Mary Berry much tougher than Blair and Brown, says Ed Balls as he wins Celebrity Best Home Cook

The former shadow chancellor dedicated his victory to his mother Carolyn, who has dementia

Ed Balls claims that Dame Mary Berry is much tougher judge than former PMs Tony Blair and Gordon Brown as he beat out the competition to claim Celebrity Best Home Cook.

The former shadow chancellor dedicated his victory to his mother Carolyn, who has dementia, and the recipes she taught him as a boy.

He hoped she was able to recognise him on the TV and “deep within her” was proud of his achievement.

The 53-year-old triumphed over journalist Rachel Johnson and actor and presenter Tom Read Wilson to win the Golden Spoon trophy in the final of the BBC cookery show’s first star-studded series.

“Mary Berry is much more formidable than the Strictly judges, more formidable than Tony Blair and Gordon Brown,” he said.

“She is the best, she is an expert, she is very tough.”

Hosted by Claudia Winkleman, it saw famous faces tasked with impressing Dame Mary Berry, leading chef Angela Hartnett and produce expert Chris Bavin with their kitchen exploits.

Ed Balls wins Celebrity Best Home Cook 2021
Ed Balls wins Celebrity Best Home Cook 2021
PA

Balls told the PA news agency it was “actually quite nice to win something for a change”.

He added: “I have not done that for a long time. It was important to me in that final. It had been very competitive. Tom and Rachel are both great cooks but I was thinking of my mum and her teaching me to cook all those years ago.

“She might recognise me on the TV now – she has dementia – but she will probably be watching and I would like to believe that she would be proud that the recipes that she taught her son are now not only popular in our family but actually winning a BBC show as well. That was a nice moment.”

During the “rustle-up challenge” from Bavin, in which the contestants had to prepare a butternut squash dish, Balls made a Thai butternut squash and courgette curry with a side salad and rice.

Johnson left the competition following Hartnett’s eliminator challenge, where she and Read Wilson were tasked with making a croquembouche, a complex pastry tower, from scratch.

Balls then went head to head with Read Wilson in the final, where Dame Mary asked them to create an “ultimate picnic” for the judging panel.

The finalists were told to make four items, including one sweet, one meat, one plant-based and one fish.

Read Wilson created mini salmon and asparagus quiches, chicken liver pate with gruyere cheese scones, and mini chocolate orange cakes.

But Balls won out with a crab and samphire tart inspired by his Norfolk upbringing, herby lamb cutlets, chargrilled broccoli and asparagus, and a banana bread with cream cheese frosting.

He called his mother his “culinary inspiration”, adding: “I hope that deep within her she will see some of those recipes and be proud of her son.”

Other contestants who appeared on the show included reality TV star Ferne McCann, Years And Years actress Ruth Madeley, Doctor Who’s Shobna Gulati, and CBBC presenter Karim Zeroual.

Additional reporting by PA

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