Articles tagged with: Best of Show

05
October
2014

Juicy News from the Pie Contest, NM State Fair

People – Pie Pals, specifically – have been asking, “What happened?!” 

Let’s get to the juicy details!

New challenges emerged this year.  There were 17 categories, up from the previous 16.  The Home Arts Division decided that they would eliminate “Dutch Apple” (it was rolled into the “Nontraditional Apple” category) and they added “No Sugar” and “Citrus.”  Hmmmph!  Here I thought I’d won all of the categories (which I had until they changed things) and could just bake for fun.

I worked and worked on creating a great sugar-free pie.  I’m not willing to use those weird artificial sweeteners that often have a bitter after taste, so I focused on more natural ways to make things sweet. First it was the “Nutty Buddy” Pie, based on frozen bananas whirled with unsweetened chocolate, frozen, and topped with chopped peanuts.  Analysis:  terrible texture (icy, frozen shards).  Then it was on to the “Sweet Potato Sweetie Pie,” which used apple juice boiled down to a thick syrup as the sweetener.  I was looking for a soft, custard-like texture and, instead, got what would gag a dog (if I had one).  As one of my favorite pie testers, Jon, said with such understatement, “This doesn’t measure up.”

Ha!  The final entry was an apple pie, double crust, sweetened with raisins and condensed apple cider.  It was quite lovely, thick with apples and raisins, and I really liked the flavor – probably because I’ve cut down on sugar so much in the last few years.  The judge, however, said she was a little confused by the flavor – maybe too much cinnamon?  And she didn’t get that the raisins had been soaked in rum. 

Sugar-free Apple Pie  So…it didn’t win a ribbon.  But you know what?  I enjoyed it for the next several days!

Meanwhile, they were judging the peach pie category which had an unusually large number of entries this year.  Guess who won?  A Pie Pal, Havens!    Here’s a picture of her gorgeous lattice-top peach pie, and you can find the recipe ("Stars & Moon Peach Pie) on www.piepals.com

Blue Ribbon Peach Pie

Then they judged the nontraditional apple pies.  And guess who won again?  Pie Pal Havens!  I’ll ask her to post on the web site the recipe she used for her winning Dutch applie pie along with a picture.

Finally, they got around to judging the “Fruit Pie” category.  It catches everything that doesn’t fit in one of the other fruit groupings.  That’s where I entered my raspberry chocolate creation.  And I say creation because this is a recipe I made up 25 years ago.  That was the first blue ribbon pie I ever made! 

It’s a labor of love, for sure.  The crisp crust holds a thin layer of chocolate buttercream (like dark chocolate butter frosting), then there is a double layer of fresh raspberries covered by a lush, scarlet-red raspberry glaze.  Small chocolate cream swirls around the inside edge of the crust made it all come together. 

So the two judges tasted a sliver of the raspberry pie and also someone’s pineapple pie and all of the others in this category.  As usual, I watched to see if their expressions gave away their impressions.  They did not.  I tried to remember to breathe.  They lifted each of the slices to check the bottom and see if the crust was properly browned.  They pinched off bits of crust to check for flavor and flakiness.  They tasted the fillings each one more time. 

Finally it was time to announce the winners in this category.  One judge took the microphone and started, “Third place goes to…” while the other judge lifted my pie.  My heart sank.  “No, not that one!” the announcer corrected.  Whew.  They discussed and displayed the third place and second place winners.  And then judge #2 held up my pie while judge #1 pronounced it to be “perfection.”  Yay!  A blue ribbon in the “Fruit Pie” category!  I could breathe again.

Near the end of the pie contest, all of the blue ribbon pies (one from each of the 17 categories) compete against each other for “Best of Show.”  All 6 of the judges circle up and compare notes on their favorites among those 17 pies.  They go back and forth, a little more tasting, a lot of kibitzing, and finally one of them takes the mic again.  Guess what?  They agreed on the raspberry pie!! 

Raspberry Chocolate Pie

So, there you go.  Well, actually, there we went.  We, friends and I, took the remainder of that pie outside and ate it up.  We sat at a shady picnic table on a sunny September afternoon, forks, little plates and bottles of cold water at the ready.  We also ate up most of the peach pie and the Dutch apple and some of the sugar-free apple.  Does life get any better than moments like this? 

Special thanks to Havens, Jon, Patty and Carla for making the day even sweeter than the pie.

Cheers & love from Rebecca, your Pie Pal

P.S.  The recipe will be posted soon under Scarlet Raspberry Pie.

 

 

 

 

Categories: October

30
September
2013

"Pie Story," by Sandy Bryan, "Best of Show" Winner 2013

How I Got Hooked on the Pie Contest

STATE FAIR PIE CONTEST

By Sandy Bryan

Guest Blogger, Pie Pals

The State Fair Pie Contest is one of the most fun things in my year.  I got started years ago (1986) after a visit to the Torrance County Fair, where I visited the exhibit building and saw the Pie Contest entries on display with their ribbons.  There were only a few pies, of course, and I was fascinated to realize that there was a pie contest, that regular people brought their pies and entered the contest, and that they were awarded ribbons. 

