MasterChef Australia: fans farewell 'national treasure' Poh after elimination
On Sunday night, 11 years after her first appearance, Australia once again said goodbye to Poh Ling Yeow.
It was a lack of time and an undercooked curlugione (an Italian potato-filled dumpling) that spelled trouble for the MasterChef contestant.
As she bade farewell, Yeow was praised by viewers at home for her creativity and joy, described as a “national treasure” by MasterChef judge and food writer Melissa Leong, and celebrated as a trailblazer in Asian Australian representation on television.
In 2009 Yeow – then an artist and amateur chef – came second in the show’s debut season. This year, returning for an all-stars competition, she stood out for her creative dishes, fun approach, at-times unpredictable decisions and last-minute saves dubbed the “Poh-llercoaster” by judges.
Related: Melissa Leong on MasterChef, diversity and tabloids: ‘I will never, ever let this stuff shake me’
On Sunday night’s program, fellow contestant Callum Hann, who came second on MasterChef in 2010, said the pair had been “mates for 10 years”.
On Twitter, viewers spoke about how Yeow was one of the first Asian Australian faces they ever saw on TV.
“You’ve always fought to show and represent who you are and to be proud of your [Chinese-Malaysian] heritage,” Leong said. “Millions of people around the world see you and understand that, and love you even more.”
Hard to put into words what Poh even being on TV meant to me – this part Chinese-Malaysian kid, growing up in a sea of white – and so many other Asian-Australians.
What an absolute icon of Australian food. Gonna eat a goddamn century egg this week in her honour.#MasterChefAU— Benjamin Law 羅旭能 (@mrbenjaminlaw) July 5, 2020
Appreciation post: Poh was the 1st Asian face that I saw on Aussie TV. I loved how unapologetic she was about the Asian-ness of her food, culture, & heritage.
As a runty Korean who used to toss his kimchi bento because white kids mocked the smell, I salute her 💔💔 #MasterChefAU pic.twitter.com/IDPPWRfClT— Andrew Shim 심우근 (@andrewwshim) July 5, 2020
Poh. A true trailblazer, a whole hearted human, and one of the most beautifully vulnerable and strong people I have ever met. You fly the flag for misfits like us and what we are capable of achieving. You’re a fierce, defiant warrior woman, and I love you for it. https://t.co/y68sgzFzVn
— Melissa Leong (@fooderati) July 5, 2020
Melissa nails it. Poh is all heart and soul. She inspires me to go into the kitchen, to take risks, have fun, be proud of my heritage and pour all my love into my food. I’ve always loved her, and now I love her even more #MasterChefAU pic.twitter.com/dS2b7bZmG9
— Fiza Zali (@fizawanders) July 5, 2020
I do not like this stressful show
I do not want my friends to go.
I do no like it Cal my pal
I do not like it Reece the beast
I do not like it Poh my bro
I DO NOT LIKE THIS STRESSFUL SHOW! #MasterChefAU— Julie Goodwin (@_JulieGoodwin) July 5, 2020
There should be a #MasterChefAU spinoff series where all the judges have to cook for Poh.
— Adam Liaw (@adamliaw) July 5, 2020
Hann said: “What Australia gets to see is Poh’s incredible cooking skill, but what they might not necessarily see is what she is like as a person behind the scenes, which is a pretty incredible one, which is why I am feeling quite emotional.”
Yeow was eliminated on Sunday after making curlugiones with burnt butter sauce in a challenge that asked contestants to feature either potato, cauliflower or mushrooms.
Described as her redemption dish, she had previously made the potato dumplings in an earlier week, but had run out of time. She also set out to recreate a butter emulsion sauce that she had not successfully made earlier that same night.
Unfortunately time pressures meant that her sauce split again, and she replaced it with a burnt butter sauce at the last moment.
“Your pasta pleats – they were raw – and your sauce was rushed,” judge Andy Allen told her.
“I am a risk-taker and that is what happened today,” Yeow said, adding it was “humbling” to cook with the other returning contestants.
“You are a national treasure,” Leong told her. “Every day we could be guaranteed we would get all of your heart, all of your soul, all of your love and all of your commitment. And it has been the greatest privilege in this kitchen and cooking with us.”