Judge John Hodgman - Snickerdoodiligence
Episode Date: October 2, 2019Rachel files suit against her husband, Doug. Early in their marriage, she brought cookies to his family's Christmas Eve celebration. Doug and his brothers realized the cookies were similar to a belove...d family recipe that had been lost to time. 20 years later, Doug and his brothers still refer to these cookies as their "Great Grandma Hebig's cookies." But, Rachel thinks she deserves the credit for cookies. Who's right? Who's wrong? Thank you to Jeremy Frank for naming this week's case! To suggest a title for a future episode, follow Judge John Hodgman on Facebook. We regularly put out a call for submissions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, snickerdoodle diligence.
Rachel files suit against her husband, Doug.
Early in their marriage, she brought cookies to his family's Christmas Eve celebration.
Doug and his brothers realized the cookies were similar to a beloved family recipe that had been lost to time.
to a beloved family recipe that had been lost to time.
Twenty years later, Doug and his brothers still refer to these cookies as their Great-Grandma Habig's cookies.
But Rachel thinks she deserves the credit for the cookies.
Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom
and presents an obscure cultural reference.
Early podcasts were different, with the ingredients being flour, oats, and water.
In addition, the Advent season was a time of fasting, and podcasters were not allowed to use butter, only oil.
And the podcasts were tasteless and hard.
In the 15th century, in medieval Saxony, the prince Elector Ernst
decided to remedy this by writing to the pope in Rome. He said the Saxon bakers needed to use
butter as oil in Saxony was expensive. Pope Nicholas V denied the first appeal. Five popes
died before finally, in 1490, Pope Innocent VIII sent a letter known as the Butter Letter to the prince.
This granted the use of butter in podcasts, but only for the prince elector and his family and
podcast network. Bailiff Jesse Thorne, swear them in. Please rise, Rachel and Doug, and raise your
right hands. Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth,
so help you God or whatever. I do.
I do.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling,
despite the fact that he believes brownies are a cookie?
I do.
I do.
That's not confirmed. Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
No, of course not. Brownies are a sandwich. Doug and Rachel, you may be seated. And since we're stirring the pot with a culinary episode,
I made a wordplay. And also with
that brownies are a sandwich comment. I don't want to
stir it further. Oh, bailiff,
my bailiff, because Jeremy Frank
sent in this week's title, and
I read it as snickerdoodle diligence.
You read it as snickerdoodle
diligence, which I think both are equally pretty
clever. But if I didn't point out that it's snickerdoodle diligence which i think both are equally pretty clever but if i
didn't point out that it's snickerdoodle diligence we'd be getting a lot of letters from jeremy so
jeremy i think we'll get a lot of letters from jeremy we're gonna get a lot of letters from
jeremy anyway yeah mayor of max funcom town but jeremy stand down stand down jeremy now it's not
about you jeremy it's about rachel and doug. Rachel and Doug, for an immediate summary judgment in one of yours favors, can either of you name the piece of culture that I paraphrased as I entered this fake internet courtroom? How about you, Rachel? What's your guess?
I'm going to guess Back to the Table, the reunion of food and family by Oprah Winfrey's personal chef, Art Smith.
Back to the Table. You're coming in with a heavy duty, prepared, but solid guess.
Off the top of my head.
Really?
You didn't have that written down in front of you?
Is that one of your favorite cookbooks?
I may have written it down.
Is this the cookbook where the cookies in question recipe come from?
No, no, it's not.
I should have figured that one out.
That would have been a good cultural reference.
But I'm not saying you're wrong yet.
I'm just putting it in the guest book. Doug,
what's your deal? What's your guests? Let's hear it.
I'm going to say the wooden spoon cookbook.
The wooden spoon cookbook. It's really the one cookbook you need when you're eating wooden
spoons.
Yeah. You got to cook them slow, slow and low.
Yeah, exactly. You can't just throw them on the grill.
A lot of liquid or they'll dry out.
That's right.
They're a braising cut for sure.
The wooden spoon cookbook, what is that?
Is that something you just made up off your dome?
It's a cookbook that we have in our house
that has lots of old-timey cakes and cookies
and things like that that we've used for years.
Is this possibly where the recipe for the
disputed cookies comes from no it does not all right well it doesn't matter because both of
your guesses and indeed all of them are wrong the correct answer was a wikipedia page i don't like
to float from wikipedia very often this is a hard one because you're talking about cookie recipes
and the ownership of that ip and i was having a hard one because you're talking about cookie recipes and the ownership of that IP.
And I was having a hard time coming up with a cultural reference. But then I found a Wikipedia
page for a particular fruitcake. Not only that, a holiday fruitcake, because these are holiday
cookies. And not only that, but a Germanic, an old Germanic fruitcake. Part of the dispute is that the cookies that Rachel makes reminds you, Doug,
of your grandmother's German-style holiday cookies. Is that right?
Correct.
So I thought I was really onto something. And as I'm reading the history of this particular
style of fruitcake, I get to this thing called the butter letter, where Pope Innocent VIII gave the prince elect of Saxony the right to use butter
in this fruitcake instead of oil. And I'm like, I got to get my hands on this butter letter.
