A Bit of Optimism - Ask Yourself "What If?" with Milk Bar Founder Christina Tosi

Episode Date: June 3, 2025

What if this podcast turned into a baking show?For Christina Tosi’s third visit to A Bit of Optimism, we decided to find out. So we headed to Milk Bar to make compost cookies from things in my own p...antry and my favorite beer bread from scratch! Christina’s not just my best friend—she’s the founder of Milk Bar, host of Bake Squad on Netflix, a cookbook author, and a fan favorite on this podcast. She lives by one simple question: what if?In this experimental episode, we dug into some big ideas about creativity, uncertainty, and the magic of trying something new. Recipes below!This...is A Bit of Optimism.You can watch the video version of this episode on YouTube here.For more on Christina and her work, check out:christinatosi.com----------------------------Simon's Compost Cookie Recipe (makes 15-20 cookies):16 tablespoons unsalted butter, room temperature1 cup granulated sugar2/3 cup tightly packed light brown sugar2 tablespoons glucose syrup1 large egg1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract1 1/3 cups all-purpose flour1/2 teaspoon baking powder1/4 teaspoon baking soda1 teaspoon kosher saltMaltesers85% dark chocolateOptimism Coffee groundsGranolaSpace/Astronaut Ice CreamKettle Corn Pop ChipsFor the full step-by-step recipe, visit Milk Bar's website!Beer Bread Recipe:3 cups self-rising flour1 teaspoon kosher salt4 tablespoons honey (or to taste)12 oz beer (Samual Smith's Organic Chocolate Stout is Simon's preference!)2 tablespoons butter (and save a little for the top)Mix ingredients slowly togetherBake at 350 for 45-60 mins until baked through----------------------------This episode is brought to you by True Classic!I really love True Classic T-shirts, so we called them up and asked if they wanted to work together. And they said yes! Check out their clothes at: trueclassictees.com

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This episode is brought to you by True Classic. The way they became our sponsor is because I loved their t-shirts. And so we just called them up and asked them if they wanted to work together. And they said yes. So check out their clothes at trueclassic.com. What's funny about this is I always have this in my pantry.
Starting point is 00:00:20 Always. Space ice cream. Always. There's always a space ice cream in my pocket. I love you so much for that. This is 100% going, like, over my dead body is this not going to your pasta cookie. I don't know how that will bake. Me neither, but we're gonna find out. But hey, what if? What if. So a bazillion years ago, I went for dinner in New York City at a place called Sambar, which was a David Chang restaurant.
Starting point is 00:00:46 And in the back they had a little thing called Milk Bar, which was basically the dessert place for the restaurant. Well I fell in love with one of the desserts called cereal milk ice cream. And yes, it is the most nostalgic ice cream you could ever eat. It tastes exactly like the milk from the cereal bowl from when we were kids, that sweet milk that we would drink. Little did I know that the founder and owner of Milk Bar would later become one of my closest closest friends,
Starting point is 00:01:11 Christina Tozzi. Christina Tozzi has gone on to have wild success. We can all buy Milk Bar products in our local supermarkets. You can see her on Netflix and her TV show. She's got multiple cookbooks out, but best of all, Christina is the most wonderful baker because she bakes with love. It is her love language.
Starting point is 00:01:29 Because Christina was in my hometown this week, we thought we would do something different. We would do an experiment. And this one thing Christina and I both love, it's the unknown. So this is a live cooking show that Christina and I did. So if you're listening to this on audio audio you will hear some clinking and clanking because we are actually in the kitchen, we are actually baking. If you'd like to see us
Starting point is 00:01:52 bake, go to YouTube, the whole episode is there, or we will do our best to explain everything we're doing. We did something we've never done, it could succeed, it could fail, you'll let us know, but no matter what, I know one thing will happen. You will learn how to make a compost cookie and you will learn how to make the tastiest beer bread of your life. This is a bit of optimism. This is a thrill for me personally because you were my first guess on a bit of optimism during lockdown. You and I have done this, I think two or three more times, but I thought you were in LA. How much fun would it be that we actually bake together?
Starting point is 00:02:29 You and I have never, that's not true, we have baked together. I was like, every time I come over, well, it's less about baking and more, Simon has an idea that involves food. No, no, no, it's about introversion. It's about introversion. Because I went to a dinner party at your house
Starting point is 00:02:42 and there were lots of people who were all outside being entertained by your front of house husband. And you disappeared into the kitchen, you're a happy place, you don't have to talk to people. Turns out I was very close behind you and we ended up experimenting and we invented new breads. We also made new ice creams. We did a, it was an ice cream loaf. That's like a club. That's what Bake Club is. It's like come in, bake with us, learn something new. We also made new ice creams. We did a, it was an ice cream loaf. Genius.
Starting point is 00:03:05 That's like a club. That's what Bake Club is. It's like, come in, bake with us, learn something new. We're gonna set you up for success. And you're the genius, cause it's putting the things together in your home that will bring you delight, that you can share. I've never talked to you about baking,
Starting point is 00:03:19 cause I'm either doing it with you or we talk about other things. I've actually never talked to you about baking. And now we're gonna talk about baking. What was your, like where was your entry into baking? Like was it an escape to like, because you didn't want to play outside with other kids that you like, I was like, I'm just gonna be over here baking. Like what? Where did like, why baking? Baking? Why not baseball? Yeah. I love to be outdoors and I love sports. But baking. So my mom was a working mom. She's an accountant.
