MasterChef Canada
MasterChef Canada is a Canadian competitive culinary reality TV show, part of the MasterChef franchise, open to self-taught amateur home cooks across Canada. It premiered on CTV on January 20, 2014, and has since aired its eighth season.
The first seven seasons of MasterChef Canada starred three judges: Claudio Aprile, Michael Bonacini and Alvin Leung, were narrated by Charlie Ryan and produced by Endemol Shine International and Proper Television. The first six seasons were produced under the executive production of Guy O'Sullivan.
After a three-year hiatus, CTV announced on October 22, 2024, an eighth season of the show for the 2025–26 season, to be produced by Scott McGillivray's Toronto-based McGillivray Entertainment Media. Filmed in early 2025, the season premiered on October 2, 2025, with a new judging panel that consists of Season 3 winner Mary Berg, Toronto chef and restaurateur Craig Wong, and chef and former Top Chef judge Hugh Acheson. In December 2025, CTV renewed the show for a ninth season to be filmed in the spring of 2026, with Berg, Wong and Acheson returning as judges.
Format
On MasterChef Canada, amateur, self-taught non-professional home cooks are given the opportunity to compete individually in a series of gruelling individual culinary cook-off challenges to win a trophy, a $100,000 CAD cash prize money, and the title of MasterChef Canada to realize their culinary dreams. Each season generally begins with a larger group of applicants invited to Toronto compete in an initial challenge or series of challenges in order to win a coveted white apron and a spot in the primary stages of the competition. Alvin Leung, Claudio Aprile, and Michael Bonancini have served as the series' judges for the first seven seasons of the series.In the first two seasons of MasterChef Canada, fifty hopeful applicants were given the opportunity to prepare and present their audition signature dish to judges Leung, Aprile and Bonacini, where a "yes" vote from at least two of the three judges was required in order to win the coveted white apron. Those who were successful were then presented with an additional challenge to determine which contestants deserved a spot in the Top 16; over a third of the apron-winners were eliminated at that stage. The third season featured a unique spin on the original auditioning format, in that three unanimous thumbs-up "yes" votes were required from all three judges unanimously to win an apron, while three "no" votes eliminated a hopeful applicant, and a second chance battle between those with wither one or two "yes" votes was then held to determine the remaining competitors who would advance to the Top 14. Seasons four, five and six streamlined the audition process by facing smaller groups of contestants with more specific, qualifying cook-off challenge rounds with only twelve aprons up for grabs.
With exceptions to the rule, the primary phase of the competition on MasterChef Canada involved a two consecutive cook-off challenge per episode format cycle, in which two consecutive challenges were held in an episode; the former challenge would grant immunity and/or advantage to one or more competitors, and the latter challenge would result in at least one competitors being permanently eliminated from the competition. This cycle of challenges would be repeated until a small number of home cooks remain, usually three or four, in which each season holds a unique series of semifinalist challenges before a final two competitors are named. The main two-episode cycle's challenges generally consist of:
- Mystery Box Challenge: The competitors are all given a box with the exact same ingredients. The box usually conceals of specific ingredients or a required kitchen utensil underneath, and they contestants must utilize only those ingredients to create an elevated, MasterChef Canada-worthy dish within a set amount of time. Sometimes, a special guest may also appear to inspire the cooks and will serve as a guest judge for the challenge. At the end of the challenge, the judges take a quick look at all of the completed dishes and usually call forward the three most promising dishes up for tasting. A single winner from these three is usually named, and the competitor is then invited to join the judges in the pantry to hear about the advantage won - this typically includes a form of control over the upcoming elimination challenges, as well as occasionally immunity from the elimination challenge that night.
- Elimination Challenge: Competitors are tasked with completing a specific challenge directly inspired by the decision of the winner of the mystery box challenge. At the end of the challenge each of the contestant's dishes are brought up separately for evaluation and critiquing by the judges. Usually the two or three best competitors in the elimination challenge are named opposing team captains in the upcoming team challenge. The judges then call forward a bottom two or three, from which at least one cook is eliminated permanently from the competition.
- Team Challenge: The competitors arrive at an off-site location and are split into two or three teams by either the judges or team captains. The teams are asked to serve a single-dish or mult-course meal for a set group of diners; the winning team is decided either by voting from the diners or by the call of the judges themselves. The winning team is exempt from the upcoming pressure test, while the losing team are to individually cook for their lives. Typically when there are six competitors remaining, the team challenge is a Restaurant Takeover challenge, in which cooks take over a well-known restaurant for a set service.
- Pressure Test: Competitors who lost the previous team challenge are required to compete against one another back in the MasterChef Canada kitchen; occasionally, before the challenge begins competitors may be saved from partaking in the pressure test by either the judges, the winning team, the losing team's captain, or team consensus. Often requiring competitors to replicate a technically complicated dish predetermined by the judges, all of the dishes are evaluated and critiqued by the judges. Those who rise to the occasion and put out up-to-standard dishes are sent to safety on the balcony, while the weakest cooks are faced with elimination; at least one cook is permanently eliminated from the competition.
After a final two competitors are determined through a unique-to-each-season semifinalist challenge sequence, the finalists are given their final challenge: they will compete head-to-head in a three-hour, three-course final challenge while friends, family and former competitors spectate and cheer them on. Each course is judged privately by the judges; in recent years since season 4, the finalists are required to continuously cook each course non-stop for three whole hours without rest. After all of the courses have been sampled, and the judges have deliberated, a winner is eventually crowned - the winner receives a trophy, a $100,000 CAD cash prize money, and the title of MasterChef Canada.
Judges
Season 1–7
- Claudio Aprile, chef and owner of Toronto restaurant Xango.
- Michael Bonacini, chef and co-owner of the Oliver & Bonacini hospitality family of Toronto restaurants Jump, Canoe, Luma and Bannock.
- Alvin Leung, owner of Michelin-starred restaurants Bo Innovation in Hong Kong and Bo London in London, UK.
Season 8
- Hugh Acheson, former Top Chef judge
- Mary Berg, cook, TV host and winner of Season 3
- Craig Wong, chef and owner of Toronto restaurant Patois.
Seasons
Specials
| Title | Original air date | Canadian viewers |