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Local News

Fair food: Italian meatball sandwich

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Well, it’s been a while since I posted on the fair food I’d been checking out, but, trust me, that doesn’t mean I haven’t been eating.

A couple days ago some perfectly innocent — and I’m sure perfectly delicious — fried green tomatoes put me over the edge. I just happened to be eating these when I hit my fried food breaking point. They tasted pretty good, but I had to choke them down.

So I returned to the fair the next day determined — I was on the hunt for non-fried fair food.

I took a couple suggestions and wandered the midway for a while.

I finally stumbled upon Lobo’s Pasta. I can’t say that I’ve ever thought of pasta as a festival food. In fact, you say “Italian” and “fair” to me, and I’m going to think pizza or stromboli. (And if you’ve been reading, my fair pizza was less than impressive.)

But Lobo’s smelled good, and it wasn’t fried. The stand had gnocchi (A HUGE favorite of mine), cavatelli (OK, but I always sort of thought of it as wannabe gnocchi) and ravioli. I was on the go, though, and didn’t feel like sitting and eating with utensils, so I opted for a meatball sandwich.

The meatball sandwich was cheap by fair standards ($4) and HUGE. The bun was probably six or seven inches long, and once I thought they’d filled it, they kept going with the meatballs.

So much for my idea of eating on the go. I couldn’t even wrap my mouth around this sandwich!

So I returned to my booth, and ate it slowly, trying (not so successfully) to not make a mess (and a fool) of myself.

Five-star Italian food it probably isn’t. And I wouldn’t have minded it being a little warmer (had I been home, I’d have nuked it). But for fair food … let’s just say this is the first thing I’ve ate all week that made me forget I was eating at the fair!

4-Hers’ steers earn big bucks at auction

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

WELLINGTON – 4-Hers paraded their steers Saturday afternoon during the market steer auction and hoped to see their college accounts grow.

Lamar Horton, 12, of Grafton, had the Grand Champion Dairy Beef Cross, which weighed in at 1,363 pounds and sold for $2.20 per pound – 35 cents shy of a fair record.

That’s $2,998.60 for the veteran fair participant.

Lamar, a seventh-grader at Eastern Heights Middle School, said it was a lot of hard work to take care of a steer every day for nearly a year but said remembering to “always show him you’re in charge” helped him control the large animal.

Showing for the fourth year in a row, Lamar said he was thrilled with his win.

“It feels pretty good to have a grand champion,” he said, “but I’d like to give other kids a chance to win so everyone can be a winner.”

Wal-Mart of Oberlin bought Lamar’s steer.

Kirsten Long, 12, of Wellington, had the Reserve Champion Lottery Steer and struggled afterward knowing she had to say goodbye to the animal she’d raised to a whopping 1,315 pounds. Her steer sold for $2.05 per pound.

“I wanted to do it because I know it’s good money for college,” the McCormick Middle School student said.

4-H veteran Ryan Bradley, 19, of Wellington, said he, too, was emotional the first few years he showed steers, knowing they were being sold for food. He’s a little sad this year, too, because it’s his last year. He raised the Grand Champion Lottery Steer.

“I think I’ll be a little sad,” he said. “I’ve been doing this for so long. … I’ll want to come here in the fall and get my steer, and I’ll have to remember that I can’t anymore.”

Bradley is studying at Lorain County Community College to become a middle school math teacher, so the sale of his 1,354-pound steer for $3 per pound will come in handy.

Amy Sayler, of Wakeman, also intends for funds from the sale of her 1,398-pound Reserve Champion Dairy Steer to help pay for her classes in early childhood education at Bowling Green State University’s Firelands campus.

For 9-year-old Kyle Piscione of LaGrange, his first time out at the county fair was highly profitable. Kyle took home six titles, including Reserve Champion Dairy Beef Cross, which weighed in at 1,216 pounds.

Kyle said he was happy to have shown three grand champions and three reserve champions.

“I’m proud,” the Keystone fourth-grader said.

“I go out and feed them every night and morning and play with them and stuff,” he said.

Kyle intends to save his winnings for college and is already looking forward to competing next year.

In all, 80 steers were sold Saturday.

Contact Alicia Castelli at 329-7144 or acastelli@chroniclet.com.

Three win in 4-H thank-you card design contest

Saturday, August 29th, 2009

Each year, 4-H members across the county design thank-you cards with the hope that their card will win the organization’s annual contest.

The creative young artists design, draw, color and word the cards, and the best of the best are picked.

This year’s three winners, senior division, Jillian Auble; junior division, Madeline Ott and intermediate division, Maria Stanviano, all had one thing in common — modesty.

The design of Jillian Auble, 17, of Wellington, shown with her cow, “Dude,”won in the senior division.

The design of Jillian Auble, 17, of Wellington, shown with her cow, “Dude,”won in the senior division.

And this isn’t even Jillian’s first time sharing her artwork with the country.

The Kids and Kritters 4-Her has entered the thank-you card design contest twice and won both times.

Still, she says she’s not an artist.

“It’s just kind of something I do,” she said. “It’s fun.”