Starting point is 00:03:45 So January through April every year, my grandmas, my aunts would watch us basically. And in my family, the matriarchs bake. That's just what you do in your free time. Ohio and Virginia. And then my mom would ship me off to Ohio to live with my grandma on her farm every summer so that we didn't become city kids when we moved to Virginia, city kids. And I loved it because
Starting point is 00:04:13 it was time with them. But really, I loved it because I liked cookie dough. Only I started eating too much of my grandma's cookie dough. And she started doing the math and being like, this is not adding up. This should equal this many cookies, demand planning in her head. And she realized I was the culprit. And she basically was like, no more baking with me because you keep eating the cookie dough,
Starting point is 00:04:34 you're spoiling your dinner, all the grandma things. It was like survival of the fittest moment. And I wasn't allowed to turn on the oven, but I loved cookie dough. So I would at a very young age make these concoctions of like, I don't know, flour, sugar, things that I remembered putting in. And it was trial and error, right? Like if you don't put in enough sugar,
Starting point is 00:04:53 it's not really cookie dough. I'd put a raw egg in and be like, oh, this is good. You put too much salt in, not enough baking soda, et cetera. Then I was, then got to the age where I could turn on the oven and still these concoctions would actually start baking and that's I learned how to bake self-taught as a home baker and then I moved to New York City sounds like I want to do this for a living and then you went to you went to culinary school became a fancy baker worked in fancy restaurants. Yeah because I'm
Starting point is 00:05:19 intense I like I like the competitive the inner competitive spirit so I'm doing the highest of my game. So here's the thing that I find amazing, which is most kids who discover baking, it's science, it's following the formula, and their first recipes are memorized, you know, or you read them. But you, you didn't have that. So from the get-go, it was trial and error.
Starting point is 00:05:40 From the get-go, you had to learn, like one egg tastes good three eggs taste bad and That's how I learned that's how things crumble or things stay together So you're baking was never precious for me, right most people Why do they bake because they like the control of it the science the security behind it's hard, but it's accurate Yeah What I love about baking is the opposite of that reason the thing thing, because I've seen, having baked with you before and having experimented with you before,
Starting point is 00:06:06 the thing that I love that you do that no one, I've never seen anybody else do, which is usually somebody makes a thing, right? And even if they experiment, it'll either work, it won't work, and they say, oh, next time I'll add this to it. You will have four things going on simultaneously. It's like a conveyor belt.
Starting point is 00:06:22 This one's got a little more of this, this one's got a little more of that, this one has less, and you are, you're treating it like A, B, C, D, and see which one comes out. And that's what we did when we made the beer bread. I remember because I went and bought the beer. I came over. How many bottles of beer did you buy? We went through a lot of bottles of beer on the wall. And we probably tried, I remember we tried a raspberry beer. We tried a chocolate beer. We tried a stout. We raspberry, a raspberry beer, we tried a chocolate beer, we tried a stout, we tried like a fancy beer, we tried a not fancy beer, and we did the same recipe
Starting point is 00:06:51 with all these beers until we discovered one we liked. That's right. And so for me, baking... Love, I liked all of them. No, love, yeah, to be fair. For me, baking and the approach to life is always walking around with this sense of what if. What if? What if the raspberry one's really good?
Starting point is 00:07:11 What if the chocolate's, what if? What if I put pretzels and chocolate together and swirled them in? What if I put cookie dough, sweetened condensed milk, Ritz crackers and Bugles in the oven? But there they are. But there they are. I'm looking at them right now.
Starting point is 00:07:24 And you never know. And the beauty is. There's a Bug But there they are. I'm looking at them right now. And you never know. There's a bugle on a cookie. The beauty is you don't know. And I love that part of baking. You only know what you know and I go into it. Then I'm not disappointed, because that's the other bit of trial and error. Being a great chef, a great baker,
Starting point is 00:07:39 you have to be so good at disappointing. But you know, even with all your training, you know things that go together and things that shouldn't go together. So how often are you actually disappointed? So often. Because I want to defy the odds. For me, like Milk Bar was built on,
Starting point is 00:07:55 we're going to have a bakery and we're not going to have vanilla ice cream and we're not going to cover cakes on the sides and we're not going to make normal cookies that you would find in a bakery. And we're going to make pie, but it's not apple pie. So you get cereal milk ice cream, and you get milk bar pie that's dense and gooey and fudgy
Starting point is 00:08:12 that no, we pull it out when it is still dense and gooey and, right? Because who knows? And who's to say? Who gets to make the rules? Where did you come up with the name Milk Bar to name your company? Okay, it's kinda two parts. One.
Starting point is 00:08:27 Milk and bar, those are the two parts. No. Close. No. My idea for Milk Bar originally, and still is, like my North Star was a modern day take on Dairy Queen with a bakery case. Like I knew I wanted cookies, cakes, and pies, but for me it was all about a soft serve ice cream machine. And this is before soft serve. Was anything beyond what you'd find at Dairy Queen or like a roadside custard stand? Chocolate vanilla mousse.
Starting point is 00:08:54 Yeah, so like Dairy Queen milk bar. You can see that, right? And then I started Milk Bar originally in the back of a Momofuku restaurant because I was helping Dave build all the Momofuku restaurants. And the naming convention that we always had was something bar right? Noodle bar, Sambar, Sambar, milk bar. So part of it's like the origin story and then the other part is like the nostalgic
Starting point is 00:09:15 origin story. So milk was really your homage to Dairy Queen and bars because you were forced into it. Not forced into it that was just how I thought. No, but you said all of the things were Sambar, Noobar. But it wasn't like it must be this. I just thought that's a beautiful way to pay homage. So you liked it. It's good. I mean it's worked for us. What if I said no? It's like that's part of it, you know? So how much has baking influenced you as a person in life? Your relationships, your friendships, your marriage, your mom-ness? It's everything. Or the other way around? How much does outside life come into your kitchen? It has gone through waves in my baking career. Here's what I know about baking. Even after all that I said, I thought
Starting point is 00:09:55 I knew why I love to bake. And it wasn't until a few years ago that I realized that I actually love to bake, not just because I love to eat dessert. I thought that was really the motivating factor, and not just because I love to eat dessert. I thought that was really the motivating factor and not just because I love the creative outlet of it, but I do my best talking through dessert. So, dessert is my relationship to the world, the community.
Starting point is 00:10:15 I'm an introvert. The reason I like to hide in the kitchen is because I want to bake you every, I want you to feel known and seen and loved by your not too sweet chocolate cake, right? Like I, that's how I say, I got you. I'm here for you. I love you.
