Jock Zonfrillo remembered as 'generous' chef and influential member of Australia's culinary landscape
Chef and MasterChef judge Jock Zonfrillo is being remembered as an incredible professional who made a huge influence on Australia's culinary community.
Zonfrillo was born in Glasgow, Scotland, as Barry Zonfrillo to a Scottish mother and an Italian father who migrated from a coastal village in the Italian region of Lazio.
His career began at 15 years of age in Scotland's country house hotels and he soon moved to London where he worked with high-profile chefs, including Marco Pierre White, according to The Orana Foundation.
He moved to Australia in the 1990s at the age of 20 and spent a year at Sydney's Restaurant 41, before he returned to the United Kingdom.
However, Zonfrillo later moved to Adelaide in 2000, where he became interested in Aboriginal culture and food, and opened the acclaimed fine-dining Restaurant Orana and Bistro Blackwood.
But his ventures weren't without controversy: He placed both businesses into voluntary administration in October 2020, and paid $90,000 to settle the debts.
The chef was programming director of Tasting Australia — one of Australia's largest food festivals — from 2016 to 2019.
He was best known as a host and judge on the hit show MasterChef and became one of the faces of the Channel 10 program in 2019.
Zonfrillo set up The Orana Foundation, which aimed to create an Indigenous food database.
The foundation's website said it aimed "to preserve Indigenous food knowledge … and verbally pass it down through generations".
In his autobiography, Zonfrillo detailed overcoming a heroin addiction formed in his teenage years, and credited cooking as playing a key role in turning his life around.
Zonfrillo died in Melbourne, MasterChef Australia confirmed on Monday afternoon.
Victoria Police said there were no suspicious circumstances surrounding his death, but have not revealed a cause.
In an interview with ABC Radio Perth's Geoff Hutchison in August 2021, Zonfrillo said he remembered the day he decided he wanted to be a chef.
"I had got this job part-time washing dishes in a local restaurant, and one day one of the chefs had a motorbike accident and he obviously didn't come to work," he said.
Born in Glasgow, Zonfrillo operated renowned restaurants in Sydney and Adelaide over two decades before becoming a judge on MasterChef in 2019.
"The head chef said, 'We are one chef down and I need somebody to cook veg tonight and I want you to do it.'
"I said, 'OK I'll do it on two conditions: You give me a pay rise, and two, I never have to wash dishes again.'
"Obviously, I was a cheeky little bugger, but that was it. I got drafted into the kitchen and I was being taught by these two female chefs who were tough but so good at cooking.
"There was this atmosphere that you were in the middle of extreme passion, and excitement, and then customers who were all dolled up, dressed up, sticking their head in the kitchen door thanking the chef for a great meal.
"I just thought, 'This is it. This is the first time I've felt that I was a critical part of anything … and it feels good.'"
He said only his mother called him "Barry".
"I was always getting grounded for something, you know, nicking fags out of Nanna's cigarette packet and smoking them on the fly," he had recalled.
"I didn't grow up in poverty … My mum and dad were perfectly middle classed and they worked really, really hard to make sure that we had everything."
Celebrity chefs Gordon Ramsay and Jamie Oliver took to social media to express their sadness at the news of his deatj.
"Saddened by the devastating news of Jock Zonfrillo's passing. I truly enjoyed the time we spent together on MasterChef in Australia," Ramsay said.
"In total shock to hear of the sudden death of chef Jock Zonfrillo … Jock was very generous with his time and spirit in the show and will be so very missed," Oliver said on Twitter.
The MasterChef community has been rocked by the sudden death of judge Jock Zonfrillo, who is being remembered for his “charisma, wicked sense of humour, generosity and passion”.
Tasting Australia festival co-director, Darren John Robertson, said Zonfrillo showcased South Australia's culinary culture to the world.
"Orana was huge. It arguably put South Australia on the map in the … culinary world for what he was doing with native Australian ingredients and fine dining," Robertson said.
"He was greatly loved, in and out of the kitchen, for what he stood for.
"He's obviously a household name now but, in my industry, he was a guy that was incredibly well respected, an incredible chef and he was a friend."
The 46-year-old is survived by his wife and four children.
We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn, and work.
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