logo
The Cook Up with Adam Liaw Season 8  Episodes 31 to 38

The Cook Up with Adam Liaw Season 8 Episodes 31 to 38

SBS Australia19-05-2025

--- Watch The Cook Up with Adam Liaw weeknights on SBS Food (Ch.33) at 7.00pm. Stream all episodes anytime at . ---
The Cook Up with Adam Liaw Whether you need simple weeknight winners or elaborate dishes to delight, The Cook Up has the goods to help you reach culinary greatness. Season 8 features memorable chefs and cooks, along with notable names from sports, entertainment, and the arts—offering plenty of dinner inspiration and entertainment on SBS Food and SBS On Demand. Episode 31 | Splashy Suppers
Airs 7:00pm Monday 26 May on SBS Food If you're feeling fancy, you'll love the splashy suppers made by Adam and his guests, Olympic swimming champion Ariarne Titmus and hatted chef Alejandro Saravia. Episode 32 | Unbe-leaf-able
Airs 7:00pm Tuesday 27 May on SBS Food Adam and his guests, the acclaimed chefs Katie White and Warren Mendes, leaf nothing to chance in a night of unbe-leaf-able cooking. Episode 33 | Self-Taught Sweets
Airs 7:00pm Wednesday 28 May on SBS Food It's time to enrol in The Cook Up's self-taught sweets course! Your teachers? Adam and his guests, lawyer turned comedian Sashi Perera and banker turned cook Lilly Wright.
Episode 34 | Special Broadcasting Suppers
Airs 7:00pm Monday 2 June on SBS Food Two SBS favourites, Maeve O'Meara and Mark Olive, join Adam for a night of SBS 50 th birthday celebrations. And what are they cooking? Special Broadcasting Suppers! Airs 7:00pm Tuesday 3 June on SBS Food Adam is celebrating SBS's 50 th birthday by kicking some food goals with football legend John Aloisi and food legend Shane Delia. Airs 7:00pm Wednesday 4 June on SBS Food It's a very educational night in The Cook Up kitchen, as SBS favourites Guillaume Brahimi and Lily Serna share their favourite recipes in celebration of SBS's 50 th Birthday. Episode 37 | Specialist Subjects
Airs 7:00pm Thursday 5 June on SBS Food In a week of SBS 50 th birthday celebrations, Adam is joined by two familiar faces, Gourmet Farmer's Matthew Evans and Mastermind's Marc Fennell, to cook their specialist subjects. Episode 38 | The Seafood Spectacular
Airs 7:00pm Friday 6 June on SBS Food Tonight's Easy Entertaining menu is a seafood spectacular in honour of SBS's 50 th birthday, made by none other than chef Peter Kuruvita, journalist Karla Grant and Adam.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom's relationship is on the rocks, source says
Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom's relationship is on the rocks, source says

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom's relationship is on the rocks, source says

There are rumours bubbling that Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom's relationship is on rocky ground. 'It's over,' one source told Page Six. 'They are waiting till her tour is over before they split.' Perry is currently in Australia on her Lifetimes tour, which began on April 23 and runs through December 7. The pair first met in 2016 at a Golden Globes after-party. They got engaged on Valentine's Day in 2019, and welcomed daughter, Daisy Dove, in August of 2020. Sources have told People that stress over the poor reception of her new album, 143, has caused 'tension' in the stars' relationship. 'Katy was deeply frustrated following the reception of her new album,' a source told the pub. 'It made her very stressed. Orlando was understanding, but it did cause some tension.' Another source told the magazine, 'She was also disappointed in some of the tour reviews. It's put stress on their relationship.' Spies tell Page Six that Bloom was spending time in Miami, Florida, last month. The couple previously split for a year in 2017. Perry addressed the past break on Call her Daddy, in 2024, saying, 'We weren't really in it from day one. He was because he had just done a huge time of celibacy, and he had set intentions. I was fresh out of a relationship, and I was like, I can't do this anymore. I need to swim in a different pond, but I had to do a lot real work.' That same month, the pop star told People, 'Orlando and I, when we argue, we argue kinda hot and fast and then cool really quickly. It's like, 'La la la la la, I love you. Alright, let's move on.'' 'We are fire, fire, fire, and so [Daisy] sees all of that,' she continued. 'He's a real sage. We both have parts of ourselves. There's two parts of us, our highest good, and then our carnal, material self. Ego. When the ego is running the show, then it's like, 'Whoa.' But when that's in check, then we're both something else.'' The couple have previously said that they've turned to couple's therapy. In 2023 the Pirates of the Caribbean actor opened up about their challenges in Flaunt magazine, saying: 'We're in two very different pools [for their work]. Her pool is not a pool that I necessarily understand, and I think my pool is not a pool that she necessarily understands.' He added: 'Sometimes things are really, really, really, challenging. I won't lie. We definitely battle with our emotions and creativity.' 'I think we're both aware of how blessed we are to have uniquely connected in the way that we did at the time that we did. And there's definitely never a dull moment,' he continued. Bloom and their daughter attended the Dark Horse singer's recent 11-minute trip to the edge of space on the all-female Blue Origins flight where she kissed the ground upon landing. Page Six have reached out to the couple's rep.

