The Great British Bake Off FINALLY hit our screens last night for the 2021 series and while some viewers took to social media to call out their early favourites to win, others were more concerned with the 11-year-long blunder in the opening credits.
Amid summery scenes of the green countryside and adorable wildlife (doesn’t the Great British Summertime feel like FOREVER ago?) some viewers were distracted by what has been affectionately referred to as “raspberry gate”.
As the opening credits roll to a finish and the camera closes in on a delectable looking chocolate cake topped with raspberries, long-term fans can’t help but spot the missing raspberry along the lower right edge of the cake.
“11 YEARS ON, RASBERRY-GATE CONTINUES”, tweeted one viewer. “Fumin’ #GBBO”.
CHECK OUT: the maddest GBBO moments of all time
GBBO 2015: The maddest moments of Great British Bake Off of all time
Series 1: The squirrel's nuts
Forget the excitement inside the tent: literally all anyone was looking out for during the opening credits was this little fella and his, er, stash of nuts. It looked a bit like he was sitting on a squirrel-sized space-hopper, but they were actually his genitals. Still blows our mind.
Series 1: Too many fridges
Someone actually made an official complaint about the number of Smeg fridges spotted on the programme, saying it amounted to product promotion. This, quite literally, was the most British complaint ever written of all time. FRIDGES, FFS.
Series 1: Mary vs Paul
We don’t think of these two as anything other than BFFs who stay in a giant marquee talking about cakes year-round until the BBC camera crew come and find them again. But Mary and Paul allegedly had a huge behind-the-scenes barney about their respective talents in the kitchen, specifically about cupcakes. Incredible, yes. Presenter Mel confirmed that it took the fiery pair FOUR HOURS to put aside their differences and get on with filming. We like to think it was resolved with a good old-fashioned arm wrestle, which Mary – naturally – won.
Series 2: When caramel attacks
Poor Yasmin Limbert had a right mare when she was making her croquembouche, burning her hand on the white-hot caramel. As if a maimed limb wasn’t enough to be dealing with, she then managed to tip a load of cold water into the sweet mixture while running her hand under the tap, so it was totally ruined.
Series 2: Death to chocolate cake
Rob Billington dropped his beautiful chocolate cake just as it was about to be presented to the judges, and a million people screeched “FIVE-SECOND RULE!” at their TV sets in unison.
Series 3: When MIXERS attack
John Whaite was forced to withdraw from the strudel round after getting a nasty nip from his mixer. He had to be led off to get medical treatment despite begging to be allowed to stay on and finish his bake. Poor love.
Series 4: Custardgate
Potentially the most British theft ever: the contestants were asked to present a trifle, and everything was going swimmingly until Howard realised his custard had gone missing. Turns out Deborah had accidentally taken it out of the fridge and used it on her own dessert, leading to her being sent home IN DISGRACE. Her parting words were magical: “It kicked off with the wrong custard and from then on it was a cascade of misery.”
Series 4: Plastic pie
The GBBO contestants have always tried breaking boundaries with their ingredients, but Ali Imdad really took the proverbial biscuit when he inadvertently left some clingfilm in his fruit pie. D’ough!
Series 5: Paul Randy-wood
Loads of people noticed that Paul’s piercing blue gaze would often fall on super-talented contestant Ruby Tandoh, and wondered whether he was perhaps a little smitten with her firm buns. Even Michelin-starred chef Raymond Blanc got involved, sparking a Twitter war with Ruby when he said she was “too thin to love great cooking”. What a pillock.
Series 5: What's pesto?
We’re still really into Norman, the elderly chap who hadn’t been baking for very long when he bagged a place in the GBBO line-up. Norm gained a huge groundswell of support for his simple dishes, but the best bits were when he a) said pesto was “exotic” and b) declared tiramisu to be one of the best culinary experiences of his life. He served up some serious sass too – remember when he uttered the magical phrase, “It’s a bit like how some people are nice-looking on the outside and rotten in the middle. My puddings are the opposite of that”? We heart Norman.
Series 5: BINGATE
This was possibly the biggest controversy the BBC has ever faced (aside from, er, Jimmy Savile). Viewers, columnists and lovers of Iain Watters’ bushy beard were OUTRAGED when the camera appeared to show Diana Beard taking Iain’s Baked Alaska out of the fridge before it had set, resulting in him chucking the whole lot in the bin. The Beeb was later forced to set the record straight after Diana got DEATH THREATS on Twitter, confirming that she’d only removed it from its icy cave for a minute. It still pulled in 800 complaints to Ofcom, though. That’s eight hundred separate people who were mad enough about the treatment of a frozen dessert to get out of their armchair and pen a letter to the national watchdog.
NEVER STOP DOING YOU, GBBO
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“Yes! Thank you! I thought I was the only one who got really stressed out by it!” said another.
Another said, “@greatbbakeoff Every year, this picture profoundly disturbs me!
“Anyone else think that there is a raspberry missing from the bottom right of the cake?!#GBBO #RaspberryGate”.
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Bakers will be returning to the iconic white tent for the 2021, but did you know the location was changed in 2020?
Since 2014, Bake Off has been filmed in the grounds of Welford Park Stately Home in Berkshire, but last year producers moved it to the Down Hall Hotel in Bishop’s Stortford, a village on the border of Hertfordshire and Essex. The move was made so that Bake Off could hire out the whole hotel, in order to keep the show Covid safe.
For 2021, the show returned to its home at Welford Park.