Sophie Morgan breaks Bake Off rules to reveal shocking thing Paul Hollywood said to her on set
SOPHIE Morgan broke a Celebrity Bake Off SU2C rule by revealing something Paul Hollywood said to her while filming.
Sophie, 36, is one of 20 different celebrities trying their best at baking in the hopes to raise money for charity.
The disability advocate appeared on The One Show and opened up to hosts Michelle Ackerley and Jermaine Jenas on her true cooking skills.
“I’m renowned for being really bad… I used to keep wine in my oven because I needed storage,” she revealed.
“Jokes aside I was so nervous going into the tent because it’s such an institution and I thought, ‘I don’t want to mess this up’.”
Sophie admitted she had a lot of fun on the show and that she ended “surprising myself”, but couldn’t say much more than that because of Channel 4 rules to not spoil the episode before it airs.
That’s when she dropped the bombshell about Bake Off judge, Paul Hollywood.
“The first two [challenges were] absolute chaos… but then there was one challenge I actually did alright in,” she started.
“I don’t know if I’m allowed to say this, but I’m going to say it anyway because it was the highlight of my year.”
She revealed: “Paul Hollywood said ‘it’s too good to eat.”
Sophie who was part of the team which hosted Channel 4’s coverage of the past three Paralympic Games opened up about the car crash which changed her life.
The TV presenter – who is paralysed from the chest down – detailed the horrifying ordeal that saw her and four friends in a near-fatal car crash.
Sophie, 37, suffered a spinal cord injury back in 2003 when she was involved in a car accident in Scotland, leaving her partially paralysed.
The star, who went on to become a disability advocate and TV presenter, has relied on her wheelchair ever since the day of the accident.
“Language matters and about 10 years later I watching a BBC report that the biggest killer of young people was driving and it really shook me,” she explained.
“It really shook and I thought ‘I’m a statistic’.”
Sophie added: “If we call it an accident there’s noone to blame, no one to take responsibility for what happened to me and why I crashed, what are the contributing factors.
“Because if I can find what those are, then we can help other people avoid those mistakes I made and we can save more people behind the wheel.”
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