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Archive for the ‘events’ Category

Taste of: The Future (Sept. 14th): Columbus (Sept. 28th) & Grandview (Oct. 3rd)

Posted by CMH Gourmand on September 12, 2010

If you are looking for something to do this fall and feel stumped, might I suggest eating.

There are many events over the next two months, three of them give you a broad taste of what our city has to offer.

Taste the Future is Tuesday – September 14th. Do not panic you can buy tickets at the door and there are no classes at Columbus State this week so there is plenty of easy, accessible and free parking. Columbus State Culinary arts students pair with local eateries and food service companies to offer an evening of incredible food. There are a bevy of beverages including beer and wine. Everything is included in your ticket. This is my third year eating at this event and I really look forward to it. If you are on the fence about going, check our this photo recap of last year by my friend Becke from Columbus Foodie (and try not to drool on your keyboard) Click Here.

More information available below:
Taste the Future

A Taste of Columbus is September 28th. Try not to gasp but I have not been to this event and I am unable to go. I know, for the Gourmand who eats everything, everywhere, this seems not right. The good news is I have one free ticket to give to someone.. The first person that posts “Give me the ticket Mr. Gourmand” (and includes an e-mail address) gets the prize. (If the winner cares to report back after, even better). This event benefits HomeReach Hospice and will feature the fare of Barcelona, Basi Italia, G. Michael’s, Jeni’s Splendid Ice Cream, Latitude 41, The Refectory and others.

Find all the details below:
A Taste of Columbus

A Taste of Grandview Heights is on Sunday October 3rd. Grandview restaurants and foodsmiths serve and show off their best fare in McKinley Park (1661 Goodale Blvd) from 2 – 7 PM. If you do not spend much time in Grandview this is a great way to eat your way through the menu of restaurants this area has to offer.

For more information go to:
Facebook – Taste of Grandview Heights

Twitter – Taste of Grandview Heights

Posted in events | Tagged: | 6 Comments »

PLUG: BACONCAMP IS THIS SATURDAY!!!!

Posted by CMH Gourmand on September 1, 2010

I am not going to Baconcamp because I will be out of town. For those of you remaining in town might I highly suggest going to Baconcamp at the North Market. What is Baconcamp? It is a celebration of bacon – all things bacon.

Here is my spin on the bacon awesomeness from last year.

Gourmanding at Baconcamp 2009

And here is where you can get information and buy tickets for Saturday.

Baconcamp 2010

Go forth and eat bacon.

Posted in events | Leave a Comment »

You can be a Wine Judge for $50

Posted by CMH Gourmand on August 12, 2010



(Sunday August 15th: Sorry title correction: – You could have been a Wine Judge……I just found out all the judge slots are full.)

Objectively, judging, evaluating, tasting and opining about food is a subjective trade. I judge at the North Market, for Kansas City BBQ Society competitions and elsewhere. Judging can be hard work. The volume of food can be overwhelming or underwhelming. The quality can vary as well. My greatest challenge is when I am judging wine because it is something I only have intermediate knowledge of and because the way it is done is objective and means medals for some. I just finished a wine judge refresher class on Tuesday.

I have attended the Columbus Food & Wine Affair for the last two years and look forward to going again in September. In 2009, I was able to become a judge for the Grand Tasting. Each year, The Food & Wine Affair receives 350 or more wines for competition. A group of judges including wine experts, distributors, industry insiders, food writers and a gourmand set out to score them objectively. We sample five to eight (or more) flights of wine rating appearance, taste, bouquet, aftertaste and other factors to come up with scores from a low of 0 (never happens) to 20 (rare). In the course of a morning of judging, I may try fifty to eighty wines. Sounds like fun? It is. However, sampling that much wine wears you out. You really have to focus on the sip (one will do) and spit aspects of the tasting process. If you focus on the slurp, swallow and chug aspects of wine drinking you will be done for.

I really enjoy this experience because it forces me to focus on one wine at a time. Unlike food where the focus is flavor and consumption, judging wine breaks things down to different aspects of the wine and enhances the experience. It is like tasting one bite of steak, savoring it, then moving on to something else.

