Derry Girls special of Great British Bake Off crowns winner

Cast of comedy show join judges Prue Leith and Paul Hollywood for festive show

Prue Leith, Saoirse-Monica Jackson, Noel Fielding, Siobhán McSweeney, Nicola Coughlan, Dylan Llewellyn, Jamie-Lee O’Donnell, Sandi Toksvig and Paul Hollywood in the Bake Off tent. Photograph: PA
Prue Leith, Saoirse-Monica Jackson, Noel Fielding, Siobhán McSweeney, Nicola Coughlan, Dylan Llewellyn, Jamie-Lee O’Donnell, Sandi Toksvig and Paul Hollywood in the Bake Off tent. Photograph: PA

Derry Girls star Saoirse-Monica Jackson has defeated her co-stars in a special festive edition of The Great British Bake Off.

The actress was joined by castmates Nicola Coughlan, Jamie-Lee O’Donnell, Dylan Llewellyn and Siobhán McSweeney for a New Year instalment of the show.

Host Sandi Toksvig jokingly branded them “five of the most troublesome people we have ever had in the tent”.

She added: “I don’t think we have ever had more fun.”

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The TV stars attempted to impress judges Prue Leith and Paul Hollywood with an alcohol-laced sharing trifle for their signature challenge.

A few of them tucked into booze as they whipped up sponges, jelly and custard.

Jackson, who had never made a cake before taking part in the show, triumphed after winning the duo over with her Irish cream trifle, decorated with green sugar shamrocks, and her 1960s-inspired showstopper cake.

She also impressed during the technical challenge, when the contestants were tasked with making salmon and beetroot blinis.

After she was announced as the victor she said: “I’m stunned. I can’t believe I won, I’m delighted.”

Hollywood praised Jackson for being the “most consistent over the three challenges, adding: ”For someone who has never baked before coming into the tent, to do what she has done, fantastic job.“

Leith added: “I’ve always said if you can read you can bake, and the Derry Girls proved that today.”

The group did struggle with a number of their efforts and Leith told Llewellyn the layers of his Bakewell trifle were “a bit casual”, while Jackson’s was branded “a bit messy and smeary”.

Hollywood told McSweeney her trifle was “all over the place, it looks like an aquarium”, while Leith added: “It does look like slime.”

O’Donnell was told her showstopper cake, shaped like the plane Amelia Earhart landed in Derry in the 1930s, was “as tough as old boots” after she mixed up the table spoon and the teaspoon while measuring out the baking powder.

Meanwhile, Coughlan’s bowler hat cake inspired by 1930s Berlin and the film Cabaret was branded “quite musty” and Llewellyn was told his 1960s camper van lemon cake was “nearly inedible”.

McSweeney made a chocolate raspberry cake in memory of her family camping trips to Cork in the 1980s, which she said looked “so weird”.

After the final challenge Coughlan said: “I am a broken woman.”

Jackson said: “I don’t think it could have gone any worse.”

McSweeney joked: “I’ve basically ruined the memory of my mother and father, I might not go back in.”

Llewellyn said: “I feel it’s made us closer, baking together. I think we should bake together more.” - PA