“She’s a psychopath,” Ryan said. The Carbondale local introduced himself over
beers at the Pour House bar when he heard talk of the pie baking contest. “My
mom’s been judging the contest for years.
I’ve heard of Judy Harvey. She’s
absolutely obsessed. If you win, she
may kill you.”
Cover Model status thanks to Tara and Andrew |
Two years ago, I was Fruit Number 1. During a summer of Rifle sport climbing, I
dropped off a granny smith all butter crust apple pie, the first entry into the
fruit category at the Carbondale Mountain Fair annual pie baking contest. I dreamed of being on the cover of Martha
Stewart’s Home Living, wearing an apron and holding an apple pie. I dreamed of being
a handsome climber boy killing it in the kitchen.
This spring, my long term girlfriend and I broke up. To deal with it, I threw myself at free
climbing a new big wall route in Yosemite.
I toiled, tried, and worked. After a few months, the route fell to my
tenacity. With no goals left, no
girlfriend, and no direction, I felt lost.
The Final Frontier in Yosemite- Mikey Schaefer photo |
Remembering my dream, I packed quick draws, a harness,
shoes, a rolling pin and my pastry blender into my Saturn station wagon with
plans of returning to Colorado. The competition
in Carbondale would provide direction in my life, somewhere to invest my energy,
and a chance to be a cover model.
Before leaving, I prepped for the contest by baking a
chicken pot pie in Yosemite. Traveling
east, my friends in Salt Lake City loaned me their kitchens to bake a mixed fruit
pie, an apple pie, and a strawberry rhubarb pie.
While traveling, I studied endlessly, devouring cookbooks
and searching the ends of the Internet for recipes. On July 1st, The
New York Times published an article about tarts, crisps and most importantly,
summer pie recipes. I read the piece fifteen times. In
Salt Lake, my friend’s mom provided beta on cold butter, on shredding apples
and how to crimp the edges for the best presentation. When she was out of the kitchen, I snapped
pictures of her grandmother’s 100 year old apple pie recipe.
With a solid technical foundation, I drove to my friend
Hayden’s house by the confluence in Carbondale. Hayden’s kitchen provided a
perfect place to bake a second apple pie, a bourbon pecan pie and a chocolate
bourbon pecan. I tailored my Rifle climbing towards pie baking.
The steep limestone routes provided core training. The small edges allowed me to crimp until my
fingers cracked. The sidepulls worked my
hand strength. By the end of the month, I used an ab roller to press out the
pie crust. I crimped the edges of the
pie to perfection. I broke apples in
half. Beyond the training, I sought
advice from master bakers.
For the past 20 years Judy Harvey has dominated the
Carbondale Mountain Fair pie baking contest. White and dark chocolate mousse. Boysen
berries. Caramel coconut creams peaked with translucent amber spikes of
macadamia nut brittle. Judy mastered these recipes and the subtleties of pie
baking. In 2005, the Aspen Times
featured Judy in an article about the contest.
Her husband, Roger spoke of Judy’s determination describing trial run
pies stuffing their garage refrigerator and inviting friends over at all hours
to test the pies. On competition days,
Harvey wakes at 4 am to begin baking. I wanted her obsession.
The Carbondale phone book provided her number. Judy shied
away when I first rang. “My family is
setting up camp for the 4th of July.
Can I call you back?” she said. After
3 days of silence, I dialed again. The call went straight to her voicemail. The
master baker ignored my pie enthusiasm.
Despite Judy’s reluctance to share pie secrets and the rumor
of her homicidal tendencies, my mission to bake the perfect pie held true to
course. A climber’s BBQ offered a chance
to serve a strawberry rhubarb pie and a third apple pie. Jen and Andrew, a pair
of local Rifle climbers, allowed me to bake a peach pie at their house. I baked until I only saw imperfections in the
pies. The crust that Andrew left, the
extra peaches that Jen pushed to the side and Hayden stopping at his third
piece became the objects of my obsession.
