NBC Universal
Has there ever been a season of Top Chef where the favorites have been this obvious? The only season that comes close in my mind is season five, when Stefan Richter won damn near every challenge leading up to the finale, when he lost to Hosea Rosenberg like the Patriots in Super Bowl XLII. Of course, that season had just one obvious favorite. This time around, thereâs at least two, possibly three, and itâs so close between them that the show manages to be both predictable and exciting at the same time.
Anyway, this week began with a Chipotle challenge. As Padma explained it, âOur friends at Chipotle have provided these 53 real ingredients that they use to make their food fresh every day.â
Wow, real ingredients? Count me in, dude. The only thing I hate more than fake ingredients are fake friends.
Whereas the challenges seemed pretty straightforward this week, the show tried to compensate with EVER MORE COMPLICATED JUDGING SCHEMES! This meant that not only would the chefs âuse these ingredients to make something unique for us,â the six of them would be doing a series of three head-to-head battles. Two would make something âtangy and crunchyâ for Tom, two would cook something âsmokey and charredâ for Gail, and two something âspicy and tartâ for Padma, that spicy tart (just kidding, please donât cancel me).
That was kind of a fun twist, though part of me wishes theyâd just gone full Cafe Gratitude with it and forced the chefs to design a dish based on how the judges were feeling that day. âI want something that says âheroic.â âIâm still trying to process my relationship with my dad.â âIâm feeling very temporary about myself right now,â and so forth. It could be like the Derek Delgaudio special of cooking battles (what would The Rouletista eat?).
Meanwhile, if youâve been following the judges on Instagram, you may have noticed them posting their âTop Chef journeys,â a meme which I have to think was inspired by Steveâs meditation on what fame does to dorky chefs and their personas in this column from a few weeks ago. Whatever the case, please enjoy Richard Blaisâs pasta hands and Dale Taldeâs camo hoodie.
Oh, Richard Blais. It seems like he has a bit of that David Spade thing going on, where every hairstyle feels like a temporary experiment. The faux hawk though⌠man. People forget how many faux hawks there used to be on Top Chef. Top Chef used to be Americaâs number one source of faux hawks.
Anyhoo, after that it was time for a tofu battle. The chefs got to visit Ota Tofu to learn how the vegan sausage is made, then got together for another tournament-style challenge. This three-round format, in which the goal was more not to lose rather than to win (the better they cooked the fewer rounds they had to participate in), required lots of judging. In this house, there is no winner! There are only ânot losers!â
Luckily, Tom brought his most serious hat for the occasion:
Bravo
Thereâs a little room up there for extra thinkinâ. Iâd like to imagine that if you could see inside Tomâs mind in this shot it would just look like Jackie Treehornâs notepad in The Big Lebowski.
RESULTS:
Quickfire Challenge Top Three: Shota, Dawn*, Gabe. (*winner)
Elimination Challenge:
Round One: Shota d. Maria (5-5 tiebreaker). Gabe d. Dawn (5-5 tiebreaker). Jamie d. Byron (9-1)
Round Two: Maria d. Byron and Dawn. (9-1 over Byron, Dawn via DQ)
Round Three: Dawn d. Byron
6. (even) ((Eliminated)) Byron Gomez
NBC Universal
AKA: Manolo. Burger King. Goldblum.
It was looking like it was curtains for Byron early on in this episode and he ended up fulfilling expectations. In an episode defined by razor-thin margins of victory, where the first two head-to-head battles in the elimination challenge came down to tiebreakers, Byron got trounced 9-1 by Jamie and then 9-1 by Maria.
Still, that only sounds bad because the other matches came out to ties. Even in his own lopsided losses two professional chefs still thought Byronâs dishes were the winner. Itâs pretty amazing that there were no unanimous winners in that context. The dissenting judges shouldâve been forced to explain their decisions. Anyone who has ever worked in a restaurant knows that no matter how perfect a dish you put out thereâs always going to be someone who doesnât like it for completely arcane and arbitrary reasons.
âYeah, this dish was great⌠itâs just that I only eat chicken in the shape of dinosaurs.â
In any case, pour one out for Rico Suave, the Costa Rican sensation. Iâll be rooting for him to take down Sara in the Last Chance Kitchen finale if only so I donât have to hear her anxiously laugh at herself for two more episodes.
5. (-1) Maria Mazon
NBC Universal
AKA: Gas Can. Backdraft. James Brown. Mole Maria.
Maria opened this episode thinking she had the tools to dominate the Mexican challenge, only to lose to Shota. I have to think that was because she fried her avocado. Does anyone else have a strong aversion to cooked avocado? Itâs perfect raw. Or maybe Iâm just the dumb baby in my own joke about chicken shaped like dinosaurs?
Maria had a chance for revenge against Shota on Shotaâs turf, and it was looking like it was going to be a disaster. First Mariaâs chosen filling, the okara chorizo, didnât pan out and she had to toss it in the trash. Imagine that? The gritty byproduct of ground soybeans that they strain out of tofu to keep it from being gritty turned out⌠gritty. I think she probably shouldâve figured that out without having to cook it first, but oh well. Maria pivoted to a tofu-dough masa, which didnât set in time.
