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March 13, 2010

Cook-off combines families, food, fun

BY LISA MILLER
CONTRIBUTING WRITER

For 50 years, local cooks have sliced, diced and boiled their way to prizes, prestige and a place in an ever-growing community of culinary experts.

The tradition started in May 1961, when 10 women from Otsego and Delaware counties gathered at Wright’s Electric, an appliance store on Oneonta’s Main Street, to prepare dishes chosen as finalists in the inaugural Star Recipe Contest. The newspaper, called The Oneonta Star in those days, published its first Cookbook edition May 18, 1961. Norma Lee Havens of Oneonta was featured in a story on the front of the 40-page special section with the headline “Mrs. John Havens Contest Winner!” and the winning recipe, Svenska Meatballs.

Today, the tradition continues at the State University College at Oneonta’s Morris Conference Center, where cooks will prepare their favorite recipes for judges and spectators starting at 9 a.m.

Winners will be announced at the end of the cook-off and in Monday’s Daily Star. Recipes will be published in The Daily Star’s Weekend edition March 20-21.

“We are proud and honored to carry on this longstanding tradition,” Daily Star Publisher Tanya Shalor said. “We truly appreciate the community participation that makes this event a success year after year, and we hope to make our 50th the best ever.”

CHANGING VENUES, CHANGING TIMES

The cook-off was held at a variety of venues in its first 34 years, including the historic Bresee’s Department Store on Main Street, the Pyramid Mall (where FoxCare is today), the State University College at Oneonta Oneonta home economics building, the Oneonta High School home economics department and St. James’ Episcopal Church.

In 1995, the cook-off moved to the Hannaford supermarket (known then as Shop’n Save), where it remained through 2007.

For the past three years, the event has been held in partnership with SUNY Oneonta. In 2008, the first year of the partnership, internationally known master chef Joe Poon, a 1978 SUCO grad, served as a judge and entertained the crowd with a garnish demonstration with fellow judges Brian Bennett and Bill O’Donnell of the college’s catering and dining services.

No matter what the venue, the cook-off attracted spectators, from friends and family of the finalists to shoppers who happened to be passing through to retirees who made the event a social outing, setting up shop in the front row and trying every dish.

“I liked the way they explained everything, and you got the recipe and a sample,” said Josephine Markovich of St. James Manor in Oneonta, who has attended the cook-off with friends every year for the past 10 years.

In the days before digital photos and computer pagination, putting together the annual Cookbook edition was no small task. The contest drew hundreds of entries for consideration by the judges and publication in Cookbook sections that typically ran from 40 to more than 60 pages.

“We regularly had 400 or 500 recipes, and all of them had to be set by hand,” recalled Anna Elwyn, who coordinated the recipe contest as The Star’s Family Page editor from the late ’60s through 1990.

Some recipe entries were neatly typed, some were submitted on index cards and others were scrawled on scraps of paper in handwriting that had to be deciphered (a challenge that persists in the e-mail age, according to Emily Popek, associate managing editor at The Daily Star and coordinator of the cook-off for the past seven years).

The contest was receiving more than 400 recipes as late as 1986, but the number of entries waned in the ’90s, as prepared foods became more widely available and people began to rely on computers for information.

“People are still looking for good recipes,” said Elwyn, 81, – only now if you want a recipe for rhubarb, you Google `rhubarb’ on the Internet.”

WHATEVER CAN GO WRONG … WILL

Between being nervous and having to adapt to cooking in an unfamiliar kitchen, cook-off contestants have had their share of minor mishaps. One contestant found a stick of butter on the counter while cleaning up — and realized she’d forgotten to add it to her cake. Another cut herself while slicing vegetables and had to stop and put on a Band-Aid. Adjusting cooking times for a hot plate rather than a gas or electric stove is a perennial challenge. “Every year, there’s someone who’s hung up waiting for their water to boil,” Popek said.