As a wine enthusiast judge you will be trained by Rob Somers, the Wine Competition Chair. Rob will conduct an educational session that guides novice judges through the intricacies of tasting and judging wines. I have known Rob for a few years, he is very knowledgeable (and started his culinary career at Casa Nueva in Athens). After your training you will be judging wine the same way I am (but drinking less) and you will get to make picks for a new wine award, the People’s Choice. You also get a light breakfast and lunch at Columbus Fish Market. This all happens the morning of August 21st.

The 2010 Medallion winners and the People’s/Enthusiast’s Choice will be announced at the Columbus Food & Wine Affair Grand Tasting on Friday, September 24, 2010. Guests will be able to sample all competition entries that evening.

If you want to join the world of judging you can jump in with help from the link below:

Wine Enthusiast Competition / Judging

Posted in culinary knowledge, events, wine | 1 Comment »

GPMS: Season Two, Session One. A Hot Dogpalooza with a serving of Colin Gawel & The Lonely Bones

Posted by CMH Gourmand on July 4, 2010


The Goodale Park Music Series (GPMS) was the sleeper hit of the Summer of 2009. The premise is simple. On six Sundays a great band played in the Goodale Park Gazebo for free. People showed up, threw down their blankets and enjoyed the music. It was a community event and a community grew out of the event. A small group of people brought food to share at the first performance. Word of mouth as well as comments on Columbus Underground grew informal food sharing to a bona fide gourmet potluck. An increasingly larger group of people prepared high end fare (or in my case Hounddogs pizza (the box stained the quilt of Community Personality Lauren Wilson) and Pattycake cookies) to pass around each week. Strangers shared food while sharing their love of great local music. It was like Woodstock but with one band, no camping and less geopolitical consequences. You can get a sense of the event in my post from last year.

The core elements of the series return this year – six bands, six Sundays and come as you are for free. The music starts at 12:30 pm and plays on until 2 pm. People will start to stroll in around noon.

Each week a local food blog pairs with a local band and presents a theme to guide potluck participants. The aim is to match the theme of the cuisine with the genre of music, but feel free to bring any item you would like. All you need to do is to bring yourself along with water (it is hot, stay hydrated) and your own tableware. I am teamed up with Colin Gawel and the Lonely Bones. Lifelong locals like myself will know Colin from his Watershed days. His music can not be typecast, but for the purposes of our potluck we have classified it as Americana / Ohioana. Bring along a classic American or Ohio picnic dish to share if you care.

In honor of the inaugural session of this summer’s series and because it is National Hot Dog Month I am bringing at least 105 Five-Star Hot dogs to grill and give away to the masses.

Five Star Hot dogs are made in Cleveland and are used by my favorite hot dog hangout O’Betty’s in Athens. Using the power of the Magnificent Jill Moorhead from Hills Market, Leo Dick and Sons is donating two jars each of Stadium, Bertman’s and Dick’s Horseradish Mustard to the cause. Visitors can decide which Cleveland ballpark mustard they prefer – Stadium or Bertman’s. Local favorite, Buckeye Mustard will also be available for hot dog dressing. Tony Packos from Toledo has pitched in a few products. I will bring whatever other hot dog toppings I can scrounge. I may have a few veggie dogs to share as well since it is also National Veggie Hot Dog Month. My pals at Pattycake Bakery will let me use their pop up tent to shield me from the elements if needed.

My aim is to recreate an annual party once held at Gourmand Manor, called HotDogPalooza. I would grill multiple types of hot dogs so my guests could use multiple garnishments to recreate regional hot dogs such as Chicago Style hot dogs and Hillbilly Hot Dogs

Hot Dogs are an American icon. National Hot Dog Month includes National Hot Dog Day. Hot Dogs are Haute cuisine nowadays, perhaps you have heard of a local Hot Dog Palace called Dirty Franks which has refueled the resurgence of tube steaks.

If you are looking for inspiration for hot dog toppings try the links below.

Downhome example of Hillbilly Hot Dogs

West Virginia (Hillbilly) Hot Dog Blog

National and International Hot Dog styles

There are many ways to keep track of the bands and potlucking at The Goodale Park Music Series this summer.

GPMS on Facebook

GPMS on Twitter

GPMS discussion on Columbus Underground

And for planing purposes, here is the schedule. All bands take the stage at 12:30 pm.

July 11: Colin Gawel & The Lonely Bones

July 18: The Mooncussers

August 1: Quartet Yumbambé

August 8: The Spikedrivers

August 15: fo/mo/deep

August 22: Flypaper

Come to Goodale Park to support the series, enjoy yourself and see what we have on our plates.