Starting point is 00:10:27 I'm sorry you had a shitty day. Happy birthday, like anything in between. It's your love language. It is, that's why I bake. And it gives me the never- Bake to give love. It gives me the never-ending capability to fall back in love with anything,
Starting point is 00:10:45 a simple ingredient, feeling good about a day, being a human in the world. It is my bit of optimism. I think what I want, I think what I, what's important, what I wanna get across is that too many of us think baking is follow the recipe. And it's not like cooking.
Starting point is 00:11:02 Cooking, you can experiment more. And baking, you can't. There's less room for experimentation because if you change the variables, the science changes, the chemistry changes, and it doesn't work. And this idea that getting comfortable with failure and that baking is an education for getting comfortable with failure, it doesn't taste good, so throw it out and make it again. So what? Just what did you learn from it? When you fail from anything in life what did you learn? Right? Use that. There's always good in something and for me if you're not failing you're not taking
Starting point is 00:11:34 risks. You're not growing. Right? What have you learned today? I didn't learn anything because I crushed it. How do you define failure? Because nobody wants to fail. Things not turning out the way that I thought they would. And guess what? That's fine. If not, that's great. That's flexibility. So how has this mentality towards your cakes impacted you as an entrepreneur? Because Milk Bar is your company.
Starting point is 00:11:59 You founded it. It's had its ups and downs like any other company. You have all the same issues as every other company. Human in the world, believe it or not. So I'm very curious because for me, I can look at myself. I know as an entrepreneur and a business owner, I know what elements of my personality come and show up, for better and sometimes worse, but I know how they show up in work. Because I'm an artist and I have an artist sensibility.
Starting point is 00:12:26 And I love seeing things. I love my senses, I love hearing things, I love tasting things. I just love all of that. I know how that shows up at work. I love the experimentation. I love the messiness. I love the chaos. Because for me, creativity is the skill of finding order in chaos.
Starting point is 00:12:45 The skill of finding order in chaos. Creativity is finding order in chaos. And sometimes that chaos is thrust upon you, market conditions. And sometimes I have to inject chaos in order to get some creativity out. So what I find in my, for me, for work, when it gets stale, and sometimes I don't realize things are stale until I realize I'm bored. And when I'm bored, I realize it's because there's no... And so sometimes I inject creativity, I inject chaos in order to produce a creative output.
Starting point is 00:13:12 And by the way, not just mine, everybody's. This is a very, can I tell you? This is a very chef mentality. Really? Some of the greatest chefs that I worked for were most drawn to chaos. Some might call it drama, but in a way that was like, if it doesn't exist, we're not alive. We don't feel alive.
Starting point is 00:13:30 The spirit of getting something done, the Herculean effort of it, and the sparks that come from that don't exist. I think the difference, at least from TV shows that I've watched about chefs, which probably is a terrible way to make this conclusion. But I don't want to be the hero. I don't want to inject chaos and then be like, and I put it right.
Starting point is 00:13:49 It's not like that. I want to inject chaos and be like, all right everybody, we have a mess. I don't know what to do. Even if I made it, what are you going to do? And I love watching people and pushing people to find creative solutions to the mess that sometimes I make.
Starting point is 00:14:08 So what is it about as a baker and the way you bake and the style in which you bake that you can make a one-to-one correlation to you as an entrepreneur and a business owner, the way you make decisions, the way you lead people, any of it, any of it? This is a human business and if humanity is not a part of what we do, we have failed, and anything is possible. But what about being a baker has influenced you as an entrepreneur? Like what, like, like me as an artist, I can see it. I can see where it comes in as an entrepreneur.
Starting point is 00:14:38 So what about you as a baker? How you bake, the way you're approaching baking, you can see. You know nothing. Like, ask yourself what if and give it a try. But it's that sense of possibility. That is like how did we build a bakery? That is locations all over the place, a care package business across the country. Right.
Starting point is 00:14:56 Product in the out, like all kinds of crazy stuff. It's because we didn't follow a roadmap and we were just like, what if? But to your point of the creating chaos, if we're not asking ourselves what if with this anything is possible mentality, and by the way, when you're building business, right? We're 17 years in right now. It would be smart to keep just doing what we're doing.
Starting point is 00:15:18 Sell the icons, sell the classics, don't iterate, like play it safe, keep it simple, right? Go with your greatest hits. Right? But you still have to sing respect if you're a Loretta Franklin. 100%. You still have cereal milk ice cream in the machine. But if that's all we're doing, the spirit and the heartbeat of who we are, we don't feel like ourselves.
Starting point is 00:15:37 We love to do that. And you have to be able to nail your classics every time. But if we're not experimenting and trying and falling flat on our faces and finding these moments, we're suffocating ourselves. Let's bake. Okay. I wanna learn. So you've made something not with me,
Starting point is 00:15:54 but I've been in the room when you're making them, which is a compost cookie. And I knew that we were gonna make these cause I was told I was given one instruction, which is bring stuff from around my kitchen. Just bring stuff. I have no idea if any of this stuff is bakeable. You don't. Just bring stuff. I have no idea if any of this stuff is bakeable. You don't know what I brought. I have no clue what you brought. But I brought stuff from around my kitchen. So I think every baked good, like
Starting point is 00:16:13 it's not about us when we make baked goods. It's about what the baked good does for the person that's eating it. Not too sweet. So the compost cookie. Yeah. Is a chocolate chip cookie when you don't have enough chocolate chips to make a chocolate chip cookie when you don't have enough chocolate chips to make a chocolate chip cookie. That was the origin? It's butterscotch chips, it's pretzels, it's potato chips, it's ground coffee, it's graham cracker crumbs.
Starting point is 00:16:32 It's whatever. It's anything and everything. I used to make it on this island off the coast of New Hampshire. A bad storm would come in. I had to bake for 600 people breakfast, lunch, and dinner. And it was basically the like, ooh, we're not getting any fresh,
Starting point is 00:16:44 so I just go into the pantry and grab stuff and it became this beloved cookie because people would guess every time. So this is my bespoke. This is your bespoke compost cookie. I also just think it's fascinating what people keep in their pantries. It says everything. It's the food that fuels them. It's the food that fuels your creative engines. I didn't bring kimchi and it's always in my fridge. That's okay. But you wanna know what? I would've gone the distance with you,
Starting point is 00:17:10 but I think the food that people keep at home is the most brilliant insight into them. And I think your taste buds are fascinating. Okay, well this- And they're different than mine. Well, hopefully this will fascinate you. This hopefully is a fascinating. Okay, let's see. We're trying something a little different.
