Magnolia Table with Joanna Gaines Is the Relaxing Food Show I’ve Needed During the Pandemic
Photo Courtesy of Discovery+
When Discovery+ launched earlier this year, many in the TV business wondered who would subscribe to a streaming service that offered unscripted programs usually watched after idly flipping through channels on a lazy Sunday afternoon. The answer is… me. As someone who has absorbed so much of Guy Fieri’s travel series Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives that it’s not out of the ordinary to turn on the show and realize it’s an episode I’ve already seen, I am the target demographic for Discovery+. The addition of the service to the streaming landscape has allowed me to watch my favorite comfort shows on-demand. And yet, I had no idea that I would become so obsessed with Magnolia Table with Joanna Gaines.
Magnolia Table, which is available as part of a preview for Gaines’ upcoming Magnolia Network (launching on the Discovery+ app, the new Magnolia app on July 15, and as a linear cable channel early in 2022), finds the popular Fixer Upper host and entrepreneur instructing viewers on how to cook various dishes from her cookbooks in a beautiful, rustic kitchen that was once a flour mill. But what sets the show apart from the dozens and dozens of other culinary-themed programs out there that want to teach you how to cook is the relaxed feel of the series, which is so laid back in its approach to production that it doesn’t cut away from or edit out its host’s mistakes.
Most cooking programs you see today are overproduced and extremely polished, with trained celebrity chefs like Bobby Flay and Giada De Laurentiis explaining how to cook meals that will make your mouth water, but don’t necessarily always feel achievable for the average home cook. Even when the host isn’t a professional chef, like Ree Drummond of the popular Food Network series The Pioneer Woman, the show still goes through the entire post-production editing process to clean it up and make it ready for air. This is all fine, of course, especially when you’re just looking for something to pass the time or are already fairly adept in the kitchen, but it’s a breath of fresh air to see a show like Magnolia Table that eschews the glossiness of perfection that most culinary programs attempt in order to focus on the act of cooking.
In a special “making of” episode of Magnolia Table, Gaines explains why she decided to keep the show a little rough around the edges. “I had started feeling like, ‘Oh this is not real, this is more produced,’” she recalled of doing a test shoot for the show. “I think that’s normal. That’s not anyone’s fault, that’s just how you shoot TV […] But the process was harder for me because it felt produced. I think I realized in that moment, ‘Hey, if I’m going to do this, it’s going to be me really cooking something, start to finish. Don’t stop me. If I mess up, we show it.’”