Saucy way to help out
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Deirdre Newman
Peanut butter and jelly is traditionally the glue that holds lunchbox
sandwiches together, but Saturday it escaped the ignominy of being
hidden inside two slabs of bread and made its debut on the outside as
a sauce for chicken wings.
Peanut butter and jelly was just one of the innovative ideas for
sauces offered up at a chicken wings taste-off at Wingnuts restaurant
on Harbor Boulevard.
Nine wings fans competed to create the restaurant’s 31st flavor of
wings, which will be featured on the menu during September. Proceeds
from the sale of the winner’s wings during that month will go to the
Westside Boys and Girls Club, which has an established relationship
of goodwill with the restaurant.
“Besides the obvious benefit of being a recipient of some
potential funding, the key is, it’s not lip service with these
people,” said Dan Monahan, branch director of the club in Costa Mesa.
“[Owner Gregg Diganci] believes in giving back.”
Six women and three men from hometowns including Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach and Irvine brought their sauces to the restaurant,
eager to tantalize the judges’ taste buds. The judges included food
journalists.
Some of the contestants said when they first heard about the
contest, they thought all they had to do was offer an idea for a
flavor. Then they found out they actually had to cook it up
themselves.
“I don’t cook at all, so I called my friend, and we whipped
something up,” said Molly Barrett, 21, of Huntington Beach, who made
a spicy pepper-jack sauce.
Trying to achieve perfect taste and texture was a challenge, she
said.
“I made one, and it was really good, but it wasn’t the right
consistency -- you couldn’t dip [the wings], it was too cheesy,”
Barrett said. “So, I made another batch. It didn’t taste as good, but
it had a better consistency.”
Brian Roberts, a captain with the Costa Mesa Fire Department for
close to 30 years, brought his concoction -- dubbed “Open Sesame” --
a firehouse favorite among his colleagues.
“We’ve always told him, your chicken wings are a hit -- you should
take them on the road,” firefighter Pete Melgoza said. “He’s one of
those guys who doesn’t measure stuff -- he just throws things
together.”
The recipe came from a retired battalion chief but has been
tweaked through the years, and Roberts has been the keeper of the
sauce, he said.
After the contestants coated 10 wings in their sauces in the
restaurant’s kitchen, the judges made their way down the row of
entries, some licking their fingers in between rounds.
The winner: Tara Poulsen’s Spicy Orange Cilantro. Poulsen won a
year’s worth of free food at Wingnuts.
“I’m shocked,” Poulsen said upon hearing the judges’ decision.
“Everything looks so good. I can’t believe I won.”
Poulsen works near Hoag Hospital and makes the trip to Wingnuts
for lunch frequently to chow down on wings, she said. Family members
convinced her to enter, and she obliged at the last minute, she said.
Her recipe includes orange juice, ketchup, chili-garlic sauce,
cilantro and cumin.
Wingnuts has been involved with the Boys and Girls Club since
before it even opened, at the initiative of Diganci. In developing
the restaurant, Diganci wanted community service to be a fundamental
theme. He chose the club as the recipient because many towns have
one, and that way, when he opened future restaurants, he could link
with branches of the same organization.
From day one, he has only hired employees who agree to help out
two hours a month at the club -- they get paid for their volunteer
time.
“The employees are on the young side, and they’re good at taking
rather than giving,” Diganci said. “I’m helping them get a jump-start
in life and having them give back to the community.”
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