Great British Bake-Offs Ruby Tandoh has married her girlfriend.

The 26-year-old married fiancé Leah Pritchard in Sheffield, earlier this week, before celebrating with a reception at the city's Abbeydale Picturehouse.

The union comes just three years after the reality TV star first announced her bisexuality via Twitter - and simultaneously went public with her relationship.

Pictures of the big day show Ruby in an old-fashioned white dress, which she matched with sandals and the obligatory bridal bouquet.

Meanwhile, Leah sported an electric blue suit which she teamed with a patterned shirt and tan-coloured brogues.

Surrounded by a small group of family and friends, the couple looked very happy as they exchanged vows before indulging in their first dance as wedded partners.

Later, the baker - who featured on the show in 2013 - shared a picture of the pair kissing via Instagram, which quickly racked-up more than 12,000 likes.

One fan replied: "So unbelievably happy for you both. You truly deserve to enjoy a beautiful, harmonious and joyous life together. Xxx"

Meanwhile, another quipped: "May your lives together be filled with love!".

A third follower added: "Huge congratulations on your excellent fashion choices."

Previously, Ruby has branded plenty of controversy with her opinions.

In October 2016 she branded X Factor as racist after it sent home black contestant, Gifty Louise, following her performances in the live shows.

"X Factor channels the purest essence of racism, and gifty getting sent home is absolutely typical of this," she spat on Twitter.

"POC [people of colour] get far less screen time throughout auditions. a small handful of white contestants are pretty much groomed to win from the beginning.

"The judges have the opportunity to save contestants after the public vote, but they NEVER use that opp to mitigate the racism of the vote. In fact, the judges preempt, validate and bolster that racism."

Around this time she also slammed Paul Hollywood for staying with GBBO when it moved to Channel 4.

"A peacocking manchild lingering wherever the money is, I am shocked," she wrote. "This from a man who turned up to work revving a rental Lamborghini, or Ferrari."

This year, she resigned from her contributing role at The Guardian, where she had a food column.

In a series of tweets, she announced that the “circles of food hell are heinous,” and that “the stuff that makes the headlines again and again is toxic and elitist and supported by truly rotten foundations.”