The North Shore Dish Cookie Therapy By Chuck Viren
Who doesn’t love a good cookie? Cookies bring smiles. Cookies bring joy. Perhaps that is why decorative cookies have become popular at birthdays, graduations, and other celebratory gatherings. Many artistically talented bakers have now found a niche selling this form of edible art. As is turns out, some of those who produce these iced masterpieces have found making these cookies to be just the right therapy to help them through trying times. Three such cookie artists, Sharon Peters of Binocular Baker in Thunder Bay, Jennifer Nosker of Superior Cookie Co. in Grand Marais, and Lyndsay Smitke of Snazzy Cakes in Duluth, have all gotten involved in decorating cookies as a way of dealing with stressful times in their lives. Sharon Peters was a low vision specialist at the Canadian National Institute for the Blind. She dealt with the psycho-social aspects of vision loss. To relax after a stressful day at work, she started to bake and decorate cookies. She networks with a number of local cookie artists who say they also create their art as a way of dealing with anxiety. As she puts it, “I can’t do anything else when making cookies.”
Lindsay Smitke of Snazzy Cakes started creating hand-painted cookies while living the life of a military wife in Texas. After moving back to their hometown of Duluth in 2016, Smitke’s business has really taken off. | SNAZZY CAKES
What started as a hobby turned into a vocation after she retired. She would bring her cookies to events, and soon people were asking to purchase them. To her, Binocular Baker is more than a business, though. She has taken a keen interest in developing her art. She recently traveled to Toronto to study under Marta Torres. The class was so detailed, and the cookies they made so intricate, that in nine hours she completed just two cookies. She looks at her creations as more like paintings. “It’s taken me to another level,” she says. Her clients connect with her through her Instagram account, @thebinocularbaker. She offers contactless pick-up. Most clients want sugar cookies with royal icing. Her designs are customized to meet the needs of her clients. She provides cookies for bridal showers, classrooms, graduations, birthday parties, and other special events. Sharon is proud of how far she has come with her craft. As she puts it, “I see things through sugar.” Jennifer Nosker of Superior Cookie Co. moved to Grand Marais in 2009 after a nasty divorce involving an abusive relationship. She had always been a big baker of cookies for Christmas. She had wanted to
To relax after a stressful day at work, Sharon Peters would bake and decorate cookies. But what started as a hobby turned into a vocation after Peters retired. She now runs the Binocular Baker in Thunder Bay. | BINOCULAR BAKER go into the cookie business, but her ex-husband declared she had no talent. So she, “buried that dream and set it aside.” Now married to a very supportive husband, her life was looking up until her brother passed in 2019. Then Covid hit, and during that time her father had a stroke. Then this past
February, she got up and said, “I’m going to make cookies.” She made a test run on Valentine’s Day and got such positive feedback that she plunged into the business. She has been happily swamped ever since. She calls her cookie making her therapy. It is lots of fun and a good creative out-
Lindsay Smitke of Snazzy Cakes likes to ice the cookie in white first and use that as her blank canvas. Then she hand-paints a set of cookies with a variety of designs. | SNAZZY CAKES let, like an adult coloring book. She finds that she talks to herself and her departed brother. “It’s so creative,” she says, “I didn’t think I had that in me.” And she is so pleased that her efforts bring other people joy. She takes orders over Facebook and Instagram; you can find her online at Superior Cookie Co. She does what she calls her stock orders of cookies she has designed NORTHERN WILDS
JUNE 2021
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