The
Polar Pig Cookoff has grown in interest and size since it
began in 2016. To provide more space, the
competition last year was moved from
Mount Pleasant, NC, to the
Cabarrus Arena and Events Center in nearby
Concord, which served as the site again in 2018.
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Judges check in for the start of the Polar Pig Cookoff. |
This year for the first time the cookoff was a double-entry event, which permits teams to turn in entries simultaneously for two contests. Each contest awards prizes and points, which appeals to teams trying to score points as a year of competition is winding down. Each event is sanctioned by the
Kansas City Barbeque Society and qualifies teams for invitational championships such as the Jack Daniel’s World Championship and American Royal World Series of Barbecue.
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Prizes await the winning teams. Grand champion for contest A was Rooters-N-Tooters from Tennessee; The Algood Bar-B-Q Pit Crew from Tennessee was the top team for contest B. |
Although some teams began signing up as early as May for this competition, several teams waited until immediately before the event to register. Until the total number of teams was known, the contest organizers could not adequately plan on how many judges were needed, and several assignments had to be revised just before the first entries were turned in.
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The most interesting cooker was brought by Smoke Me Silly from Alabama, placed third overall in contest A and is currently in third for 2018 KCBS team of the year. |
All 56 teams that entered the cookoff competed in
contest “A,” and 44 of those teams also competed in
contest “B.” For the two contests, 100 entries in each of the four meat categories — chicken, ribs, pork, and brisket — needed judging. As a result, the Fair Contest Office Building, where the judging was held, was overflowing with judges, with six plus a table captain seated at each table.
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B-S BBQ Outlaws form South Dakota traveled the farthest of all teams. |
Most cooking teams were from North Carolina, but several teams came from neighboring states such as Virginia (8) and Tennessee (5). Teams from states more distant also brought very creative names such as Texas (Boomerang BBQ), Alabama (Smoke Me Silly), Rhode Island (Rhode Hog BBQ), Massachusetts (Insane Swine), Indiana (WeQ4U), and South Dakota (B-S BBQ Outlaws).
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Cooking teams, which had set up in the 11-acre midway of the Cabarrus Arena and Events Center, begin the process of disassembly after the cookoff ends. |
In all, teams came from 14 states.
Polar Pig is one of the few events where competitive teams come from so many distant locations. The high caliber of teams participating made being a judge very rewarding because the barbecue was exceptional.
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