
Yay! A contest! It took me a bit to come up with something worth doing. And personally, I'm getting a little overwhelmed with all the fancy cookin' & ingredients both in books and on the internet. Sure it's a lot of fun, always something new to try. But this isn't something that occupies most of my time in the kitchen or at the grill. I'm usually coming home from work and have about 1.5 hours to come up with something, get the kitchen clean and serve up food that is worth eating, good or at least good for you. To be honest, after 10 years of cooking every night for my family, I'm starting to come up a little dry on recipes. So, this contest is all about your favorite weekday meals. A meal you have 2 to 3 times a month, more or less. If not, something that you love dearly and would work well in a pinch. If your recipe requires going to 3 or more grocery stores, that's not going to work. 2 I think we could handle, maybe 1?
I'm going to make this easy, nice eh? Your submission can be on your blog or you can submit it directly to Meathenge Labs. You can make it as long as you want or as many pictures as you want, it's up to you. You will be judged on 3 things:
1. You'd want the judge to say, "Yeah, I'd make that. It looks & sounds really good."
2. Overall Love Factor of your image & prose(show you cared with your presentation). Tell a little story?
3. Completeness and flow of your recipe. Does it make sense? If you can't make sense of it, you can't eat it. And if you can't eat it, you can't win. See?
The Meathenge Lab assistants will be pitching in to judge these fine entrys, thanks all!
The contest starts today, July 13th and ends on July 27th. That's Wednesday to Wednesday, 2 weeks & 2 weekends.
The 3 top finalists will receive a copy of Diana Abu-Jaber's book, The Language of Baklava. Diana weaves the story of her life in upstate New York and in Jordan around vividly remembered meals: everything from Lake Ontario shish kabob cookouts with her Arab-American cousins to goat stew feasts under a Bedouin tent in the desert. These sensuously evoked meals in turn illuminate the two cultures of Diana's childhood - American and Jordanian - and the richness and difficulty of straddling both. Thank you so much to Pantheon Books in New York for supplying these hardback books. Yup, hardback, ain't that cool?
I'm sure I've left a few things out, feel free to email me and we'll get to them as we roll along over the next two sun filled weeks.

Good luck and let the contest begin !!!