Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

MasterChef 2017: Pakistani-Kashmiri Recipes Win MasterChef For Saliha Ahmed

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 May, 2017 12:36 PM
    A British Pakistani doctor who has been crowned MasterChef champion for 2017 after besting 64 amateur cooks has credited her family for supporting her hobby of cooking -- starting with Pakistani and Kashmiri dishes.
     
    Saliha Ahmed, 29, triumphed in the final of MasterChef after defeating two rivals and made headlines around the world for impressing the judges with her Pakistani-Kashmiri-inspired three-course meal, The News International reported.
     
    A record six million viewers watched Saliha storm to victory over music teacher Giovanna Ryan and DJ Steve Kielty who are considered amongst the top chefs.
     
    In an interview with Geo News, Saliha credited her family with her cooking skills and reserved special thanks to her doctor husband Usman Ahmed for pushing her to take part in the coveted competition.
     
    "It's been a long journey, I always wanted to go on this show but I thought I can't make it because I didn't have time due to my full-time job as a doctor with the National Health Service (NHS).
     
    "Then around two years ago, we were blessed with a baby boy and I became very busy but Usman filled my application form without even consulting and encouraged me to take part in the competition. He saw talent in me and believed in me."
     
    Saliha was born in Watford to Pakistani parents Tariq Mahmood and Amina Khatoon, both doctors with the NHS. Her grandparents originate from Srinagar but moved and settled in Lahore at the time of partition -- and that explains why Saliha's show-stopping finale dish was inspired by Kashmiri and Pakistani food.
     
    Saliha, a fluent Urdu speaker, explained how she went through a gruelling experience over several months to make it to the final.
     
    The run-up involved working on the weekends, sacrificing annual leave for many months for filming and going to restaurants and cooking almost everyday after work to ensure that she is cooking new dishes and doing the right thing.
     
     
    "I couldn't have reached here without putting in a lot of hard work. After I was crowned the MasterChef 2017 champion, I was overwhelmed by the positive feedback -- so many people from Pakistan contacted me to congratulate and to give positive feedback. It's impossible to describe in words the happiness I have felt. I must say Allah has been kind to me," she said.
     
    Saliha's extended family lives in Lahore and Rawalpindi. "In our household, cooking has always been like a craze. Kashmiri families are known for celebrating what they cook and eat. My parents are Kashmiris and my mother-in-law is also a Kashmiri and she is a brilliant cook, in fact she is the one who taught me how to cook Shaami kebab, the recipe for which I used for the finals."
     
    She sas been targeted by racist trolls after winning the BBC cooking show on Friday.
     
    The abuse began during the episode with Twitter users accusing Saliha of not showing enough 'versatility' during the competition.
     
    Others claimed that the doctor, who is of Pakistani descent, was only capable of cooking curry. 
     
    And others were quick to point out that her winning menu had featured a variety of cuisines including Italian and French classics with a twist.
     
    Friday night’s final was an emotional affair with Saliha’s win bringing presenter John Torode to tears.
     

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Was Done With Him: Preet Bharara On Not Returning Donald Trump's Call

    Was Done With Him: Preet Bharara On Not Returning Donald Trump's Call
    "My job was not to serve the president, whether that's Barack Obama or Donald Trump or anyone else. It was to serve the public, and to serve the interests of justice," he added.

    Was Done With Him: Preet Bharara On Not Returning Donald Trump's Call

    Namaste, Not Handshake As Indian Diplomat Snubs Pak Official At UN Court

    Namaste, Not Handshake As Indian Diplomat Snubs Pak Official At UN Court
    Deepak Mittal shook hands with some of the Pakistan delegation members, including the Pakistani attorney general.

    Namaste, Not Handshake As Indian Diplomat Snubs Pak Official At UN Court

    Victoria Woman's Cutout Of Sean Spicer In A Bush Trending On Social Media

    Victoria Woman's Cutout Of Sean Spicer In A Bush Trending On Social Media
    What began as a bit of whimsy on the part of a Victoria, B.C., woman to poke a little lighthearted fun at Spicer's occasionally comedic foibles is now trending on social media.

    Victoria Woman's Cutout Of Sean Spicer In A Bush Trending On Social Media

    5 Immigrant Women Vie For 2017 Miss USA Pageant Title

    5 Immigrant Women Vie For 2017 Miss USA Pageant Title
     Five of the contestants vying for the Miss USA title have a message to immigrant girls and women watching the pageant this weekend: Set goals, work hard and don't stay in the shadows.

    5 Immigrant Women Vie For 2017 Miss USA Pageant Title

    2 Arrested, Three Men Sent To Hospital Following Stabbing Outside Vancouver’s Caprice Nightclub

    2 Arrested, Three Men Sent To Hospital Following Stabbing Outside Vancouver’s Caprice Nightclub
    VANCOUVER — Police say two men have been arrested following a stabbing at a nightclub in Vancouver that sent three people to hospital.

    2 Arrested, Three Men Sent To Hospital Following Stabbing Outside Vancouver’s Caprice Nightclub

    Video: Heroic Man Saves Suicidal Woman From Jumping In Front Of Train

    Video: Heroic Man Saves Suicidal Woman From Jumping In Front Of Train
    A quick-thinking man saved a suicidal woman's life in China. Footage captured on station surveillance camera shows the woman, reportedly a college student, running towards the train tracks just seconds before a high-speed train reached the station.

    Video: Heroic Man Saves Suicidal Woman From Jumping In Front Of Train