HOME & LIVING TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2022 THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD — B3 The more I clean my kitchen, the dirtier it gets By DANIEL NEMAN St. Louis Post-Dispatch Scientists will tell you that matter can neither be created nor destroyed. I disagree. Wednesdays are my busiest days. On Wednes- days I cook the food that has to be done at the last minute, a photographer comes over to take the lovely pictures you see of the food, and then I typi- cally write the story that accompanies the photo- graphs of the food. It’s a long day, and that doesn’t even include the cleaning. The cleaning is the worst part. The cleaning is when matter spontaneously gen- erates itself, and science be damned. On one recent Wednesday, I used nearly every sauté pan that I own, plus most of the pots and perhaps a dozen dishes. I used several cut- ting boards, a multitude of knives, waxed paper, plastic wrap, fresh pro- duce, and, now that I look at a photo of the carnage, a tape measure. I also, incidentally, cooked a total of 28 eggs. That doesn’t really have much to do with the sub- ject at hand because I quickly disposed of the shells, but I still fi nd it startling. The more immediate point that I want to make is that between the time the photographer left and the time I started to write, I cleaned for perhaps 15 or 20 minutes. In that time I entirely fi lled a large dish- washer with dishes and silverware. And when I looked around the kitchen, it was every bit as dirty as it had been before I started cleaning. Maybe dirtier. Somehow, I was living inside a horror fi lm. The mess is coming from inside the house! It was like one of those zombie fl icks where every- where you look there are more and more zombies, or dishes. It was like seeing time-lapse photography of kudzu moving relent- lessly across the southern states and it just. Can’t. Be. Stopped. It was like looking down at my leg and seeing gangrene’s inexorable, deadly upward spread. But with pots and pans. How is this even pos- sible? Logically, if you have a certain number of dishes and many of them are in the dishwasher, there should be fewer on the counter. And yet I have the photographic evidence that proves otherwise. Scientists will also tell you that energy also can neither be created nor destroyed. Again, I disagree. When I began to tackle the mountains of food and dish detritus, I had a cer- tain level of energy. Let’s call it about 50% of my usual energy store; all the cooking and photo- graphing takes a lot out of me even though I am not the one with the camera. Fifteen or 20 minutes later, my energy level was well into the red. That fi rst bit of cleaning had only taken a minor amount of eff ort, yet my energy dropped by at least 35 or 40 percent. In that respect, it reminds me of my phone. I really need to get a new battery. And so does my phone. Every time a pile of dishes grows even while I am washing them, I am reminded more and more of why people like to go out to eat. It isn’t the cooking that they mind so much, it is the cleaning. If my theory of the Unequal Expenditure of Energy is correct, then millions of people who dine out in restaurants are fully charged and ready to tackle any kitchen cleaning chores that need to be done. They are welcome to stop by my house. Any Wednesday will do. At 100, why Bett y Crocker is still a household name Crocker’s International Cookbook.” The following year came the release of Chinese and Mexican cookbooks. Always up on the latest technology, a number of Betty Crocker micro- wave cookbooks were also released in the decade as residential use of the appli- ance skyrocketed. By BROOKS JOHNSON Minneapolis Star Tribune burn-Crosby Co., a prede- cessor to General Mills, ran a contest in the Sat- urday Evening Post pro- moting Gold Medal Flour that inadvertently produced some market research. In addition to completed puzzles, letters poured in asking for baking advice, and the company concocted a character to answer them. “Betty” was chosen for its friendliness; “Crocker” was the last name of a retired company board member. And in 1924 Betty was given a voice — and later a variety of voices — with a daytime radio program. “Betty Crocker Cooking School of the Air” debuted on WCCO (the station’s call sign named after its then- owner, Washburn-Crosby Co.). The show was picked up by NBC and would run for more than two decades. 1930s By this point Betty Crocker’s popularity had inspired a number of other fi ctional spokeswomen at rival companies, including Ann Pillsbury, Kay Kellogg and General Food’s Frances Lee Barton. None loomed as large as Betty. In 1945 Betty Crocker was named CRAFT NIGHT! Want to add sweet simple style to your entryway? Come on down February 8th @5:30 PM and customize a 10x48 inch porch sign! Grab a friend and get your craft on with Sherree’s Custom Signs! The short-lived “Betty Crocker Show” premiered on CBS in 1950, one of sev- eral programs to feature Adelaide Hawley Cumming as the “First Lady of Food” over the next 15 years. Also in 1950, “Betty Crocker’s Picture Cook Book” aka the “Betty Crocker Cookbook” aka “Big Red” was released. Millions of copies have been sold. “This was the fi rst time a cookbook had step-by- step instructions,” Jaramillo said. “Before then, the way you learned to cook was generation to generation.” 1960s Betty Crocker’s fi rst product in the grocery aisles was a pea soup mix released in 1941, followed soon by cake mixes. In the late 1960s, Betty’s name started gracing the box of a hot new toy credited with instilling a love of baking in a new generation: the Easy-Bake Oven. She also received two portrait makeovers during this fast-changing decade. “The changing faces of Betty Crocker are a barom- eter of shifting concepts of domesticity and women’s role as homemakers in the twentieth-century United States,” wrote Adema, the culinary anthropologist. 