I remember thinking, I could do that!  I wondered, where and when is the Bernalillo County Fair?  Then I realized that in Albuquerque we have the New Mexico State Fair.  I was a little daunted, but I found out where and when to enter, then baked a blueberry pie sweetened with maple syrup, and off I went.  I won a blue ribbon, and I was hooked!

The next year I baked a cherry pie with cherry brandy for Pie Contest.  I won a blue ribbon and Best of Show!  Now I was really hooked!  Since then I have entered every year except one, when a family emergency took priority.  Some years I have come away with a second or third place ribbon, and a couple of years ago I came back empty-handed for the first time. I realized that probably needed to happen at least once and accepted it as a part of the life of a hard core pie baker.

After the blueberry pie and cherry pie successes, I moved to another pie I liked, perfected that pie, eventually won a ribbon for it, then moved on to another pie.  I say eventually, because in some cases I’ve won a ribbon the first time I entered a particular pie category, and sometimes I went back two or three or more times. 

I recall my quest for the blue ribbon for pecan pie.  After the first time I entered and failed to garner a ribbon, a friend remarked to me that her neighbor had been the judge, and he was a fan of a very sweet pecan pie.  Well that’s okay, I don’t do that.  I went back the next year, and there was a different judge, who raved about the beautiful whole pecans in the winning pie.  My pecans were chopped. The next year, the judge went on about the way chopping the pecans releases the volatile nut oils, enhancing the wonderful flavor of the pie.  What to do!  Meanwhile, my loyal friends who served as pie tasters were going through the agonies with me!  What to do to get that ribbon for pecan pie?  Finally, on about the fifth or sixth year, I had my partner, a former precision machinist, come to my kitchen and cut each pecan half crosswise into four perfect pieces, mixed my filling, put it in the pie shell, then covered the top in concentric circles of pecan halves.  Whoever’s judging, here’s your pie!  I finally got my blue ribbon and moved on.  Thank goodness!

All this is to illustrate the trials and tribulations of a pie contest.  You really challenge yourself to do your best.  Sometimes you get a ribbon, sometimes you don’t.  It sure is fun!  I’ve involved the people in my daily life, giving ongoing updates on my research and test pies, having pie tastings to get their input.  Sometimes I’ll make a batch of pie filling, divide it into several parts and add different ingredients to different samples, then bake into mini-pies for side-by-side testing.  That’s one way to figure out what tastes best. 

After winning several ribbons, I challenged myself to see if I could win blue ribbons in every category.  This has meant developing skills in baking pies I’d never particularly considered, and it has widened my pie baking knowledge considerably.  Without meaning to, I’ve become an accomplished baker, far beyond where I was at the beginning. 

This is exactly what pie contest should do for all of us.  All it takes is stepping out and entering your first pie, and the road opens up before you.  Whether you win or not, you learn.  The judges give their critiques and often point out how to remedy the problem, so you know what to do next time. 

Probably the main thing a competitor needs to know, and what people complain to me about when the subject of pie baking comes up, is how to make a good crust.  Do that, and you’re on your way.  There’s lots of information available on every aspect of pie baking, whether you’re looking at your cookbook collection or searching on line.  No reason not to learn it, and do it, and dazzle your friends and wow the judges!

As for this year’s contest, I entered the “Tart” category for the second time.  Last year I won second place for a dazzling coconut tart.  This year I brought a Chocolate Coconut Tart that was inspired by a conversation with a friend about German chocolate cake.  The tart consisted of a pre-baked classic tart crust with a cooked bittersweet chocolate custard. This was topped with coconut and chopped pecans which had been tossed with a bit of melted butter.  The whole thing went into the oven just long enough to toast the coconut and pecans, and it was off to Pie Contest.  I was hoping for a blue ribbon, of course, and I got it.  And, joy of joys, it also got Best of Show!  I am over the moon!

People who come to Pie Contest see their comrade/competitors year after year. It’s a great sense of camaraderie.  And we cheer new entries to the group.  I’ll be back next year, of course.  I hope to see you there!

Sandy has won 13 blue ribbons and four Best of Show rosettes over the years at the New Mexico State Fair Pie Contest.

Categories: Deep Dish Categories, September

02
September
2013

State Fair Pie Contest 2013 (New Mexico)

How it Works! How to Win!

State Fair Pie Contest 2013 (New Mexico)

Where do you live?  When is YOUR State Fair Pie Contest?  I urge you to enter it!  Ours in NM is coming up Sept. 17th.*

First of all, why enter?  It's unbelievable fun.

