Entering any cooking competition is a labor of intense preparation, work and detailing. You’re crossing your ‘Ts’ and dotting your ‘Is’ repeatedly before you hit that ‘submit’ button! Since the Dole California Cook-Off has such high stakes, the winning recipe earning that person $25,000, it’s imperative that you go into it with a serious joie de vivre!
Alcohol is Allowed
Alcohol and wine are used in cooking all over the world. Dole understands this and allows inclusion of it in a recipe. It counts as an ingredient, so make sure you choose wisely and you achieve the flavor profile you’re creating as a result of it! Unless you’re making a ‘drink’ recipe, you can’t take some of your ingredients and also make a cocktail to serve to the judges—yes, they’d probably like it, but it’s not ‘the’ recipe!
Enter Multiple Recipes
One of the really great things about the Dole Cook-Off is that you can enter multiple recipes—under the same email address—but, just wait 24 hours between each submission. This is very generous because if you’re like me, you get obsessed with creating recipe ideas and to have to just choose one to submit can stifle your creativity! When I was working on my entries in 2013, I entered four recipes—actually, had 9 but decided to focus on and refine just the top 4 after getting results from my taste-testers.
I’m so glad I took this approach because when these three taste-testers {yes, I have a throng of folks who taste for me} came to my kitchen for a
Use the Right Products
Make sure you’re using the right Dole products in your recipe entries. Dole has fresh products and packaged products, and in the rules and guidelines, they’re specific about what you can use. These include at least (1) cup of at least one Dole Packaged Foods ingredient: DOLE® Canned Fruit (Mandarin Oranges, Tropical Fruit, Crushed Pineapple, Pineapple Chunks, Pineapple Tidbits or Pineapple Slices), DOLE® Fruit in Plastic Jars (Mandarin Oranges, Mixed Fruit, Pineapple Chunks, Sliced Peaches, Tropical Fruit), DOLE® Fruit Bowls (any variety), DOLE® Canned Juice (Pineapple, Pineapple Orange, Pineapple Orange Banana), DOLE® Frozen Fruit (any variety), DOLE® Raisins, Dates or Chia.
Make those Ingredients Count
In capturing the essence of a winning recipe, you’re allowed only the use of no more than ten (10) additional ingredients plus at least one DOLE product. Now if you use a second Dole product, then that counts in your ten. There are ‘freebies’—salt, pepper, water, oil or butter used for cooking, and cooking spray. So, if you’re deep frying a turkey on the grill in peanut oil, then the turkey counts, but the oil doesn’t!
Serving the Judges’ Portions
I’ve gotten several questions from competitors asking what are ‘small plates’—well, it’s precisely that—not a full serving, just a taste—think appetizer plate 3-4” size or a small bowl. Now how you food style and plate your entry is quite important. You want it to have the pizazz and appeal even
though it’s just a small plate.
Since my winning recipe was offered on skewers, my judges’ portions were all plated on one platter (provided by Dole), and they looked beautiful as the judges passed the plate and took a serving for tasting. Other contestants used individual serving pieces, so as you’re considering your recipe, think long and hard about how it’s going to look once you take it to the judges’ platform!
Know the Judging
The Dole folks are quite clear about how entries are judged. As they sift through thousands of recipes and use a couple of rounds of judging. First, it’s does this recipe’s name have appeal, is it something that catches a person’s attention?
Then they use a four-point criteria to start digging into the actual recipe–(1) Best Use of DOLE® Product(s) – 30%, (2) Flavor and Taste – 25%, and (3) Creativity – 15%, (4) Presentation – 15%, (5) Ease of Preparation –15%.
I’m thinking there’s going to be a record number of entries in 2014 for the Dole California Cook-Off—it’s one of the premier cook competitions in the world of high-stakes culinary competition. That’s because it’s a world-class organization that sponsors it, and they ensure that everything will be fair, just and a level playing field for entrants. One last thing, when I entered in 2013, the previous 2012 winner, the talented Jeanette Nelson, had done pork sliders—I kind of suspected that sliders would not be favored for 2013—just saying, think outside the box as you work your culinary magic with the versatile Dole products!
This page is sponsored by Dole Packaged Foods~~all of the opinions are mine. For a full disclosure just CLICK HERE~~
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