Elwyn recalled the year the cook-off was held at the old Sears & Roebuck store on Main Street, where Ruffino Mall stands today.

“The only water available was from a washing machine that they had hooked up nearby or from the ladies room on another floor. That was interesting!” Another year, the cook-off was postponed at the last minute because of a surprise May snowstorm that knocked out power at the Pyramid Mall.

CHANGING DEMOGRAPHICS

In the early years of the cook-off, most of the finalists were women and teenage girls. Gradually, the contest drew more entries from men, and in 1979, 17- year-old Mark Balbuena of Oneonta became the first male winner with his Candycane Delight, a candycane shaped yeast bread filled with dates, raisins and apricots, and drizzled with powdered sugar icing.

Two years later, Thomas Vajo of Worcester claimed the top prize with his Raspberry Swirl Cheese Cake. By the ’90s, men were winning almost as often as women. During the past 20 years, nine men have taken home the grand prize — including the past three years running.

Youth involvement has been a constant. The first teen to nab the grand prize was 17-year-old Oneonta High School student Colleen Seeley, who won an electric range from Bresee’s in 1967 with her Orange Glazed Stuffed Pork Chops. Two years later, 14-year-old Susan Lee of Stamford placed second with her Fruit Sherbet. In the decades that followed, teens continued entering recipes, competing as finalists and participating as spectators. Today, young people continue to be a big part of the cookoff, with a special category for college students.

For Jan Andrews of Davenport, the cook-off has been a family affair. Jan competed in the cook-off twice herself and experienced the event as a proud mother when daughter Caitlin was selected to compete twice as a teenager. Caitlin’s younger brother, Phillip, was also chosen as a finalist twice before nabbing the grand prize in 1998, at age 16, with his Grilled Chicken with Citrus Salsa. He remains the youngest grand-prize winner in the cook-off’s history.

“It’s a fun thing to do,” Andrews said. “As a mother, I’ve always encouraged (my children) to cook and be creative.

“The cook-off presents a great opportunity to share skills and be competitive, Andrews said, adding that she always entered the contest with the philosophy, “Someone has to win – why not you?”

Today, the family that gathered at the cook-off to cheer one another on is still cooking together.

Phil, 28, owns Nicoletta’s Italian Café in Cooperstown, and all three of his siblings, Caitlin, Mark and Megan, work at the restaurant. Andrews, meanwhile, is encouraging another generation of cooks — her fifth-grade students at Greater Plains Elementary School — to enter the recipe contest.

A COMMUNITY OF COOKS

The cook-off has always been about more than winning. “To me, the recipe contest was just a group of women who liked to cook — and men — getting together and talking about cooking, and preparing food together,” Elwyn said. “I always thought of it as not really a contest, but a gathering of cooks.”

Two-time grand-prize winner Kitty Brennan of Cooperstown said she’s enjoyed the sense of a “brother and sisterhood” of cooks that has developed through the years during experiences at this and other local culinary events. (On a Saturday morning in February, she shared cook-off memories while peeling 10 pounds of carrots for her Carrot Bisque contribution to the Empty Bowls fundraiser for the Cooperstown Food Bank.)

“What I’ve enjoyed the most is being enough of an old hand about it that I could help other contestants,” said Brennan, recalling one year when she was “chopping onions for one fella and peeling potatoes for another gal.

… You learn the things that count. You’re not going to tell your competition, `This is when you need to wear gloves,’ but if somebody’s scrambling to get 5 pounds of potatoes peeled, it’s nice to be able to pitch in.”

50 YEARS … AND COUNTING

Organizers and participants agreed that, even in today’s busy world of drive-thru dining and microwave meals, people will always be interested in cooking and food.

“Cooking is something that will be around forever,” Andrews said. “In our society, we don’t just eat for needs — it’s a social outlet, a creative outlet.” Elwyn said she’s not surprised the recipe contest has endured for five decades, and she expects it will continue for many years to come.

“As long as people are eating,” she said, “I think they’ll be interested in cooking.”

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