The Private Chefs of Beverly Hills combined Food Network-style cooking with celebrity lifestyles. In it, private chefs struggled to serve their eccentric and demanding clientele. The reality show only had three seasons since it released in 2009.
The chefs, who all worked for Big City Chefs, were on call 24/7 to service Los Angeles. The drama came from the pushy clientele and varying experiences of the chefs. The Private Chefs of Beverly Hills ended after a lawsuit with Food Network claiming that they had stolen the show idea.
Coming soon: a competitive Aaron Sanchez show that many people forgot.
Sandwich King
Before Jeff Mauro co-hosted The Kitchen, he had his own Food Network show, Sandwich King. During this series, Mauro visited some of Chicago’s best sandwich restaurants, and then went into the kitchen to put his own spin on the recipes.
Although Mauro’s humor made the show enjoyable, there were not enough sandwiches to continue after six seasons. Sandwich King ended in 2014, the same year that Mauro was chosen to co-host The Kitchen. On the bright side, Mauro received a Daytime Emmy nomination for Sandwich King.
Tyler’s Ultimate
Tyler’s Ultimate was named after Tyler Florence, the host chef who created “ultimate” versions of popular dishes. In every episode, Florence traveled to the part of the world where the dish originated. After learning about it, he would return home and make his own rendition of the meal.
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