The Richmond Register

Lifestyles & Community

July 2, 2009

Paula McHargue …Cooking for fun and profit

About 30 years ago, Paula McHargue of Richmond entered a cooking contest sponsored by the local Cooperative Extension and was awarded a certificate for her winning entry.

Thousands of contests later, she has won about $50,000 in cash, plenty of prizes and trips to cooking contests all over the country to show for her efforts.

“After that first contest, I was hooked,” said Paula, who develops her recipes in her home kitchen, types them up, sends them out and anxiously awaits the daily mail delivery see if she has another winner.

She recalls her first “big money” win about 14 or 15 years ago. She had submitted a recipe to Quaker Oats for peanut butter fudge-filled brownies.

“I got this damaged envelope in the mail and when I opened it up, there was a check for $10,000,” Paula said. Entering recipe contests can be somewhat profitable, said Paula, whose best year brought in $28,000. She has also won other prizes, such as appliances, and has used some of the money she has won to remodel her kitchen.

One especially memorable win, a regional prize at the famous Pillsbury Bake-Off, also won her national fame. Her Mint Julep Brownies netted first place in Kentucky and attracted a film crew from CBS Sunday Morning, who spent two days at her home, following her around and taping her making the recipe in her own kitchen.

She has also appeared with the likes of Alex Trebek, of “Jeopardy” fame, and Paul Newman as the result of her culinary endeavors.

The meeting with Newman was the result of a winning entry in a contest using “Newman’s Own” salad dressings. She won a $10,000 prize to be donated to her favorite charity, The American Heart Association, in honor of her late mother.

A picture of her with Newman, and one with Trebek, hang proudly in her dining room.

While hobnobbing with celebrities and winning prizes are a big attraction, the expenses-paid trips to recipe contests are an exciting feature of her life. She’s been all over the country, from New York City and Napa Valley, Calif., and parts in between, to the degree that she’s hard pressed to list states she had not visited.

Paula’s husband, Richard, has come to share his wife’s passion for cooking and entering contests.

“Anything she’s into, I’m into,” said Richard.

Both Paula and Richard have each twice been winners in the Pillsbury Bake-off, considered the granddaddy of cooking contests. It is conducted every two years, and individuals are only allowed to win a maximum of three times, so the McHargues have one more shot apiece.

Richard proudly tells of the time he was one of four contestants who could have won $1 million. He ended up with a $10,000 prize in that one.

Even the McHargues’ son, Matthew, has gotten involved, entering and winning prizes in recipe contests.

While he has embraced cooking, Richard’s main passion continues to be clogging. His claim to local fame is the Richard McHargue Cloggers, a group with participants ranging in age from 5 to adult who perform at many local venues. It’s really a hobby with Richard, who enjoys teaching the dance to anyone interested.

Just as Richard has joined his wife in cooking ventures, Paula has been a loyal clogging partner over the years.

While she has entered thousands of recipe and cooking contests over the years, and won hundreds of prizes, ranging from certificates, to appliances, to cash, it’s not about the winning for Paula … she truly loves to cook, and to experiment on her appreciative husband. She said the cuisine she especially loves is “country cooking.”

“Don’t get me wrong,” said Paula, “I’ve had my share of disasters over the years … Richard doesn’t even get to taste those.”

While she doesn’t enter as many contests these days as she used to, Paula can still be found in her kitchen “laboratory,” cooking up new dishes and anxiously awaiting the mail delivery to check the results of her latest culinary innovations.

Text Only
Lifestyles & Community
  • Anthony-Phelps-c.jpg We are heirs and joint-heirs to His kingdom

     “For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God.
    “For ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear; but ye have received the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father.
    “The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God:
    “And if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified together.
    “For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.
    “For the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for the manifestation of the sons of God. — Rom 8:14-19

    May 18, 2012 1 Photo

  • Dr-Jack-Rutherford.jpg How little exercise is necessary for good health?

    How little exercise is necessary for good health?
    That question was the subject of a recent investigation by a team of exercise scientists at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, and the answer seems to be a lot less than we might think, as long as we’re willing to put in the effort.

