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Anne Burrell, TV chef who coached the ‘Worst Cooks in America,' dies at 55

Anne Burrell, TV chef who coached the ‘Worst Cooks in America,' dies at 55

Boston Globe6 hours ago

Burrell was on TV screens as recently as April, making chicken Milanese cutlets topped with escarole salad in one of her many appearances on NBC's 'Today' show. She faced off against other top chefs on the Food Network's 'House of Knives' earlier in the spring.
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'Anne was a remarkable person and culinary talent — teaching, competing and always sharing the importance of food in her life and the joy that a delicious meal can bring,' the network said in a statement.
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Known for her bold and flavorful but not overly fancy dishes, and for her spiky platinum-blonde hairdo, Burrell and various co-hosts on 'Worst Cooks in America' led teams of kitchen-challenged people through a crash course in savory self-improvement.
On the first show in 2010, contestants presented such unlikely personal specialties as cayenne pepper and peanut butter on cod, and penne pasta with sauce, cheese, olives and pineapple. The accomplished chefs had to taste the dishes to evaluate them, and it was torturous, Burrell confessed in an interview with The Tampa Tribune at the time.
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Still, Burrell persisted through 27 seasons, making her last appearance in 2024.
'If people want to learn, I absolutely love to teach them,' she said on ABC's 'Good Morning America' in 2020. 'It's just them breaking bad habits and getting out of their own way.'
Burrell was born Sept. 21, 1969, in the central New York town of Cazenovia, where her parents ran a flower store. She earned an English and communications degree from Canisius University and went on to a job as a headhunter but hated it, she said in a 2008 interview with The Post-Standard of Syracuse.
Having always loved cooking, she soon enrolled in the Culinary Institute of America, for which she later taught. She graduated in 1996, spent a year at an Italian culinary school and then worked in upscale New York City restaurants for a time.
'Anytime Anne Burrell gets near hot oil, I want to be around,' Frank Bruni, then-food critic at the New York Times, enthused in a 2007 review.
By the next year, Burrell was hosting her own Food Network show, 'Secrets of a Restaurant Chef,' and her TV work became a focus. Over the years she also wrote two cookbooks, 'Cook Like a Rock Star' and 'Own Your Kitchen: Recipes to Inspire and Empower,' and was involved with food pantries, juvenile diabetes awareness campaigns and other charities.
Burrell's own tastes, she said, ran simple. She told The Post-Standard her favorite food was bacon and her favorite meal was her mother's tuna fish sandwich.
'Cooking is fun,' she said. 'It doesn't have to be scary. It's creating something nurturing.'
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Survivors include her husband, Stuart Claxton, whom she married in 2021, and his son, her mother and her two siblings.
'Anne's light radiated far beyond those she knew, touching millions across the world,' the family said in a statement released by the Food Network.

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Anne Burrell went into cardiac arrest before shocking death: 911 caller
Anne Burrell went into cardiac arrest before shocking death: 911 caller

New York Post

time24 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Anne Burrell went into cardiac arrest before shocking death: 911 caller

