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Contestants Go Grill-to-Grill at Fair's 10th Annual Barbecue Cook-Off

Six amateur contestants will face off on Saturday at the Alameda County Fair's 10th Annual Barbecue Rib and Chicken Cook-Off.

A hungry crowd filled Festival Square on Thursday to witness and sample some mouth-watering barbecue during the Alameda County Fair's 10th Annual BBQ Rib and Chicken Cook-Off.

It was one of two semi-final rounds where contestants went grill-to-grill on their barbecuing skills to see which six would move onto Saturday's final round.

Thursday's contestants lucked out — all three automatically qualified to move onto the final round since three were selected on Wednesday and two contestants that were supposed to compete on Thursday never showed up.

Despite knowing they would automatically advance to the final round they still worked their rump roasts off.

First time team competitors Erik Darby and Justin Hennessee from Lafayette arrived at the fair as early as 5 a.m. to start prepping for their Asian-inspired sauce.

The two met through their wives, who were part of a moms group with both their 18-month-old sons who happen to be two weeks a part.

"This is a chance for us to hang out without dirty diapers or kindergym," Hennessee said.

Castro Valley resident Bob Moglia is competiting for the fifth year and says it's the people that keep bringing him back each year.

"It's kind of like a fraternity," he said.

The father of three is the cook in the family and says it's his attention to detail that he hopes will get him this year's grand prize — a blue ribbon, a trip to the Oakland Raiders' trianing camp, and four tickets to one of their games.

Cook-off veteran Keith Brown of Livermore has competed in the contest for the past nine years. Despite having yet to win the grand prize, he remains hopeful this year after tweaking his recipe over the years.

"It's kind of like the blues, if you play the same song over every night, you play it different every time," he said.

All five judges ranging from Safeway chefs to credentialed tasters picked the sauced-up meat off the bones, chewed, and often spit it out in red solo cups.

"It's so you have a fresh pallet," said Chef Clyde Serda who is a certified master taster, who's been tasting professionally for the past 15 years.

Each competitor received two slabs of baby back ribs and one whole chicken at 8 a.m. from contest officials. After hours on the grill, their barbecue was judged on taste, sauce, meat, smoke and texture.

"This contest is even from the set," said Courtney Townsend-Duboff, Festival Square Director. "That right thereis really relying on their technique and expertise."

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Ken Martin May 23, 2013 at 07:46 am
Bocce play starts at 10:00 AM and is usually over by noon. Join us for a fun morning.
Sabrina Schultz May 22, 2013 at 09:03 am
That dog was on Joseph drive on Saturday morning. I was on my way to the airport or I would haveRead More tried to help him! He/she seemed pretty skittish, poor thing.
Joyce Tavares May 17, 2013 at 02:10 pm
She is home safe! Was at clinic for about 24 hours....thanks so much to the Boulevard PetRead More Hospital!! You just may have saved a life..... :0)
MICHELLE CLOWSER May 19, 2013 at 10:56 am
This was very successful. Thank you to the 32 families that participated and to Papa Panchos forRead More their generous donations, even above the percentage they promised. It made for a very busy night.
Teresa Pahler April 26, 2013 at 10:54 am
Do you know if there will be a Memorial Day Ceremony for the Veterans Memorial at the CommunityRead More Center this Year? If so may I have details-date and time. Thanks Terry Pahler tepahler@yahoo.com