Hi,
I have competed at the county fair and state fair levels in the culinary arts department. At the county fair level, I've received several champion, grand champion and a best of show trophy. At the state level, I have received a few first prizes and champion ribbons. I live about 225 miles from the state fair, so my participation has never been as ambitious as my county fair activities 20 miles away.
My participation in these competitions began when a friend submitted a handmade quilt, which I came to admire and support her efforts. I checked out the culinary arts, where I kept checking winners against what I do and did the classic, "I can do that!" The first year of competing and the feedback by the judges gave me a good sense of what the judges were looking for. My second year, I received several champion ribbons and the third year my grand champion ribbon. After that, I lost steam because how can you best yourself after that?
To explain the ribbon system: There are competition classes, for instance jam. Within that class you may have grape, strawberry and cherry jam competitions. Initially, all the grape jams are compared to each other, where jams will be awarded 1st, 2nd or 3rd place ribbons. The first prize jams of grape, strawberry and cherry will be compared and a champion derived. A grand champion will be derived from the champions of every culinary arts class, i.e. jelly, jams, cake, cookies, pies, ect. Best of show trophy almost always goes to the Grand Champion, though this is at the judge’s discretion.
This year after not participating in the county and state competitions for maybe 10 years, I am returning at full force. At the state fair I am doing something new to me by participating in the blue ribbon contest where you cook your product before a live audience in a 2.5 hour time period. To compete, you submit up to two recipes in each competition and if your recipe is selected, then you register. In my case, I will be in the desserts made with dairy and the pie contest. If I win first prize in either, then I have the right to return for the Grand Champion competition. If I decline, then second runner up may participate. The last time I saw this in action, they had an organist playing bouncy music as you cooked away.
There is the normal competition, then there are the contests sponsored by companies like Spam, KC masterpiece, Hidden Valley Ranch, Crisco, which offer greater prize money.
Long ago, the Crisco State Fair competitions were lead-ins for a Pillsbury Bake-Off type of competition. All the first prize winners at state level were invited to a central location to prepare their pie. First prize at the national level was a kitchen’s worth of major appliances and $25,000 for remodeling your kitchen. I came darn close to winning at the state level, except my misguided insistence on a meringue top on a humid day in summer. Stupid! The contest is no longer conducted this ambitiously but it was more achieveable than any beauty contest or lottery with very good odds in your favor.
I plan to have a lot of fun this summer. I recommend the experience.
Regards,