New details surrounding Anne Burrell's tragic death are emerging. Before the celebrity chef was found dead at her home in Brooklyn, N.Y. on Tuesday, paramedics were responding to a 911 call they received about a reported cardiac arrest. A rep for the New York City Fire Department told Page Six on Wednesday that the 911 caller claimed Burrell suffered a 'cardiac arrest' and was 'DOA [dead on arrival].' 7 Chef Anne Burrell attends the 2023 Austin Food And Wine Festival. Getty Images The police department also shared that Burrell was found 'unconscious and unresponsive.' Police told People that law enforcement from the 76th Precinct responded to 'an unconscious and unresponsive 55-year-old female' at around 7:50 a.m. According to the officers, EMS 'responded and pronounced her deceased on scene.' Burrell's official cause of death has yet to be revealed. She was 55. On Tuesday, Burrell's family confirmed her passing in a statement to People. 7 Chef Anne Burrell attends the 2025 City Harvest Gala. Guerin Charles/ABACA/Shutterstock 'Anne was a beloved wife, sister, daughter, stepmother, and friend — her smile lit up every room she entered,' they said. 'Anne's light radiated far beyond those she knew, touching millions across the world. Though she is no longer with us, her warmth, spirit, and boundless love remain eternal.' Burrell was best known for hosting the long-running series 'Worst Cooks in America' on Food Network for 27 seasons, from its inception in 2010 to 2024. After news of her death broke, a representative from the channel shared with The Post: 'Anne was a remarkable person and culinary talent – teaching, competing and always sharing the importance of food in her life and the joy that a delicious meal can bring. Our thoughts are with Anne's family, friends and fans during this time of tremendous loss.' 7 Anne Burrell attends a screening of 'RX: Early Detection A Cancer Journey With Sandra Lee.' Getty Images for Tribeca Film Festival Just one day before her tragic passing, the cookbook author performed an improv show at The Second City New York in Brooklyn on Monday night. A source revealed to People, 'Everyone said she was so great last night and so happy.' Meanwhile, a second insider who was at the comedy club with Burrell claimed she 'was in great spirits last night during and after the improv show.' They added, 'Typical fun, outgoing Anne, having a blast.' 7 Anne Burrell. Madison McGaw/ The source noted Burrell seemed fine when the show ended and that everyone is 'shocked and confused' over her death. Along with performing at the club, the kitchen guru was out and about around New York City, sharing what would be her last social media post on June 12. 'I ran into [the Green Lady of Brooklyn] in my neighborhood today!' she wrote beneath a picture of her and New Yorker Elizabeth Eaton Rosenthal. 'I'm not going to lie – I have been keeping an eye out for her. I may or may not have followed her down the street for a minut. She is just lovely!!!' Rosenthal, 84, who is devoted to only wearing the color green, replied to Burrell's Instagram, gushing over their interaction. 7 Chef Anne Burrell with The Green Lady of Brooklyn. chefanneburrell/Instagram 'Hi Anne, it was so much fun meeting you, see you again soon in the neighborhood, the only thing I make is coffee and fig preserves from my fig tree, love and hugs,' the Green Lady of Brooklyn wrote alongside green heart emojis. 'I would like to invite you to my garden and pick figs when they are ready, usually beginning to ripen beginning September, and come and visit the garden on a sunny day anyway.' Following then news of Burrell's passing, Rosenthal took to the late star's page, writing: 'Hi Anne, you are such a lovely person just to meet and not knowing you, I just love you and so sorry but come to my garden and visit with all your beauty and love and I will be waiting for you.' 7 Anne Burrell and her husband. Instagram/@chefanneburrell Prior to her death, Burrell tied the knot with Stuart Claxton in October 2021 after meeting on Bumble in 2018. Fellow celebrity cook Rachael Ray was a bridesmaid at their fall wedding. In 2020, Burrell gushed over meeting The One. 'I don't know if we had both thought of marriage, but we both were like, 'Oh, yeah, this is something,' ' she told People at the time. 'This is really going to be real and this is going to turn into something.' ' 7 Chef Anne Burrell poses during a Food Network event. Getty Images for NYCWFF 'Once you get to be a woman of 50 years old, you don't really think that marriage is going to be on the plate for you,' she continued. 'I was always really focused on my career and marriage was never a huge thing in my life that I was looking for. Then when I met Stuart, my opinion about all that changed.' The celebrity chef is survived by Claxton, his son, Javier, her mother, Marlene, her sister, Jane, and her brother, Ben.

Food Network Chefs and Many Others Pay Tribute to Anne Burrell
Food Network Chefs and Many Others Pay Tribute to Anne Burrell

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Food Network Chefs and Many Others Pay Tribute to Anne Burrell

After her family announced in a statement on Tuesday that the chef Anne Burrell had died at age 55, tributes began pouring in across social media from those who knew her as a longtime Food Network star, a capable and experienced chef and a fledgling comedian. Ms. Burrell, who first found fame on television as a sous-chef for Mario Batali on 'Iron Chef America,' went on to establish herself as a television personality in her own right, initially with 'Secrets of a Restaurant Chef' and later co-hosting the show 'Worst Cooks in America.' She was a frequent guest on 'Chopped,' 'House of Knives,' 'Food Network Star' and other cooking programs. Of late, Ms. Burrell had begun dipping her toe into the world of comedy. She performed on Monday in an improv show at Second City New York after attending months of classes. 'Can I just say it is so much fun and I am learning so so much!!!' she wrote in an Instagram post in March. 'It really helps me get out of my shell … as if I needed that!!' Here's what some of Ms. Burrell's contemporaries have said online about her death and legacy. Tyler Florence, who hosted 'Worst Cooks in America' with Ms. Burrell, recalled her wit and 'sincere kindness.' 'Anne had a collage of star tattoos on her left arm. I asked her what they meant and she said she loved the night sky. And, how lucky she felt to be a star,' he said. 'She was one of the brightest.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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