it?

He’s in a ukulele club. And he once had black hair!

All the bakers’ families are lovely. I’m wondering what Colin would do if I were on this. “I don’t watch it, to be honest,” is what I’m imagining. This from the man who will be playing Paul H on the village stage come December. I’m angling for the role of Mary Berry, but have so far been repeatedly turned down for the part.

We see them make choux pastry which, again, isn’t very tricky – this challenge has lots of easy elements, so it’s the structure and the timing which is the hard thing. (I think – but am not sure – that Nancy pronounced ‘choux’ to sound like ‘chew’. I do hope she did.)

The people outside continue to do everything in slow motion – whether that be rolling down hills, playing a guitar, or talking about Brighton – and some exiled bakers say who they think will win. Except Chetters, who misunderstands the question, and just says “Who will win?!” And guess who’s back?

“This is all a bit fancy, if you ask me.”

Nancy’s husband has ‘made’ her something to curve her bake on. It’s an old bit of drainpipe.

Can we stop briefly to admire how brilliant Luis’ sugarwork is? Although… why is the word ‘sugar’ written backwards? Are you tricking us, BBC? Have you ordained that fancy camerawork is more important than artistic truthfulness?

IS ANYTHING REAL?

Mel and Sue wander around in the background, gorging on people’s offcuts, and everything looks to be going swimmingly for all the bakers. Their croquembouches are extraordinarily stable. But I do wonder if the luminous green icing Richard is using, and the vampire-red hat Nance is piping, are homemade… this strikes me as a shop-bought fondant interloper moment.

Sails are breaking, profiterole towers are snapping, and we don’t even have time to stop and panic – that’s how busy this episode is. All the tension musical instruments are playing at once, and it’s getting very tense, not to say hysterical. And… time is up. They’ve all done brilliantly.

Here are the final bakes, which – as per – the bakers are staring at like melancholy, overprotective parents.

Appearance-wise, Luis has this in the bag, I reckon.

There are so many elements to these creations that Paul and Mary have to eat, and comment on, dozens of things. There’s no real point in them commenting on whether or not people can make sponge cakes at this stage. And the critique is made interesting by the sound of marauding children in the far distance.

Nancy’s sponge cake, according to Paul, “reminds me of a birthday cake I had as a child, actually”. So… you once had a regular sponge cake? Memories, like the corners of my mind.

But, overall, there is nothing interesting to say about this section. Everybody has done well. They process out to the awaiting masses…

Although you can’t see them, you know they are cheering,
each time someone brings out a cake.

Back in the tent, Mary and Paul do their usual recap of the previous five minutes, and – they are in agreement about the winner! Who could it be? Who will get the amazing prize of a glass cake stand that probably costs about £20 at John Lewis? At this stage, I felt pretty confident that I’d earned my monies from the office sweepstake.

Hordes of people – inexplicably wearing daisy chains in their hair – applaud as the finalists wander forward. Paul does his best to look manly while holding a bouquet of flowers. And the winner is…

It’s only bloomin’ Nance!

The best reaction is actually from Chetna, in the crowd, who flings her arms around in a delighted manner, shrieks “I knew it!”, and is generally lovely.

Mary says that Nancy is a perfectionist, which is hilarious, since she’s the living embodiment of “that’ll do” – but that’s why we love her so much. She is truly a great amateur baker.

She finishes the series with the wit, panache, and magnificence that she started it (remember how she was my fave in ep.1?), by ‘confessing’ that she’s been in love with Paul all along. I so desperately hope that she gets a baking show. It could be called The Female Baker.

We are treated to the usual What Have They Been Up To Since The Bake Off? slideshow – the answer invariably being “exactly and precisely what they were up to before it” – except for this wonderful piece of news:

And… it’s over! I got a triumphant “AAAAAAAAAAAAAA!” text from my colleague Adam, who is £10 richer after the sweepstake pay-out, and somehow we’re going to have to find something else to talk about in the office.

It’s been fun, guys! Thanks for reading – and I’ll be back next year :) (and I’m only a little glad to get my Thursday evenings back…)

20 thoughts on “Great British Bake Off: Series Five: The Final

  • October 9, 2014 at 10:11 pm
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    I've enjoyed reading these as much as I have watching the show. So funny. Thank you!