Starting point is 00:17:26 Instead of a traditional host-read ad, I invited Ryan Bartlett, the founder of our sponsor, True Classic, to sit down for a conversation. And it turns out, there's a lot more that we can learn from him beyond just how great his t-shirts are. And his t-shirts really are great. We call this an ad with authenticity.
Starting point is 00:17:47 I was obsessed with reading the reviews about what people were saying about the product. And there was a magical moment very early on. It was in the first couple months. This lady hit us up and was like, hey, I just wanted to let you guys know, my husband, because of your product, he walks out of the house with an air of confidence now
Starting point is 00:18:03 that he's never had. Like ever in his life. I spent $49 on a three pack and somehow that has translated to confidence in him. I can't tell you how transformational it's been. He doesn't feel self-conscious about how he looks anymore. He's actually proud of himself. So thank you so much for developing this thoughtful product. It has quite literally changed our lives. And I read that and it just hit me.
Starting point is 00:18:30 And I was like, we're not selling t-shirts. We're selling confidence. And like all great companies, what you're doing for your customer, you're doing for your employees. You're building a culture where people feel confident because they have the opportunity to experiment, be their true selves, and build a career with you. So one of my favorite things in the world, I brought what I have left.
Starting point is 00:18:51 Oh. Yeah, Lapsang Sushong tea. Okay, so we got tea, some really fancy tea. My brother-in-law makes the best granola in the world. His name's Brad, and so we call it Branola. Okay. I brought our favorite almonds. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:19:07 I introduced you to these almonds, which are almonds from Afghanistan of all things, but they're the tastiest almonds in the world. I had those in the pantry. I have a half-eaten bag of- Mm, ooh, those are really good. Of kettle corn pop chips. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:19:19 I love kettle corn everything. Getting some play here. I brought a bag of my optimism coffee. Oh, this stuff. That's the magic. Okay, I'm gonna loop these into categories. I think somebody stayed at my house and left these in my pantry, and I don't know what they are.
Starting point is 00:19:39 They're wheat puffs. Or some sort of wheat puff, something or other. I don't know what it is. There are things in here that, believe it or not sort of wheat puff, something. I don't know what it is. There are things in here that I believe or not, this will tell you something. You say what's in my pantry tells you about something about who I am. What else you got?
Starting point is 00:19:51 I have a chocolate drawer. I know about the chocolate drawer. So I just grabbed a lot of bars and the chocolate drawer, everything from crap to really high end stuff. This is gonna be the most primo Yeah, yeah. There's some fancy chocolate. Compost cookie we've ever seen.
Starting point is 00:20:04 Because I'm an Englishman, I always have English chocolate. I love you that you have a dark chocolate cake hat. I have Maltesers, I have Cadbury's white buttons. Now this will tell you the most- My red box. This will tell you the biggest thing about me. And what's funny about this is I always have this in my pantry, always.
Starting point is 00:20:23 Space ice cream, always. There's always a space ice cream. Always. There's always a space ice cream in my pocket. I love you so much for that. This is a hundred percent going, like over my dead body is this not going to your Pocos cookie? I don't know how that will bake. Me neither, but we're gonna find out. But hey, what if? What if?
Starting point is 00:20:39 What if it works? That really is compost. What if? What if? Okay, great. We've got it. By the way, you talk about what if, That really is compost. What if? What if? What if? Okay, great. We've got it. By the way, you talk about what if. This entire you and I doing a cooking show
Starting point is 00:20:55 is an experiment. This could be an absolute disaster failure. I'll tell you what, I had a great time. No. Okay. So first thing first, which one do you want to choose? You want to do the granola? Brinola.
Starting point is 00:21:07 We got you, Brad. Okay, so we're going to go in granola, Maltesers, chocolate, space ice cream, pop thingies, and then... Almonds. Simon Fils. Okay, I'm going to start chopping some stuff up. In the meantime, you're going to do 101. When you're making a cookie, you got to with fat and sugar, and you paddle them together.
Starting point is 00:21:27 So I've got unsalted butter, sugar, light brown sugar, and some granulated sugar. We have to say we did not pre-bake the cookies because I literally just showed up with the ingredients. Couldn't do it. Couldn't do it. So what was the other thing I had to add to this? Just those three.
Starting point is 00:21:41 We're gonna start there. Okay, so butter and sugar creamed together till it's nice and smooth, you got it. Like 101, it's all about a homogenous mixture. It's all about scraping down the sides of the bowl to get it going. I'm very excited for this. Right now it's very crumbly, just keep it going?
Starting point is 00:21:59 Just keep it going, it'll come together. You can, we'll do this, ready? Yeah. Really get in there. You're, we'll do this, ready? Really get in there. You're turning up the... Yeah! Oh, we're making dough. We're making dough.
Starting point is 00:22:15 Alright, now she's letting go. When I was a kid I used to like dipping my finger in the butter and then dipping it in the sugar. Oh, I'm gonna eat it with my finger. This is, honestly, baking with children and watching them interact with ingredients is one of my favorite things. No, I just mean you did it as a kid because you looked at it with this childlike sensibility. Are you ready for this? See this?
Starting point is 00:22:38 This is glucose. It is a significantly less sweet inverted sugar compared to corn syrup. But we put glucose in all of our cookies at Milk Bar because it guarantees you're going to get a nice, dense, fudgy centered cookie. And because there's water activity in it, it guarantees that your cookie stays nice and moist and fudgy for multiple days. Did I ever tell you that I think that the Great British Baking Show is the greatest television on television, did I ever tell you that?