    May 12, 2012 1 Photo

  • Anthony-Phelps-c.jpg A mother’s love never stops

    A mothers love will always be there. Even when everyone else stops to rest, her love for her family continues. She is always working, carring and sharing what she has with her children, even if she has to do without for herself.

    May 11, 2012 1 Photo

  • Start planting your hot weather vegetables now

     

    Hopefully, the unusual spate of unseasonably warm weather we had earlier this spring did not fool you, and you’ve been patiently waiting to get your hot weather veggies, such as tomatoes and peppers, into your summer vegetable garden.
    Now is a good time to start planting these delectable goodies.

    May 7, 2012

  • Dr.-Jack-Rutherford.jpg Rethinking the benefits of crunches

    I’ve been doing crunches all my adult life and it may be one of the reasons I have back problems. Research from the University of Waterloo in Ontario has found that repeated bending of the spine, such as occurs when doing crunches, can contribute over time to damage of spinal discs. The results are presented — along with a lot of other useful information — in the book, “Ultimate Back Fitness and Performance” by Stuart McGill.

    May 5, 2012 1 Photo

  • Don-McNay-.jpg Is 401(k) good for America?

    Internal Revenue Code section 401(k) is the only section of the US tax code that average people can cite.
    They know it has something to do with whether or not they can retire with dignity. Or retire at all.

    May 5, 2012 1 Photo

  • Anthony-Phelps-c.jpg He is there when you need Him

    Whither shall I go from thy spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy presence?
    If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there: if I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there.
    If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea;
    Even there shall thy hand lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me. — Psalm 139:7-10

    May 4, 2012 1 Photo

  • Dick-Ham.jpg It’s tough to be old

    I was just thinking the other day about how tough it is to be old. We seniors have so many things to contend with. One of the first things is our memory, or perhaps I should say our lack of memory. I’ve often thought it is easier for us to remember things that happened to us when we were kids than to remember what we had for lunch yesterday. Names are hard to recall. It is embarrassing to meet someone who is familiar and we are certain we should know them, but simply cannot remember their name. In a conversation with a friend, to talk about a former friend but neither of you are able to recall their name.

    May 1, 2012 1 Photo

  • Dr-Fred-Engle.jpg McCreary’s second term

    Between the end of Madison countian James B. McCreary’s first term in 1879 and the beginning of his second term in 1911, a lot happened in Kentucky.
    Democrats continued to dominates state politics, as they did Madison County politics. But, the Republicans did break through to take control of the state government once or twice. Of course, that depends on how you interpret the whole, now-infamous Taylor-Goebel affair.

    May 1, 2012 1 Photo

  • 05.01-Veteran-news-pic-1.jpg Officers elected for Post 12, auxiliary

    The Richmond American Legion Post 12 and its auxiliary elected officers on April 12.

    April 30, 2012 2 Photos

Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
AP Video
Robin Gibb of Bee Gees Dies at 62 Protesters, Police Clash at NATO Summit Raw Video: NATO Protesters Face-off With Police Libyan Convicted in Lockerbie Bombing Is Dead NATO Chief: 'No Rush for Exits' in Afghanistan. Obama Pushes for Post-2014 Vision for Afghanista Raw Video: Demonstrations Ahead of NATO Summit Raw Video: Powerful Quake in Northern Italy G-8 Seeks Unity on Euro-debt Crisis, Iran Mary Kennedy Mourned at Private Funeral in NY Prosecutors: Trio Planned to Attack Obama's HQ Blind Chinese Activist Arrives in NY G-8 Leaders Hope Greece Remains in Eurozone SpaceX President: 'This Is Not Failure' Blind Chinese Activist Leaves for US Raw Video: Obama Greets Leaders at Camp David Big Job: G-8 Tackles Euro Crisis Raw Video: SpaceX Rocket Launch Aborted in Fla. Video Surfaces of Alleged Abuse at Kansas School Verizon to End Unlimited Data Plans
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Popular Searches
Powered by Local.com
Poll

A recent health ranking listed Madison County as the 20th healthiest county in the state. It measured factors such as exercise, access to health care and smoking. Do you smoke cigarettes?

Yes
No
I used to, but I quit.
     View Results