    Reply
  • October 9, 2014 at 11:23 pm
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    The green icing horrified me, but I LOVED Nance's grandkid pronouncing 'buns' in a regional accent. So good. Also, like you say, although Richard said the sheet had nothing but titles on it – he said he added both the eggs they asked for instead of one in and one to glaze – so… maybe the title instructions were mere headings? I feel cheated somehow. I could def have made vic and scones unaided. Tarts are a bit more high maintenance. xx

    Reply
  • October 10, 2014 at 12:25 am
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    That was a wonderful finale, it had me on the edge of my seat in suspense, and then I was cheering like Chetna! Nancy has always been my favourite. I liked Richard and Luis, but I just love Nance – she's witty, confident, and the best technical baker since Mary Ann from season 2.
    Those windmills were fabulous, for a moment I thought I was watching the Dutch version of Bake-off. But now it's over, how will I live without bake-off and your recaps? I'm thinking maybe I should learn to bake? It's tough to find something as endearing and engrossing as GBBO. Thanks for all your hard work – any book suggestions for those of us who are dealing with withdrawal?
    Perfect Custard

    Reply
  • October 10, 2014 at 5:33 am
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    Brilliant – thank you again for doing all of these! BTW I think Luis' "sugar" is backwards because he draws it all out on the paper but then pipes on the back so he doesn't get pencil on the sugarwork. But you probably know that already, don't you, because you are all-seeing. I'm glad Nancy won although I was sad for Luis – and you was ROBBED not appearing on Extra Slice – grrr to the BBC.

    Reply
  • October 10, 2014 at 8:57 am
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    Brilliant, GBBO without you later in the week would be a bore!!!!
    Looking forward to 2015 already!

    Reply
  • October 10, 2014 at 11:01 am
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    You have been The Extra, Extra Biggest Best Slice, thank you.

    Reply
  • October 10, 2014 at 12:12 pm
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    Perfectly put, Anonymous! I couldn't agree more, thank you Simon.

    Reply
  • October 10, 2014 at 12:13 pm
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    It's official – the show is 100% improved with your write-ups. Gosh, wasn't Paul Hollywood a sour puss? I was glad he was a bit nicer when it came to the final challenges. It's been such a laugh reading your brilliant posts – though I fear I will be saying 'adorbs' and 'commiz' for a few weeks to come.

    Reply
  • October 10, 2014 at 1:07 pm
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    Hard to wait until next year for your comments, so much better than the show…please, please find something else to comment on!

    Reply
  • October 11, 2014 at 7:43 am
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    Layeriness will definitely be an Oxford Dictionary word within five years. Definitely. I mean deffo.

    Simon, these recaps have been fab. Thank you so much for giving me an extra Extra Slice every week. I've loved them. xxx

    Reply
  • October 11, 2014 at 4:11 pm
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    Simon, Mill Hill = yes
    Uncle = no
    part in the show as Mary B = no chance!
    Layeriness = wonderful!

    Reply
  • October 13, 2014 at 10:16 pm
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    Wonderful recaps found via Mrs Miniver. Thank you for making Bake Off even more of a treat.

    Reply
  • November 3, 2014 at 6:43 pm
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    I love these posts so much! I think you are the reason I am now addicted to Cupcake Wars which doesn't have half the drama. I must see if BBO is on Netflix. There's no better excuse for watching TV instead of reading, than this show. Love it!

    Reply
  • March 6, 2015 at 11:28 pm
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    I found your blog late, but it has been truly a DELIGHT to read after watching. So much funny! Of course, we here in America only just got this last series, perhaps as a scone (bone?) thrown to us by PBS. Hopefully, they will air the next series and also consider going back to the beginning.

    My other wish is that you create a category on this site so your recaps are easier to find. I realize that this is mosly a book site rather than a cooking show site, but I had quite a time navigating to find these recaps. Totally worth it, but still.

    Thanks!

    Reply
    • March 7, 2015 at 12:12 am
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      Thanks for your lovely comment, Suzy, I'm so glad you've been enjoying it!

      I should have said before, if you click on the 'BakeOff' label at the bottom of the post that will take you to all of them. But that way you can find the old series!

      Reply
  • November 6, 2022 at 3:22 am
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    Binge Australia has just released GBBO series 1 – 10.
    I’ve been an addict of the show since binge watching a series on an international flight.
    I’ve just started watching them from the beginning and then reading your blog straight afterwards.

    Thank you so much for your recaps. They are excellent and really add to the show for me!

    I think Luis’ sugarwork page is see through and turned over so he doesn’t pick up lead pencil or whatever he uses and mix it with his caramel.

    I can’t find the link you refer to in your reply above to get the whole list of all the GBBO series and episodes but I just google each title and manage to find them anyway.
    Love your work.

    Reply
  • November 6, 2022 at 4:47 am
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    I’ve found the link to all your recaps linked together.
    Thanks.

    Reply

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