The Sentinel-Record

Chocolate lovers flock to festival

- MAX BRYAN

Chocolate lovers flocked to the Embassy Suites Hot Springs — Hotel & Spa to try the best sweet treats Hot Springs could offer Sunday afternoon.

The 13th annual Chocolate Festival featured 16 restaurant­s and vendors displaying their culinary skills with items they prepared specifical­ly for the occasion. The festival benefited Cooperativ­e Christian Ministries and Clinic, a local nonprofit that provides health care along with services and programs designed to lift individual­s out of poverty.

CCMC’s executive director and festival coordinato­r, Lynn Blankenshi­p, said that this year’s festival was a hit, both in terms of the vendors and the atmosphere surroundin­g the event.

“This has been a better year for us,” Blankenshi­p said. “It always seems like there’s someone that doesn’t show up, but that’s not the case this year. There was a lot of excitement around it.”

John Wayne Smith, founder of CCMC, said that 2017 also marks a significan­t anniversar­y for the clinic itself.

“We’re celebratin­g our 20th anniversar­y of the

clinic being open,” Smith said. “That’s what makes this year special.”

Blankenshi­p stressed the financial importance of the festival, pointing out that she and others at CCMC were looking to raise $50,000 from the event. As for tickets sales, she cited 600 advance purchases at $15 apiece, as well as the possibilit­y of festival goers purchasing tickets at the door, at $20 apiece.

Blankenshi­p said that the funds raised from the festival will account for at least 10 percent of CCMC’s budget.

“It’s a big fundraiser for us,” Blankenshi­p said. “Our private funding comes from outside sources, churches, businesses. We don’t receive federal funding at all, so it is very instrument­al that we do well with our fundraiser­s.”

Chocolate aside, the festival goers could also participat­e in both silent and live auctions. CCMC added the live auction to this year’s festival, which featured a puppy that was a mix between a beagle and a Boston terrier to bid on.

The lineup of chocolatie­rs at this year’s festival featured names such as Arlington Resort Hotel & Spa, National Park College, Bleu Monkey Grill and Quarter’s Cafe. Each chocolatie­r made a minimum of 800 items, giving the entire event a surplus of at least 12,800. Such items included delicacies such as cupcakes, fudge, truffles and cookies for the crowd’s sampling.

The chocolatie­rs competed against each other in two different categories — Best Presentati­on and Best Tasting — which were determined by a panel of judges. The winners of each were announced about one hour into the festival.

Bliss Cupcakes won the first place award for Best Presentati­on, beating out Spa Botanica and National Park College. The truffles that Bliss made were presented with wedding cake platters and roses.

“We went with a ‘shabby chic’ look because we do a lot of wedding cakes, and that’s kind of in this year,” Elecesha Enloe of Bliss said. “We thought we would do well with that.”

For Best Tasting, Fat Bottomed Girls Cupcakes topped Bliss and Bleu Monkey Grill with their Butter Pecan Chocolate Custard Cupcake. Owner Mackenzie Simon described the process of making her shop’s winning item, mentioning icing and butter pecan cream as incorporat­ed ingredient­s.

Smith expressed satisfacti­on with his organizati­on’s festival. He said that the Chocolate Festival has always been successful, given its subject matter.

“It’s always been very popular,” Smith said. “People like chocolate, so you can’t go too wrong.”

 ?? The Sentinel-Record/Lorien E. Dahl ?? BLISSFUL ARRANGEMEN­T: Catherine Condery, left, and Jennifer Rhodes keep their display filled with truffles at Bliss Cupcake Cafe’s booth during the 13th annual Chocolate Festival Sunday afternoon.
The Sentinel-Record/Lorien E. Dahl BLISSFUL ARRANGEMEN­T: Catherine Condery, left, and Jennifer Rhodes keep their display filled with truffles at Bliss Cupcake Cafe’s booth during the 13th annual Chocolate Festival Sunday afternoon.
 ?? The Sentinel-Record/Lorien E. Dahl ?? SWEET TOOTH: Elizabeth Winningham, 1, of Cabot, enjoys treats during the 13th annual Chocolate Festival Sunday afternoon.
The Sentinel-Record/Lorien E. Dahl SWEET TOOTH: Elizabeth Winningham, 1, of Cabot, enjoys treats during the 13th annual Chocolate Festival Sunday afternoon.

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