Ithaca Cupcakes 2024: Honorable Mention Awards

The Sophie Fund thanks the 29 bakers who entered their masterpieces in the 9th Annual Ithaca Cupcake Baking Contest. Judging so much originality, creativity, and skill is a challenging task! Besides the three top awardees, 10 contestants were selected to receive Honorable Mention Awards. Bravo to all! Honorable Mention awardees were presented with $25 gift certificates from the Downtown Ithaca Alliance.

Honorable Mention

Aušra Milano

Jessica Cullen

Katy Holloway

Angela Meeker

Avery Carr

Renee & Julia Bauer

Pragadeeshwaran Sivasamy

Hailey Ayres

Alecia Sundsmo

Aušra Milano’s “All Things Orange Cupcakes”: Blood orange flavored chocolate and olive oil cupcakes topped with a bouquet of blood orange buttercream flowers.

Jessica Cullen’s “Mango Magic Cupcakes”: Classic vanilla cupcake with a tart mango curd filling, vanilla frosting, and whipped cream topping.

Katy Holloway’s “Waiting for Spring Cupcakes”: Vanilla cupcakes with a pomegranate curd filling and pistachio buttercream frosting flower garnished with four pomegranate seeds representing the time Persephone must spend in the underworld.

Angela Meeker’s “Dark Chocolate Raspberry Curd Cupcakes”: Gluten free decadent deep dark chocolate velvety cupcake, with a homemade raspberry curd filling topped with a homemade cream cheese, white chocolate, and raspberry swirl frosting decorated with dark Bavarian chocolate and fresh raspberries.

Avery Carr’s “London Fog Cupcakes”: Chocolate cupcakes with brewed Earl Grey tea, topped by a Swiss meringue buttercream frosting emulsified with butter steeped with vanilla bean and Earl Grey tea and adorned with salted caramel.

Renee & Julia Bauer’s “Autumn Tea Party Cupcakes”: Chocolate cakes with ganache filling, topped with Earl Grey buttercream frosting and a candied orange slice decorated with a chocolate leaf.

Pragadeeshwaran Sivasamy’s “Chai Cupcakes”: Chai-infused cupcakes, with cinnamon frosting decorated with a pippette containing a sip of Chai tea.

Hailey Ayres’s “Apple to the Spice Cupcakes”: Apple spice cakes filled with apple cider dices, topped with cream cheese frosting with cinnamon bites and leaf sprinkles.

Alecia Sundsmo’s “Summer Reprise Cupcakes”: Strawberry lemonade birthday cupcakes, with lemon cakes and filling topped with strawberry icing decorated with strawberry wedges.

Ithaca’s Best Cupcakes 2024

Sadie Hays won 1st Place and the Grand Prize with her “Orange Pomegranate Cupcakes” in the 9th Annual Ithaca Cupcake Baking Contest organized by The Sophie Fund on October 19.

Sadie Hays’s award-winning “Orange Pomegranate Cupcakes”

Her sumptuously moist olive oil orange cakes with a hint of pistachio, almond, and cardamom and a piquant pomegranate curd center were topped with a white chocolate labneh and cream cheese frosting with notes of rose water and pistachio.

“There is a lot of struggle in the world these days,” Hays said. “Through it all, I am looking for the sun rays, the lightness, the freshness, the optimism, and above all, the harmony.”

Full List of 2024 Ithaca Cupcake Baking Contest Winners

“I love baking because it lets me create something new by balancing opposing concepts and flavors. This was an experiment in using Middle Eastern flavors. I hope these bring you a little ray of sunshine and some joy in your day,” she said.

1st Place Awardee Sadie Hays

Marina Mahashin captured 2nd Place with her “Rasmalai Tres Leches Cupcakes,” vanilla cakes soaked in a three-milk syrup infused with saffron and cardamom and a whipped cream frosting dusted with crushed pistachios.

Mahashin’s Bengali and Dominican flavors were inspired by her childhood in Bangladesh and her enjoyment of a friend’s tres leches birthday cake after arriving in America.

“Growing up, sweets were an essential part of every celebration, no matter the occasion,” she recalled. “Among them all, my favorite was rasmalai. The richness of the milk and the blend of delicate flavors always captivated me. Every bite of rasmalai feels like a warm reminder of home and cherished memories.”

Marina Mahashin’s “Rasmalai Tres Leches Cupcakes”

The judges awarded Grace Qi 3rd Place for her “Harvest Caramel Apple Cupcakes,” consisting of fluffy cakes made with Fiji, Honeycrisp, and Granny Smith apples with spiced apple pie filling and topped with salted buttercream frosting drizzled with caramel.

Qi said that her contest entry sought to honor memories of growing up in Oklahoma. “Every year at the state fair, my mom and I would always get caramel apples together. That sweet, sticky treat became one of my all-time favorites, and I wanted to recreate that comforting flavor in these cupcakes. They’re a tribute to those moments with my mom.”

