GBBOJ S07E11 The Great British Bake Off Junior Season 07 Episode 11 Descriprion
It’s Finals Week and our junior bakers dive into Chocolate Day, as they combine chocolate and miso in a sweet-and-salty bake and create mini chocolate mousse mirror glaze cakes
The Great British Junior Bake Off All Seasons
The Great British Junior Bake Off Season 7
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Junior Bake Off Show Summary
Junior Bake Off is a British television baking competition in which young bakers aged 9 to 15 tackle a series of challenges involving baking cakes, biscuits, bread, and pastries, competing to be crowned Junior Bake Off Champion.
The series debuted in 2011 as a spin-off from The Great British Bake Off and is also produced by Love Productions. Four series of Junior Bake Off were broadcast on CBBC from 2011 to 2016. Following its parent series’ departure from the BBC in 2017, Junior Bake Off resumed with a fifth series in 2019 on Channel 4, with comedian Harry Hill as presenter and Prue Leith and Liam Charles as judges. The fifth series concluded on 22 November 2019. The show returned for a sixth series on 11 January 2021. In January 2021, it was confirmed that Junior Bake Off will return on Monday 10 January 2022 for its seventh series.
Format
Each series of Junior Bake Off includes 15 episodes. While The Great British Bake Off features three challenges per episode (signature, technical, and showstopper), Junior Bake Off includes only the technical and showstopper challenges. In the first four series, aired on CBBC from 2011–16, the format featured 40 young bakers aged 9 to 12 years old divided into 10 qualifying rounds or heats.[5] Each episode featured only four bakers, with one winner each episode and the other three eliminated. The winning baker from each heat were brought back for ‘Finals Week’ (divided into two semi-finals, followed by two finals, and then one grand final) which determined the winner.
The format was altered in 2019 when the series moved to Channel 4. The episodes were increased from 30 minutes to one hour, the number of bakers halved to 20 (16 in series 6), and the upper age range of the contestants increased from 12 to 15.[6] Instead of only four bakers taking part in each qualifying round, the bakers are divided into two groups of 10 each, with five eliminated from one group during the first five episodes, and five eliminated from the second group during the second five episodes. The remaining five bakers from each group are combined in the week-long finals, resulting in quarterfinals, semifinals and finals.[8] The ‘Star Baker’ award, given to the judges’ favourite baker in each episode, was not included in the CBBC version of the show but is a part of the Channel 4 format.
Series overview
Series | Eps. | Premiere | Finale | Winner | Finalists | Channel |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 13 | 31 October 2011 | 17 November 2011 | Freya Watson | Kai | CBBC |
Kieran | ||||||
Saffron | ||||||
2 | 15 | 11 November 2013 | 29 November 2013 | Harry | Emma | |
Ruby | ||||||
Zainab | ||||||
3 | 15 | 2 November 2015 | 20 November 2015 | Amari Koryang | Alyth | |
Euan | ||||||
Megan | ||||||
4 | 15 | 7 November 2016 | 25 November 2016 | Nikki Lilly | Macy | |
Tyrese | ||||||
5 | 15 | 4 November 2019 | 22 November 2019 | Fin | Aleena | Channel 4 |
Amal | ||||||
Eliza | ||||||
6 | 15 | 11 January 2021 | 29 January 2021 | Reece | Robbie | |
Naima | ||||||
Cece | ||||||
7 | 15 | 10 January 2022 | 28 January 2022 | TBA | TBA | |
TBA | ||||||
TBA |