
Published March 16, 2008 in the Hibbing
Daily Tribune
I am a
cooking fraud (and almost got away with it)
By Aaron J. Brown
If you missed it, I recently appeared on “WDSE Cooks” on
Channel 8, northern Minnesota’s public television station. For a lot of
people,
the image of me in an apron on the TV came as a shock. An encore of the
show,
titled “C is for Comfort Food” will run again today. I baked fudge
bars. More
specifically I baked Beatty Zimmerman’s fudge bars, which were dubbed
“Bob
Dylan fudge bars” on the show in honor of the late Hibbing woman’s
famous son.
It was a strange, winding road that
brought me to the
world of televised cooking. See, I’m involved with Dylan Days in
Hibbing, an
annual event celebrating Dylan and the arts community of northern
Minnesota.
(Disclosure: Dylan Days will be held May 22-25, with more information
available
at www.dylandays.com.) (Disclosure Disclosure: That last disclosure was
an
inappropriate excuse to plug Dylan Days … May 22-25 … d’oh!).
So when I was e-mailing a producer at Channel
8, “The
Ocho” as the kids call it, I told her that the Dylan Days group had
some of Bob
Dylan’s mom’s old recipes. Maybe the cooking show would want them?
(Har-har-har, small talk, is what I was thinking). Well, not only did
she want
Beatty’s fudge bar recipe, she wanted me to bake it … on TV.
Apparently, they
wanted to fight two widely held stereotypes: 1) that only women can
cook well
and, 2) that you have to know something about cooking to appear on a
television
program devoted to cooking.
Since the marketing department of
Dylan Days can’t afford
to buy a used Kia, much less air time in Duluth, I figured I’d do the
show to
mention the event. (Oh, is that too honest? Does that break the PR code
of
silence? OK, then I did it because I love to try new things).
The show went well, and my thanks
and kudos go out to
host Juli Kellner, all the good people at Channel 8, and the many
skilled
“real” cooks who shared their recipes. In the week that followed the
original
airing of the show dozens of folks told me they saw the show and even
tried
making the bars themselves. Hey, the bars were pretty good.
If the crushing fame of appearing on
a local TV cooking
show wasn’t enough, I also ended up in the “Taste” section of the
Duluth
News-Tribune. (Disclosure: The Duluth News-Tribune is a competitor of
this
newspaper and thus, you should never ever read it. Not even as a joke.
Not even
if an old copy gets stuck to your leg on a windy day and the front page
story
is about your long lost father. Not even then). The story featured
several of
the cooks who appeared on the program talking about their comfort
foods. Now,
remember, I was there to bake something that we presumed to be Bob
Dylan’s
comfort food. I had only learned the recipe a few weeks before the
show. So
when I was asked about MY comfort food, here is what was quoted in the
Duluth
story by Candace Renalls:
“For Aaron Brown of Bovey, comfort food is
Kraft macaroni
and cheese, just like he had with hot dogs as a boy. ‘Not the good
homemade
stuff,’ he said of his preferred macaroni and cheese, ‘but the cheap
stuff from
the store.’”
I have to imagine that real cooks
and bakers – and I know
there are thousands of you reading this right now – see a quote like
that and
shudder. Hibbing Daily Tribune publisher Wanda Moeller shook her head
when I
stopped by the office afterward. She said something, too. I don’t
remember the
words she used. I think “travesty” was one. “Assault on justice” may
have in
there, too.
Anyway, I’ve fessed up now. I am a cooking
fraud. I do
enjoy fudge bars though, and it feels good to bring more of them into
the
world.
Aaron J. Brown is a columnist for the Hibbing Daily Tribune. Read
more or contact him at his blog www.minnesotabrown.com.
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