Posted in Columbus, events | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »

Dirty Rice for Clean Shores: July 3rd, 5 to 7pm

Posted by CMH Gourmand on June 28, 2010


My friend the “Church Lady” at Maple Grove Church in Clintonville asked me to pass this along.

So what are you doing this Saturday?


Who: Anyone
What: Eat for $5, all money goes to support cleaning up a dirty Gulf.
When: July 3rd, 5 – 7pm
Where: Maple Grove United Methodist Church
Why: Why not, eat good food, support other States (1776 style), eat as a community. Ben Franklin and Sam Adams would probably have done this.
How: Through the time and effort of community volunteers and local business owners.

More info here

Among the volunteers helping out will be one Liz Lessner LaRue of Betty’s, Tip Top, Surly Girl Saloon and Dirty Franks fame…among other wonderful things in our community. Food has been donated by US Foods and other business owners. Rumor has it the sausage is from New Orleans. There will be music. If you are interested in donating, performing, cooking, or helping out contact the church at: 614-262-1163.

So what is dirty rice? It is a sanitary Cajun dish with rice, meat and spices.

Posted in events | 2 Comments »

Brickstreet BBQ Festival and the Ohio BBQ Triple Crown

Posted by CMH Gourmand on June 16, 2010

I recently traveled with @cmhtobias to Marietta to serve as a judge for the Brickstreet BBQ Festival. This was a very good event and an exciting time for BBQ enthusiasts in Ohio. This was the second year for the festival. In the first year, there were eight cook teams. This year there were thirty-nine entrants and a prize pool of $10,000. Cook teams came from as far away as Ontario, Florida and South Carolina. Attendance was good. There were many other events coordinated with the BBQ contest including bands, food vendors, bike rallys and more. Proceeds went to the Colony Theatre which is being renovated.

Teams must compete in each of four categories: Chicken, Pork (butt or shoulder), Ribs and Brisket. Teams are typically tending their smokers and/or grills for twenty four hours straight and need to make sure they have at least six judge worthy samples for each category at the designated time. On occasion, I have seen teams race an entry to the turn in table with seconds to spare.

I am a Kansas City Barbeque Society Certified BBQ judge and this was a KCBS certified contest. As a certified judge, I had to take a training class and must swear an oath before judging each contest. (The oath is not that I will eat as much BBQ as possible.). The judging is a double blind process. Cook teams are each given a number. They bring their entries to a turn in point. Here their entries are given a different number so that the judges have no idea what teams they are judging in each category. While this is a good way to ensure fairness it also guarantees heartbreak for judges because if we have an exceptional sample of BBQ, we do not know which team to go to in order to beg for more.

Each type of BBQ is rated in three areas: appearance, taste and tenderness. Each category is judged on a scale of two to nine. A two is considered inedible. A nine is considered perfect. The baseline is a six. An entry can be disqualified for several reasons.

Judges are given water and crackers and cannot discuss any entries until the judging sheets are turned in. We cannot make faces if we get a mouth full of gristle or spit out something that still has fuel on it so as not to influence other judges. Rating food is a subjective process but KCBS makes it as objective as possible which is good for the cook teams who are competing for cash prizes and invest a lot of time and money to compete.

leftovers

This year, the Buckeye state has an Ohio BBQ Triple Crown. This consists of three KCBS sanctioned events. A prize is awarded to the team that competes in each contest and scores the highest number of overall points. The two other contests are in Kettering and Nelsonville.

So, yes, this is an exciting time to be a BBQ eater or cooker in Ohio. In some years Ohio BBQ contests have numbered none or one. I had to take my BBQ judge class in Indianapolis because none were offered in Ohio. I had to go to Indiana and Wisconsin just to have opportunities to judge when I first hit the circuit. This year, there are three ranked competitions and at least two judges’ classes were offered. These are all good things for BBQ and Ohio.

This better year of BBQ wraps up at the Ohio Smoked Meat Festival in Nelsonville on October 16th and 17th. This competition has been the premiere (and sometimes only) competition in Ohio for years. The competition will be fierce and the BBQ will be spectacular.

