2012 Hy-Vee Cake Designer Final

Sandra Fridley’s chances of winning the 2012 Hy-Vee Cake Decorator Challenge championship hinged on how quickly her mechanical bull would dry.

Fridley, whose rodeo-themed cakes and cookies were good enough to win the Des Moines regional contest and punch her ticket to Wednesday’s final round, learned before the event that the tiny bull, which spins atop one of her sheet cakes, could not be preassembled as it was for last month’s preliminary.

So her first order of business Wednesday was to roll out a fat wad of brown fondant to form the all-important prop. If the bull was not dry when it was attached to the spinning mechanism fabricated by her husband and son, the centrifugal force would surely pull the bull apart.
But rules are rules.

“I don’t want the bull to fly off, so I’m using a lot of toothpicks to hold it. I just hope it dries,” Fridley, who works at Des Moines No. 2, said with a worried look.

Fridley’s bull dried just in time, but her high-calorie creations finished out of the championship money.

Amy Murtha of Belton, in her first Hy-Vee cake challenge finals, took home first place and $1,000 with a whimsical depiction of a garden that combined color and originality with oversized lady bugs, smiling snails and overturned clay pots.

“It was a real shocker because I really didn’t expect to win,” Murtha said.

“Amy’s Enchanted Garden” got the judges’ nod over the second-place, pirate-themed entry delivered by Heather Hansen of Omaha No. 8. Hansen, who finished third in last year’s finals, got off to a rocky start when she was told that it was against the rules to use extra layers of cake to create height. In the end, the rule was revised, and the augmentation was allowed.

“I would have tried to do something cool anyway,” she said.

A total of 155 Hy-Vee cake designers entered the 2012 challenge. They competed in a series of regional contests that produced the “Elite 18,” who did battle Wednesday at Jordan Creek Town Center in West Des Moines. They had four hours to decorate one dozen cookies, two sheet cakes, 24 cupcakes and a feature cake.

“Think about it: Hy-Vee has 451 designers in the company, and these are the absolute best 18,” Tony Byington, assistant vice president of bakery operations, said before the contest. “We have some real talent out there. And the thing is, every year it gets better.”

Murtha’s co-worker, Stephanie Dillon, who defeated her in the Kansas City regional, agreed.

“Everybody seems to step it up every year,” she said, glancing around the hall. “The backdrops, the props. Everyone is getting better.”

Two-time defending champ Katie O’Connor of Lincoln No. 2 won the Decorator’s Choice Award and $500 for her “Kate’s Krab Shack,” which captured the sights and sounds of a seafood feast. Third place and $250 went to Janine Schwendinger of Rochester No. 3 and her undersea world creation.

O’Connor was a model of cool efficiency as she launched into the design that won the Council Bluffs regional last month. To her right was Murtha, who will represent Hy-Vee this summer at the three-day International Dairy Deli Bakery Association designer contest in New Orleans.

When asked which decorator was the one to beat, Murtha glanced first at O’Connor, then to her right, where Dillon, last year’s IDBBA runner-up, patiently trimmed what would be the top tier of her main cake.

“I think that one right there,” Murtha whispered.

Dillon, with the quiet concentration worthy of a bomb squad technician, deliberately assembled an assortment of ice cream-inspired treats that had onlookers cooing. Other themes ranged from Lawrence No. 2's Jill Blancho’s “1930s technology” to Sioux Falls No. 2's Sheree George’s art gallery, complete with a frosted depiction of Van Gogh’s “Starry Night.”

Missing from the championship field was Amber Rahe of Mankato No. 2, who upset O’Connor in the 2010 finals. Rahe, who has a master’s degree in fine arts, finished first in the Sioux Falls regional to earn a trip to the finals but was unable to attend due to final exams. The same thing forced her from last year’s event, where O’Connor captured the crown for the second time in three years.

Rahe’s co-worker, Rhoda Schulz, took her place at the finals table thanks to a fourth-place finish at the Sioux Falls regional. She admitted her nervousness at being thrust upon the big stage but responded with an elaborate dragon-themed entry.

“I tried to not think about it the night before; I second-guess myself enough as it is,” she said. Asked if she felt pressure, Schulz rolled her eyes and feigned rubbery legs: “No, not at all.”

Judge Elizabeth Riggs of Bakery Crafts Inc., a Cincinnati supply company, said the task was every bit as hard as it looked. Four judges rated the designs in seven categories that covered everything from smoothness and penmanship to symmetry and color correctness.

“It all comes down to technique, because the creativity here is out of this world,” she said, adding that judges would each select six finalists, “and none of or lists will match, so we have to slice and dice.”

When the slicing and dicing were done, it was Murtha whose entry was deemed sweetest.

She thanked Dillon, her co-worker, for helping her prepare.

“We bounce ideas off each other all the time, and we practice together,” Murtha said. “But I really thought she’d win it.”

Source: Hy-Vee