How Gordon Ramsays MasterChef Is Playing a Culinary Game Between Baby Boomers, Gen X,
Fourteen seasons in, Gordon Ramsay‘s Fox cooking competition “MasterChef” has found a way to reinvent itself once more: pitting generation against generation in a battle that will prove whether baby boomers, Gen X, millennials or Gen Z cooks have culinary supremacy.
Debuting Wednesday at 8 p.m., “MasterChef” Season 14 will begin with the audition rounds for the contestants that qualify as millennials (a group that usually encompasses those born between 1980-1994), followed by episodes devoted to whittling down the boomers (1946-1964), Gen X (1965-1979) and Gen Z (1995-2009) competitors.
For each of these rounds, judges Ramsay, Aarón Sánchez and Joe Bastianich will be joined by a culinary expert guest judge who has been brought on this season to evaluate their own generation: Priya Krishna for millennials, Lidia Bastianich for Boomers, Nick DiGiovanni for Gen Z and Christina Ha for Gen X.
Related Stories
VIP+The Great Cable Rollup That Will Never Be
Bobby Flay Signs New Multiyear Deal at Food Network (EXCLUSIVE)
And for each generation, these guest judges know what the gaps are going to be when these home cooks compete for the title of MasterChef champion and the $250,000 prize.
Popular on Variety
First, the premiere group: the millennials.
“I think it’s the mentality of the fact that we grew up with those articles that were like, ‘Millennials Are Ruining X,'” New York Times food journalist and cookbook author Krishna told Variety. “We were the generation that ruined things: We ruined grain bowls, ruined salad, ruined avocado toast, allegedly. They’re all the things that we got blamed for, and that’s the mentality part that makes it hard. I was really surprised that — without giving anything away — that certain ingredients that felt very ‘millennial’ to me, I didn’t taste a lot of dishes with them. So it felt like the millennials were trying to defy stereotypes.”
Then it’s about what’s OK, and not, with the boomers.
“With Boomers, it’s about tradition,” Italian-American chef and longtime public television cooking show host Bastianich said. “The tradition of techniques: How to braise something, how to roast something, how to make mashed potatoes and all of that. And I think that’s the advantage. I think the millennials are much more into not so much reaching in their own kind of background, but rather into the future of these new chefs, what they’re doing and all of that. So it’s maybe a focus on tradition, rather than then just inventiveness. How much do they keep the tradition and how much do they forge forward and keep up with the other chefs?”
Repping Gen X, a.k.a. the “latchkey kid” group, is Ha, the winner of “MasterChef” Season 3 in 2012, who says that particular nickname actually points to a skill for her age demo of cooks.
“I think Gen X is very good at being independent,” Ha said. “We had to learn to survive by ourselves at a young age, so the culinary skills are there. But we grew up a little bit later and some of the advantages that the younger generations have is access to things like YouTube, TikTok, where they could literally learn everything about cooking online. It’s just at their fingertips, typing in a search and then learning how to make something. So their plethora of information and knowledge base is much wider. I think Generation X is a little bit smaller, but we are still able to do that online search and learn about things. That’s kind of the forte of Gen X: being able to learn online but also having done a lot and experienced a lot in the kitchen ourselves with our hands first.”
Gen Z guest judge DiGiovanni, who has amassed more than 30 million followers to his cooking channels across social media platforms including YouTube and TikTok, was not available for this interview, so viewers will have to wait to find out what strength and weaknesses his generation has going for them when their audition rounds arrive in the coming weeks.
Read More About:
Jump to CommentsMore from Variety
Chappell Roan ‘Gets the Job Done,’ Debuting New Lesbian Country Song ‘The Giver’ on ‘Saturday Night Live’
Web Traffic Patterns: Established News Brands Cede Ground to Partisan Political Upstarts
Conan O’Brien Regrets ‘Being So Intense’ at ‘SNL’ and Burning Out in Three Years: ‘I Robbed Myself of Fun’ and ‘Could’ve Written There Longer’
Chloe Fineman Claims Elon Musk Made Her ‘Burst Into Tears’ When He Hosted ‘SNL’: ‘You Stared at Me Like You Were Firing Me From Tesla’
3 Ways Gen AI Is Having Early Impact in TV Production
Bill Burr, Charli XCX to Host ‘Saturday Night Live’ in November
Most Popular
‘The Substance’ Director Coralie Fargeat Pulls Film From Camerimage Following Festival Head’s Comments About Women
‘SNL’ Roasts Elon Musk for Saying Trump Task Force Workers Will Get No Pay: ‘You Can’t Be Surprised the White African Guy’s First Idea Is Slavery…
‘Cobra Kai’ Bosses on Killing Off [SPOILER] in Season 6 Part 2, What’s Next for Kreese and the Show’s Endgame
Donald Trump and Joe Biden Bond Over Hating Being President on ‘SNL’ as Alec Baldwin Debuts as RFK Jr.: ‘I Got a Dead Dolphin in My Car…
The Lonely Island Teams With Charli XCX for New Song ‘Here I Go,’ About Suburban Couples Who Love to Call the Cops
Warner Bros. Discovery, NBA Settle Legal Fight Over TV Rights
Oscars Predictions 2025: A Post-Election Race in Pursuit of Happiness
Mattel’s ‘Wicked’ Movie Dolls Mistakenly List Porn Site on Packaging
Barney Actor Says ‘I Laughed’ When the Ku Klux Klan ‘Banned Their Kids From Ever Watching Barney Again’ Because of His Casting
Mike Tyson Says He ‘Almost Died’ Ahead of Jake Paul Fight: ‘Lost Half My Blood and 25 Lbs in Hospital’
Must Read
- Music
Grammy Nominations 2025: Beyonce Leads With 11 Nods
- Film
Mattel’s ‘Wicked’ Movie Dolls Mistakenly List Porn Site on Packaging
- Film
With ‘Christmas Eve in Miller’s Point,’ Director Tyler Taormina Makes an Instant Holiday Classic
- TV
How ‘Office Ladies’ Transformed From a BFF Hang for Jenna Fischer and Angela Kinsey to One of the Biggest Podcasts in the World
Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXOAjq2taKaVrMBws86rm6imXaeurr%2FAsmSmmaOpsrOvx56dZquVlsCwuoxqa2aoopq6qrHRnmSmoZyhsq%2B6yJqjrGWSpLyusdGsZGpqY2t9coSWam5o