The kitchen goddesses
Young Chang
Six hours, two trash bags, two clothes changes, a roll of paper
towels, a sink full of bowls and many dish towels after she started
baking at 10 a.m. Monday, Bernadette Redding finally delivered her eight
food entries to the Orange County Fair.
She’s done this -- put herself through a day’s worth of cooking in a
kitchen that gets hotter with the creation of each dish -- every year for
13 years for the sake of being competitively culinary.
OK, she missed one year because she got back from Hawaii too late to
cook up her usual storm. But she wins, be it a major ribbon or smaller
honors, almost as regularly as she enters.
“I’ve always loved to cook and bake,” the Costa Mesa resident said. “I
like working and sharing things with other people.”
Redding is just one of many cooks who have made it a tradition to
enter the fair’s food contests every year. For these cooks, the event
isn’t as much about the rides and the funnel cakes as it is about the
chance to exhibit work.
Redding won five awards this year: four class awards and one division
award. A division is made up of classes.
Her Hawaiian carrot cake took third place in the layered cakes class,
her crab wontons won first place in the canopies and hors d’oeuvres
class, her Hawaiian sweetbread pudding won fourth place in its class, and
her blueberry pie won second place in the pies and pastries class.
Redding, a part-time teacher for the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District, also enjoyed a bigger division win for the cookies category,
hers being coconut macadamia nut cookies.
The rest of her eight entries included pumpkin bread, lemon bars and a
chocolate Haupia pie.
The recipes are either her own, her friends’ or ones she found and
made into her own by adding macadamia nuts instead of walnuts, for
example.
“My husband and my kids are my judges,” said Redding, 45. “And I give
leftovers to friends.”
She first entered the fair’s contests in 1988 after walking through
the Home and Hobbies building the previous year and thinking: “I could do
this! I like to cook!”
Redding increased the number of foods she entered every year, until
the number got so high that making everything the morning of became
impossible. She toned down the quantity of her goods, but she still
insists on cooking her desserts and appetizers the day they’re due, for
freshness’ sake.
Her only major accident Monday was the destruction of her blueberry
pie. It was cooling on the stove when a can of Pam fell from the cupboard
and landed in it.
Redding’s husband rushed to the store and got her new blueberries and
new lemons, because she adds lemon juice in the pie. It was only 1:30
p.m. though and Redding ended up entering a winner.
In contrast, Claudette Truex, who has entered the fair’s cooking
contests on and off for 15 years and won as regularly as Redding has,
makes it a point to make much of her goods in advance.
Her menopause fruit cake, called this because it contains ingredients
that are good for women’s health, was made a week in advance because it’s
the sort of thing that gets better the longer it sits.
Truex did make her almond scones the morning she turned it in, though,
because it’s a goody that needs to be baked fresh.
The 45-year-old Costa Mesa resident won three awards this year: fourth
place for her almond scones in the specialty breads class, fourth place
for her meatballs in the canopies and hors d’oeuvres class, and first
place for her lemon almond fudge in the confections class.
“I usually get something, but I just do it for fun. I don’t have all
my ribbons up on a wall or in a book or anything,” said Truex, who is an
assistant at South Coast Repertory’s business office. “I like reading the
constructive criticism from the judges.”
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