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Food Competition 2006

The 2006 Food Competition was more keenly fought than ever - the thirst to win was palpable, with some pubs establishing hard-core training regimes with catering consultants, physiotherapists and sports psychologists.

First round results Final results

Well ok, that bit was a lie, but people generally took it very seriously, and you could see the difference on the plate. As last year, pub teams were composed of a junior chef and someone from front of house, which made it pleasantly inclusive. There must be a lot of closet foodies working front of house, because the food was truly delicious.

Our tasting panel were some of the company heavyweights (in an avoirdupois sense) - Jerry, Graham and Mike. The scoring criteria they used remain unchanged, including dish description; style; taste; efficiency (ease of preparation); pricing and margins; and admin (food database, costings, organisation etc).

Amy and Ali - 9_thumb.jpg 6.0K CIMG2968_thumb.jpg 9.8K
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Some pubs perhaps played it overly safe in their choice of dishes, others pushed the envelope a bit, but there were almost no dishes at all that were completely off beam.

This year’s must-have ingredients were black pudding, smoked haddock and rhubarb, though thankfully no-one has yet found a way of combining them.

Heats Final Winner
Black Jug    
Old Harkers Arms    
Hare    
Grosvenor Arms    
Pant-yr-Ochain Pant-yr-Ochain  
Armoury    
Dysart Arms Dysart Arms  
Glasfryn Glasfryn  
Cross Foxes    
Corn Mill    
Pen-y-Bryn    
Combermere Arms Combermere Arms Combermere Arms
Fox    
Hand and Trumpet    

The Challenge

Every pub must enter a starter, light bite, main course and pudding. The dishes need to be prepared, cooked and put together in the morning before judging at lunchtime.

In the first round, three or four pubs each day go up against each other. The winner overall on each day goes through to the final, which is held two weeks later.

Pub managers and senior chefs are encouraged to come along for the judging and to lend support at the tastings and see what their crews have done, but they can't make any alterations or comment until after the judging - or heckle the other pub teams.

The Criteria

Each dish will be judged under the following criteria; the written description of the dish; the style of the dish; presentation; taste and balance; value for money for the customer; gross profit to the pub; kitchen efficiency; likelihood of consistent reproduction; ease of service to the table.

Prizes

The winning team will enjoy the glory, the admiration and undoubtedly the accusations of bias and double-dealing from all their peers. They will also receive a trophy and probably a case or two of something quaffable to share amongst the team.

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