The Devil Strip | August 2021 | Digital Edition

Page 35

The business’ first event was Taste of Cleveland at the Rock ‘n Roll Hall of Fame. “We gave away 500 free cookies that night,” Howe says. “My company was like three or four days old. It probably put (us) in the red.” Fat T’s was still a cottage bakery and Howe was churning out cookies from his mom’s house — “one dozen with the Kitchenaid, one dozen in the oven. Sometimes I would be baking for 20 hours a day because I could only make a dozen at a time.” Today, Howe is at a professional production facility. Howe is big on the word “we.” Fat T’s is not a one-man operation, he says. “I call my following on social media platforms the ‘Fat Fam.’ They are part of that ‘we.’ I didn’t win an award, we did,” he adds. Howe now ships cookies as far as Australia, Hong Kong and China. His Facebook page updates his weekend markets so fans know where to find him. Cookies are available online and at several local retailers, including Acme.

Above: Travis Howe of Fat T’s Cookies.

Travis Howe brings happiness a ¼ pound at a time with Fat T’s Cookies BY TERESA SROKA FOR TDS PHOTOS BY TERESA SROKA

T

ravis Howe didn’t set out to become a baker.

“I started this company the first time I baked,” says Howe, chief cookie officer of Fat T’s Cookies. Howe, who graduated from Archbishop Hoban High School in 2010, returned to the area with a masters degree in sports management. He’d hoped to get a job as an athletic director, but soon found that, “you need a teaching degree for everything.” Rather than return to school, Howe explored his options. And one night in June 2017, feeling down about his situation, made cookies.

“I thought, hey I could sell these,” he recalls. That same night he baked that first batch, he made a Facebook page to let friends know he was in the cookie selling business. His next move was baking and selling cookies out of the trunk of his car at the Hartville Marketplace. Messages from markets inviting him to sell cookies and customers seeking special orders flooded his inbox.

says.“Because if the [customers] see you sell out, then they know you are good and will come to you earlier next time.” The next event, Howe brings a dozen more cookies and sells out again. “And that keeps going and going until the point I can’t bring anymore,” he says. At one event, he sold 227 pounds of cookies in a couple of hours. Bringing more inventory is physically impossible, he says. “It’s a good problem to have.” In August 2017 Howe got a call from Cleveland Magazine. Fat T’s had been voted the best cookie in Northeast Ohio.

Howe, with no experience selling at farmers’ markets, used the sports sales tactics he learned in college and applied them to cookies.

“I thought it was my buddies putting someone up to a prank, so I hung up,” Howe says with a laugh.. “They gave me an ultimatum — become a real business, or don’t be in the magazine.”

“When I go to events, my goal is to sell out. Not to make the most money. My goal is to sell out,” Howe

In October 2017, a few months after baking that first batch, Fat T’s Cookies, the company, was born.

Akron’s Community-Owned Magazine

august 2021 · Vol 9 · Issue #8

Howe’s experience working at The Akron Rotary Camp, a YMCA camp for children and adults with disabilities, helped him realize the importance of giving back to the community. He continues to support the organization by giving the camp half the proceeds of his s’moreinspired S’mummer Camp cookie. Nearly $6,000 has been raised so far. Howe says it’s the face to face interactions with customers that continues to drive his passion. “When I open my shop, it will be here in Akron, it’s got to be Akron. Even my business card, notice the odd colored chip, that’s Akron,” he says. “Anytime I make a list, if they say Cleveland, I call them and have them change it to Akron. It’s where it’s at.” Find Fat T’s Cookies on Instagram and Facebook at @Fat_Ts_Cookies and online at www.FatTsCookies. com Teresa enjoys spending time at the Akron Art Museum, quilting and reading

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UNENCRYPTED: STAYING SAFE FROM CYBERCRIME

3min
page 45

HOROSCOPES AND TAROTSCOPES

3min
page 44

GOOEY GRILLED CHEESE COMES TO HIGHLAND SQ.

3min
pages 41-42

MARC HAS GRACE AND GRIT

5min
page 43

AKRONITES ON THE RUN

6min
pages 38-40

THINKING DIFFERENTLY ABOUT DEATH

10min
pages 31-34

REVIEW: SANDY BOTTOM BOWLS

5min
pages 29-30

MOUTHWATERING VEGAN MAGICK

3min
pages 36-37

A ¼-POUND OF JOY

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page 35

NOHI CAFE BOOSTS COMMUNITY

4min
page 28

SPOTTED OWL PLANS A COMEBACK

3min
page 27

VINTAGE STRUCTURES: THE CARLTON BUILDING

3min
page 22

RFEN GIVING AKRON A VOICE

3min
page 18

AKRONISMS: WHAT’S IN THE WATER?

5min
page 23

A MEDICAL MYSTERY

7min
pages 20-21

THERON BROWN AND “SPIRIT FRUIT”

4min
page 17

MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: ABBY DARIN

2min
page 19

CIVIC GROWS AT GOODYEAR

2min
page 9

THERE’S NOTHING TO DO IN AKRON

7min
pages 6-8

ALEX HALL PAYS TRIBUTE

3min
page 16

PORTRAITS OF PRIDE 2019

1min
page 13

CELEBRATING ONE YEAR IN LOVELAND

4min
page 14

PRIDE DEBUTS IN DOWNTOWN

1min
page 12

HIGHLAND SQUARE’S FAVE FEST IS BACK

2min
page 11

Q&A WITH MARIGOLD SOL

4min
page 15
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