I want to give a couple quick shout outs about Marietta. I stayed downtown at the Lafayette Hotel. This historic hotel was canine friendly and located within walking distance of everything I wanted to do including a trail that follows the river (for relaxing and scenic walks). The Marietta Brewing Company (recently reopened) was just down the street to provide quick access to local microbrewed post BBQ beers and house made root beer. The Marietta Wine Cellars also recently reopened after being a victim of arson. It is now located next to a bowling alley which is a good pairing especially if one is impaired from a tasting. I also discovered Old Town Bakery that has a palate pleasing selection of pastries. Marietta has a lot of offer food, history and nature lovers. There is also a Gutzon Borglum sculpture in the riverfront park downtown.

Borglum sculpture

Posted in culinary knowledge, events, Ohio | Tagged: | 2 Comments »

Around My World in Eight Days: May Madness

Posted by CMH Gourmand on May 9, 2010

I woke up Sunday morning to a messy house, a mess of e-mails and my loyal dog looking at me like I was a stranger. It has been a long month and I am not even at the 1/3 mark. I have reconstructed the last week or so, what a (fun) whirlwind.

Saturday May 1st was the Market to Market Ride. It was a huge success in spite of a significant rain storm. I was honor bound to go, the consequences of not riding would have been unbearable since the following people would have relentlessly taunted me: Mary Martineau of the North Market, Jill Moorhead from the Hills Market, a Hungry Woolf, Ray “I’ll taunt you until you ride” George and the rest of the usual suspects. I had intended to ride with the Pierogi King of Columbus but his tire mysteriously blew out on him right by his house. The advantage of a rainy day was the route of the ride was relatively pedestrian free so dodging and swerving was at a minimum. Thanks to Jill, Mary and their volunteers for a great event.

Jill had just returned from the Philipines so in the Moorhead style, she was also hosting a Kahiki tribute dinner at the Hills Market (for 340 people) that evening at 6:00 PM. It had stopped raining by then and everyone had a good time – including me after two signature Kahiki mystery drinks served by the mystery girl. Jill was on her feet for 15 hours running two events. Again good job Ms. Moorhead

I did Taco Truck reconnaissance Sunday. On Monday, Taco Nazo catered 480 tacos for my workplace on behalf of our diversity committee. My wage slave work world and other worlds have nothing in common so I sweated it a bit as these worlds collided and I struggled with not being in control of the event but instead watched (mostly) from the sidelines. Everyone survived including me. That evening, Johnnycupcakes was in town at Pattycake Bakery on stop 25 of their back to basics suitcase tour. The hipsters had turned out in droves so I went inside the bakery to hide. Inside, I had a chance to speak with Johnny for quite some time. He was impressed by his first impressions of Columbus. Bear from Slow Food and I gave Johnny a few dining suggestions. I was happy to see that Johnnies crew went to Rigsby’s for lunch the next day. Rigsby’s is a favorite lunch spot for me so I was pleased that my tip was enjoyed by some hip out of towners.

Monday evening was also Nerd Night – which has occurred nearly every Monday for two years. The evening is hosted at The Pierogi King World Headquarters in Victorian Village. We gather for either a movie or several episodes of a television series, food which is frequently Adriaticos pizza and almost always discussion of our collective big and small ideas about new events and business ventures in Columbus. I consider these evenings to be opportunities for idea incubating and free focus grouping.

Don't have a T-shirt....have Mr. Cupcake sign your engine

On Tuesday, I read George Motz’s report on his hamburger hangover from his trip to the Midwest, including Columbus. I have now added a few more places to my hamburger hit list and look forward to his new book and maybe a future collaboration. I made a trip to Jeni’s Ice Cream in Grandview to try out the new Buckeye State Sundae. This might be catering to our football fanatic masses but I say cater away, I will do anything to support the pairing of peanut butter and chocolate.

Wednesday started early, meeting up with the rest of the Taco Trucks Columbus / alt eats Columbus crew to team up with Johnny DiLoretto at Otro Rollo Bakery for Cinco de Mayo. We encountered Otro Rollo while Taco Trucking. We think that the bakery fits well into the combined mission of Taco Trucks Columbus and alt eats Columbus which is: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new entrees and new cultures and to boldly go where none of our neighbors have gone before. We like working with Johnny and his crew.

