Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Fair Giveaway Time

 Just a few days left-if you haven't entered, please do! I love giving stuff away.

All this can be yours! Leave a comment by 15 September 2022 at Midnight CST (US). Contest is open to everyone around the world, but I can't guarantee how long it will take to get there. If you've won before, let someone else have a chance at the contest. One entry per person, please.

I was hoping for a ribbon-any ribbon really. I never expected a Best of Division rosette for my Limpa bread. All told I had four blue ribbons, five red (2nd place) and one bread that didn't place (hey, no one's perfect). I won't know if I won the sweepstakes prize for the most winning entries until after the fair as there are still live on stage events to be judges. These carry some real prize money, so I'm happy I will be able to recoup some of the cost of ingredients. Would I do it again? Nope. But I'm glad I participated this once. Dan was so excited for me-a complete role reversal of when I would support his State Fair efforts. He was able to spend some time visiting with people he knew at the fair (he's grown a bit since he was 10) and had to quickly lift his mask so the volunteers could admire his beard. It was a very nice way to spend a day, even if it rained like mad.

Pointing to one of my winning entries.

I wore my shirt from Shifty Thrifting hoping for a photo with a head or two of cattle, but the rain was so intense I didn't want to go to the other side of the fairgrounds just for a photo op. 

I was glad to have a plastic rain bonnet in my handbag as the rain would have destroyed my vintage hat. Dan is holding the leftovers from his lunch-a giant, barbecued turkey leg. You don't go to the fair to eat things you can have at home. I had planned to get ice cream but it was so cold and wet I opted for a hot cup of coffee in town later. Even with the rain, we're still very much in a drought. Today the temperatures were back up in the 90s. 

What's a fair without exhibits? Here's some winners from the Open Class entries

Prize winning pumpkins...

Is it still a cornucopia in a basket? I say it is.
Cucurbits...
Hmmm. Moving along...
Prize winning sorghum...
art...
Primary school educational displays...
Art from recycled materials...
Student poetry. Spelling is hard kid, you have my compassion.
Leggo displays (a Runza is cabbage and ground beef encased in white bread. Sort of like a Czech calzone).
And of course the Kool Aid man. Hastings, Nebraska is the birthplace of Kool Aid and locals will be quick to let you know it wasn't Kool Aid used in the Jonestown massacre, but Flavor-aid. I mean, I feel for them. but after 40 some odd years, good luck re-branding Kool Aid.
Penmanship contest for school children.
Paper cutting...
Figures from history...
Science Fair...
Knit baby blanket with built-in horse plush. How adorable is that?!
Quilting...
Felting...
A knitted Nativity
Tatted earrings
Dorothy Lynch salad dressing is another local product. The Fair's theme this year was, "Nothing More Nebraskan" which explains all the Runzas, etc.

What's more Nebraskan than a covered wagon? Maybe hunting. Here's Dan trying his hand at the shooting gallery. He managed to hit one target. It was just as dismal at the archery display. That's OK, he's not really interested in hunting. It all works out though because most hunters don't like to cook, so we end up getting the freezer stocked with venison during the season by friends looking to offload deer. Dan needs to make friends with some duck hunters.

Most years I give away a recipe book from the previous year from the open class winners, but last year was sort of a bust because of the pandemic. Instead, I will be giving away a Nebraska State Fair tea towel and oven mitt. Because I'm inviting people from Tumblr to come here and enter I will pick two winners this year. I'll probably find some other stuff to include as well. So good luck.

 
 






11 comments:

Emily said...

Congratulations on all your ribbons!!! And thanks for showing us all those great exhibit photos! So much care and creativity went into every one of them. I was kinda hoping that you or Dan would do the chicken impression contest this year. It was great fun to see and hear the footage from yesteryear.

I was just thinking about your runza recipe the other day. I can't wait for autumn weather to arrive so I can start using the oven again. Those runzas were sooooo good.

Those two carrots looked a little embarrassed to be seen stark naked at the fair, didn't they? I will leave you with this bit of poetry from James Merrill, which concerns two parsnips that were also dug up under awkward circumstances, but somebody had the decency to put them back. : )

Finally I reach a garden where I am to uproot
the last parsnips for my sisters’ dinner
Not parsnips mastodons But this year’s greens
already frill them and they pull easily
from the soft ground Two of the finest
are tightly interlocked have grown that way They lie
united in the grave of sunny air
as in their breathing living dark
I look at them a long while
mealy and soiled in one another’s arms
and blind full to the ivory marrow
with tender blindness Then I bury them
once more in memory of us

JT said...

Penmanship? That’s a blast from the past!

Vronni's Style Meanderings said...

Everyday's a school day! I now know what a Rusta is and what Sorghum looks like!

Congratulations on your rosettes and prizes. The breads you described making for the fair all sounded delicious and obviously the judges agreed.

Fascinating entries to the fair; I really liked the craft items.

I'm still reeling over Danny's turkey leg - the remains of. I'd hate to have seen the size of the original turkey...

Have a great week
xxx

Polyester Princess said...

Congratulations on your ribbons, Goody! Well done! Well, of course, I knew you would at least win some.
Loved trawling along the fair and see the exhibits with you.
As I've won before, of course, I'm glad to leave the honour to someone else.

Anonymous said...

Congratulations on your awards at the state fair and including us in the experience.

The Nebraskan kids certainly have the art of covered wagon making down pat. Are the wagons considered Conestoga Wagons ?

There is a Conestoga PA.

No need to enter me in your giveaway.

Best WishesAlways,
Gail from Pa.

Anonymous said...

I just looked up Conestoga wagons. Apparently they where big and heavy and used to haul heavy loads for goods taken west . 6 or more horses or mules or oxen where needed to pull them. A "covered wagon" or "prairie schooner" needed less mules. What an experience that must have been !

Thank-you again for an intersting blog post.

Gail from Pa.

bahnwärterin said...

congratulations!!!
i was sure you will win with your bread - from what i was seeing and reading here over the years...... :-D
love your outfit and that dan supported you this time. the fair looks huge and interesting too. we do not have something like that here - only specialized ones: for veggies, for small animals or the big ones, for birds.... a ceramic fair, a linen fair, a wool fair..... but no baking or cooking contests.
the runza or "piroge" is polish btw. - have eaten it there on vacation in east poland - but did´t liked it :-D
xxxx

bahnwärterin said...

ps: i do not participate in the giveaway! xx

Beth Waltz said...

Not participating in the giveaway -- but I want to give my 2c worth on your array of ribbons. Brava! Brava! and, one hopes, Cha Ching! Would that I could curl up with a good book, a pot of tea and samples of all 10 of your entries. (Never mind that one bread: butter is the answer.)

the fabric arts entries were amazing, as were the produce displays. (OK, those carrots were weird.) But that sheaf of grain wearing a blue? Hope that wasn't sorghum because some folks are very allergic to it.

Sheila said...

I'll pass on the giveaway, but I loved seeing all your pictures! Congratulations on the rosettes and all your prizes! I used to enter multiple categories at the local Saanichton Agricultural Fair (link: https://saanichfair.ca/saanich-fair-2022/) when I was a kid. I still have my rosette for Best Green Tomatoes somewhere! We used to clean up on prizes, often earning up to $20 (it used to be $3 for 1st, $2 for 2nd and $1 for 3rd). We entered art, home economics (I always cleaned up in the cake decorating), and grown fruit and vegetables.

Sorry the rain...rained on you!

Also, my apologies for not visiting sooner - life's been rough this week.

Mim said...

No compo entry for me please - I'm a past winner - but I do want to congratulate you on your victories!