José DeJesus spent seven seasons working as a backup chef on Beat Bobby Flay, which means he spent seven seasons watching Bobby win, learning exactly how Bobby wins, and filing the information away for the moment when the dynamic reversed. At S25E10, he arrived as a competitor with a shrimp burrito, and the show's institutional knowledge became a liability for exactly one person in the room — and it was not DeJesus.
His burrito construction is a heat sequencing exercise: the rice goes in first, spread flat on the tortilla before any wet components touch the surface, which creates a moisture barrier between the liquid-heavy beans and the tortilla. The shrimp is cooked separately in butter at high heat — ninety seconds — and cooled for thirty seconds before folding, which prevents the carry-over heat from overcooking the protein inside the sealed burrito. He adds a spoon of the shrimp pan drippings into the beans before the beans go in, which connects the components flavors.
He now runs Breaking Bread pop-up dinners in the Bronx, which is where the studio knowledge has come home to live. Bobby Flay, who built the set DeJesus studied, did not win the test he was given.