That evening was a Taco Truck “meat up” at Taco Nazo. We did not promote the event very much so there was a turn out of about forty people. This was a nice break because I had a chance to just enjoy the evening and mingle with several people including Liz and Harold Lessner LaRue and Vanessa Druckman, aka Chef Druck, a newer food writer in Columbus. Here is her spin on the evening.

The night did not end there, I found myself returning to an old hangout from my high school days with some of the cyclists from our tour. After another margarita, I think that a blog post will be in order about this forgotten restaurant / character driven dive hangout.

Thursday night I was back at the Skillet Mobile Kitchen busking in some customers so Skillet will keep coming back to my part of town to feed my late night cravings for pork belly and porchetta. You can keep track of their cafe de wheels venture via twitter.

Friday, found me doing some lunchtime recon for alt eats and dinner time morel consuming at Deepwood. The dishes prepared with morels were good, the extra $14 I kicked out for the six paired wines was a great idea, but I could not finish all of my samples (that means extreme value).

Sweetbreads, risotto and morels...

Saturday was Public Media Camp Ohio at COSI. This was a great opportunity to learn new ideas and talk social media shop talk with several people from all types of media (Ohio Public Radio stations, writers, The OSU Center for Personalized Medicine, St Louis Public Radio, and more). It also put us alt-eaters in touch with a few members of the Somali community so we are looking forward to a guided meal for alt eats – there is no better way to appreciate and enjoy a meal than to share it with someone who is native to the cuisine.

Deepwood bread

Today was Deepwood with my Mom for Mothers Day. This was a rare treat because Deepwood does not typically serve breakfast. Based on today – Brian and Amber, please do it more often – it would pair well with a morning at the North Market. I also want to thank my server John for making an extra effort to get samples of the house breads for my mom. I wanted her to have the full experience and since the breads are a favorite at each of my meals, I wanted her to try some too.

So, that is pretty much how my life rolls and with a few more weeks like this I will be literally rolling from place to place.

For this coming week – here is my double dog dare. Thursdays are always a challenge in the capital city – typically there are three or more excellent events at the same time. I am going to try to pull off two.

Taste of Dine Originals is the major Dine Originals event of the year. It is an evening for the 42 independent Dine Originals restaurants to show off their best best at the Smith Brothers Building for a evening of food, drink and music. The event benefits the Buckeye Ranch.

After eating as quickly as possible at Taste of Dine Originals, I am hoping to arrive at Pecha Kucha Columbus in time for a presentation by Bethia about being a Hungry Woolf. Head out to support Bethia for all the good food, green and biking efforts she supports in the city.

Posted in Columbus, events | Leave a Comment »

Good Pairings: Studio 35 – Beer, Movies and More

Posted by CMH Gourmand on April 28, 2010

On Sunday I partook a pairing of Pee Wee’s Big Adventure and a Columbus Brewing Company beer tasting at Studio 35 Cinema and Drafthouse. The place was packed which I was both glad and sad to see. It is great to see an event do well and this one clearly was meeting everyone’s expectations. However, I would like to see Studio 35 packed every single night. Combining beer and a movie makes for some magic. Studio 35 adds in more elements to take everything to the next level. I would like to see even more people support a place that does so much to support the community.

pee wee event

Let’s talk about beer. Studio 35 serves an ever changing variety of good craft beers. There is typically a glass special paired with a new beer. You buy a special pint glass (that you keep) and when you bring that glass with you it can be filled with the selected beer special at a discount. Good deal. The selections include a variety of local and regional microbrews.

beer list

Studio 35 also offers a growler special. A growler as in a big, giant container for beer. When you buy a Studio 35 growler you can continue to fill it up with a variety of beers. Then you can come back for another movie and fill it up again. Groovy.

growler

growler list

There is typically a Sunday beer tasting once per month paired up with a classic movie. The tastings feature a beer expert to share brewing knowledge with tasters. Eight or more beer styles are offered for sampling and sipping. Most tasters have found it fun, informative and a good value, although the tastings may impair a person’s memory of the movie offering. Maybe that is why the tastings are teamed with classic movies – so you can miss parts and not feel cheated.

beer tasting

There are other events as well. Eric, the owner of Studio 35 appears to have some green leanings. The theater has served at a hub of for environmentally proactive documentaries such as King Corn. Other movies have included premiere’s by local film makers, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, The Three Amigos (as the finale of a Taco Truck Tour) and more. Studio 35 hosts showings of soccer matches and OSU football games. Another special event that can not be scheduled is an encounter with a ghost. Legend has it that the theater is haunted……