When interviewing various pie bakers, I asked them about why they entered the State Fair Pie Contest. Their answers:

  • First and foremost, the community of it: being “the pie people” (as Father Mark says) who see each other there year after year and cheer for one another.
  • The adrenaline of it.  The “roller coaster of emotions,” according to Peggy. 
  • The friendly competition of it.
  • “Braggin’ rights,” as Jeremy would say.
  • Winning the blue ribbon in the category you enter and hopefully the “best of show.”  .
  • The challenge of making a fabulous pie or tart – making it the best you can.
  • The art of it:  making something beautiful and delicious.
  • It’s pie.  We love pie.  We love making it and the sheer joy of sharing it.

How Does a Pie Contest Work?

Let me give you an idea of the fun based on my experience here at the State Fair in New Mexico.  Your state fair is probably comparable.  There are 16 categories of pie at the competition here, and you can enter up to 2 pies (in different categories) if you want to.  The categories are:    

  • Peach
  • Blueberry
  • Rhubarb
  • Cherry,
  • Apple
  • Dutch Apple,
  • Non-traditional Apple
  • Pecan, Peanut Butter
  • Pumpkin
  • Coconut Cream 
  • Lemon Meringue
  • Fruit (other than the specific ones mentioned)
  • Chocolate
  • Other (the catch-all category), and
  • Tart (any flavor).  

The top three pies in each category get a ribbon (red, white or blue), and then the 16 blue ribbon winners compete against each other for “best of show.”

Here’s what happens:  You bake and deliver your pie or pies by noon to the Creative Arts Building at the fair on the day of the competition.  By 1:30, the pies have been sorted into the 16 categories, the judges have arrived, the helpers are there with sharp knives and plastic forks and little plates for the judges, and the audience’s chairs are arranged.  It’s a full house!  People fill every chair and there’s standing room only around the edges.

There are 4 judges and each is assigned to judge all of one category of pie.  A judge may have all 16 apple pies while another judge has all 5 blueberry ones.  They cut a small slice and set it on a paper plate, then commence judging by pinching off a bit of crust to taste and checking to see if the bottom crust is cooked properly.  Then one bite of the filling.  Another pinch.  Another bite.  Then the next pie is sliced and judged.  All of this this happens with a mostly straight face, giving nothing away.  After all of the pies in a category are initially tasted, some are pulled closer for another look, another taste, another poke with the plastic fork.  Contestants in the audience are craning their necks to see what they can tell from the judge’s face as she does their category, their pie.  Anxiety runs high:  did my pie hold together and serve out OK, did it taste OK, did the meringue hold up, what about that other pie that looks better than mine?

Finally, finally, the judge asks for the microphone and the audience, straining to see and to hear every word, leans collectively forward.  This is it:  the judge holds up a pie and declares, “This one took third, and here’s why.  This one took second, it was close to the first place winner, and here’s why – it had really good flavor but was a bit undercooked.  And this one gets the blue ribbon because….” Well, because she thought it should, and she explains why.  We cheer for each other and congratulate generously. 

What are they looking for?  On what bases do they make these crucial decisions?  Basic pie contest criteria are: 

  • The crust should be light, flaky, and cooked to a light brown.  No soggy or pale crusts!  If your crust breaks the little plastic fork, you can forget it!
  • The filling should taste like the fruit or other main ingredient, not too much spice, and should be whole pieces (such as berries) or cut into pieces that suit that fruit.
  • No pasty or starchy taste.  Nothing that will make the judge gag a little. 
  • The slice should hold together when dished out – like you could almost hold it in your hand -- and what’s left in the pie plate shouldn’t be runny.  Hint:  Leave enough time for the pie to “set up” before the judging.
  • A simple, good-tasting pie can win a blue ribbon, for sure.  But to improve your odds, it needs to look good as well, like you’d want to bury your face in it.  It should look like Mom or Grandma was there in the kitchen with you when you made it, or maybe you were temporarily channeling Martha Stewart.  It’s worth the time to add a glaze or to weave a lattice.
  • Meringue?  Hopefully it covers the pie all the way out to the inside edge of the crust and won’t have those little drops of moisture (“weeping”) on top of the perfectly golden swirls.  Good luck with that.  Also, more meringue is better.  Preferably Italian meringue

So the ribbons are laid out on top of the pies and the blue ribbon ones are whisked off to a separate table.  After all 16 categories are judged, the judges gather around the blue ribbon collection to decide together which one gets top honors.  The judges kibitz and compare notes, recommending their favorites to each other, and then whisper to the event coordinator which one gets the top prize.  She then announces, “And the Best of Show” goes to….   The lucky winner pops up with the biggest grin ever and everyone else applauds with enthusiasm. 

Then comes the best part.  We retrieve our pies and all go outside with them and the little plates and plastic forks that we brought along ourselves, find a picnic table nearby and eat pie -- as much as we care to of our own, plus tastes of others’ pies.  We are the pie people, and this is pie heaven.

Let me know about your ribbons!  Rebecca

*For the details for the NM State Fair, go to

http://exponm.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/foodpreparation.pdf and scroll down to Section 189 in the Home Arts, Food Preparation division.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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