logo
Manu and Colin go Off the Grid in NZ's ultimate foodie road trip

Manu and Colin go Off the Grid in NZ's ultimate foodie road trip

1News23-04-2025

Celebrity chefs Manu Feildel and Colin Fassnidge are no strangers to long days and big personalities but their latest TV adventure takes things to an entirely new level: cramped quarters, campfires, and campervans. They spoke to Aziz Al Sa'afin about their next big project exploring the land of the long white cloud.
The pair – known for their judging duties on Australian cooking competition show My Kitchen Rules – have traded in white tablecloths for winding roads in their new TVNZ series Off The Grid. It's part road trip, part bromantic experiment, and part endurance test.
'We said, you know, MKR is amazing, but we want to do something for ourselves,' Feildel told Seven Sharp. 'We saw this little caravan in the back of someone's garden and we took a photo of it. We said, 'let's travel around the country in that type of caravan' and voilà, we've done it.'
But what sounded like a dream trip quickly became a test of patience, plumbing and friendship.
'On paper it all works. But after a few days, we start to neglect a lot. But I think that's all part the beauty of the show. It's not all rainbows and happy,' joked Fassnidge.
Instead of judging contestants, they're judging pit stops, navigating the full length of the country, from Coromandel to Wānaka. And they're doing it the old-fashioned way: on four wheels, with no script, no reservations, and definitely no personal chef.
'There's so much to offer in such a small country,' Feildel said. 'It's like you've got a remote control watching TV and you keep switching these channels and that's gorgeous.'
Naturally, food is never far from the conversation or the campervan.
From hāngī to home baking, Feildel and Fassnidge said they were especially struck by the richness of Māori cuisine.
'We thought the French invented confit duck,' Feildel quipped. 'I think the Māori have been confiting duck for years.'
Fassnidge added: "The beauty is, you never stop learning."
And it's not just new cuisines, he said, referring to when the pair were invited onto a marae and gifted a piece of sacred pounamu.
'The chief gave us this huge greenstone from the river,' Manu explained. 'We carved it ourselves. It hasn't left our necks since.'
Those heartfelt moments are balanced with a fair bit of silliness and and entertainment, too.
Whether they're bickering over breakfast, bantering in the bush, or bonding over breathtaking landscapes, Off The Grid promises to offer a raw and hilarious look at two friends well and truly out of their comfort zones in a world of "misadventures".
Off The Grid premieres tonight at 7.30pm on TVNZ 1 and TVNZ+

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kai Kara-France hopes to make history as the first Māori UFC flyweight champion
Kai Kara-France hopes to make history as the first Māori UFC flyweight champion

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • RNZ News

Kai Kara-France hopes to make history as the first Māori UFC flyweight champion

Kai Kara-France after his win against Tyson Nam in 2020. Photo: photosport When Kai Kara-France steps into the octagon, he brings the warrior spirit of all his ancestors with him. The Kiwi mixed martial artist is out to make history this month with a shot at becoming the first ever Māori UFC flyweight champion. Kara-France (Ngāti Tūwharetoa, Ngāti Kahungunu, Te Ati Awa), said he feels bullet-proof carrying his culture into the cage. "I channel it when I step in there, and it gives me a lot of clarity and gives me clear intentions that I can do this. When I'm in there, there's no team to hide behind, but I'm not alone. I have all my tipuna behind me and it just allows me to kind of go inwards. I don't have to go looking for answers. It's always in me. "It's my identity, it's my anchor. Fighting is my mahi, it's what people know me as. But long before I was a fighter, that's the reason why I'm a fighter, is because of my ancestors, my, and that's the blueprint I go off because they would've been navigating and all these challenges that they've had to go through." Since entering the UFC in 2018, Kara-France has proudly showcased Māoridom to the world. "That's what makes our culture so beautiful. So what I'm doing now in the modern day, I bring culture with me and I want to let everyone know where I come from and I'm very proud of it, be unapologetically Māori, and what better way than to become the first flyweight Māori champion? And if I don't do it, who else will?" Kara-France said he was chasing mana for his sons. "That's what's fuelling me. When I'm in there, I'm that warrior version of myself. When I'm back home with my family, I'm that sensitive, compassionate, unconditional love that I give to my wife and my two boys. It's being able to navigate those different roles and responsibilities as a man to let a younger generation that you can do it all and there is a time and place for everything, but also just prioritising what is important, and that's culture, that's whānau. "I want to win this belt, defend a few times, and step away from the sport with a brain. Go up north, put my feet up, go fishing, hunting, and just live off the land and know that I've got no regrets, and show my boys that are looking up to me that their dad went out there and he chased his dreams." Kara-France wanted to inspire not only his sons, but all rangatahi. "When I first started, there wasn't a fight scene here. It was very underground. People used to see it as savage or thugs and it's cool to see that kind of support around us and know that the next generation is saying, 'I don't want to just be an All Black, I want to be a UFC fighter like Izzy or Kai or Dan.' It's cool that we're leaving that legacy behind." UFC 317 Kai Kara-France vs Alexandre Pantoja UFC Flyweight title 29 June New Zealand UFC flyweight Kai-Kara France. Photo: Facebook - Kai Kara France Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Chopper to visit city
Chopper to visit city

Otago Daily Times

time4 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Chopper to visit city

Heath Franklin's Chopper will once again wow audiences with his unique comic appeal. Photo: supplied A time-travelling outlaw from 2030 will ride into Dunedin when Australian comedian Heath Franklin brings his cult alter ego Chopper to town on Saturday, June 14. His latest tour The Last Hard B*stard on Earth has Chopper busting through time to stop an imagined collapse brought on by "gentle parenting, love languages and paper straws". The alter ego of Chopper as a "crude, bogany kind of person" provides an opportunity to subvert and lampoon modern anxieties. While Franklin allows a "window for the zeitgeist" he tends to avoid following topical news issues too closely. "You need to make sure you write a show that can tour for six or 12 months without people being like, 'what is he talking about again'?" After two decades on stage, Franklin still relishes the build-up to a fresh tour. "Every year I write a whole new hour of jokes." While Franklin has a plan for his shows, he makes time for unique moments to emerge at every gig. Dunedin audiences can expect a show that is not simply a carbon copy. "It is nice to know that there was something about that experience that was unique to that show, that it is not just almost a version of pressing play on a tape recorder." Franklin enjoys the enthusiastic spirit of New Zealand that tends to avoid the heckle culture more prevalent in Australia. "In New Zealand, there is a real enthusiasm where people just kind of, they are so excited they want to be part of it." "They are usually big enthusiastic audiences and everyone is pretty benevolent and all on the same page." Franklin treats Chopper like a work uniform. "There is a real on and off switch now." When the house lights go up, the tattoos come off and the handlebar moustache is tucked away. "It is a little bit like if someone worked at McDonald's. "They don't go to the bar afterwards in their uniform." Although he has inhabited Chopper for many years, a 2023 stand-up tour as himself reaffirmed his appetite for the moustached, in-your-face character. "My interest in it was reinvigorated and I knew that I actually wanted to be there, I was not just putting one foot in front of the other. "I had all these ideas and I was like, 'oh wow, this is great', I know that I really want to be here now instead of it just being a recurring habit." Heath Franklin's Chopper The Last Hard Bastard on Earth Saturday, June 14 7pm Regent Theatre

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