HILO — The 17th Annual Hilo Culinary Classic is set for Friday, April 10, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., and it promises to be the largest display of culinary technical skill, creativity and knowledge since the Hawai‘i Community College
HILO — The 17th Annual Hilo Culinary Classic is set for Friday, April 10, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., and it promises to be the largest display of culinary technical skill, creativity and knowledge since the Hawai‘i Community College Culinary Arts Program began the food competition 17 years ago.
Entries created by second-year culinary arts students from Hawai‘i CC will be on display, along with those of adventurous first-year student chefs. Graduates and professionals will square off in the guest competition.
The culinary displays will run the gamut from savory multi-course meals, inventive desserts, hors d’oeuvres, celebration cakes and edible art pieces.
The event will feature food to eat as well as food meant exclusively for display as first-year Hawai‘i CC students present a heavy pupu buffet. Foodies, families of student chefs, and all members of the public are invited to savor a tasty feast while enjoying the technical heights the students have reached.
Professor and Chef Allan Okuda said the competition format “really tests the knowledge and skills of our students.”
“It demands not only correct technical knowledge, but students must also execute these techniques perfectly,” Okuda said.
Okuda has set high standards for the show, which gives each student the opportunity to prepare their most elegant, innovative and technically challenging creations.
“The students are working very hard to showcase their talents in the culinary arts,” said Okuda.
The students have the guidance of a growing instructional staff of chef instructors Brian Hirata, Karen Daniels, and Shawn Sumiki, and interim kitchen manager Tori Hiro.
A team of accomplished chefs will judge the entries in accordance with American Culinary Federation rules.
Captain of the team and returning judge, Jim O’Keefe, formerly of O’Keefe and Sons Bakery, will bring his years of knowledge and practice in the culinary realm to the table. Chef Casey Halpern, of the venerable Café Pesto and a long-time supporter of the Hawai‘i CC Culinary Arts Program, rounds out the panel of judges. Also, chef Arron Anderson, of the Hilo Bay Café, is a new judge, and he will bring new ideas and insights to the competition.
The student displays will be evaluated on presentation, nutritional balance, thematic balance, workmanship, practicality, creativity and composition. Awards will be presented during the public exposition.
The Hilo Culinary Classic is the capstone project for culinary students and is the culmination of their studies. They begin the culinary program as first-year students learning basic cooking techniques, knife skills, and sanitation, and they practice those skills by running the Manono Campus cafeteria.
The event takes place at the Hawai‘i CC cafeteria in Hilo. Tickets are $9.50, and are available at the Hawai‘I CC Cafeteria, Bamboo Hale and from culinary students on campus. Tickets will also be available at the door. Call 934-2559 for more information.