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:
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:
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:
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.