Chef Dave White has an almost ridiculous quality, but in the best way. This man has climbed Mount Everest, broken numerous bones while skiing in the French Alps, prepared meals for refugees in conflict areas, and managed to become one of the most talked-about chefs in Below Deck history. In Season 7 of Below Deck Mediterranean, Bravo gave viewers a glimpse of a person whose life had already been richer and stranger than most reality shows could ever create.
Growing up in the UK, Dave White was a restless, challenging child who would completely lose himself in a kitchen but could not sit still in a classroom. At thirteen, he was doing dishwashing. Shortly after, he started an apprenticeship, attending culinary college one day a week while working five split shifts at a restaurant. It was that early, monotonous, and unglamorous grind that shaped him. He had the foundation that most chefs spend ten years pursuing by the time he arrived at Claridge’s in London for a Michelin-star stint.
His technical prowess was undeniable, but it wasn’t the only thing that made him stand out on the show. Almost all of the time, charter guests were raving. There was that cake with the sails, a chocolate piece that didn’t seem to belong in a small, motionless galley on a fifty-meter yacht. In his personal luggage, he carried a sous vide machine. He was proofing sourdough at strange hours, making adjustments for the air conditioner that was draining the dough of its heat. Tiny details, but they showed something about his methodical, hands-on, and shortcut-free approach to food.

He has openly declared that he doesn’t adhere to written recipes. He closes his eyes, visualizes the plate, and moves closer to that vision. It sounds like something a chef would say in an interview to sound intriguing, but it’s difficult to write it off as a performance when you see the food he actually made. It seemed like a real instinct.
Naturally, food is never the only focus of Below Deck Mediterranean, and Season 7 was no different. Throughout the entire season, his complicated past with fellow crew member Natasha Webb cast a long shadow, and there were times when it was obvious that the emotional burden of that affected him. He has been candid about having a breakdown while filming. According to him, it was truly difficult to balance the demands of the camera, physical tiredness, and a messy personal situation. It’s possible that his vulnerability made him more engaging to watch—not because suffering makes for compelling television, but rather because it was genuine and reality TV seldom gets that close to the real thing.
He has accomplished something that not every former cast member of Below Deck is able to do since leaving the show: he created something enduring. He was the Food Network’s Chopped Grand Champion. He defeated Bobby Flay on Beat Bobby Flay, ostensibly while managing a hand injury he had sustained in the middle of cooking. This may seem unlikely, but it has been documented and fits with his overall life trajectory. He penned Salted, a cookbook with recipes based on his experiences and travels. Captain Sandy Yawn’s wedding was catered by him. He had a child.
All of it—skiing, climbing Everest, yachting, cooking under pressure—suggests a person who is most at ease in high-stakes situations with unpredictable surroundings. He was more at home in the galley of a moving yacht with two cameras, a boiling fryer, and a rocking floor than he would likely be in a stationary restaurant kitchen.
Chef Dave White proved to be one of those rare reality TV personalities who used the platform as a launchpad rather than an endpoint, regardless of how closely you followed the Season 7 drama. It’s more difficult than it seems.
