Top Chef (French TV series)
2010 French TV series or program
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Top Chef, also known as Top Chef France, is a French culinary reality television series and an adaptation of the American television series of the same name. The show is produced by Studio 89 Productions and debuted in February 2010. It airs in France and Belgium on M6 and RTL-TVI, respectively. The format of the French version differs significantly from the original American version in terms of challenge structure and length. The French version is also recognized by NBC as the most successful iteration of the Top Chef franchise in terms of viewership.[1]
Format
In Top Chef, a group of professional chefs compete against one another in a series of culinary and gastronomic challenges. One or more contestants are eliminated by the judging panel in each episode until the finale, where the two finalists must create and serve their own multi-course menus for the judges and 100 guest diners, who vote for a winner. For the first four seasons, the winner received a flat €100,000 prize.[2] From the fifth season onward, the winner is instead awarded a cash prize proportional to the number of votes they received.[2] For example, the winner of the tenth season, Samuel Albert, won with 53.08% of the vote, netting him €53,080.[2]
During its first few seasons, each episode typically consisted of three parts: the Épreuve Coup de Feu (French for 'Rush Challenge'), a short, high-pressure test that awards an advantage to the winning chef(s), such as immunity from elimination; the Épreuve des Chefs (French for 'Chefs' Challenge'), a longer, more substantive test that determines who qualifies for next week; and the Épreuve de la Dernière Chance (French for 'Last Chance Challenge'), where the contestants who did not qualify compete head-to-head and the person with the weakest dish is eliminated from the competition.[3] The show then moved away from this specific format, eventually implementing a brigade-style system in its eighth season, which has remained ever since.[4] In the brigade system, the contestants are drafted into teams, each led by one or more of the main judges.[4] The brigade leaders act as mentors for their team members throughout the competition, observing them cook, offering advice, and providing support.[5]
Another major difference between the French and American series is episode length. While the episodes of the American version range from 45 to 60 minutes, French episodes span two hours or more.[5][6] The slower pacing gives the contestants more time to cook during challenges, explain cooking techniques to the audience, include in-depth interviews with the chefs, and feature longer segments of judging deliberations, among other things.[5][6] According to Studio 89 Productions, the decision to depart from the original series' format, in both structure and length, was made at the very beginning.[1] Due to the differences in food cultures between France and the United States, NBC was willing to give Studio 89 more creative freedom with the Top Chef license.[1] This has allowed the producers to introduce new challenges and twists nearly every season to help keep the series fresh.[1]
Seasons
| Season | Winner | Runner-up | Original air dates |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Romain Tischenko[7] | Pierre Augé[7] | 22 February – 5 April 2010 |
| 2 | Stéphanie Le Quellec[8] | Fanny Rey[8] | 31 January – 4 April 2011 |
| 3 | Jean Imbert[9] | Cyrille Zen[9] | 30 January – 9 April 2012 |
| 4 | Naoëlle D'Hainaut[10] | Florent Ladeyn[10] | 4 February – 29 April 2013 |
| 5 | Pierre Augé[11] | Thibault Sombardier[11] | 20 January – 21 April 2014 |
| 6 | Xavier Koenig[12] | Kévin D'Andrea[12] | 26 January – 13 April 2015 |
| 7 | Xavier Pincemin[13] | Coline Faulquier[13] | 25 January – 18 April 2016 |
| 8 | Jérémie Izarn[14] | Franck Pelux[14] | 25 January – 19 April 2017 |
| 9 | Camille Delcroix[15] | Victor Mercier[15] | 31 January – 25 April 2018 |
| 10 | Samuel Albert[16] | Guillaume Pape[16] | 6 February – 8 May 2019 |
| 11 | David Gallienne[17] | Adrien Cachot[17] | 19 February – 17 June 2020 |
| 12 | Mohamed Cheikh[18] | Sarah Mainguy[18] | 10 February – 9 June 2021 |
| 13 | Louise Bourrat[19] | Arnaud Delvenne[19] | 16 February – 15 June 2022 |
| 14 | Hugo Riboulet[20] | Danny Khezzar[20] | 1 March – 7 June 2023 |
| 15 | Jorick Dorignac[21] | Clotaire Poirier[21] | 13 March – 19 June 2024 |
| 16 | Quentin Mauro[22] | Charlie Anne[22] | 26 March – 2 July 2025 |