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  1. 4 days ago · The heat is on as we sift through the most captivating, tantalizing, and downright delicious cooking TV shows to find which ones truly get our taste buds tingling! This list spans decades of television, featuring both vintage gems and exciting new additions to the realm of culinary programming.

    • Easy Bake Battle
    • Sugar Rush
    • Cook at All Costs
    • Somebody Feed Phil
    • Flavorful Origins
    • Drink Masters
    • Snack vs. Chef
    • Salt Fat Acid Heat
    • Nadiya’s Time to Eat
    • School of Chocolate

    Watch on Netflix When you hear that Netflix whipped up a cooking competition show in tribute to the iconic Easy Bake Oven, one must surely assume that the point of the show will involve cooking in actual Easy Bake Ovens, but sadly we’re nowhere near as lucky with this oddity. Rather, the focus of Easy Bake Battlebecomes the idea of “easy”—contestan...

    Watch on Netflix I prayed long and hard and to no avail for my children to outgrow their obsession with Cupcake Wars, a show I found totally stultifying proof that competition food programming had reached its nadir. Repetitive, limited, middling, devoid of character. So imagine my surprise that a Netflix original knockoff has enough flair and fun i...

    Watch on Netflix The gimmick-laden competition show Cook at All Costs can’t really disguise the fact that it’s pretty much just picked up the gimmick where 15 seasons of Alton Brown’s Cutthroat Kitchen left off—as on that Food Network staple, chefs are challenged to spend and bid against each other from their pool of eventual prize, cutting into th...

    Watch on Netflix You’d be hard-pressed to find a better or funnier travel documentary series about food and culture than Somebody Feed Phil, which is a successor of sorts to I’ll Have What Phil’s Having,” which aired on PBS. In the show, Everybody Loves Raymond creator Phil Rosenthal travels around the world, tasting and experiencing the local deli...

    Watch on Netflix Flavorful Origins doesn’t really feel like it originated with the American market in mind–rather, these bite-sized 11 or 12-minute episodes feel more like Chinese language programming that has been adapted for our potential interest. And indeed they are interesting for the heavy focus on hyper-local granularity–each small episode t...

    Watch on Netflix A cocktail/mixology competition show that evokes the likes of Masterchef is an idea that seems obvious enough in hindsight that we rather wonder why it hasn’t already been done before—perhaps the more sinful association of hard liquor is a harder sell than watching contestants sear a filet for the 10,000th time. That novelty helps ...

    Watch on Netflix Snack vs. Chef takes the exceedingly familiar cooking competition show model into some refreshingly novel territory, in the form of food science and product development, albeit done in an anxiety inducingly short time frame. It really is quite a thing to be a contestant on a show like this, be shown a packet of Flaming Hot Cheetos,...

    Watch on Netflix Culinary-themed programs often make for some of the best travel shows because they take viewers around the world to explore the cuisines of various cultures. Salt Fat Acid Heat, which is hosted by chef and author Samin Nosrat and based on her book of the same name, stands out because of the way it explores the four elements of the ...

    Watch on Netflix Whether you’re watching this series, or the almost identical Nadiya Bakes, it’s easy to simply get lost in the warmth, radiance and sheer approachability of Nadiya Hussain. It’s incredible to think that this unassuming woman would perhaps be entirely unknown to U.K. television viewers and global cooking enthusiasts if not for her d...

    Watch on Netflix School of Chocolate looks, on its surface, as if it could be in more or less in the same mold as so many other dessert-themed cooking competition series, but watching a single episode quickly shows that this is absolutely not the case. This is less episodic competition show, and more in-depth song of praise to the technical wizardr...

  2. Sep 30, 2014 · Celebrity Chefs Food TV. Today's food TV is a cultural wasteland, but you can still watch food shows that were actually great. Here are 14 of the best of them.

    • Allen Salkin
  3. Apr 21, 2022 · Food and television — like peanut butter and chocolate, it's a match made in heaven. In fact, whether it's commercials, product placements, or food-based storylines, TV and food have gone hand in hand for nearly a century.

    • Famous Food tv1
    • Famous Food tv2
    • Famous Food tv3
    • Famous Food tv4
    • Famous Food tv5
    • Josh Bell
    • Chopped. If a true chef can make a great dish out of any ingredients, then Chopped is proof of that. Each episode features chefs competing head-to-head to create the best dishes from a selection of ingredients that don't seem to fit together.
    • Diners, Drive-ins, and Dives. The larger-than-life persona of Guy Fieri began with this road-trip series, featuring the bleached-blond mayor of Flavortown traveling to various greasy spoons around the United States (and later, to other parts of the world).
    • The French Chef. All cooking shows in America pretty much owe their existence to this long-running PBS series hosted by culinary legend Julia Child. Based on Child's book Mastering the Art of French Cooking, the show features the charming chef working her way through various recipes, which are all done without any retakes or room for error.
    • Good Eats. With his goofy, affable personality and his geeky approach to the technical aspects of food preparation, Alton Brown falls somewhere between a TV chef and a mad scientist.
  4. Dec 30, 2022 · From HBO Max's \"Julia\" to the second season of CNN's now-canceled series \"Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy,\" these are the best food shows of 2022.

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  6. 4 days ago · Vote up the best original TV shows that have ever debuted on The Food Network. Latest additions: Ciao House, Next Baking Master: Paris, Selena + Restaurant Most divisive: Food Network Star

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