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Seventh Avenue Comes Alive In Daytime For Fiesta Day

News Channel 8 photo by JIM FARQUHAR

Josefine Torrez puts the finishing touches on her pineapple cheese flan before she competed in the flan baking contest at today's Fiesta Day celebration.

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Published: February 28, 2009

TAMPA - The percussion of the congas and timbales put a swing in Maria De Souza's arms and hips.

With her purse slung over her shoulder, De Souza stepped back and to the side in perfect time to the live salsa music of La Orquestra Sol Caribe booming today across Seventh Avenue in Ybor City. Her fiancé, Hector Davila, 50, took her hand and twirled her around in a parking lot by the stage, joining her in the steps.

"That's awesome!" said De Souza, 52, laughing.

Thousands of people flocked to Seventh Avenue between 15th and 19th streets to mangia and merengue at Fiesta Day, a celebration of Ybor City's Italian and Cuban heritage.

The aroma and sizzle of Italian sausage, pulled Cuban pork and empanadas filled the air along with a tinkling piano, blaring trumpet and Spanish singing from the band. Two food competitions offered cooks the chance to showcase their best flan and black-bean recipes.

"If it tastes like eggs, then it's not really a custard; it's a quiche," said Roy De Jesus, host of "Chef's Kitchen" on Bay News 9 and judge for the Flan Fest competition. He sampled 20 of the 34 entries and said the perfect flan melts in your mouth. "Not too sweet. Not too bland."

The Black Bean Blowout offered an "Iron Chef"-style cook-off between chef Fred Arnold of Gaspar's Grotto and Army Sgt. 1st Class Rene Marquis, a chef at MacDill Air Force Base. Marquis won the taste buds of three judges, and the $1,000 prize, by assembling a pureed black-bean soup, sautéed pork and chicken with soba and a black-bean cake, and a black-bean rice pudding in an hour.

Marquis was unfazed by cooking under a sidewalk tent. "I'm a soldier, so I cook in the field," he said.

The Italian Club offered a range of traditional treats, including cannoli piped with fresh filling, and something new: fried Oreos.

The club tried the Oreos because they heard they were popular, said Sandra Alfieri, noting most visitors preferred sfingi, a Sicilian dish of fried dough also called zeppole. Several people waited for warm batches dusted with powdered sugar.

For De Souza and Davila, the day offered the chance to soak up their Puerto Rican heritage and enjoy the warm weather.

Their goal? "To have a nice time, and stay young at heart," De Souza said.

Reporter Valerie Kalfrin can be reached at (813) 259-7800.

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