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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

Blue Ribbon Bacon Festival

The Blue Ribbon Bacon Festival is an annual festival in Des Moines, Iowa. Founded by members of the Iowa Bacon Board, the festival sold 200 tickets to the first festival in 2008. Today, the bacon celebration has grown to host approximately 14,000 bacon-lovers in all. Ticket holders can compete in a bacon-eating contest, listen to lectures about bacon, and sample bacon from vendors. Festival organizers have extended the celebration internationally through the Blue Ribbon Bacon Tour. These are not to be confused with the Baconfest that takes place on Thanksgiving throughout the Midwest.

Description

For the price of an admission ticket, each attendee has been entitled to a T-shirt, a choice of bacon samples, and a koozie (an insulation-wrapping for a canned beverage, like beer or soda pop). The Festival also has featured lectures about bacon, a bacon-eating contest, and live performances by entertainers.

In 2012, a major change was made from the "all you can eat" bacon, which was included in the ticket price from years earlier, to a pay as you eat price structure. Justification for the added cost was to reduce lines for bacon goods vendors bring in and cook. Vendor Bacon items run $3 to $8 a piece on top of the ticket price.

History

The Blue Ribbon Bacon Festival was founded in 2008 by Brooks Reynolds, an Iowa realtor, on National Pig Day, 1 March 2008.

The Festival attracted 200 people in 2008 and 300 in 2009. The 2010 Festival sold all 600 tickets in 30 minutes: That year, the Festival served roughly 30 thousand bacon-strips (that is, about 50 strips per person); the bacon's total weight was 1,200 pounds (540 kg), that is, 2 pounds (0.91 kg) per person. The next year, in 2011, the Festival sold all 1,500 tickets in 4 minutes.

Themes

Year Theme
2008 Blue Ribbon Bacon Festival
2009 2nd Annual Blue Ribbon Bacon Festival
2010 2010 - A Bacon Odyssey
2011 Field of Bacon: If You Fry It, They Will Come!
2012 Baconpocolypse: I Love the Smell of Bacon in the Morning
2013 Viking Bacon Quest: A Journey to the Land of Fire and Ice....and Bacon!
2014 Viva Las Bacon!
2015 Baconmania VIII!
2016 Body By Bacon!
2017 Blue Ribbon Bacon Festival X - The Good, The Bad, and The Bacon!
2020 Baconritaville

State of Bacon film

In 2013, the Iowa Bacon Board in conjunction with Digital Cuvée, a production company founded by Jason Cook, set out to make a film entitled State of Bacon utilizing the festival as the centerpiece of the story. In the style of Christopher Guest or Sasha Cohen, the film is a mockumentary, utilizing actors to interact in the real world, as a mash-up style to tell each storyline, and overall transport viewers to the wild and crazy world of Bacon Wonderland.

Tour

After having worked at the Festival, some of its entertainers formed the Blue Ribbon Bacon Tour. One of the Tour's regular participants, Heather Lauer, appeared on the 2009 Tour's stop in Pittsburgh; there, for thirty dollars, participants could compete in a bacon-eating contest and (without additional cost) taste bacon-samples from vendors. Before joining this Tour, Lauer had written the book, Bacon: A love story.

References

  1. ^ "Bacon Enthusiasts Converge in Iowa for Festival". The New York Times. 9 February 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  2. ^ "Bacon lovers snap up 1,300 festival tickets". Des Moines Register. 22 January 2011. Retrieved 31 January 2011.
  3. ^ "Blue Ribbon Bacon Festival Blog". blueribbonbaconfestival.com. Archived from the original on 3 February 2011. Retrieved 31 January 2011.
  4. ^ Westly, Erica (1 March 2010). "National Pig Day". Fastcompany. Retrieved 29 June 2011.
  5. ^ Ahmad, Sophia (13 January 2011). "Tickets for 2011 Blue Ribbon Bacon Fest on sale Jan. 21". Des Moines Register. Retrieved 31 January 2011.
  6. ^ Batz Jr., Bob (24 September 2009). "Bacon tour your chance to pig out". Pittsburgh Post Gazette. Retrieved 31 January 2011.
  7. ^ McClellan, Jennifer (2 June 2009). "Bacon blogger takes obsession on sizzling tour". The Arizona Republic. Retrieved 31 January 2011.

41°35′13.75″N 93°37′18.08″W / 41.5871528°N 93.6216889°W / 41.5871528; -93.6216889