I baked until I hated pie. My climbing schedule, my life revolved around
my next chance to bake. I transformed
into the obsessive Judy Harvey.
In between baking pies and climbing rocks, I shuffled along
the edge of Thompson Lake, stubbing my toe in the dark. From the edge of the water, the summit ridge
to Mount Sopris, the highest peak in Carbondale’s Elk Range, hid behind the
impending sunrise. A week of insomnia wrecked
me. The alpine hiking helped alleviate
my angst and aimlessness. While
wandering lost around the lake at 3am, I fixated on a conversation a fellow lifestyle
climber and I had.
“Don’t you think it’s weird that you just climb all the
time?” Colette asked me. We could see
Sopris from the confluence where we sat, splitting the last piece of chocolate
bourbon pecan pie. A full-time climber,
Colette had begun a transition towards a career, a life beyond rock. I
poked at the pie crust, unsure of how to answer. This trip was supposed to be
about more than just climbing. My travels
east, the pie baking contest were supposed to provide direction, to provide a distraction
while I found something more permanent. After the contest, I’d be back where I
started- driving my car to climb at another sport crag, to find more boulders,
or explore new big walls. Climbing, like pie baking, is amazing but ultimately
pointless. There must be more to life than
rock climbing and pie baking. What was
it?
On Saturday, July 28th at 6 am, I hustled over to
Hayden’s house, where I preheated the oven.
The butter cut into the flour perfectly.
The melted chocolate mixed with pecans.
Maple syrup and bourbon provided sweetness and taste. The ingredients filled
a 9 inch pie pan and baked in the oven for an hour. At 10:30, I entered my pie into the exotic category
at the Carbondale Mountain Fair Annual Pie Baking Contest. The exotic category contained a half dozen
entries. A meat pie with hotdogs woven into the lattice seemed suspect. The other pecan pie appeared weak next to
mine. The meringue. That looked good. The fruit category
contained nearly a dozen pies from apple to cherry to pear. The crème category held just a few pies. I
nervously waited for the judges results.
That night, climbers from across the US gathered in a
Carbondale barn for Jen and Andrew’s wedding. Thunder, lightning and afternoon
showers dissipated moments before the ceremony.
Jen’s father walked her down the
aisle. Andrew’s father gave a heart felt speech about new love and old love. The
two climbers made a life long union, they were making more of their lives than
just the rocks they climbed. It was beautiful.
The wedding offered me a chance to stop fixating on the
contest. Watching these two friends in
love helped me realize that perhaps there was more to life than climbing and
baking. Jen and Andrew discovered something special in their relationship. Climbing, while pointless, had brought the
two together. My respite from my obsessions was short lived. In between the ceremony and the dancing, a
dozen different climbers asked me about the competition.
“Did you win?” “Did
you beat the blue-haired grandmas?” “You
send the gnar at the fair bro?”
“No.” “No.” No.” I answered, explaining the training, my
alpine start, and putting in my best effort. Baking pies while living out of a station
wagon proved difficult. My lackluster
excuses did little to negate my loss. The
hardest part to explain was that I never wanted to win the contest. I
wanted to find direction. If I’d been
asked if I was still aimless, then I could have answered, “Yes.”
For six weeks, baking and climbing consumed my Colorado
life. I expected an answer to my aimlessness, an answer that would come without
having to consciously think about why I was wandering. I expected an epiphany while rolling out pie
crust. Flashes of inspiration happen
slower than that. They are the product
of circling around an idea, drawing closer and closer to it.
While Judy Harvey sat in her kitchen shuffling through recipes
for next year’s contest, I packed my Saturn station and prepared to orbit
another climbing destination. I buried my pastry blender beneath my old
climbing shoes. I left my pie pan at Jen
and Andrew’s house. The weather in
Yosemite would cool soon. I drove east
from Colorado knowing Judy and I would continue our pointless obsessions. Maybe someday, we’d figure out why we did
it.
Despite the storm, the Saturn continues its orbit |