Starting point is 00:23:12 Because- Second to your show only. Second to your show only. Because it champions the spirit, the true altruistic spirit of a baker. To me it's the way life should be, which is we can compete against, it's a show with winners and losers.
Starting point is 00:23:26 Somebody will be declared a winner. Every day somebody's thrown off the show. It has losers, and yet, even though it's a competition, they help each other. And that to me is the spirit of what life should be. We can compete against each other and help each other simultaneously. They're not mutually exclusive.
Starting point is 00:23:39 Also, you can just compete against yourself. That too. We don't need a loser to have a winner. No, but the fact is it is a competition in that case. Oh, so that's the ice cream sandwich, the space ice cream sandwich. I will admit I prefer the Neapolitan. I'm kind of into this.
Starting point is 00:23:54 It's gonna give us a cookies and cream moment. Yeah, yeah. Got a real fun little situation happening. And then, do you feel like you have a nice homogenous mixture? It feels pretty homogenous. It feels nice, you don't have any specks of- There's a lot of homogeneity going on here.
Starting point is 00:24:11 Okay, great. You gotta put all the dry ingredients together before you. Oh, I fucked it up. You're fine. But I will tell you when it makes a difference and that will. You didn't mess it up, but- Shit.
Starting point is 00:24:23 Also, this is fun. Thank goodness this is your kitchen and not mine. This is what? This flour just went everywhere. It happens. Can I tell you even to this day? I'm spilling, I'm mixing, I'm dropping an egg. It all happens.
Starting point is 00:24:38 It happens. You know what, let's just leave the mess. Mess is good. Mess means we're living, man. Apparently, in Chinese food, if you leave a mess, it means you enjoyed your meal. Highest compliment. So I am-
Starting point is 00:24:53 Okay, whoa, whoa. So we want the cookie to be on this spectrum, which means as we add the flour, we wanna mix it as little as possible, because the more we mix it, the closer it gets on the spectrum to breadie. Oh, got it. Which is okay.
Starting point is 00:25:09 So let's scrape this down, and now we're going to put our mix-ins in. You want to taste some dough? Yeah. It's a good base. That's good. Is it too sweet? I didn't screw it up too badly. You didn't.
Starting point is 00:25:20 For me, this is why I got kicked out of the kitchen. Why? This moment. Because you would stick your finger in it? Because once I have one bite of cookie dough, I have to take two grown-up steps away from it now. Wait, wait. This is very tasty. Oh, very tasty.
Starting point is 00:25:33 And I can taste the brown sugar. It's so good. Yeah, I like brown sugar. All right, so we're going to add some goodies. OK. It's as much or as little as you want. Well, does it all just get thrown in? Yeah, and we're gonna let the the heft of the paddle break some of these bigger pieces down. What I love in a compa cookie... We're putting in my leftover kettle corn
Starting point is 00:25:56 pop chips. It's gonna be good. Those are tasty. Okay, this is the most exciting one of all. That's just gonna be huge and chunky though. No, no, no, it'll break down. What do you think? There's a piece in there. Why don't you eat it? Do you need it? No, just eat it. So we have now put in the,
Starting point is 00:26:12 now we've put in the ice cream sandwich, sorry, the space ice cream sandwich. We're putting in some granola, homemade family granola. I think this one's gonna be the reason you really like it. I think so too. Then lots of dark chocolate, very fancy dark chocolate. 85%, bunch of Maltesers.
Starting point is 00:26:30 This is a fun one because you're never this untidy about how you think about anything. You've absolutely got me wrong. Well, you're intentional. Everybody thinks I'm neat and organized. No, no, no, I know you're not neat and organized. It's the biggest surprise everybody has of me, which is I'm messy. That smells biggest surprise. No, no, no, I know you're not neat and organized, but. It's the biggest surprise everybody has of me, which is I'm messy.
Starting point is 00:26:46 I, but look at this. That smells good. But you're like, this isn't how one should bake. You think baking is a certain way. And I'm like, no, no, no, it's more free. Let's make a math. This is true. This is, this is true.
Starting point is 00:26:58 This is free form baking. You're like that in these other places and that's where your brilliance comes out. Oh. This is ridiculous. So we just turn on the mixer and it sounds like it's the mint mixer with what's going on there. It's never gonna be homogenous, right? Look at this.
Starting point is 00:27:14 This is either brilliant or disgusting, I can't figure it out. It's your taste buds, babe. No, it's just the random stuff I brought from the kitchen. It's just random. Okay. To harken back to Christina's childhood, you're staring at it like it's- Look at it.
Starting point is 00:27:28 But what are you staring at? What are you- Well, I'm staring at- Because what I see is a glob of mess. What do you see as a professional baker? What I love about it is that when I look at it, I see texture, I see color, I see flavor, and I see possibilities. So I see these big pieces of malt teasers,
Starting point is 00:27:43 these dark chocolate balls that I know are filled with this malted milk crunch, but some of them have broken down. All of your popcorners have broken down into much smaller pieces, so I know I'm gonna get a little corny. The optimism coffee is speckled throughout, which excites me because I know it's gonna be bitter
Starting point is 00:27:59 in a way that's good for your taste buds. But it's very hazelnutty. It is, but I'm not mad at that because then you get all the nuts and the seeds from the granola. You get these chia pops and these big and small nuts that are all super earthy. And then you have these still pretty giant pieces
Starting point is 00:28:14 of space ice cream. Yeah. And I love that because they are the total wild card of how will they bake. We have no idea. We have no clue. If they'll melt, they'll keep their shape. But you wanna know what?
Starting point is 00:28:22 Let's do it. We're gonna scoop and bake, babe. My favorite thing about this is for the number of years you've been baking, that here I am, something is gonna happen that you have no clue and you've never done. I love it. That brings me joy.
Starting point is 00:28:34 I love it. Okay. We learn together, we fail together. That's also the spirit of team, right? But this is why it's fun, I think, to bake with somebody. Okay. You got a scoop, I got a scoop. So here's my thing in scooping. One, baking 101 when you're making cookies.
