MasterChef Canada Season 3 Winner, Runner-up, Prize Money, Judges & More

By 2016, MasterChef Canada had firmly established itself as one of Canada’s top cooking competition shows. For its third season, the pressure was on: with new format tweaks, ambitious home cooks, and a hunger (literally and figuratively) from viewers, Season 3 delivered both drama and deliciousness. This season would also make history by crowning the show’s first female winner. Let’s take a closer look at how it all played out.

Season Timeline & Format

  • First Aired: February 14, 2016
  • Finale / Last Aired: June 19, 2016
  • Number of Episodes: 15
  • Network: CTV

As with prior seasons, the format included Mystery Box challenges, invention tests, team challenges, pressure/elimination tests, and culminated in a final three-course showdown between the last two contestants. One tweak for Season 3: only 14 contestants instead of 16.

Judges

The judging panel for Season 3 remained the familiar trio:

  • Michael Bonacini
  • Claudio Aprile
  • Alvin Leung

These judges evaluated based on flavor, technique, presentation, creativity, and consistency — especially under pressure challenges and final cook-offs.

Contestants (Top 14)

Here’s a table of the main contestants who made it into the Top 14, their ages, hometowns, occupations, and how far they went:

Contestant Age Hometown / Region Occupation Elimination / Final Status
Mary Berg 25 Toronto, Ontario Insurance Broker Winner (June 19, 2016)
Jeremy Senaris 34 Winnipeg, Manitoba Building Plan Examiner Runner-Up
Matthew Astorga 25 Pitt Meadows, British Columbia Digital Design Consultant Eliminated June 12
Veronica Cham 35 Toronto, Ontario Lawyer Eliminated June 5
April Lee Baker 38 Calgary, Alberta Homemaker Eliminated May 29
Shawn Karls 29 Montréal, Québec Doctor Eliminated May 8
Terry Adido 33 Edmonton, Alberta PhD Law Student Eliminated May 1
Jennifer Baglione 23 Maple, Ontario Salon Manager Eliminated April 24
Jacqueline Clark 29 Abbotsford, British Columbia Accountant Eliminated April 17
Michelle Nault 37 Bolton, Ontario Teacher Eliminated April 10
Julia Mark 30 Burnaby, British Columbia Makeup Artist Eliminated March 27
Sean Hickey 47 London, Ontario Auto Worker Eliminated March 20
Vince Spitale 41 Pickering, Ontario Contractor Eliminated March 13
David Young 32 Moncton, New Brunswick Carpenter Eliminated March 6

Winner, Runner-Up & Prize Money

  • Winner: Mary Berg, a 25-year-old insurance broker from Toronto.
  • Runner-Up: Jeremy Senaris, building plan examiner from Winnipeg, Manitoba.
  • Prize Money & Awards: The grand prize was CAD 100,000, plus the MasterChef Canada trophy and the title.

More About the Winner: Mary Berg

MasterChef Canada Season 3 Winner Mary Berg

Mary Berg’s win is notable for several reasons beyond just taking home the prize. Here are some of the highlights of her journey and what she did afterwards:

  • She was the first woman to win MasterChef Canada.
  • Prior to joining the competition, she worked as an insurance broker. The show gave her an opportunity to shift toward her passion in cooking.
  • In the finale, the competition was very close. Mary’s final dishes (especially her dessert) were praised for their sophistication, balance, and creativity. One of her dessert creations was a blueberry financier with brown butter crumb, kettle corn, blueberry sauce, and buttermilk corn ice cream. That dessert played a critical role in clinching the win.
  • After the show, Mary leveraged the win in many ways: she expanded into food-media, became a recurring cooking expert on Canadian TV shows(Your Morning, The Social, The Marilyn Denis Show), and eventually hosted her own shows (Mary’s Kitchen Crush (2019-2020), Mary Makes It Easy (2021–present)). She has also authored cookbooks and continues to be a visible personality in the Canadian culinary world.

Highlights & Memorable Moments

  • The competition was intense. Mary Berg and Jeremy Senaris were both consistently strong, and the final cook-off was widely regarded as one of the more competitive finales in the show’s history.
  • There was a format change: fewer contestants (14 instead of 16). Also, auditions were tougher – contestants needed unanimous “yes” from all three judges to immediately move forward; otherwise they had to compete in a “second chance” battle.
  • The finale’s dessert round was especially scrutinized. Mary’s blueberry financier dessert with complex components was often contrasted with Jeremy’s more experimental dessert, but Mary’s were judged more cohesive and well-balanced.

Legacy & After the Win

Mary’s ascent from insurance broker to television host and cookbook author demonstrates the kind of trajectory MasterChef Canada can provide. Her win opened doors beyond the kitchen; she became a respected food media figure in Canada, offering approachable cooking, often with a homey, comforting flair. Her personality, style, and cooking resonated with viewers, helping her crossover beyond just cooking competitions into hosting, book publishing, and lifestyle programs.

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