Standard movie food is offered at the counter as well as pizza from Clintonville Pizza a few feet down the street. Homemade cupcakes and other goodies also make an appearance but sell out quickly. There is a small bar between the counter and the theater with a few stools and booths as well as a large flat screen TV snyched with the main screen. This spot serves as a nice place to have a conversation without disturbing other moviewatchers.

clintonville pizza

That is my preview of what Studio 35 has to offer. Drop in and partake in the features I mentioned so you will see what the attraction is. I know this sounds like an ad however this post was inspired by a friend of mine that was frustrated that more people were not on board with all of the cool things (Zombie Walk) that Studio 35 supports and sponsors. Slide into the studio, have a beer, watch the show du jour and bring a friend.

Studio 35
3055 Indianola Avenue
Clintonville
614.262.7505

Posted in beer, Clintonville, events | Tagged: | 2 Comments »

When Worlds Don’t Collide: Taco Trucks Columbus and Columbus Alive

Posted by CMH Gourmand on April 22, 2010

Quesadilla and tacos at Taco Nazo

The Taco Trucks Columbus team recently spent a weekend taco trucking with G.A. Benton, Becky Zimmer and Jodie Miller from Columbus Alive. We had a great time together eating tacos, tortas, tostadas and more at six of the best street food vendors in Columbus. It is always a pleasure to introduce someone to a new taco truck experience but it is even better when the people you are with already “get it” and do not need to be coaxed, encouraged or begged to step outside their culinary comfort zones. The Alive crew are experienced eaters who were more than glad to engage in exploration with us.

Jodie and Becky at our third stop

At Don Pedros, order of operations: Photograph Panbazo, Eat Panbazo

It was also rewarding to step back from the experience at times. There are some activities that are inherent to food writing, including: taking a lot of photos before the eating ensues, ordering as many items as possible to share so a menu can be explored in depth, endless questions for our cooks and hosts, telling stories of restaurant adventures past and present and the eventual breaking point when you try one taco too many. This is not a venture for the wary, inexperienced or the non-committed. Having a group of experiential food explorers on the team was fun. It brought back memories of the first weekends of exploration when Taco Trucks Columbus was born in 2009. I had forgotten what it was like to hit three or more trucks in an afternoon. While sharing our stories with GA Benton I was able to relive some of the best days of the past year. We were also able to introduce our Alive colleagues to Quicho, Lydia, Grace and other friends we have made during our taco traipsing. Food brings people together like a melting pot and it can coax people with different opinions and experiences to the same table.

before......

...after

There is some talk of bad blood between newspapers and bloggers or a war between print and electronic media. In my experience that is not the case in the capital city. We may use different media but our aims and means are the same. Our joint mission is to educate people inside and outside of 270 about the incredible diversity and quality of food Columbus has to offer. This is not propaganda we are prophesying, this gospel is true and we want all of you to believe it. In the case of taco trucks, we have had a hand from The Dispatch, Fox 28, Channel 6, The Big Bass Brothers, and others – we might not be on the same team, but we play the same game and we observe good sportsmenship in the process.

The article about our adventures should be in Columbus Alive on April 29th. If you want to share in the taco tour experience, join us on April 24th for a tour of the best of west side.

The Latino population of Columbus is expected to reach 10% in the 2010 census. Their culture and cuisine adds to the richness of our community. Columbus has about thirty taco trucks at the present compared to zero in Cleveland, a handful of Gringo/fake out Taco Trucks in Cincinnati and few, if any, in the rest of the Midwest. These mobile food vendors are uniquely concentrated in the capital city which shows the diversity and depth of cuisine our city has to offer to visitors and residents. Come join the team.

al pastor y pina a la Los Guachos

Posted in Columbus, culinary knowledge, events, tour | Tagged: , , | 3 Comments »

BeerCamp Recap and Tale of the Last Parade

Posted by CMH Gourmand on March 30, 2010

Thanks to our dedicated volunteers, some Wild Geese, courageous sponsors and everyone that came out to the Best Event on March 28th.

There will be a BeerCamp 2011.