Starting point is 00:28:52 You want to use a cookie scoop because you want all of your cookies to be the same amount so that they bake evenly on baking sheet. I've always used a spoon and it's never worked. To use an ice cream scoop is kind of genius. Ice cream scoop is the best. So I'm going to do kind of an oversized scoop. I'm not.
Starting point is 00:29:05 Well then you're going on your own tray because they won't bake evenly if they aren't the same amount. Cause they're gonna go in the oven on the sheet tray for the same time. Do we flatten them or leave them? I don't want, no. I don't wanna flatten them.
Starting point is 00:29:18 Cause I'm really curious. They look like giant ice cream scoops of the most random cookie dough. Yeah. You've never thought of this. I've never made cookies so easily because it's always difficult. This ice cream scoop thing is a game changer. So I'm going to take your cookies and I'm actually going to arrange them with like two to three inches between them on the baking sheet because they will spread when they bake
Starting point is 00:29:40 and you want to give them enough space. All right. You could get more on there. I know I can. I wanted to make sure you had enough. I'm really gilding the lily in the size of my spoon. You're the best. And you know what I realized, it really doesn't matter that I break my fingers
Starting point is 00:29:54 because they're going to get in the oven and fire cleans everything. You're going to be fine. Yeah. Okay, great. Let me do one more on mine. Ooh, I got some big popcorners. Now this is the ultimate.
Starting point is 00:30:03 Look at the bottom of this bowl. It is just littered with great ideas and flavors. I'm licking the spoon, I'm licking the bowl. Okay, great. This is, I know you're having a really good time because you've lost yourself in it. For me, baking is like my favorite activities in life. Baking, going for a hike, running is the like,
Starting point is 00:30:21 you lose yourself, find yourself. Yep. You haven't, what have you thought about the rest of life? What have you thought about what you're coulda, what it coulda shoulda. We have a giant mess of flour and cookie dough and crumbles of all types all over this prep table. My dreams and ambitions are all over the table.
Starting point is 00:30:37 You're all baking's a science and I'm all baking's chaos. Put whatever you want in it. I know, this has made me very happy. I have a renewed love or a new found love of baking, because I always thought it was like getting the ingredients at the right levels. So let's just go through what's in this fantastic cookie. A bit of optimism, the compost cookie.
Starting point is 00:30:54 A bit of optimism, the compost cookie. So we have flour, salt, baking soda, baking powder, egg, glucose, brown sugar, white sugar, all mixed together. Butter. Butter, lots of butter. Then the added ingredients are kettle corn, popcorn, popcorners, dark chocolate malt teasers, which are malt balls from England.
Starting point is 00:31:17 We have fancy dark chocolate, just a bar which we cut up. We have my optimism coffee that I collabed with Phil's, which we put in here, which is amazing. That's such good coffee. We put granola, which is the homemade granola that my brother-in-law makes. We have space ice cream, which is freeze-dried ice cream that you can buy at any science museum. If it wasn't part of your childhood. That's when I first discovered it, and it has been in my closet ever since. All right, so we're going to take these to the oven.
Starting point is 00:31:48 My cupboard ever since. Your cupboard. 350, eight to ten minutes. Mine are going to bake a little longer because I made really big hunks of cookie dough because that's just my personality. So 350 degrees Fahrenheit for eight to ten minutes. That's it? That's it.
Starting point is 00:32:01 Oh, that's easy. I like mine over cooked. Well then we'll leave them in for the same amount of time. Do you know that about me? Like when there's a chocolate chip cookie recipe that says 10 minutes or 20 minutes, I do 40. This is my face. Okay.
Starting point is 00:32:13 I promise to still love you even though I know that. That's against everything I believe in. By the way, it's kind of like tea. I'll drink tea however you give it to me, but if I make it myself, it's going to be a very specific color. Well, you know what? Next time I bring you a plate of cookies. Same with cookies. I like cookies however you give them to me, but if I make them myself, I'm overdoing them.
Starting point is 00:32:30 I think it's the space bread. I think it's the space ice cream guy in you. No, you know, I can tell you what it is. I like them right before they burn, that dark, dark, dark brown, because everything's so caramelized. It is. It's the depth of flavor.
Starting point is 00:32:40 Thank you. Come on. Is that the beer? We're making beer bread. That's Sammy Smith's. That's that? Yeah. Oh, you went and got it?
Starting point is 00:32:48 Yeah, the clock here is open. Do you want an excuse to be drinking at work? No, but that's so good. I love that you- That's why I was like, what do we do? So this is important. We're about to make beer bread. Beer bread, so I discovered beer bread many years ago
Starting point is 00:33:00 where it was made for me and I asked the people who made it for me to give me the recipe and they did. I couldn't find some of the recipes there was some sweetener and I couldn't find so I just started using honey and I used to make beer bread all the time. Then I was with you and I was like hey can we make beer bread and you're like hey I've never made beer bread and I was like well let's make beer bread because it's idiot proof and I can make it. You made one tweak to my recipe instead of flour, self-rising flour, which
Starting point is 00:33:25 has been a gift because now I get a little more, because it's such a dense bread, it's a little dense now and it raises a little bit, and I've experimented for years with so many different beers and we did that one night of beer, beers on the wall, and we discovered that the best beer for beer bread was, what's it called? Samuel Smith's Organic Chocolate Stout. It's a good beer. It is a good beer and it has existed since 1758. God bless.
Starting point is 00:33:52 Can I tell you that I also, because I love to ask the question what if, like a month or two ago, just started going at not just beer bread, but stuff like what if I put a ripe banana into a chocolate stout beer bread? And then I took it as far as, what are other brews? Kombucha.
Starting point is 00:34:09 What if I make a kombucha beer bread? OK, it's going to be sweeter and a little bit more berry for it, and then add some berries in it. My kids are obsessed with it. It's not even kombucha beer bread, but what then is it? It's kombucha bread? It's a very bougie, bougie, bougie, bougie bread. But the thing that I love about beer bread,
Starting point is 00:34:25 and this, I probably shouldn't say this on the air because this is what I do, but for Thanksgiving, you know, everybody brings something to Thanksgiving, and I'll make one, two, or three loads of beer bread, and I come in and people are like, who made the bread? I'm like, I made the bread. And people think I'm kneading dough and I'm spending all day.