ABC announces plan to discontinue Q+A, boosts news documentaries and Your Say
ABC announces plan to discontinue Q+A, boosts news documentaries and Your Say

ABC News

time2 hours ago

  • ABC News

ABC announces plan to discontinue Q+A, boosts news documentaries and Your Say

Wednesday 11 June 2025 The ABC has today announced a plan to discontinue Q+A after an outstanding 18-year run and look to new ways to facilitate discussion and elevate voices from around the country. Q+A was a groundbreaking program that had made a significant contribution to Australian society, said ABC Director, News Justin Stevens. 'We're very proud of Q+A 's great achievements over the years. The team has done a terrific job, including a strong performance during the federal election campaign,' he said. 'Discontinuing the program at this point is no reflection on anyone on the show. 'We always need to keep innovating and renewing, and in the two decades since Q+A began the world has changed. It's time to rethink how audiences want to interact and to evolve how we can engage with the public to include as many Australians as possible in national conversations. We'll be working on how we can continue to foster engagement of this nature in an innovative way.' New projects from ABC NEWS include embedding Your Say as a permanent initiative to drive audience engagement in communities throughout Australia. During the federal election campaign Your Say received almost 30,000 online submissions, 36 per cent of them from outside the capital cities, plus thousands of talkback calls on local and regional radio. Hundreds of Your Say contributions were used by News teams and its insights informed the questions put to politicians and the topics for the ABC's leaders debate. " Your Say ensures we have a strong framework for putting the public's views, concerns and questions at the heart of our journalism, complementing our daily commissioning and reporting,' Stevens said. 'We're keen to see what else we can do with this.' ABC NEWS is also investing in producing more news documentaries. Building on the success of individual high-end programs such as Killing Season and Nemesis, it will soon advertise for the new position of Executive Producer, Documentaries & Specials. 'We're excited about being able to produce additional high impact, premium news documentary programs to complement the ABC's strong factual slate,' Stevens said. Q+A , which is currently off air, launched in 2008 under Executive Producer Peter McEvoy and host Tony Jones. 'Many extremely talented and dedicated people have worked on Q+A , as presenters and behind the scenes,' Stevens said. 'I sincerely thank them all, and everyone who has contributed as audience members and panellists. 'I want to call out current Executive Producer Eliza Harvey and presenter Patricia Karvelas. They are hugely talented journalists who have done an outstanding job with Q+A in recent years. 'On top of hosting Afternoon Briefing , presenting the popular Politics Now podcast and writing analysis for the ABC NEWS website, Patricia also recently reported for Four Corners , and we've now asked her to do more for Four Corners as time permits.' Karvelas said she had immensely enjoyed being part of the program. 'Spending time with the audience members who came to Q+A late on a Monday night has been the best part of this job,' she said. 'They have always been the reason for this show and I'm forever grateful to them for coming on national TV and having the courage to ask questions of powerful people.' Media contact: Sally Jackson | ABC Communications