Homebrew contenders

Oh my. What a day. First lesson learned, people like beer…a lot. Friday and Saturday was all about answering e-mails and phone calls from people wanting BeerCamp tickets. And it was about telling various beseechers that BeerCamp was sold out with a long waiting list. Starting on Thursday, I started paying attention to the weather forecast….and then I started not paying attention to the weather forecast with visions of thunder and lightning flashing through my head.

I have an aluminium roof over my porch. At 6:30 am Sunday morning I started to hear a light pitter patter on the roof and remained in my state of semi consciousness. By 8:00 AM the sound of rain was agonizingly still loud in spite of trying to drown it out with four pillows, every blanket I could find and my 65 pound dog on my head. As parade master for the BeerCamp parade I decided it was best to stay in bed. My task was to mentally compose an inspiring speech I would give to the seven paraders and five police officers (who were well paid) I could count on for a rainy day parade. I was convinced I could deliver the eloquence of the Henry the V speech. As it turned out, the rain stopped a few minutes before start time and all I had to say was – LET’S GO!

The parade consisted of: That Car, The CD 101 Ice Cream Truck, a Mini Van, a chicken, a dog, two bikes, two scooters, a fake goose, two bands, Lady Gaga, a man holding a beer bottle and a rag tag, motley crew of very, very good people.

One of our bands!

An unidentified woman appears to be running away from the chicken cage

Exclusive shot from the rear of the parade

The parade was memorable. Mark my words….it will never happen again. If you missed the parade you missed twenty three minutes of history.

Heroes - group shot at parade conclusion

There will be another BeerCamp. Here are some of the reasons why:

1:47 PM - Full house for an event that started at 2 PM

Entrants to BeerCamp received a BeerCamp pint glass with tickets for eight pours of Columbus Brewing Company Beers (thanks Eric Bean!). We told everyone to bring T-shirts so they could get a free BeerCamp screenprint. Kyle Sowash sang the world premiere of the Surly Girl BeerCamp song in honor our lead sponsor Surly Girl Saloon. Brezel was present to sell pretzels. After the food judging was concluded – everyone had full access to BeerCamp food which included cupcakes, pork bellies and many other excellent, over the top goodies.

Please note, Walker Evans is drinking a beer and Carmen Owens is not being surly

Here is our creme de la creme of contest judges:

Food
Walker Evans – Columbus Underground
Johnny DiLoretto – Fox 28 / Channel 6
Carmen Owens – Chief Asskicker, Surly Girl Saloon
Mike Publicover – Manager, Mama Mimi’s Take and Bake Pizza
Shelly Mann – Editor, Columbus Alive

Homebrew
Emma Christensen – Columbus Dispatch
Michael Paull – Beer Writer
Eric Drake – Brothers Drake Mead
Frank Barickman – The Scioto, Olentangy and Darby Zymurgists (SODZ)
Lauren Wilson – Beer Evangelist and Raconteur

Crafts
Amy D – Made By Amy D and Queen of Clintonville
Olivera Bratich – Wholly Craft
Adrienne Raimo – Crafty Person
Andy Dehus – Renaissance Man, Woolf Tamer, Taco Truck Writer and Restaurant Designer

Beer Label Design
Ben Lamb – Artist, Rocker and Community Personality
Clinton Reno – Artist extraordinaire and all around nice guy
Robin Oatts – Web designer and winner of the BeerCamp patience award
Patrick Kelleher – Brewmaster for Neil House Brewery and parade sponsor

So let’s talk some more about the food. I had to recuse myself from food judging since I knew some of the contestants. Every item I sampled was outstanding. The contest scores were close but at the end, the Pierogi King of Columbus and BaconCamp Champion, the esteemed Roland Kopecky won the grand prize with his Founders Kentucky Breakfast Stout Cupcakes (served with a shot of milk). Our other winners were: (Craft) Sarah Cusser, for her beer and ink drawings, (Homebrew) Shane Crane, with his Guinness-style dry stout and (Beer Label Design) John Schumacher.

Compliments of Pattycake Bakery

It was a packed house, nothing bad happened, people had a good time and it did not rain on my parade – that is all one could want from a BeerCamp. So see you next year. (Buy your tickets early!)

Cupcake King of Columbus, Mr. Roland Kopecky

Please enjoy these other links:

Parade Video

Metromix Photos

More Photos

Columbus Alive Pics

A video with The Surly Girl Saloon song!

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