1980s Though largely associ- ated with baking — and particularly the classic layer cake — Betty Crocker added some global fl air with the 1980 “Betty 2000s Betty continued embracing digital media, with recipe software and an electronic cookbook released in the early aughts. The use of Betty Crocker portraits was eventually phased out as changing demographics were refl ected in changing messaging. Today The pandemic caused a massive spike in at-home eating and baking, a trend that is continuing into Bet- ty’s 101st year. With the help of social media infl uencers and other modern tactics to reach consumers, Jara- millo said she is confi dent new generations of cooks and bakers will embrace the brand. “A lot of people have either re-discovered the joy of baking or have gotten into baking,” she said. “As long as we continue to pro- vide inspiration, we should be able to celebrate 200 years of Betty Crocker.” Featuring the EOU Chamber Choir & EOU Music Department W G E O V ’ TY E R NUMBER 1940s 1950s tinuing to crave conve- nience, which was one of the brand’s key selling points over the years, Betty Crocker’s Hamburger Helper was launched. Tuna Helper and Chicken Helper would follow, helping entrench a new category of food: the boxed dinner. “With one pan, one pound of hamburger and one package, Ham- burger Helper revolu- tionized dinner,” General Mills wrote in a history of the brand now known as Helper. OU Betty was offi cially per- sonifi ed for the fi rst time beyond a voice and a sig- nature: A painted portrait released in 1936 was the fi rst of eight diff erent faces for the brand over the next 60 years. Throughout the Great Depression and into the war years, Betty’s advice to bakers and homemakers increasingly focused on stretching limited food sup- plies. A free booklet proved “a saving grace for many Americans, and its sound advice won national rec- ognition among nutrition- ists and social workers,” Susan Marks-Kerst wrote for Hennepin History mag- azine in 1999. the second-best-known woman in America after Eleanor Roosevelt. “In part she fl ourished because General Mills, unlike many of the other companies with live trade- marks, recognized the value of her widely trusted persona and poured con- siderable resources into promoting her,” culi- nary historian Laura Sha- piro wrote in a 2005 essay, “Betty Crocker and the Woman in the Kitchen.” Da & In 1921, the Wash- Betty Crocker-TNS Betty Crocker’s likeness has changed numerous times over the years. Betty broadened her reach to the World Wide Web in 1996 when betty- crocker.com was fi rst regis- tered. Early snapshots of the website from the Internet Archive show that while the imagery and functionality has been upgraded over the years, the goal of the site was always to help people in the kitchen with recipe ideas and ways to contact Betty. The fi nal updated por- trait of Betty Crocker is also released in 1996. It was painted from a com- puter-generated com- posite image of 75 women “of diverse backgrounds and ages who embody the characteristics of Betty Crocker,” the company said. Betty kept pace with the times by adding smart- phone apps and a full suite of social media accounts to connect with con- sumers. Bettycrocker. com remained one of the most-visited food websites in a category crowded with recipe blogs. “What Betty Crocker does diff erently is, every time we put out food ideas, we make it foolproof,” Jaramillo said. “Even if you make a little mistake, it will still turn out OK.” g Son 1920s 1990s 2010s Popular How does a brand remain a household name for a century? Betty Crocker has a simple recipe: Keep changing. In October, the icon became a centenarian and has now wrapped up her 100th holiday baking season. General Mills, the company that owns her likeness, intends to keep her relevant another cen- tury by embracing more diverse cooks and bakers and fi nding new ways to reach them in their kitchens. “Betty Crocker remains relevant because she and her product lines adapt to shifting political, social and economic currents,” culi- nary anthropologist Pau- line Adema wrote in the encyclopedia “American Icons.” “Her tenacity in the American imagination — and in our kitchens — attests to her timelessness as a merged corporate and domestic icon.” In 1921, Betty’s signa- ture started appearing on response letters to home bakers seeking kitchen advice. Then she was on radio shows, cookbooks, cake mixes and her own website. In 2021, thou- sands of Instagram posts featuring photo- genic bakes were tagged #CallMeBettyCrocker. “Betty has been asso- ciated with that pride and accomplishment in the kitchen,” said Maria Jara- millo, director of the Meals & Baking business unit at General Mills, which includes Betty Crocker. “How can we make sure the next generations have that knowledge of how to bake, how to cook, so it’s truly inclusive for everyone?” Marketing food to the largest possible audience, as Betty Crocker does, is increasingly diffi cult amid a “commoditization” of many popular products, said Doug Jeske, president of Meyocks, a branding and marketing agency. Increasingly, marketers are using what’s called “mentor branding,” Leske said. It’s a way for the com- pany to ingratiate itself with customers by off ering them more information, inspiration and even advo- cate for their interests. “Of course, Betty Crocker was a mentor even before she was a product brand, so the folks at Gen- eral Mills have been on to something for a long time,” Leske said. “The community of bakers and makers is a lot more diverse right now. It would be impossible to represent that with a por- trait,” Jaramillo said. “So we now use the iconic red spoon to be more inclusive and be more inviting.” n ce Show 1970s With consumers con- Family Friendly Location New Menu! Bar Bites, Wood Stone Pizza and More! RSVP to 541-620-1874 by Jan. 31st. We will design your sign prior to the party! Cost - $30 and a bottle of wine. The bottle MON-TUES CLOSED of wine will be donated to Oregon Women in Timber for their WED-SAT 11-9 • SUN 11-7 annual auction at the Oregon Logging Conference in February Payment due at booking 1106 Adams Avenue Suite 100 • 541 663-9010 • tapthatgrowlers.com ONLY 35 SPOTS AVAILABLE McKenzie Theatre Fri., Feb. 4 - 7:30 p.m. Sat., Feb. 5 - 3:00 and 7:30 p.m. Masks required for all audience members Adults $8.00 Seniors/Students $7.00 Group tickets are $6 each when you purchase 10 or more. Group tickets must be purchased in person only. Tickets available at Red Cross Drug, The EOU Bookstore and online at eou.edu/music Advanced ticket purchase is highly recommended. For more information, contact Peter Wordelman at 541-962-3352 Presented by: