Tag Archives: Featured

Asian influences highlight MasterChef Canada

Last week, the remaining MasterChef Canada home cooks were schooled when they made lunches for over 100 hungry kids and Rozin was eliminated from the competition.

This week, Chef Alvin took centre stage during the Elimination Challenge when he uncovered Asian treats for the participants to tackle.

But before all of that, there was the latest Mystery Box to get through. The seven home cooks lifted the lids to reveal two smaller boxes. One was clear, showing all of the ingredients. The other was black, hiding its contents. Which box each chose would go a long way to presenting their personalities. Were these home cooks risk takers or not? Josh and Andre—the last two guys in the competition, it should be noted—opted for the clear boxes and 45 minutes of cooking time while the gals went for it. The secret boxes held exotic ingredients like black cod, escarole and passion fruit. Six seasons in, I continue to be impressed with the challenges the producers are coming up with and Monday’s Mystery Box was just the latest.

While Chef Michael admitted he would have chosen the “safe” box, Alvin and Claudio said they’d have gone for the secret box to test their skills. Chanelle decided on a Thai inspired cod dish for her recipe, Alyssa with fish tacos, Jennifer with fish cakes, Jenny a po’ boy sandwich and Cryssi a pan-fried cod with vinaigrette and fingerling potatoes. Andre and Josh had 15 minutes to plot and plan their recipes, the former with dry-rubbed glazed pork and the latter a pan-seared pork chop with potatoes and butternut squash puree.

The judges chose to taste Chanelle’s plate (“The flavours were fresh and clean,” opined Michael), Josh (“Very nicely done,” Alvin said) and Cryssi (“Great flavours, good technique,” said Michael). From the glowing reviews she got, it was no surprise that Cryssi won the Mystery Box challenge but it was still great to see. And though she wasn’t safe and would have to cook in the Elimination Challenge, Cryssi got her pick of Asian-themed ingredients like abalone, uni, ebisudai, Waygu beef, black garlic and XO sauce and then assigned her competitors the rest.

Cryssi chose the beef for herself and then aimed to cull the herd, giving Andre the uni, Alyssa the XO sauce, Chanelle the abalone, Jennifer the ebisudai fish, Josh the black garlic and Jenny the matsutake mushrooms.

Meanwhile, Cryssi planned to honour the beef as a steak and a tartare. Alyssa opted to put the XO sauce on pork belly, and Josh was stoked he got the garlic because he cooks with it all the time and planned to top his pasta with it. Jennifer aimed for a carpaccio, Jenny and mushroom egg drop soup and Andre a cauliflower steak with uni sauce. As time ran out, Alyssa discovered her pork wasn’t quite done and would have to complete it in a frying pan. Everyone was out of sorts, except for Cryssi and that was her plan.

Jenny’s mushroom egg drop soup wasn’t up to par, according to Claudio and didn’t honour the main ingredient; Alvin deemed Josh’s pasta beautiful thanks to the creamy black garlic sauce; Claudio called Jennifer’s carpaccio amazing and Alvin was honoured she served it in the fried carcass; Michael advised Alyssa her pork was just cooked through and the XO sauce didn’t come through; Alvin loved Chanelle’s fried abalone; and Alvin was disappointed Andre used so little sea urchin on his slab of cauliflower. Finally, Cryssi’s tartare and steak were a mixed bag according to Claudio.

Jennifer came out on top with the best dish of the night. On the bottom were Jenny and Alyssa, who had struggled so badly with the ingredients Cryssi gave them. And while they were asked to remove their aprons, they weren’t eliminated yet; both face off in a Redemption Challenge in next week’s episode.

MasterChef Canada airs Mondays at 9 p.m. ET/PT on CTV.

Images courtesy of Bell Media.

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Detention Adventure bursts on to CBC Gem

I had the honour of moderating the panel for a very cool new series that’s debuted on CBC Gem. On Friday, May 3, cast, crew, friends and family of Detention Adventure packed Toronto’s vintage theatre, The Royal, to watch the first five episodes of the digital series on the big screen.

Co-created by Joe Kicak and Carmen Albano, written by Kicak, Albano and Karen Moore, executive-produced by Moore, Lauren Corber and produced by Ryan West, Detention Adventure summons Goonies, Stand By Me and the Harry Potter franchise in its tone. Legend says inventor Alexander Graham Bell built a secret lab under a school attended by three nerds. Raign (Simone Miller), Joy (Alina Prijono) and Hulk (Jack Fulton) are determined to find the entrance, which is supposed to be located somewhere in the old library that now serves as a detention room. The trio’s plan? Get into trouble, go to detention and find that entrance. The problem? Raign, Joy and Hulk have to include the school bully, Brett (Tomaso Sanelli), in their plans.

I’ve been a fan of Detention Adventure since last spring when Kicak, Albano and Moore were seeking Independent Production Fund money to help get it made. Now, one hot summer later, and the 10-episode spectacle is available for all to see

And truly enjoy.

Detention Adventures is touted as CBC’s first original kids scripted series for CBC Gem and is aimed at the tween crowd. That makes sense; after all, a quartet of kids putting teachers and a principal in their place and solving cool puzzles rates with that crowd. But there is a lot for adults to like as well. The writing is razor-sharp, the performances spot-on and the production values are stellar. Detention Adventure is chock-full of Easter eggs adults will revel in, including a nod to The Shining.

The science used in the series is sound (Hulk’s science class antics are what land him in detention) and the sets are incredible (the show’s tunnel sets were built in a high school gymnasium), but it’s the message that most impressed me. Everyone is different, everyone comes from a different background, but we can all work together to solve problems.

Detention Adventure is available for streaming on CBC Gem.

Images courtesy of CBC and Joe Kicak.

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Comments and queries for the week of May 3

Where does Mary Berg get her wardrobe? I really loved her white dress with purple and green flowers with Ben Mulroney interviewed her on eTalk. I really like Mary’s fresh take on healthy, delicious recipes. —Marmac

When will you put the recipes on the Internet for everyone to try? It is hard to get the exact measures from her on TV. —Donna

My wife and I watch your show. We will look for your next. By the way, we enjoyed it. —The Cooks

Recipes please!!! —Yvonne

You can get all of Mary’s recipes on the Mary’s Kitchen Crush show page.

Got a question or comment about Canadian TV? Email greg.david@ami.ca or via Twitter @tv_eh.

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MasterChef Canada: Blue Team fails school challenge

I still remember the high school lunches I enjoyed in the cafeteria. Plates of fries soaked in gravy AND ketchup. Ham and cheese on a kaiser roll, wrapped in plastic and set into a steam table so one half was dried out while the other was soggy. Fish and chips covered in gravy. Tasty? Yes. Healthy? Heck no. And none of it was to the standard the food the kids received on Monday’s new episode of MasterChef Canada.

Last week, we said goodbye to Tony and crowned Jennifer and Andre the leaders in the Team Challenge. And, to put their performance in academic terms: the teams overall got a B. Arriving in Rotherglen Elementary School in Oakville, Ont., the teams were informed that over 160 kids from Grades 2 to 5 would be descending on them and eager for lunch consisting of a main, vegetable and dessert. (My first instinct? Mac and cheese, caramelized carrots with maple syrup and chocolate chip cookies.)

Jennifer planned to make sure everything was covered and nothing overlooked while her Red Team of Josh, Alyssa and Chanelle cooked. Andre viewed this as the perfect experience for his plan of running a catering company; he chose Jenny, Rozin and Cryssi for his Blue Team. It didn’t take long for the Red Team to settle on square pizza with square pepperoni, brownies and veggies and dip, while Blue clearly overheard me and went with macaroni and cheese with a bread crumb crust, chocolate pudding and raw veggies with dip.

Jennifer’s Red Team got down to work, splitting up the brownie and pizza prep. They were moving quickly, efficiently, quietly and confidently. The same was true for the Blue Team and it looked like everything would run smoothly. Wrong. Chef Claudio’s math quickly revealed a shocking fact: there was not enough time for Rozin to cook 161 portions of mac and cheese. More burners were needed. Over on the Red Team, grating cheese for the pizza was taking up valuable time too. They decided not to cut up the pepperoni into squares and dropped a vegetable from their veggies and dip. The Blue Team, after tasting the pasta, opted not to include beef (how much time did Rozin waste cooking it?) or finishing it in the oven.

After a frenzied service, it came down to the judging: Jennifer’s Red Team topped Andre’s Blue Team by 37 points, sending Blue back the MasterChef Canada kitchen for the Pressure Test.

Talk about pressure; the four home cooks had just 20 minutes to create a Catalan fish stew in a replication challenge. I Googled the recipe and read a variety of cooking times, from 20 to 75 minutes so, technically, it could be done. I’d like to know how the home cooks knew they had to toast the noodles for the dish. Did one of the chefs tell them that? I can only assume the answer to that is yes because the home cooks had never heard of the stew before, let alone that the noodles should be toasted. Jenny cut herself and required a medic. Undaunted, she continued to work one-handed.

The plates were completed on time, but Rozin’s dish held far less seafood than his competitors. He was hoping the taste was enough to save him and Chef Michael was impressed with the flavouring. Sadly, Rozin’s squid tentacles were undercooked. It was going to take a miracle to save him. Cryssi’s seafood and her plating wowed Chef Claudio. According to Chef Michael, Jenny’s mussels weren’t presented in the half shell and her pasta lacked a little flavour. Andre’s plate appeared to be the best of the bunch in looks and taste, opined Chefs Alvin and Michael.

It was no surprise, then, that Andre was awarded best dish. And, because it was a replication test and Rozin failed it, he was eliminated from the competition. I’m going to miss Rozin’s passion, enthusiasm and the baseball caps.

What would you have made for the school lunch test? Had you ever heard of that seafood stew before? Let me know in the comments below.

