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Art of the pARTy culinary fundraiser generates over $4K

By Morgan Pilz, Staff Writer

(Feb. 27, 2020) The second annual Art of the pARTy buffet-style fundraiser at the Atlantic Hotel in Berlin last Friday was both a culinary and financial success after drawing a sell-out crowd of more than a 100 people and raising in excess of $4,000 for scholarships.

By Morgan Pilz
Gary Beach, left, and Mark Mayers of Marlin
Moon on 33rd Street in Ocean City, serve up
Thai chili shrimp during the second annual Art
of the pARTy fundraiser held at the Atlantic
Hotel in Berlin, Friday, Feb. 21.

To promote food as a form of art, the Worcester County Arts Council and the Delmarva Chefs and Cooks Association created a scholarship for students of creative cuisine last year, and netted more than $3,800 through their first food sampling party.

“It was a great event,” Phil Cropper, president of the Delmarva Chefs and Cooks Association and culinary instructor at Worcester Technical High School. “We’re just happy to get the community support for the arts and student scholarships.”

Guests could sample from 12 different stations of food from American Culinary Federation-certified restaurants while listening to live jazz and participating in a silent auction.

The organizations that participated in the event were Centerplate of the convention center on 40th Street in Ocean City, Marlin Moon on 33rd Street in Ocean City, Box Car 40 in Pittsville, Baked Desserts in Berlin, Coastal Coffee Roasting in West Ocean City, Princess Royale on 91st Street in Ocean City, Coastal Cupcake in Berlin, Washington Catering of Snow Hill and the Handy Seafood Company in Salisbury.

The event’s menu read like that of a high-end restaurant: dry rubbed brisket of beef with roasted red pepper and tomato chili sauce, roasted pork, gourmet deviled eggs and candied bacon, artisan cheese, sautéed blackened shrimp over three-cheese grits, shrimp wrapped with shredded phyllo dough and coated with a Thai sweet chili sauce, gourmet mini cupcakes and cream-based desserts.

“I thought it went well; everyone seemed very positive,” Cropper said. “They liked the addition of the live music this year. I got emails sent to me from people who attended that were just gobsmacked because they didn’t know what to expect and they really loved the event.”

Eight students from Worcester Technical High School, Wor-Wic Community College and Somerset Culinary prepared food onsite.

The money raised from last year’s party will be used for scholarships this year, since the inaugural fundraising event took place after the scholarship deadline. Additional money raised this year could be used to help members of the chefs’ association continue their education by sending them to conferences and conventions.

Cropper hopes to continue using the Atlantic Hotel to host the event for years to come.

“We would like to keep it at the Atlantic Hotel because we like the vibe and we like the small community and the ambiance that the hotel offers,” Cropper said. “It’s going be based on whether we keep the event at 100 or we try to elevate the event to make it more attended. As a committee, we’re happy with the current venue and with having 100 people.”

Students can apply for the culinary scholarship before April 15 at the Worcester County Arts Council website at www.worcestercountyartscouncil.org/index.php/site/grants_scholarships/ or the Delmarva Chefs and Cooks Association website at www.delmarvachefs.com.