From the BBC:
“Mary Berry: TV chef 'proud'
to be made a dame”
(Mary Berry with her husband Paul
Hunnings after she was made a dame)
TV chef Mary Berry has said she
is "proud and honoured" to be made a Dame Commander for services to
cooking, writing and baking. Dame Mary was honoured on Wednesday by the Prince
of Wales during an investiture ceremony at Windsor Castle. As well as her
50-year culinary and broadcasting career, the honour also recognises her
charity work. She said she would celebrate by "going home for a sandwich
and the children are coming tonight." The 86-year-old former Bake Off
judge recently had surgery after breaking her hip following a fall in the
summer. Yet she was able to attend the ceremony alongside husband Paul
Hunnings, a retired antiquarian bookseller.
'Everybody has to cook' Dame
Mary previously baked alongside the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge for the TV
show A Berry Royal Christmas, praising the latter for being a "remarkable,
enthusiastic cook". Speaking after her latest royal engagement, she
said: "I'm extremely proud and honoured. I just wish my parents were here
- they're looking down and my children are quite excited. "My aim
is to pass on the skill that I love so much, because everybody has to cook each
day. Whether it's a student or whatever it is, you've got to feed yourself so
why not learn to do it well and enjoy it."At the same ceremony, Peaky
Blinders writer Steven Knight - whose latest film, Spencer, explores three days
in the life of Diana, Princess of Wales - was made a CBE. Karen Gibson,
founder and director of the Kingdom Choir that performed during the Duke and
Duchess of Sussex's wedding, was also honoured with an MBE.
After studying cooking in France
and the UK, Dame Mary worked for a number of food industry bodies and wrote
recipe pages of Housewife magazine. Her first cookbook, The Hamlyn All Colour
Cookbook, was published in 1970 and she has gone on to write more than 50
others, selling millions of copies around the world. She became a household
name to a new generation of cake lovers thanks to her role as a judge on The
Great British Bake Off, alongside Paul Hollywood, Mel Giedroyc and Sue Perkins.
"I thoroughly enjoyed being on Bake Off, I was there seven years. We were
a great team Paul Hollywood, Mel and Sue - we enjoyed every minute," she
said.
In her latest upcoming BBC series,
the veteran broadcaster will come to the rescue of novice cooks hoping to
impress a loved one. She revealed she loves it when she meets people in the
supermarket who say they have successfully learned how to make her lemon
drizzle cake or lasagne. Aside from cooking, Dame Mary has committed herself to
charity work down the years. Her youngest son William was killed in a car crash
at the age of 19, after which she became a patron of Child Bereavement UK."I
was lucky to have a very supportive family but there are many people who are
not in that position," she said. "Whether it's the siblings who are
left or the husband or the wife, it's a hand to hold and to realise other
people are in the same boat."
^ I have always liked watching
Mary Berry cook and judge so this is a good day. ^
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