Again, did she not test her own masa?? That was like the main component!
Even with all that working against her, you have to consider it a moral victory that Maria still managed to battle the tofu king Shota to a 5-5 tie in a tofu battle. She lost the tiebreaker, but also: donât we deserve to know how that tiebreaker worked? The judges just shout at each other until one judge admits that they were wrong, or what? Where is that footage? âMy bad, guys, I actually have bad taste and am a dumb baby.â -Richard Blaise
Mariaâs instincts and ability to make tasty food have taken her this far, but it feels like some of the holes in her food knowledge are starting to get exposed this far into the competition. Sheâs looking like the plucky underdog going into the final challenges.
Notable Quote:
âIâm like a kid in a candy store with all these Mexican ingredients.â
Notable Critique:
âI thought the masa was just mush. The tofu wasnât treated well at all.â
4. (+1) Jamie Tran
NBC Universal
Aka: Splat. Police Academy. Womp Womp. Hello Kitty.
Speaking of underdogs, there was the previously eliminated Jamie, who came into this looking like one of the weaker chefs and ended up making what sounded like the best dish of the episode, her tofu-stuffed banh xeo (Vietnamese crispy crepe). That was a straightforward dish that sounded like something Iâd order. Jamie has come a long way since her broccoli couscous curry disaster (also the name of my punk bandâs obscure side project).
Notable Critique:
âYou can eat like 12 of these.â
3. (even) Shota Nakajima
NBC Universal
AKA: Beavis. Big Gulps.
Big Gulps came out of the gate hot, or at least spicily, beating Maria at her own Mexican food game and nearly burning Padmaâs pants off in the process (would love to see that R-rated episode of Top Chef, by the way. Top Chef After Dark: Bottomless Judging Edition.) He solidified his top contender status in the process, but then solidified his bottom-of-the-top-three status by nearly getting beaten by Maria at his own game in the tofu challenge.
That being said, doing food two or three or four different ways has traditionally been the kiss of death on Top Chef, and Shota managed to win while doing tofu six ways. Buddy, thatâs too many ways. You donât get bonus points for self-sabotage. Cook smarter, not harder.
Notable Critique:
âWhile Shota used tofu six different ways, it all tasted the same.â
2. (even) Gabe Erales
NBC Universal
AKA: Good Gabe. Canelo. Fozzy. The Foz. The Masa Father. JamĂłn.
For the second or third week straight it feels like a tough choice at the top of the rankings. On the one hand, Dawn looked like she narrowly escaped going home and Big Fozzy came through near the top of both challenges. On the other, she beat Gabe at his own game in the quickfire and I think I have to give her some of the benefit of losing via injury in the elimination second round.
The Foz busted out all the weird tricks this week, too â like roasting his pork loin in âbay leaf oilâ and choosing not to smoke the components of his sauce but the finished sauce itself. Thatâs some galaxy brain-ass cooking technique right there. That wasnât quite good enough to win the quickfire but he did barely edge out Dawn in the elimination challenge first round. This one is basically a pick-em.
Notable Critique:
âHe didnât braise it. He dropped it in a sauce and brought it up.â
1. (even) Dawn Burrell
NBC Universal
AKA: Hothead. âSheed. Legs. Breaking Dawn. Milk Carton. The Sphynx. Zeus. Flamethrower.
Rollercoaster of an episode for my odds-on favorite this week. She won a Mexican food challenge and then leading up to the tofu battle revealed that she has experience working in a modern Japanese restaurant. For a second there it sounded like she was about to run away with this thing, but then it seemed like she might be back to her self-sabotaging ways from the first two episodes.
I wince a little every time the chefs go ham on the mandolin slicers in this show (they go so fast! and seemingly carelessly!) so when Dawn actually sliced her finger on one it was borderline traumatizing. She ended up having to throw out some components and her âNashville hot tofuâ (which sounded like one of the best dishes of the episode) was disqualified on account of not having 10 completed portions. Come on, you pussies, man up and eat some blood.
For a second there it seemed like the injury may have gotten in Dawnâs head, but when Dawn and Byron put up two strikingly similar dessert dishes (both tofu mousses with mango) the judges probably realized that choosing an underdog like Byron over the winner of like seven out of the last 10 challenges (I donât know the actual stat, Iâm not looking this up) would incite a viewer revolt and gave Dawn the narrow victory.
My galaxy brain take is that getting eliminated mightâve actually been better for Dawn. That way she couldâve popped down to Last Chance Kitchen and had a chance to beat Sara in a one-off battle, then returned to the show just in time for the finale, rather than have to wait for Sara (presumably) to win Last Chance Kitchen and then have to keep beating her and everyone else until the end of the show.
Thatâs just the kind of genius thinking you can expect from a cooking show expert like me. Iâd probably be out there solving cold fusion if I wasnât here trying to think up new nicknames that rhyme with âSaucier.â
Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can access his archive of reviews here.