Festivals are mostly about having fun and stuffing your face, but learning opportunities abound, as well — and we don't mean the tedious kind. To whet our appetites, we asked insiders from three popular fests this weekend to share a few secrets.
Cinco de Mayo: How to win a jalapeño-eating contest
West St. Paul's celebration of Mexican heritage draws crowds for its low-rider competition, but there's another one that can only be described as hot, hot, hot.
Benjamin Theisen Escobar, who helps organize three separate jalapeño-chomping "heats" — for reyes (men), reinas (women) and a final coed faceoff — said it's not always Latinos who take home the prize.
"I'm impressed by the gringos who can eat 10 peppers in three minutes, because I couldn't handle that many," he said. "People think it's all professionals doing this, but amateurs often win."
You have to choke down all the seeds, the hottest part, but "once you go through a few peppers, all you can feel is the burn, so it's mind over matter," Escobar said. "Focus on the clock, not what's going in your mouth."
Serious contenders increase their intake of food in general, especially spicy stuff, starting days before the contest. Chewing a lot of gum strengthens the jaw, and regular exercise helps to metabolize the food more quickly, he said.
As for after? "A swig of milk never hurts. And if you're not feeling too amazing a few hours later, try ginger ale."
May Day Parade: How to wrangle a giant puppet
The May Day bash thrown by In the Heart of the Beast Puppet Theatre is legendary for its colorful variety of floats and puppets, but the most breathtaking are the four huge ones — representing woods, prairie, sky and river — used in the "Tree of Life" ceremony at Minneapolis' Powderhorn Park. This year, after a hiatus, those puppets will return to the parade route as well. So how are these beloved behemoths and the parade's other super-sized creatures maneuvered down people-packed streets, sometimes through wind and rain, without toppling over onto bystanders?