Between cheerleading, classes and working on her family’s small farm, there isn’t much time for drawing, the 17-year-old Wellington High School senior said.

Still, she’s excited her card will be sent out across the county.

“It’s cool,” she said.

Jillian, who has been in 4-H since she was 9 years old, is taking dairy cows to the fair this year.

Depending on where she goes to college, she hopes to stay with 4-H for the next two years. Jillian wants to go into the medical field, possibly as a respiratory therapist.

The design of Maria Stanziano, 12, of Elyria, won in the intermediate division. (Photo by Chuck Humel, The Chronicle-Telegram.)

The design of Maria Stanziano, 12, of Elyria, won in the intermediate division. (Photo by Chuck Humel, The Chronicle-Telegram.)

Maria, 12, already was planning for a future career in art when she found out she had won the thank-you card design contest.

“I didn’t really expect that,” she said. “I love drawing. I’ve thought about going to college for art. I’m not sure for what exactly, but I would be an art major.”

Maria, who is in her first year with the Carlisle True 4-Her’s, says drawing is her preferred medium. She likes to make portraits of her friends, but she mostly lets her inspiration guide her.

“Whatever inspires me, that’s what I draw,” she said. But she isn’t ready to call herself an artist quite yet.

When she doesn’t have pad and paper in hand, the Midview Middle School student likes hanging out with her friends and skateboarding and she wouldn’t dare to draw on her board.

“It was expensive,” she said. “I don’t think my dad would like that.”

Madeline doesn’t want to be an artist when she grows up — she wants to dance.

But the 12-year-old Vermilion resident still loves to draw.

She entered the thank-you design contest last year, but this is her first win.

The design of Madeline Ott, 12, of Vermilion, won in the junior division. (Photo by Steve Manheim, The Chronicle-Telegram.)

The design of Madeline Ott, 12, of Vermilion, won in the junior division. (Photo by Steve Manheim, The Chronicle-Telegram.)

“I was so excited,” she said. “No one told me I won and I found out from my adviser at our bake sale. It’s exciting that (the cards) are going to everyone. I think people are going to like it.”

Her humorous card depicts two sheep by a bale of hay making witty banter. But the home-schooled seventh-grader usually prefers drawing pigs, she says.

The Brownhelm Perfection and BB’s 4-H member also has sewing, cooking and rabbit projects for the fair.

Contact Christina Jolliffe at 329-7155 or ctnews@chroniclet.com.

Aussie import an exotic add to fair’s animals

Friday, August 28th, 2009

GRAFTON — It doesn’t take long for anyone to see why Stella may steal the show as far as small animals are concerned at this year’s Lorain County Fair.

The pint-sized marsupial native to Australia definitely can elicit the wow factor. At least that is what 16-year-old Veronica Vena hopes when she unveils her sugar glider for the first time at this year’s fair.

“I’ve never taken her to the fair before and I don’t know how she will do, but I think she will do just fine,” she said. “I just thought this year I will step out of the comfort zone of what I usually do.”

Besides Stella, Veronica will show chickens and guinea fowl at the fair.

Veronica Vena, 16, of Grafton, poses with her sugar glider, Stella, at her home.

Veronica Vena, 16, of Grafton, poses with her sugar glider, Stella, at her home.

Veronica, a 10-year member of the North Ridgeville Ridge Kids 4-H Club, never intended to use Stella as a fair project when she got her three years ago.

The teen, a junior at Midview High School, remembers just wanting the sugar glider as a pet. It was a wish she had long before Stella showed up at the family home just in time for Veronica’s 13th birthday.

“I don’t know why, but I think they are so cute,” she said of sugar gliders in general. “Plus, there are kind of exotic, and I like exotic animals.”

Actually, Veronica said her entire family is so into animals that she believes the number they have is around 50. Family pets and animals include everything from cats and dogs to horses and chicken. The family even owns a peacock.

But it’s Stella who constantly steals Veronica’s heart.

“I really like it when she jumps and glides,” she said. “In Australia, sugar gliders can jump from tree to tree and just sort of glide to where they want to go.”

In Grafton, Stella’s home is a multi-level cage in Veronica’s room. Nocturnal by nature, she spends most of her days sleeping and can be heard roaming her cage at night, sometimes munching on fruit or cooked chicken that Veronica places in her bowl.

“She makes this sound that is kind of like teeth chattering and she can bark, too, but only occasionally,” Veronica said. “You really have to play with her at night because she doesn’t like the light.”

Taking Stella out in the daytime, which happen on a recent Wednesday, can quickly turn into a game of hide-and-seek.

From Veronica’s back, where Stella quickly scurried as soon as she got out of her cage, it’s just a quick leap to the dresser. From there, the small furry creature dashes up Veronica’s majorette uniform, behind some boxes and under her bed.

“I have to be very careful with her,” Veronica said. “She can get out very fast.”

That’s why when Veronica brings Stella to this year’s fair she will not be far away. The entire family will be camped out nearby to ensure all their animals are just a stone’s throw away.

“It’s just easier with the animals if we are right there,” she said. “Plus, it’s a lot of fun.”

Contact Lisa Roberson at 329-7121 or lroberson@chroniclet.com.