MasterChef Canada airs Mondays at 9 p.m. ET/PT on CTV.

Images courtesy of Bell Media.

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Hudson & Rex’s Mayko Nguyen: “It’s equal parts dog, and equal parts us.”

The film and television business is truly a unique one. A project can seem dead in the water and then, suddenly, months later it’s up and running. Likewise, an audition that seemed to go nowhere can just as easily return.

The latter occurred with Mayko Nguyen. After having what she felt was a great audition for Hudson & Rex led to, well, nothing. Then, out of the blue, a screen test and a jaunt to St. John’s to play Doctor Sarah Truong, Head of Forensics on the police force and helping Charlie and Rex catch criminals.

We spoke to Mayko Nguyen after she’d completed a long day of rehearsals for her latest project, the play Beautiful Man running from May 4-26 at Toronto’s Factory Theatre, and some ADR work on Hudson & Rex.

How did you get the role of Dr. Sarah? Did you audition, did they seek you out, how did that work out?
Mayko Nguyen: I auditioned. It was an interesting process in that. In January 2018, I think, they started the first rounds of auditions. And I did that. And I actually felt good, like decent about the audition, because that never happens. And then I never heard back. And I think it was like months later, I found out that the project had been shelved for a little bit.

And then it wasn’t until sometime in the summer, I think,  just got a call and they wanted to screen test me with some people, which was really bizarre, because it was just one audition, and then I never heard anything about it, and then to jump from that into a screen test, seemed a bit crazy.

I guess the gap was because Ken Cuperus came on board, and they re-jigged the show because he thought that it would fit better the way that it exists now.
MN: Yeah, yeah. It’s funny because I actually didn’t even know that that was exactly what it was. But that makes sense. But it is funny though, it’s just like this business is so bizarre in that way, where you can do this thing and then you might know nothing about it. And then, half a year later, it pops up and you have a job.

How much of a lapse then was there on production from Killjoys to Hudson & Rex? It might have been a pretty quick turnaround for you.
MK: It was a very quick turnaround. I think I moved out to Newfoundland while they were still finishing up the final season. So I got out of Killjoys, and then yeah it was October I think they were still just, they were just finishing up. So yeah, it was a very quick turnover.

What’s the experience been like being in St. John’s?
MN: Actually my very first real kind of big gig that I booked out here in Toronto started shooting in St. John’s. And that was in 2003, I think it was. So I had spent a tiny bit of time. But shooting, so not hitting the tourist spots. And that was so long ago. So I didn’t really remember it. And then this past little bit, we were out there for about six months.

And it was … I mean listen, it was great. It was great. Because it’s gorgeous, and it’s a landscape and a beauty that I’m actually not accustomed to, here in Canada. It’s different, you know? But in the winter time, it’s also ferocious. The wind is insane. And the show’s supposed to be a summer show. So the snow was definitely an impediment, and it was a challenge constantly. It would be really lovely if the show came back, and we shot at a different time of the year. But I hear that their summers are not very long. So I don’t think we really get away from the inclement weather, regardless.

One of the things that I really like about Hudson & Rex so far, and I said this to Ken Cuperus, is the fact that yeah, there’s a dog on the show, but you’ve got this core group of humans as well. And they all get along. I really like that.
MN: I think that’s actually one of the things that I was most surprised by. When you’re shooting it, you don’t know how much the dog becomes the focal point of the show. And it’s really nice because it feels like it’s equal parts dog, and equal parts us. Sometimes when an animal is the focus of a show, it changes the tone and the nature of the show and this doesn’t feel that way. I love it. And Diesel’s so great. It’s shocking what he’s able to do.

According to the press kit, Dr. Sarah is motivated, she keeps a schedule of late nights in the lab, and early morning forensic sweeps. She has the discerning eye for forensic evidence. Nothing gets past Sarah. Are we going to find out a little bit more about her as the season goes on? What can you say about this character?
MN: The one really great thing you pointed out with the show is that it does really focus on the four of us, and I think a lot of the season is spent just establishing that group dynamic. Establishing those relationships. We definitely learn more about the characters as the season goes on. But I think, again, this season has really focused on establishing this ensemble, including the dog, and this unit, this team. You do get to meet my boyfriend for a quick little bit. But we’re still leaving things … we’re not saying too much about anybody just yet.

Give me an update on the play Beautiful Man, that you’re a part of. You’ve been doing auditions, so what can you say about that?
MN: Well, I’m in the throes of auditions. I’m very stressed out. We start our technic next week, and it’s at the Factory Theatre. It’s a show that sort of looks at gender reversals in a really interesting and provocative way. To watch it is a little bit of a mindfuck. It’s a really interesting show and I’ve had very many really great conversations that have come out from this rehearsal process.

Watch Hudson & Rex online at Citytv.com, on Rogers on Demand, or on the Citytv app.

Hudson & Rex returns with new episodes Thursday, June 13, at 8 p.m. ET on Citytv.

Images courtesy of Rogers Media.

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