Grace Qi’s “Harvest Caramel Apple Cupcakes”

Isabel Perkins received the Youth Award for her “Dream Cupcakes,” with rich, moist chocolate cakes with a fluffy peanut butter frosting and filled with arequipe, a “sweet surprise” also known as dulce de leche.

Perkins’s entry included a surreal fictional story she wrote about her “dream cupcake.” The protagonist imagines a rich, moist chocolate cupcake, and then in a dream set in a futuristic world comes across a ginormous building in the shape of a cupcake that houses a huge rich, moist chocolate cupcake on a golden pedestal.

Isabel Perkins’s “Dream Cupcakes”

Twenty-nine bakers entered the contest this year, displaying a range of themes including: fall colors, autumn tea parties, campfires, Halloween, Greek mythology, birthdays, Persian delights, Cayuga Lake swims, creatures known as cats, and empathy and understanding.

Judging the finalists were professionals from Ithaca’s culinary community, Via Carpenter, of Via’s Cookies, and Yuko Jingu, of Akemi Food, along with Susan Hack, co-founder of The Sophie Fund.

The Awards Ceremony was hosted by Carley Robinson and Gabriella da Silva Carr, and the event featured live musical performances by SingTrece & Kenneth McLaurin, Joe Gibson & Dan Collins, and Rachel Beverly.

The 9th Annual Ithaca Cupcake Baking Contest at the Bernie Milton Pavilion in the Ithaca Commons was sponsored by Visions Federal Credit Union, Cayuga Health, and Maguire. All awardees received Downtown Ithaca Alliance gift cards accepted by more than 100 local shops and restaurants.

The contest was produced by Cara Nichols of CRN Events.

Volunteers from student organizations at Cornell University supported the contest: Cornell Circle K, PATCH (Pre-Professional Association Toward Careers in Health), Alpha Phi Omega, and Cornell Minds Matter.

Also participating in the day-long event were organizations advancing mental health in the greater Ithaca community. They included: Be Kind Ithaca; Free Hugs Ithaca; Suicide Prevention & Crisis Service; American Foundation for Suicide Prevention Greater Central New York; Mental Health Association in Tompkins County; National Alliance on Mental Illness Finger Lakes; Advocacy Center of Tompkins County, Tompkins County Bullying Prevention Task Force, and Ithaca Free Clinic.

The contest is organized every year by The Sophie Fund, which was established in 2016 in memory of Cornell University fine arts student Sophie Hack MacLeod to support mental health initiatives aiding young people. Sophie’s passion for baking cupcakes inspired the launch of the first Ithaca Cupcake Baking Contest in 2016. At the time of her death by suicide at age 23, Sophie was on a health leave of absence from Cornell and active in Ithaca’s culinary scene.

1st Place and Grand Prize ($250): Sadie Hays

2nd Place ($150): Marina Mahashin

3rd Place ($100): Grace Qi

Youth Award ($100): Isabel Perkins

In Tompkins, It’s United in Kindness Month!

The Tompkins County Legislature proclaimed October “United in Kindness Month.” Legislature Chair Dan Klein issued the proclamation after the Tompkins County Bullying Prevention Task Force coordinated a series of 12 events with kindness themes for the month.

For the third year in a row, the Task Force organized the series to mark National Bullying Prevention Month and National Domestic Violence Awareness and Prevention Month.

The Task Force’s aim is to promote kindness, acceptance, inclusion, and support. This year’s series includes a Youth Mental Health & Wellness Town Hall, “Huddle Together for Mental Health” for school sports events, a gallery exhibition featuring young artists, webinars on promoting social-emotional strengths in children and recognizing mental health conditions, risk factors, and warning signs.

“United in Kindness is a wonderful collaboration of professionals and community members who care about the well-being of kids in our community. We’re happy to partner in this effort, as bolstering kids’ mental wellness is central to our mission,” said Libby Demarest, director of Community Engagement at Family & Children’s Service of Ithaca.

VIEW OR DOWNLOAD: United in Kindness Event Series for October 2024

The Tompkins County Legislature’s Proclamation reads as follows:

PROCLAMATION
 
WHEREAS, bullying has been identified as a prevalent and serious problem affecting today’s youth, and
 
WHEREAS, types of youth bullying include physical, verbal, and relational bullying, as well as cyberbullying that involves threatening or harassing electronic communications, and
 
WHEREAS, according to the 2023 Community-Level Youth Development Evaluation (CLYDE) survey, given to Tompkins County students In grades 7 through 12, 27 percent of teens report being bullied at school and 20 percent report being cyberbullied,  and
 
WHEREAS, bullying has psychological, physical, and academic effects and adversely affects youth who are bullied as well as those who engage in bullying, and
 
