The Chronicle

Cake Boy’s done good

ELLA WALKER CHATS TO FORMER BAKE OFF STAR LIAM CHARLES ABOUT HIS RISING FAME

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LIAM Charles does “cool things now”. The 20-yearold, who despite not winning last year’s Great British Bake Off was the stand-out contestant of the series, gave hosts Noel Fielding and Sandi Toksvig serious screen-time competitio­n, and had that certain ‘we love you’ factor Mel and Sue used to rake in.

A year on and the Hackneybor­n drama student has landed his own telly gig, co-hosting Bake Off: The Profession­als, and has written his debut baking book, Cheeky Treats (“It’s just crazy!”) – plus, he’s still set to graduate from university in December.

The book packs in decadent cookies, colossal layer cakes (more of which later) and savoury bites too, like his pattie quiche and curried goat pie. “Shout out to Nan,” says 20-yearold Liam, “because she inspires my savoury bakes. Being from a Caribbean background, [eating] curried goat, jerk chicken, ackee and salt fish, I try to combine the two – my modern ‘hipster’ side [he says this wryly, with air quotes] and then my foundation of being Caribbean.”

Frustratin­gly, there aren’t many high-profile Caribbean bakers out there, but he’s hoping to change that: “That’s the plan.”

Liam’s fascinatio­n with baking, fuelled by food shows on TV, kicked in four years ago, when he was 16 and began to think, “I can do this myself”, when faced with Sainsbury’s ready-made cheesecake­s and microwavea­ble apple crumbles.

He’d sketch out bakes on a whiteboard in his kitchen – and still does, Cheeky Treats is scrawled with his analytical doodles – drawing cross-sections of cupcakes (“So I could understand how it all worked”), and bring his cakes into school on Mondays. A teacher asked if he wanted to do a bake sale and he “went all out, it was absolutely mad .... We sold out in stupid time,” he recalls.

You’d have wanted to be in his year at school too. Nicknamed ‘Cake Boy’, for sixth form prom he baked every person in his year a customised cupcake with biscuit initials. But what is it like, being 16, and a lad, baking? “It’s all right!” Liam says with a grin. “But obviously, some people don’t really understand it. It’s [usually] either football, music or girls. I had an element of all those things, but baking definitely was the main one for me.”

Refreshing­ly, he’s frank about the fact that baking from scratch isn’t cheap – often, a microwavea­ble apple crumble actually makes more financial sense. “I’ve always looked after my money well,” he says, explaining how he saves money from birthdays and Christmas so he has a pool to buy ingredient­s with. “When student loan comes in, yeah, it’s the best thing ever. Some people are prone to get drunk – whatever, by all means – but I’m like, ‘Yes! I can buy ingredient­s, I could buy that new food processor I want!”’

It’s a balancing act, he says: “Because obviously you don’t want to skimp on quality of ingredient­s, but you also want it to be feasible.” His advice is, if you’re new to baking, to start off small, no matter how badly you want to “go to Lakeland and just buy everything!”

Just buy what you need, “then build up, build up, build up”.

As we begin gearing up for the next series of Bake Off (set to air at the end of summer), Liam says he feels he’s almost recovered from his experience in the tent. “Getting there, 80%,” he reasons with a grin. “I had post-traumatic bread disorder – ha ha – bread is obviously not my strongest point.”

Bread disasters aside, Liam is already being touted as something of a national treasure. “Oh my good giddy aunt,” he responds, laughing and collapsing in his chair. “That’s a massive accolade, isn’t it? A year ago, before I was on Bake Off, I was making meringues just in my kitchen and stressing over biscuits.

“Then to be called a national treasure is like, it’s actually crazy,” he buzzes, shaking his head. “Thank you?! Ha, that’s all I can say.”

Cheeky Treats by Liam Charles, photograph­y by Haarala Hamilton, is published by Hodder & Stoughton, priced £20.

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Liam Charles
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