MasterChef winner Julie Goodwin shocks with X-rated Twitter joke
Julie Goodwin! Australia’s first MasterChef winner just stunned her fans with this absolutely filthy response to a viral Twitter question.
Julie Goodwin, we did not see this coming.
Australia’s very first MasterChef winner just stunned her fans with an absolutely filthy – and very funny – response to a viral Twitter question.
Swedish Twitter user Lina Lundin prompted the surprising gag from Goodwin with a simple question: “What’s something you could say both during sex and while cooking?”
Lundin’s query prompted thousands of responses and many a cooking double entendre – but few were as filthy as Goodwin’s effort:
If a skewer comes out clean, itâs ready to eat https://t.co/PpJ3VqZnE9
— Julie Goodwin (@_JulieGoodwin) July 1, 2020
JULIE. As one of her followers put it: “I did NOT expect that.”
Some other highlights to rival Goodwin’s efforts:
Itâs covered in brown sauce https://t.co/em5TpHWlZr
— AND IM VICTORIA MALCOLM (@yournameistyler) July 1, 2020
I donât usually do this https://t.co/oyT07I0fhW
— Melanie Bracewell (@meladoodle) July 1, 2020
Wait for it to warm up first. https://t.co/anZqqG6V7l
— Chris McCrudden (@cmccrudden) July 1, 2020
Iâm full https://t.co/lpmvwnQ2aS
— ML (@just_mindy) July 2, 2020
Is it meant to be that colour? https://t.co/4NICclSzU1
— RMRicky ð¬ð§ðºð¸ (@RRichardsonyt) July 1, 2020
âLetâs see if this wet noodle sticks to the wall.â https://t.co/ObiJiwKMsE
— Allison Burnett (@Allison_Burnett) July 1, 2020
This needs more cumin https://t.co/6HboPFAT2R
— Your Mum says Black Lives Matter (@judeinlondon2) July 1, 2020
Filthy, every last one of you.
Goodwin, who beat fellow MasterChef success story Poh Ling Yeow to win the first season of the show back in 2009, was praised by her fans earlier this year for speaking candidly about her struggles with mental illness. She revealed in February that a mysterious sudden absence from co-hosting her radio show was because she’d spent the past five weeks in a mental health unit.
In an April sit-down interview with The Project’s Lisa Wilkinson, Goodwin said finding herself in such a dark place came as a “shock”.
With the help of husband Michael and her three sons, she got better, and realised the impact her overwhelming schedule – running a cooking school and managing a gruelling breakfast radio timeslot – was taking its toll.
“Everyone just rallied around and I guess … I slowly, incrementally got better.
“You know it wasn’t the end of the world. I’m not that important, I’m a cog in a wheel and we all need a break sometimes.”