Nigella will be 'wonderful' on Bake Off - Prue Leith

2 weeks ago 22
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Ethan GudgeSouth of England

BBC Dame Prue Leith is wearing colourful glasses and has short grey hair.BBC

Dame Prue Leith announced she was leaving The Great British Bake Off last month

Nigella Lawson will be "wonderful" as the new judge on The Great British Bake Off, her predecessor Dame Prue Leith has said.

When asked by BBC Radio Oxford if she had any guidance for her successor, Dame Prue said: "She doesn't need any advice from me."

"She's so good and she will bring to it's a whole fresh look and she'll be wonderful," Dame Prue said.

"She's funny, she knows her onions and she's delightful."

Getty Images English cook and food writer, Nigella Lawson, attends a book signing and lunch at the Melbourne restaurant, Taxi Kitchen, during her tour of Australia, January 24, 2018Getty Images

Nigella Lawson will replace Dame Prue on Bake Off

Dame Prue was hired for Bake Off after the series jumped from the BBC to Channel 4 in 2016, replacing another Oxfordshire resident, Dame Mary Berry who lives in Henley on Thames.

She said leaving the programme was difficult because "I enjoyed it so much and I would still enjoy it if I was doing it and I could probably do it for a few more years and go on enjoying it."

"But the truth is I've got an awful lot of other things I want to do and I'm getting on a bit, you know, next week I'm 86."

"I can't go on enjoying myself eating cake all the time - I want to get on with other things."

PA Media Dame Prue Leith joins Year 1 and 2 pupils at St Clement & St James Primary School in West London for a cookery lesson, as she announces a new nationwide commitment from Leiths to teach every primary-age child in Britain how to cook.PA Media

Leiths Education has committed to teach every primary-age child in Britain how to cook

Her comments come as her Leiths Education cookery training service launch a new free primary school curriculum to help get children in the kitchen.

"There's been three generations with no cookery going on in schools, or very little, so what we thought was that the answer was to have a really good curriculum, starting with four year olds and going right through primary school," Dame Prue said.

She explained that the scheme had already been trialled in nearly 50 schools, with 82% of children involved seeing their cooking skills "improve enormously".

"In my 50 or 60 years of teaching cooking, I have never yet met a child who didn't enjoy a cookery lesson."

"When they're very young they're so curious and they're imaginative and they want to try things."


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