WHEREAS, more than two dozen government agencies, community organizations, parents, and representatives from the county’s six school districts formed the Tompkins County Bullying Prevention Task Force in March 2019, and
 
WHEREAS, the Task Force’s mission is to facilitate comprehensive cooperation across the community in developing and promoting appropriate bullying prevention and response strategies in Tompkins County, and
 
WHEREAS, every member of the Tompkins County community, government agencies, community organizations, school administrators. teachers, athletic coaches, parents, and students, can play a part in creating a bully-free environment in our schools, athletic fields, public spaces, and online websites, and
 
WHEREAS, the task force organizes a series of “United in Kindness” educational events and activities in October to fight bullying and domestic violence and to promote kindness and empathy throughout our community, now, therefore be it
 
RESOLVED, That the Tompkins County Legislature does hereby proclaim the month of October 2024, as
 
UNITED in KINDNESS MONTH IN TOMPKINS COUNTY
 
IN WITNESS THEREOF, I, Dan Klein, on behalf of the Tompkins County Legislature, have hereunto set my hand and caused to be affixed the great seal of Tompkins County, State of New York, on this 15th day of October 2024.
 
Dan Klein, Chair
Tompkins County Legislature

Tompkins Town Hall: Safeguarding Youth Mental Health

America is experiencing a youth mental health and suicide crisis, as kids grow up in a world that is increasingly stressful and scary for them, according to Tiffany Bloss, executive director of the Suicide Prevention & Crisis Service of Tompkins County.

Tiffany Bloss speaks at youth mental health town hall

Bloss said that a quarter of the young people who die in the United States today take their own lives. She said the causes of suicide are complex, but pointed to stress factors such as the Covid-19 pandemic, academic pressures, addictive social media, poor family relationships, and financial anxiety.

“They are trying to navigate so many things in their world, and it is a scary place to be right now. And, with social media, there is no escape,” she said.

Bloss was a featured speaker at “Youth Mental Health & Wellness,” a community town hall hosted by the Tompkins County Suicide Prevention Coalition at the Tompkins County Public Library on October 5.

Bloss said that suicide is preventable, and emphasized the importance of normalizing discussions about mental health and being aware of warning signs that could be indicators of suicidal thoughts.

“We talk about our physical health all the time. We don’t ask about mental health. If your gut tells you that something is kind of going on for your youth, you’ve really got to ask them questions about suicide and see what we can do and open up that conversation,” she said.

Some of the warning signs Bloss described were not going out with friends anymore, failed relationships, slipping grades, changes in sleep patterns, excessive agitation or anger, and talking about dying by suicide.

She said that her agency and others in Tompkins County offer support services to address mental health challenges and emotional crises. She said that when people have serious concerns about themselves or someone else, it is wise to call 988 for the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.

Melanie Little, director of Education and Youth Services at the Mental Health Association of Tompkins County, spoke about the importance of recognizing risk factors can make youth more vulnerable to developing a mental health disorder.

Melanie Little provides “Mental Health 101”

Among the risk factors are trauma, substance abuse, social marginalization, lack of supportive relationships, a physical illness or disability, and bullying, she said. She said mental disorders are increasingly common in youth, with 1 in 3 teens experiencing anxiety, 1 in 5 major depression, and 1 in 5 eating disorders.

Little emphasized the need to avoid perpetuating stigma around mental health. She listed some common examples of stigmatizing language that can be harmful to young people struggling with a disorder.

“Everyone has anxiety. Some people are just stronger than you are.”

“Therapy and medications are just scams. You don’t need them.”

“What do you mean you can’t get out of bed? It’s not like your legs aren’t working.”

“Kids can’t have mental illness. What have they got to worry about in life?”

“All women are a bit bipolar.”

Pat Breux, former director of School and Youth Initiatives at the Suicide Prevention Center of New York, discussed the vital role that schools play in preventing youth suicide.

She said that the 2024 National Strategy for Suicide Prevention as well as New York State policy highlight schools as important settings for upstream prevention through community education as well as intervention with individuals at risk of suicide.

“We take an approach that we call ‘confident, connected, caring school communities.’ What that means is everyone has a role to play. Everyone is challenged to have the competencies to notice, and know where, when, and how to access help for somebody when somebody’s in need,” she said.

Breux said schools can help educate parents about mental health starting when the children enter kindergarten. “We need to start having those conversations and preparing parents for the idea that mental health crises are pretty common by the time kids get into middle school or high school. And you need to be able to recognize that early and know how to get help for your kid,” she said.

In New York State last year, Breux said, more 5,000 children went to the emergency department for self-injurious behavior.