ABC to discontinue Q+A after panel show's 18 years on air
ABC to discontinue Q+A after panel show's 18 years on air

ABC News

time2 hours ago

  • ABC News

ABC to discontinue Q+A after panel show's 18 years on air

The ABC will discontinue its weekly panel show Q+A after 18 years, the public broadcaster has announced. The show, hosted by Patricia Karvelas since 2023, will not return after its hiatus, which started last month. The ABC's news director, Justin Stevens, said Q+A had made a huge contribution to the national public discussion. "We're very proud of Q+A's great achievements over the years. The team has done a terrific job, including a strong performance during the federal election campaign," he said. "Discontinuing the program at this point is no reflection on anyone on the show. "We always need to keep innovating and renewing and, in the two decades since Q+A began, the world has changed. "It's time to rethink how audiences want to interact and to evolve how we can engage with the public to include as many Australians as possible in national conversations. "We'll be working on how we can continue to foster engagement of this nature in an innovative way." Karvelas will continue hosting Afternoon Briefing and the popular Politics Now podcast along with writing her column for the ABC News website. "Patricia also recently reported for Four Corners, and we've now asked her to do more for Four Corners as time permits," Stevens said. The Q+A proposal would result in some redundancies, Stevens told ABC staff in an email. The ABC also announced it would invest in producing more news documentaries, with a new position of executive producer, documentaries and specials to be advertised soon. It will also make the Your Say project — launched during the recent federal election — a permanent initiative to drive audience engagement in communities around the country. "Your Say ensures we have a strong framework for putting the public's views, concerns and questions at the heart of our journalism, complementing our daily commissioning and reporting," Stevens said. "We're keen to see what else we can do with this." Launched by founding executive producer Peter McEvoy and host Tony Jones in 2008, Q+A was an agenda-setting program that pushed politicians beyond their standard talking points. Then-prime minister Kevin Rudd appeared solo on the first episode, before the second episode introduced the regular format of five panellists, including politicians from across the spectrum and others in public life. What made it stand out from other panel shows was the role of the audience, who led the questioning in the studio or via video and social media. McEvoy said in 2019 that the audience was the show's biggest challenge and its strength. "An ordinary panel program just has to wrangle four or five guests," he said. "Q&A has to manage 300, 400 — up to a thousand audience participants — recruiting, registering, checking identities, keeping them informed, generating and choosing questions." With the audience asking the questions, the conversation could go in unexpected directions, giving a platform to people who were not being heard in other areas of public life. But not every question took the conversation forward, earning Jones's signature line, "I'll take that as a comment". When Jones left the show in 2019, Hamish Macdonald joined as host for 18 months, before resigning. He was replaced by rotating hosts David Speers, Virginia Trioli and Stan Grant, before Grant took the role on solo. Grant resigned from the program in May 2023 after sustained racist abuse and trolling, saying on his last show: "To those who have abused me and my family, I would just say — if your aim was to hurt me, well, you've succeeded." Stevens paid tribute to the many people who had worked on screen and behind the camera over the show's 18-year run. "I want to call out current executive producer Eliza Harvey and presenter Patricia Karvelas. They are hugely talented journalists who have done an outstanding job with Q+A in recent years," he said. "Many extremely talented and dedicated people have worked on Q+A, as presenters and behind the scenes. "I extend our sincerest thanks to them all, and to everyone who has contributed as audience members and panellists." Karvelas said she had immensely enjoyed being part of the program. "Spending time with the audience members who came to Q+A late on a Monday night has been the best part of this job," she said. "They have always been the reason for this show and I'm forever grateful to them for coming on national TV and having the courage to ask questions of powerful people." The news comes in the same week Channel Ten has axed its long-running nightly panel show The Project, after almost 16 years and 4,500 episodes. The show's hosts, Waleed Aly, Hamish McDonald and Sarah Harris, will leave Channel Ten after the final episode airs on Friday, June 27. The network announced a new national "news, current affairs and insights" show that will air for an hour from Sunday to Friday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store