The aroma of steaming chowder, the tantalizing scent of
garlic, and the chance to sample the best specialties of Iceland await autumn
visitors to Western Connecticut, home to three of the season's top food
festivals.
Chowdafest, New England's largest cooking competition, will
be held at Norwalk's Calf Pasture Beach on October 12, a new location spacious
enough to accommodate the growing fan base, while another popular event, the
tenth annual Connecticut Garlic & Harvest Festival takes place October 11-12,
2014 at the Bethlehem Fairgrounds. The following Saturday, October 18, the
fifth annual Iceland Affair and Fire and Ice Music Festival once again will
bring fans to Winchester, CT. for a rare treat, one of only two such festivals
in the United States.
YOU ARE THE JUDGE AT
CHOWDAFEST
At this SOUPerbowl of festivals to benefit the Connecticut
Food Bank, attendees are the judges as more than two dozen of the regions best
restaurants compete in four categories: classic New England Clam Chowder,
Traditional Manhattan and Rhode Island chowders, “creative” chowders that might
be anything from sweet potato to Cajun shrimp, and bisque soups such as
Butternut Squash and Golden Corn.
Everyone receives a spoon, pencil and ballot and can sample unlimited
chowder and soups, grading entries on a scale from 7 to 10. Winners are
announced at the end of the event.
For tasting variety, samples are offered at the Cheese and
Cracker Corner, at ChowdaMex featuring salsas and chips and at a beverage
center stocked with beer and wine. The
ChowdaKIDS area will provide samples of ice cream and milk as well as free chef
hats, coloring books and stickers provided by Stop & Shop, the event
sponsor.
Admission is $10 in advance for adults, $15 at the door on
October 11. Ages 6 to 12 pay $5, children under 6 are free. Hours are 12 noon
to 4 p.m. Proceeds from this food festival to fight hunger have provided over
100,000 meals for the CT Food Bank. For information, see www.chowdafest.org
GARLIC IN ITS GLORY
Foodies flock each year to the Connecticut Garlic &
Harvest Festival where they enjoy cooking demonstrations, informative food
talks, lessons in growing garlic, plus free samplings of garlic dips, spreads,
cheeses and oils from specialty food vendors. Visitors can buy farm-fresh
garlic as well as other bounty from the fall harvest. All of that is the
warm-up for some serious eating that includes treats like homemade roasted garlic sausage with peppers and onions, garlic marinated steak sandwiches, garlic roast pork sandwiches, deep fried
garlic, and even garlic ice cream.
Live bands add to the festive feel, fine artisans are on
hand offering hand made crafts and young visitors will find rides and games to
keep them entertained.
The Garlic Festival will be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday October 11 and 12
at the Bethlehem Fairgrounds, Route 61 just north of town. Adult admission is $7, under age 12, just $1.
Find more details at www.garlicfestct.com
TAKE A TRIP TO
ICELAND
One woman's love affair with Iceland was the spark that
began this unusual festival. Gerri Griswold, a former chef and current
broadcaster, visited the “land of fire and ice” and fell in love.
She has made over a dozen trips to Iceland since 2002 and
in 2009, decided to introduce more Americans to their northern neighbor in what
she thought would be a one-time event in her home town. Instead, the Iceland Affair keeps growing. At
this year's fifth edition at Winchester Center's Grange Hall visitors will hear
experts talk about Iceland's arts and amazing nature, see prize photography of
the land's lavish geysers and waterfalls, and will be able to sample authentic
Icelandic foods such as goat sausage, smoked and dried fish, sensational
chocolates and licorice, the special local yogurt known as skyr, pure Icelandic water, and what Griswold calls the best hot
dogs in the world. On the Winchester Center Green the public will meet Iceland’s
biologically pure animals including Icelandic horses, sheep, sheep dogs, and
chickens. The event will be held on October 18 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. All the
day's activities are free.
At night, the original small concert in a barn has morphed
into the Fire & Ice Festival, to be held this year at Infinity Hall in
Norfolk at 8 p.m. Those attending will hear a host of top entertainers rarely
seen in this country, and, perhaps discover the next Bjork, Iceland's best
known performer in the U.S.. For details on the festival and information on
concert tickets, see http://icelandaffair.com
or phone 860-307-6144.
For more information about lodging and other activities in
the area and a free copy of UNWIND, a full-color, 152-page booklet detailing
what to do and see, and where to stay, shop and dine in Fairfield County and
the Litchfield Hills of Western Connecticut, contact the Western Connecticut
Visitors Bureau, PO Box 968, Litchfield, CT 06759, (860) 567-4506, or visit
their web site at www.visitwesternct.com
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