Starting point is 00:34:42 Making beer bread is about, it's about five minutes of mixing ingredients and then putting it in the oven for about, what, an hour? A little less than an hour. That's all beer bread it is. It is absolutely idiot proof. It's reverse engineering what makes bread bread, right? It makes people, the joy that I give people
Starting point is 00:35:00 thinking that I made bread and they don't realize that I did it like 20 minutes before I came to Thanksgiving. And it's because you're taking all of the elements of bread making but you're reverse engineering them in your favor right? So the yeast is already in the beer. It's in the beer. It's already alive and well. We don't need to wake it up. Okay well then let me put this in the micro real quick but I've got our salt, I've got honey if you want honey but then I saved some room temperature salted butter over here for us just in case. Okay, well I always melt it. So I pour it in.
Starting point is 00:35:28 Great. So I'll put this together. So I'm putting the flour, which is self-rising flour, into the bowl. I'm now putting the... Which salt do I use? I'll use the salt. I put the salt into the thing and mix those together. I'm still making a mess even though there's no mix master. Christina is melting the honey into the flour.
Starting point is 00:36:06 How's it going, Chef? Good. Slowly adding the beer into here. Perfect. Alright, I'm grabbing our cookies because they look really good. Are they already done? Almost. So basically you can make a compost cookie
Starting point is 00:36:26 in less time than it takes to mix a bowl. To mix a beer bread. A bowl of beer bread. It smells so good. I know. Okay, so. Yes I do. It's now getting, it's very gluteny and gooey.
Starting point is 00:36:39 So what should, so let's add. Little bit of butter. Add butter and I'm gonna add, is this honey? I'm gonna add the honey. So I always melt the honey in the butter. Add butter and I'm going to add this is honey. I'm going to add the honey. So I always melt the honey in the microwave. Oh, I just did that. She's liquid and I do the same thing with the butter just to make it liquid to make it easier to stir in. No other reason.
Starting point is 00:36:55 So adding the honey. Okay, the honey is now in. I did recently discovered silicone bread things. Oh silicone molds are so nice because they have easy release. So easy. So easy. Alright I'm gonna give our a loaf pan and by the way I'm a really big fan of an 8 by 4 inch loaf pan because you get a taller beer bread loaf. Now am I gonna, what am I doing to it? Can I, one can over knead bread, can I over stir beer bread? I think to over stir beer bread you'd have to be at it for seven plus minutes.
Starting point is 00:37:37 It takes seven minutes to fully develop gluten in a traditional bread recipe so you'd have to really go at it. That's so specific. I got your back, I know. Seven minutes. The scientists, my sweet food scientists of the world, the Harold McGee's of the world defined that for me. Seven minutes to fully produce gluten.
Starting point is 00:37:54 Once it comes together in a mass, seven minutes. Christina gave me an aluminum nine, what are these, eight by three, eight by three and a three quarter, whatever, bread pan, loaf pan, we sprayed it with some sort of spray thing. And now I'm putting my dough into the pan. There we go.
Starting point is 00:38:26 In it goes. Very gooey looking. I've made this many times, and it's very good. I make it every Thanksgiving because it's easy and tasty and a crowd favorite. Okay. I'm just flattening it out a little bit for no reason. And then I'm going to add a little butter to the top. I always save a little bit extra just to add to the top because it makes it shiny and tasty. And now I have to wait here patiently for Christina to come back because I don't know. I guess I can go back to the oven.
Starting point is 00:39:06 Okay, I'll go back to the oven. All right, compost cookies. So we're going to do two things. We're going to do the magic of television. We have our actual compost cookies that we actually made. And here they are. You want to put those over here? We actually made and we did the magic television where you pre-baked a loaf of bread because
Starting point is 00:39:22 otherwise it would take too long. What do you think? We taste the bread first and then our cookies have a minute loaf of bread. Yeah. Because otherwise it would take too long. What do you think? We taste the bread first, then our cookies have a minute to kind of cool down. I think so. Will you make me your perfect bite so I can taste it through your eyes?
Starting point is 00:39:32 Okay, so. I'm experimenting here. A nice room tempi butter, some salt a little on top. I love salt on a little piece of bread. It's again, going back to my childhood, my grandfather always put butter on his bread and always put salt on the butter. And to this day,
Starting point is 00:39:47 No matter what. Yeah, so it's somewhat tasty and somewhat nostalgic for me. Okay, cheers. Cheers. Chink. To friendship. To friendship.
Starting point is 00:39:58 It's so good. It's so simple and so good. Oh, that salt, when it comes around, like dances on your taste buds. And that chocolate beer. The acid of that chocolate beer. You know me, I like sweets, so I'm gonna put some honey on this, babe. Mmm. It's so good.
Starting point is 00:40:17 Should we try one of our cookies? Yeah, for sure. Do you like a fresh out of the oven cookie? I do. But you like crispy. That's my only. I let my cookies cool. So, we've got some, this I'm very excited about.
Starting point is 00:40:31 Look at the peaks and valleys, the texture of these cookies. So we got some thinner crispiers. For me. Some taller goo-ears. Which one do you want to try? This one. That, okay. Alright, so we're choosing one of mine.
Starting point is 00:40:50 More cookie dough, same bake time, but we've got some real goo in the center. This has got some crunch in it. Chew, right? Crunch, chew, it's got all the things. Oh, it's gonna be a real culinary adventure here. Wow. For me, this is, I know you're appored by this, but there's like, there's a little inner stripe
Starting point is 00:41:09 of just cookie dough, warm cookie dough. It's not a Simon crisp, it's a Christina goo. Cheers. Oh my God, it's a good cookie. The coffee. That works. Oh my God, I like this cookie a lot. Wait, what have you got?
Starting point is 00:41:26 You know the thing that would make this perfect? What's that? It was crunchy. Look at this! Yeah. Ooh, there's something... That's a good cookie. Mmm.
