The Great British Bake Off crowns the winner for 2021
Spoiler alert! If you don't want to know the results of the Great British Bake Off Finals, please look the other way now. Giuseppe celebrated the win on Tuesday after what the judges on the Channel 4 show called the closest final to date. The 45-year-old Bristol resident won this year's finalists Chigs and Christelle, who all had to prepare food for Crazy Hatter's tea party.
"There are no words. I have no words for a change," said the event's first winner from Italy.
In the last episode, he made a bar of chocolate and hazelnut filling in the shape of a giant mushroom. The factory also produces panna cotta made from mango and passion fruit, heart-shaped muffins made from oranges and figs, and caterpillar cookies filled with asparagus and peas.
In the show's Series 12, a dozen bakers first stepped into a baked bubble early in the race in September before judges Paul Hollywood and Dam Prue Leith pressured them with a series of 10-episode knockout challenges.
They gave the last three bakers three jobs: baking carrot cakes, Belgian baking rolls, and remaking a crazy hater tea party while demonstrating the four different baking disciplines.
This year's winner Giuseppe (center), along with judges Paul Hollywood and Dam Prue Leith (left) and hosts Matt Lucas and Noel Fielding. The victorious Giuseppe dedicated his victory to his parents. "All I can think about is my mom and dad's reaction," he continued.
"Everything I have done to get this is from his legacy [to my father]; this is the best thank you letter I could send him. "He's been through a lot of moments of bad health, so I think it's going to be a big boost.
"I don't often say, or lightly, that I'm proud of what I do, but in this case, I'm very proud of what I've done. It's amazing!" Giuseppe's success came the same year his compatriot won Euro 2020 and the Eurovision competition. "I feel like it's been a great year for Italy," he said on the show.
"I really can't believe it or accept it, and it makes me so happy that I'm British. Dell'Anno is my last name, which translates into English as "this year" - and I feel like this must be the year I am."
Hollywood said it "did a great job." Fellow judge, recently awarded Lady Prue, added, "She is a handsome classic baker and has a long history of making traditional Italian cakes. He had done brilliantly so far. "I'm going home to make more Italian cakes because they are so good."