All The News That's Fit To Eat

All The News That's Fit To Eat

Gwyneth Doland
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3 min read
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Oh yeah, it's gingerbread time. This weekend at Coronado Center, the Make-A-Wish Foundation will be displaying and selling dozens of gingerbread houses for the 17th straight year. Some of the modest abodes are made by kindergartners. (Imagine a tub of royal icing and bag of gumdrops in the hands of a 5-year-old. If these houses don't look like they've been hit by a category-four hurricane, then you can tell grownups helped.) Others are made by Four H-ers, artsy teenagers, professional pastry chefs and graduates of baking classes at the Specialty Shop. Gingerbread artists compete in several categories and prizes are awarded by a panel of experts including Yours Truly. I've judged this thing for four years or so now, and I've seen gingerbread houses made to look like the church in Ranchos de Taos, Noah's Ark, Barbie's Dream House, a mobile home (compete with Donette tires on the roof!), the Luna Mansion and Rapunzel's castle tower. They are truly amazing. And, contrary to what I wrote a few weeks ago, judging this event is actually fun for three reasons. First, these kids are total geniuses. Last year, one of them used strips of Fruit Stripe gum to make little skateboards and built a full-on skate park in the back yard of his gingerbread house. Secondly, I don't have to taste any of this stuff. I merely award points for creative use of Fruit Stripe and deduct points for use of inedible items like plastic Santa figurines. Make that Santa out of royal icing, you little cheaters! Which brings me to my last point, how the nice and understanding folks at Make-A-Wish don't give a crap how I come up with my winners. It's art for chrissakes. Art and math only intersect at the moment you decide to buy a gingerbread model of San Felipe de Neri church. Yes, all of the houses at Coronado this weekend will be for sale. The houses usually bring in about $3,000 for Make-A-Wish; it costs anywhere from $3,000 to $5,000 for them to grant a wish to a child with a life-threatening illness. Check it out this Friday through Sunday, during mall hours.

Speaking of gingerbread, the New Mexico Solar Energy Association wants your holiday confectionery home to be as energy efficient as possible. Therefore, they're offering a set of architectural blueprints (funny, but they're not blue anymore) designed by Betty Tsotsie and Mark Chalom of Solar Design and Analysis in Santa Fe. The plans, available for $12.50, give you full-size patterns for all of the house's pieces, including sugar-glazed passive-solar windows, candy cane vigas and marshmallow farolitos. You also get recipes for making the gingerbread walls and icing mortar. Honestly, the plans look a little complicated to me, but even if you never make the house, the drawings are a real hoot. It would make a great gift. Sale of the plans helps raise money for solar education. To get yours go to www.nmsea.org or call 246-0400.

Be paid to get fat! If you have a tidbit of news that belongs in "The Dish," e-mail food@alibi.com, call 346-0660 ext. 245 or fax 256-9651. The juiciest tidbits will be rewarded with a gift certificate for Maximito's.

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