Ted Allen: We are throwing them into
the deep end of the pool,
and we wanna see what happens.
And that's where the
excitement comes from.
Our show is totally real.
My name is Ted Allen, I'm the host of
the show "Chopped" on the Food Network.
I had never been on camera
before I was on Queer Eye,
and somehow, I know that
TV cameras freak a lot
of people out, it's
just never bothered me.
When I'm doing "Chopped,"
I'm just being me.
We have a rotating array of nine judges,
who have become just fast
friends, we're all so close.
We're so passionate about food.
All we have to do is show
up on time, and talk about
cooking techniques, and
ingredients that we love,
and ingredients that we don't love,
and how things might be put together best.
And the proof is on the plate, you know.
So, if it's good, it's
good, and it's not, see ya.
The casting actually is
quite a complicated process.
We're looking for chefs
who are interesting
and colorful, and that have great skills.
We want people from all over the country,
every possible walk of
life, different ages.
We wanna have plenty of
women and plenty of men.
And it's harder than it might seem.
As difficult as it is to do the show,
to compete on the show, it never ceases
to amaze me how many people wanna do it.
TV is a little more complicated
to make than it is to watch,
and TV that involves food
is particularly complicated
because, obviously, everything
has to be safe, and fresh.
It's about a 12-hour day
to make a 46-minute show.
Someone has to decide what ingredients
are going into the baskets.
Every basket has a riddle
in it, that is known
to the people who make the basket.
I doubt that in a 20-minute cooking round,
many of the chefs figure out that riddle.
They just start chopping.
But, if we give you say,
silken tofu, and lavash bread,
and tomatillos, maybe we're looking for
a riff on grilled cheese and tomato soup.
Good luck figuring that out.
I get picked up at 6:30
in the morning, which is
much too early.
So we get there, we
have a little breakfast,
I get into wardrobe, I read my script,
and make sure I'm happy with it,
and change a few things here and there.
For a regular episode, I'm
up there by about eight.
The first round is 20 minutes,
the second and third rounds
are each 30 minutes, but
there are a whole lot of shots
that have to be shot before
those rounds can begin.
There are so many different
angles that we have to shoot.
We've got something like
10, 12 cameras going.
Some of the most dramatic
moments in a competition
like "Chopped" happen unexpectedly.
For example, let's say somebody
drops a steak on the floor,
and they decide to go
ahead and serve it anyway.
We need to make sure that
we have a shot of that steak
hitting the floor, and that's
why we need the coverage
from so many cameras, because
we don't reenact things.
We don't stage things, and we
have to capture everything.
The rounds are scrupulously,
strictly timed,
and people have exactly 20
or 30 minutes to get done.
If they're not done, too bad.
There are actually laws about shooting
game shows that have cash prizes.
There are strict rules about
the way these shows are run,
and you have to live by those rules.
First of all, the chefs do not know
what's in the mystery baskets.
Scrupulously, that is kept from them.
They open the basket, they typically have
about two minutes before
they have to start cooking.
With the ingredients that
are in each mystery basket,
we're looking for variety,
we're looking for,
we wanna represent
different ethnic cuisines,
we wanna represent American favorites.
I think the audience likes it best
when the basket
ingredients are horrifying.
We've had pickled pig lips on.
We're lucky enough to be
shooting in New York City,
which has markets that
sell absolutely everything.
There is at least one shop in
Chinatown that sells
nothing but mushrooms.
New York is such a great food capital
that we can get anything we need.
Once in a while, we'll
give people a basket that
looks like it's a slam dunk, you know,
New York strip steak, and
potato, and some cheddar cheese.
And it seems like the easier the
basket, the worse the dishes.
It seems like the chefs almost need to be
challenged with, you know,
something really scary
like a whole chicken in a can.
We have to base our decisions
on what is on the plate.
Sometimes, the winner of a "Chopped"
competition is not our favorite person.
You can't base the
decision on who is popular,
who is charming, who is cute. You can't.
The rules sort of save us from that.
If somebody omits a
mystery basket ingredient,
that's a huge mistake, but
somebody else maybe could
burn two of the ingredients, or undercook
one of the ingredients, and burn another,
and we find ourselves asking all the time,
"What is the greater crime?"
Cooking can definitely be dangerous.
There are flames, there are sharp edges,
there's a small amount of counter space.
We have surprisingly few injuries,
and what we've had have always been minor.
I've been doing this for 10 years,
and I never get bored with it.
The only problem I have with hosting
"Chopped" is that my feet hurt.
Whenever you start a show,
there's no guarantee of success,
and so they typically
will order a modest number
of episodes, I think our
first order was 13 episodes.
We had no way of knowing what
our longevity was gonna be,
or whether people would embrace it.
I think "Chopped" succeeds in part because
of the excitement and the tension.
We're forcing them to cook with
ingredients that they
didn't get to choose.
But I also think that all of us who cook
have had those nights when
the kids are screaming
for something, and you
haven't had a chance
to go to the market, and
you open up the fridge,
and you have to make
do with what you have.
I love working at Food
Network for a lot of reasons.
I think probably my favorite aspect is -
the relationships that I've built with
all these really, really talented chefs.
And, I mean, I have Alex
Guarnaschelli's phone number.
If I have a problem with
a recipe, I can text her.
I also think that our judges are
super knowledgeable,
very entertaining, funny.
We've had a little bit of
foment in our judges' ranks
and our most recent
acquisition, Martha Stewart,
I think is a very, very exciting one.
I've been a fan of hers for 25 years,
and now I get to work
with her, it's amazing.
I'm super grateful, super
proud, I love our team,
it's a well-oiled machine,
really great people,
and led almost entirely
by women, which I think
is exciting in television, and we're happy
to keep making them as long
as you wanna watch 'em.
