The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

SAVORING A ‘SUGAR RUSH’

- By Donna Rovins drovins@21st-centurymed­ia.com @MercBiz on Twitter

EAST PIKELAND » A Chester County baker that specialize­s in wedding cakes is making her small screen debut as a contestant on a new Netflix baking competitio­n show.

“Sugar Rush” is an eight episode program that began streaming on the network July 13.

Peri Anderson, owner of Brooklyn Girl Bakery, 2208 Kimberton Road in East Pikeland, teamed up with friend and former co-worker Jennifer Low, owner of The Frosted Fox Cake Shop in the Mt. Airy section of Philadelph­ia, to compete on the program.

According to a spokeswoma­n for the network, “Sugar Rush” is a “fast-paced baking competitio­n series that challenges brilliant bakers to create sweet treats that look beautiful and taste amazing — all against the clock.”

“I am excited and nervous. They did 6 to 8 hours of footage, and that gets boiled down to 45 minutes. I have no idea how it’s going to be portrayed.”

In a recent interview, Anderson would not talk about what happened during her episode or the results. She plans to host a viewing party with family and friends on Saturday. She also said she won’t watch any of the episodes until the group is all together.

“I want to be as surprised as everyone else. I want to go through all the emotions with them,” she added.

On “Sugar Rush,” four teams of two compete in each episode for a prize of $10,000. The competitio­n is broken into three segments, according to Anderson: cupcakes, confection­s and cakes.

“What makes it different is that if you don’t use all the time allowed in the first two rounds — the extra time is applied to the third round,” she explained.

The competitio­n is judged by two world class pastry chefs: Candace Nelson (co-founder and executive pastry chef behind Sprinkles cupcakes and Pizzana in Los Angeles) and Adriano Zumbo, with Hunter March hosting, according to the network.

Anderson said it has taken almost a year to get to this point, adding that she was initially contacted by the casting company for the show last summer.

Anderson said she is a one woman operation, so when she was told there would be teams of two, the first person she thought of as a teammate was Low.

“I contacted her and she said she had been contacted (by the show), too. We did a Skype interview together,” she said.

The pair had worked together for seven years at a bakery in Chestnut Hill before starting their own businesses. Anderson left to start Brooklyn Girl Bakery in 2012. The pair has remained friends.

Anderson said they made a good team for “Sugar Rush,” balancing each other.

“She (Low) went to culinary school — she had more formal training and more experience with other things. I have a cake background.” Anderson said. “I told her she was in charge the first two rounds and when we got to the third round I would take over.”

In the weeks leading up to the taping, the pair — busy with their businesses — was unable to get together to practice.

“We didn’t know what we were going to have to do; we knew the rounds but not much else,” Anderson said. “We figured whatever they gave us, we could take a recipe and modify it.”

Anderson and Low made the trip to California in October, spending three-days taping their episode — episode No. 3 in the first season.

Anderson said the teams had a chance to see the workspace ahead of time, but there was no opportunit­y to get the feel of the kitchen — the layout, the equipment.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF NETFLIX ?? Peri Anderson, owner of Brooklyn Girl Bakery in East Pikeland teamed up with a friend and former co-worker to battle for the prize on the new Netflix show “Sugar Rush.” This is a view of the competitio­n kitchen.
PHOTO COURTESY OF NETFLIX Peri Anderson, owner of Brooklyn Girl Bakery in East Pikeland teamed up with a friend and former co-worker to battle for the prize on the new Netflix show “Sugar Rush.” This is a view of the competitio­n kitchen.
 ?? PHOTO BY JOSIAH AND STEPH PHOTOGRAPH­Y, COURTESY OF BROOKLYN GIRL BAKERY ?? Peri Anderson, owner of Brooklyn Girl Bakery in East Pikeland, is a contestant on the first season of “Sugar Rush,” a baking competitio­n streaming on Netflix. This is one of Anderson’s wedding cake designs.
PHOTO BY JOSIAH AND STEPH PHOTOGRAPH­Y, COURTESY OF BROOKLYN GIRL BAKERY Peri Anderson, owner of Brooklyn Girl Bakery in East Pikeland, is a contestant on the first season of “Sugar Rush,” a baking competitio­n streaming on Netflix. This is one of Anderson’s wedding cake designs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States