Starting point is 00:41:34 This is a sellable cookie. I purposefully saw them. If you want to sell a bit of optimism cookies in your stores... You love me? You feel free. Wow. I just have to get my brother-in-law to start making granola. Granola? A mess. We will give the recipe in the
Starting point is 00:41:47 notes. 100%. Do your kids like to bake? My kids, each of them is different. One of them, air quotes, likes to bake because she's here for the cookie dough. She's here for the Simon's in it. She's butter, sugar. She's her mother's daughter. Yeah. The other one loves to bake because he truly loves from what I can tell. He truly loves bringing something to life. He loves the act of creation. Does Will like baking or does Will like eating baked goods? No. Will has no interest in baking.
Starting point is 00:42:18 Will has every interest. Honey, can you put one of every cookie on a plate and bring it to me? The movie starting? Like this is. But you know what? That's what makes a great relationship. I know. So your love language. I remember I came to your house for brunch. And because I know who you are, I said, can you please make biscuits? Because I love biscuits for brunch. And you're Christina Tosi. So to have your biscuits will be amazing. But because you're Christina Tosi, so to have your biscuits will be amazing. But because you're Christina Tosi, I expected a biscuit. We got five different kinds of biscuits. We had ones with bacon, ones with cheese,
Starting point is 00:42:52 ones with chives, ones with... What if? I mean, the number of bis... And then, so, which is awful, because then you have to eat them all and compare, and you have to eat them again, because you're like, I don't know, maybe I like... That was a really rough day for you. It was a rough day. I love when people come over to my house and ask for something because to the point earlier, like that's why I love to bake. Now I know that it's your love language.
Starting point is 00:43:13 It brings me so much joy. Five different kinds of biscuit, I mean you don't get more love than that. You're not questioning whether you're feeding people what they wanna eat, you know you are. Yeah, it's so good. And you're giving them permission to eat six different biscuits.
Starting point is 00:43:23 It's so good. So here's what I've learned. I've learned that there's one thing better than baking, which is baking with friends. I've learned that... Do you know the whole thing about like Duncan Hines cakes, the history of those? I think it was in the 50s. They came out with powdered cakes and all you had to do was add water and you could make a cake. And it was a failure because people were embarrassed that they didn't do anything, they didn't bake the cake. So they changed the chemistry of it and they made one difference which is I think you add
Starting point is 00:44:00 an egg. You add egg, oil and water. You add egg, oil and water. They changed the chemistry so now you add water egg, and oil and now people could honestly say I baked a cake because they mixed in an egg and some oil and of course it exploded. So the idea that people can bake a cake, bake something for someone as a sign of love and putting in a little effort, right? Because with no with no egg and no oil that felt that there was no effort. And
Starting point is 00:44:25 what I'm learning from you is I've never, one of the reasons I don't bake by myself, unless I'm baking just almond cookies for myself at night, because they're easy, is because I don't want to get it wrong. And what I've learned here is it's nothing about getting it right or wrong. It's experimentation. And to be able to say, I just put something together, I threw some ingredients, and the compost cookie is perhaps the most lovable cookie in the world because you literally can't screw it up. And some will taste better and some will taste worse and some will prefer this and some will prefer that.
Starting point is 00:44:53 But this cookie is, a compost cookie doesn't do it justice, it's a cookie full of love. And so this was wonderful. And I got a beer bread out of the deal. And we got like, we got so many seven minutes in there. So many seven minutes. So eight minutes. We have so many eight minute blocks in there. So many eight minute blocks.
Starting point is 00:45:13 That we, yeah, you and I talked about that eight minute story. So in one of the episodes that you came on a bit of optimism, we talked about what the value of a friend was and I told you the story that happened with my friend Maria where she was going through a hard time. I hadn't seen her in a while and I'm at her house and I was like, how are you? She's like, I'm better now. I'm like, what do you mean better now? She's like, well, I had a hard week last week. I'm like, why didn't you have a hard week?
Starting point is 00:45:39 Why didn't you text me? She goes, I did text you. I'm like, no, you didn't. And instead of being like sympathetic, I got mad because, you know, to be of service to our friends is a gift and like denying me the gift of being in service to my friend. And she goes, I did text you. And I pulled out my phone to prove that she didn't and it said, how are you? What are you doing?
Starting point is 00:45:54 Want to come over? I'm like, you mean these texts, the ones that sound like every other text you send me? How am I supposed to know that's a cry for help? And she had read this article that all somebody needs to feel not alone is eight minutes of time with a friend. And so we came up with a code which is, do you have eight minutes? And that basically means I need you.
Starting point is 00:46:12 And anybody can step out of a meeting for eight minutes. And you're not going to solve the problem, you're not going to be there for the hour, the hour and a half, but to make someone feel not alone for those eight minutes is everything. Somebody sent me a picture recently that they were so inspired by that story that they made hats for all their friends that say eight minutes on them. Like you're my eight minute friend? You're in the eight minute club? My love? Like you're my eight minute friend. Isn't that amazing? And by the way the eight minutes can be literally making a compost cookie. Literally, it takes eight minutes. And so you and I have talked about
Starting point is 00:46:40 this before but you and I are and have been eight minute friends to each other and I am very grateful for that. Through the years. The feeling is mutual. Bust. All right, let's just go eat. That's it. Can we just go eat everything now? I've been staring at these the whole time.
Starting point is 00:46:56 There are a set that you actually made, but I want to eat them all. Yugal bars, Greta's. All right. They're all gooey. Why don't we cut and have the whole crew come eat? at us. They're all gooey. Why don't we cut and have the whole crew come eat? Sure.
Starting point is 00:47:05 A bit of optimism is brought to you by the Optimism Company and is lovingly produced by our team, Lindsay Garbenius, David Jha and Devin Johnson. If I was able to give you any kind of insight or some inspiration or made you smile, please subscribe wherever you enjoy listening to podcasts for more. And if you're trying to get answers to a problem at work or want to advance a dream, maybe
Starting point is 00:47:33 I can help. Simply go to simonsonik.com. Until then, take care of yourself, take care of each other.

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