The hot new reality TV show on DSTV
Eight Families, Two Generations, One Kitchen
With Kupido about to
shoot his final arrows of love in this season of Boer Soek ’n Vrou, kykNET
viewers can already start licking their lips in anticipation of the inspired
dishes and passion for cooking that 16 South Africans are about to share.
Kokkedoor: Son &
See will be served as the main course on kykNET’s menu from Thursday,
20 November at 20:00.
For its tenth
season, Kokkedoor is putting on a different apron – and welcoming two
new judges: renowned culinary experts Herman Lensing and Yolani
Abrahams. Both are qualified chefs who have made significant contributions to
South Africa’s food landscape.
In Kokkedoor: Son
& See, the spotlight shines on the nostalgic role that cooking plays within
families – and how it weaves like a golden thread through different
generations.
A handful of unique
ingredients distinguish this season from previous Kokkedoor series:
- All contestants are home cooks
only – there are no professional chefs this time.
- There are eight teams, each made up
of two family members.
- Each pair has a generation gap of at
least 20 years.
- The series consists of eight
episodes.
Contestants range in
age from 18 to 64 and hail from across South Africa –
from Aberdeen in the Eastern Cape to Vryheid in KwaZulu-Natal, and
from Paarl in the Western Cape to Pretoria in Gauteng.
Their professions are as diverse as their hometowns, including “tuck shop
aunties,” a pastor, farm stall owners, and a programmer. The oldest contestant
even runs a field kitchen at the AfrikaBurn festival.
The contestants are:
1. Anton (64) and
Stefvan (37) Stemmet
- Father and son
- Anton is a former teacher and retired
commercial fisherman from Yzerfontein in the Western Cape.
- Stefvan works in marketing and business
registrations and lives in De Tijger, Western Cape.
2. Yvette Malan
(60) and Francisca Momberg (35)
- Mother and daughter
- Yvette is a property agent who lives on a
farm 45 km north of Lephalale (Ellisras) in Limpopo.
- Francisca lives with her family on the
same farm as her parents and manages a shopping centre.
3. Frans (51) and
Una-belle (18) van Wyk
- Father and daughter
- Originally from Namibia, Frans owns a
coffee and flower shop in Paarl and also works as an event planner.
- Una-belle is a matric student at Paarl
Girls’ High School.
4. Marianne du
Plessis (64) and Ronelle de Klerk (39)
- Aunt and niece
- Marianne is a retired nurse from Kuils
River in the Western Cape and runs a field kitchen at the AfrikaBurn
festival.
- Ronelle is an architect from Ballito,
where she has run her own firm – RANFT Architects – for the past 12 years.
5. Shireen (50) and
Reuven-Jon (21) Kadalie
- Mother and son
- Shireen is an operations manager who lives
in Burgundy Estate in Cape Town’s northern suburbs.
- Reuven-Jon, or RJ, is a programmer and
full-time model who lives with his parents.
6. Andrew Anderson
(57) and Leoné Smit (30)
- Father and daughter
- Andrew is a pastor at AGS Lig & Lewe
in Mtunzini, KwaZulu-Natal.
- Leoné is a homemaker and farmer’s wife who
lives on a farm near Vryheid in KwaZulu-Natal.
7. Caroline Linde
(55) and Anél van Niekerk (32)
- Mother and daughter
- Caroline is a “tuck shop auntie” at
Afrikaans Hoër Seunskool (Affies) and qualified somatologist from Pretoria
in Gauteng.
- Anél, like her mother, works as a “tuck
shop auntie” at Laerskool Tygerpoort.
8. Hanna (58) and
Dirk (29) van der Westhuizen
- Mother and son
- Hanna owns the distinctive golden-yellow
Kamdebo Farm Stall near Aberdeen in the Eastern Cape.
- Dirk has managed the farm stall for the
past year and is co-owner of Kamdebo Padstal | Bistro | Negosie.
Kokkedoor: Son & See
premieres on Thursday, 20 November at 20:00 on kykNET (DStv
channel 144). The series will also be available on DStv
Stream and Catch Up

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