“About 2,000 of those kids ended up hospitalized. Where did the other 3,000 end up the next morning? Back in school. Were they fixed? No. There are kids who are going to struggle with suicidality who need access to education. They need to be able to move through life with that. How do we create the environment that those kids can be okay and make sure that we’re having some kind of eyes on them and they have access to the supports that they need at the level that they need?”

Breux distributed copies of “A Guide for Suicide Prevention for New York Schools,” a booklet prepared by the Suicide Prevention Center of New York that provides information for training school staff and educating parents as well as targeted and individualized interventions against suicide risk.

Town Hall organized by the Tompkins County Suicide Prevention Coalition

Other speakers at the town hall included Shawn Goodman, a psychologist in the Ithaca Central School District; Nicole Roulstin, Contact Center Manager for 211 Tompkins/Cortland; a student at Tompkins Cortland Community College; and Randy Brown, a member of the Tompkins County Legislature.

Goodman, an author of young adult fiction and nonficton, gave remarks about his latest book, “How to Survive Your Parents: A Teen’s Guide to Thriving in a Difficult Family,” published in September by Penguin Random House LLC.

Goodman said several things inspired him to write the self-help manual. He said that he noticed that some people his age were still struggling with their childhood issues. And while he found books to help adults heal their issues, he couldn’t find any books for kids to help them before they became adults themselves.

“And I had kids coming in essentially asking for that, saying ‘This is going on with my dad. This is going on with my mom. I want my relationship to be better. How do I do that?’”

Goodman said his favorite strategy for living in a difficult family is to learn how to manage the situation, not the relationship.

“Many kids are holding the entire relationship and feeling responsibility for it. I tell kids it’s not your job to change your parents’ behavior. And even if it were your job, it’s mission impossible. So instead, just try and manage each situation. Throughout the book, if kids stick with it, I’m really hoping that they’re going to be building confidence in navigating difficult situations and improve their outcomes, one moment at a time,” he said.

The Tompkins Cortland Community College student shared a personal story of a suicidal crisis that began before she turned 11. She said that while she grew up in a supportive family, an attentive youth pastor and later a therapist played crucial roles in guiding her on a path to healing. “Sometimes talking to parents can be really challenging especially for a middle schooler,” she said.

The student noted that that while she is feeling fantastic and is enjoying college today, speaking about her ordeal is still difficult. She said she agreed to speak about it publicly for the first time at the town hall because “I thought it was a good idea to bring awareness.”

In her presentation, Roulstin provided an overview of how the 2-1-1 hotline can help Tompkins residents access a multitude of community services for support, including food, housing, transportation, health and mental health, utilities, legal aid, veteran needs, job listings, and tax assistance. She said the hotline uses a database with over 1,600 local, state, and federal resources.

Tompkins County Legislator Randy Brown: “The issue of our time”

Brown provided the town hall’s welcome remarks, saying “I think mental health and wellness is the issue of our time, more important than any other issue that I can think of. When I ran for the legislature a few years ago, it was the number one issue for me and still is. I think that there’s more that we can do as a county.”

The Tompkins County Suicide Prevention Coalition is comprised of health agencies, community organizations, and individual members who share a determination to prevent suicide deaths in our community. It is a collective of volunteers that strives for diverse and inclusive representation and encourages collaboration for achieving goals.

If you or someone you know feels the need to speak with a mental health professional, you can call or text the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 9-8-8, or contact the Crisis Text Line by texting HOME to 741-741.

I Wish You Knew!

We are all more than what others see on the surface. And others see things in us that we don’t. Here’s a chance for young people in Tompkins County to create a piece of artwork that expresses how you would like to be seen.

Artwork from the Mental Health Association’s 2023 “How I See Myself” exhibition

“I Wish You Knew” is an art exhibition organized and hosted by the Mental Health Association in Tompkins County in recognition of National Bullying Prevention month in October.

Young artists and would-be artists may submit artworks for the exhibition, which will take place from October 21–November 6 at the association’s Outreach, Education, and Training Center in Center Ithaca on the Ithaca Commons.

The exhibition invites youth ages 21 and under to create a piece of artwork about what “you wish people knew”—about yourself, or about them, or even about the problem of bullying. All styles and mediums are welcome.

The submission deadline is October 11th. Artists have the option of being anonymous.

Melanie Little, director of Training and Peer Education, said that the exhibition, creates an outlet for young people to be heard, and for their peers and adults to learn.

“Through artistic expression, we can communicate what is difficult to put into words and express challenging emotions in ways that support our mental well-being,” she said.

The association will host a “First Friday” Ithaca Gallery Night reception for artists on November 1 from 5-8 p.m. at its Outreach center.

Click here for more information and how to submit artwork.

“I Wish You Knew” is the Mental Health Association’s second annual art show for Tompkins County’s United in Kindness series of programs. In 2023, the organization hosted “How I See Myself,” which drew 30 self-portraits from students aged 10-17.