You can watch Gordon Ramsay throw a tantrum any day of the week. But when you want to see a 200-kilogram rugby player cry because he burned the kasza gryczana (buckwheat groats), you turn on Polsat .
The iconic "Pass" is immaculate. The ovens are industrial. There is no fluff. The show’s producers understood something fundamental about the Polish audience: we don't care about the drama of the bedsheets; we care about the chicken . Is the chicken cooked? If not, pack your knives. One of the most fascinating differences is the menu. On the American show, Ramsay often throws bizarre curveballs—deconstructed this, foam that, or exotic proteins. hell's kitchen poland
Every season has a "Family Night" where contestants have to serve their own relatives. In the US, this is emotional. In Poland, it is a tribunal. Babcias (grandmas) walk into the restaurant not to support their grandchildren, but to judge the broth. If a contestant’s own grandmother says the dumplings are "tough," that contestant usually self-eliminates out of sheer shame. You can watch Gordon Ramsay throw a tantrum