Fun comes bite-sized
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Elia Powers
On a day when the temperature exceeded 80 degrees, and the humidity
was higher than average, a glass of lemonade and a spot in the shade
seemed heavenly at the Orange County Fair.
An open seat inside an air-conditioned building was invaluable
Wednesday. So visitors filled the plastic chairs around the Home &
Hobbies Stage, where chef Jan Mongell demonstrated cooking methods.
Mongell is the founder of Kitchen Talk, an Orange-based culinary
consulting company that specializes in food preparation and product
testing. Keeping with the fair’s avocado theme Mongell diced the
green-colored fruit and included it in nearly every dish she
prepared.
“My favorite way to eat an avocado is to slice it, salt-and-pepper
it and bite in. It’s awesome,” Mongell told the crowd.
With a full-blown kitchen behind her, Mongell bantered with the
audience as she prepared a mozzarella and avocado salad and a chicken
tenderloin dish, with an orange and avocado sauce.
Her husband manned a video camera on stage, giving the crowd of
about 100 people close-up shots of his wife stabbing the avocado pits
and tossing them into the garbage.
Mongell gave fairgoers cooking tips, such as: When cooking a dish
with avocado, add the avocado last.
Orange resident Michael Reed, an avid cook, visited the fair to
see Mongell’s presentation.
“I wanted to see what I might learn,” Reed said. “If there’s a
demonstration, I’ll go.”
Valerie and Richard Thacher didn’t have time to watch food
preparation. Their job was to eat.
The couple from Whittier judged a children’s baking competition
inside the Youth In Motion building. Both tasted portions of more
than 25 dessert items, such as cake decorated with plastic roosters
or cookies covered with icing. They judged based on taste, appearance
and texture.
Buena Park resident Brooke Stevens spent an hour Wednesday morning
baking a chocolate cake with macaroons. She has cooked since the age
of 2 and regularly makes bread and tomato sauces.
“I’ve always wanted to join a contest,” she said.
For this competition, entries were separated into three age
categories. Everyone who brought a desert item received free entry
into the fair, said Youth In Motion employee Karen Shaw.
In the ages 9 through 12 category, Christopher Keithly won Best in
Show for his M & M and cookie display that spelled out, “We Love the
OC Fair.” A cake in the shape of an avocado also won one of the top
awards.
“It’s fun seeing the kids’ work,” Valerie Thacher said. “Some of
them are really creative. It’s fun for us, too. It’s like wine
tasting.”
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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