I'm going to read this butter letter, also referred to as the butter brief in history.
I'm wearing butter briefs right now.
I'm wearing butter boxer briefs. But the thing is is nowhere on the internet could I find the text
translated or untranslated of the butter brief so I put this to you Judge John Hodgman fans
particularly those of you who work in libraries which is I think 83 percent of you could you
please find me the text of the butter brief Because I just had to read this thing from the, alluded to it from the Wikipedia.
Now, can either of you guess the particular style of buttery, dense, German holiday fruitcake,
made most famous perhaps in Dresden, that this Wikipedia page is for?
Rachel, Doug, Doug, Rachel, can you guess?
Can you guess?
I'm going to say Stolen.
Stolen is correct.
This doesn't win you the case,
but I'm really impressed.
Stolen is correct.
Just like the legacy of the cookies that Rachel has made
have been stolen by your family
and attributed to your great Grammy hay big. Is that right? Correct. Rachel, you come
to this court seeking justice. Tell me about great Grammy hay big and the case of the stolen cookies.
Sure. So I found this recipe for giant ginger cookies in a popular home magazine in 1998.
popular home magazine in 1998. And it was the following year in 1999 when we were spending the holidays with Doug's family and participating in their tradition, which is the annual Christmas
Eve buffet, which is a day-long feast of various noshes, mostly meat-based. I thought this would be a good addition to the Christmas Eve buffet table.
There were no desserts planned.
I'm not a big dessert fan, but these are pretty much as close as you can get to savory cookies.
And so I thought this would be a good addition.
Could I ask you to pause for one second before we get into what a huge hit they were?
I just have two quick questions.
I don't care for sweets,
but I will occasionally enjoy a gingery cookie because they are savory. Is it always the case
that Doug and his family put out all the meats in the world, but not a single dessert? Because even
I, not a dessert person, thinks that that's a little imbalanced. I mean, there's usually some some cookies maybe some fudge but the main focus is meat based dips whoa because we were talking
about meat i was like oh we should have put a content warning on top of this for the vegans
and vegetarians like we did with the barbecue episode so i'm gonna give a content warning
right now because i'm a carnivore and meat-based dips just triggered me. That is gross.
Doug, what is this?
What's a meat-based dip?
So we have what we refer to in my family as the Holy Trinity of dips that come out every year for the Christmas Eve buffet.
There's a different epistolary about the dips, by the way.
Wait a minute. You guys are in Chicago, right? Correct. Are you Midwesterners?
Yes. Oh, yeah. Yeah. So the Christmas Eve buffet takes place in my hometown in rural Iowa.
Oh, okay. So let me hear about the Holy Trinity of dips.
So they're not all meat-based. One of them is a spinach dip, but then the other two are a dried beef dip.
Wait, when you say a dried beef dip, are you referring to jerky?
No, it's a thinly sliced air-dried beef.
We find it and use it, but I can't remember where we find it.
You find it and use it.
I appreciate your every part of the buffalo sentiments here,
but you find it and use it?
That's part of the tradition, Jesse.
You can't buy it.
You have to find it.
It's part of the Christmas miracle,
the finding of the dried beef.
I know what you're talking about.
It's kind of like a Bressolat, but it's flakier. Yeah, exactly.
All right. So dried beef dip, you're cutting up the dried beef and then mixing it in with
mayonnaise and sour cream or something? Yeah, it's dairy products. Cream cheese
is involved. I can't remember the full recipe, but it's yeah.
And what's the third one? It's Braunschweiger dip.
You're talking about a liverwurst dip.
You're talking about chopped liver.
Yeah.
Okay.
That's the Holy Trinity.
Correct.
Which is the father?
Which is the son?
Which is the Holy Ghost of those dips?
Would you say?
Shockingly, we've never debated that.
I am shocked.
Off the top of your head so you can have a fight with your brothers later.
What do you maintain?
I would say the spinach dip would have to be the Holy Spirit.
Of course.
I'd say dried beef is Jesus and Braunschweiger is God.
I think that that's right.
I agree with you.
I'm not going to fight that.
Rachel, you've married into an interesting family.
How long have you been married?
21 years.
Wow.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
So, Rachel, the other thing that I wanted to ask was you very coyly alluded saying the name of the popular home magazine that you got this recipe from.
But it's okay for us to say brand names on this podcast now because usually getting around saying the brand names just ends up being confusing.
Was it perhaps Good Housekeeping?
Announcing the brand names just ends up being confusing.
Was it perhaps Good Housekeeping?
No, it was Better Homes and Gardens, the November 1998 issue.
Oh, I take it back now.
I find in Doug's favor.
Get out of here.
Only because, and I feel, Jesse, that we have not made a big enough deal about this,
but we have literally received the Good Housekeeping seal of approval. Have we not, Jesse yeah judge john hodgman as seen in good housekeeping magazine or at least good housekeeping
dot com this is not the ancient times of 1998 when rachel was tearing out giant ginger cookie
recipes from what was it better homes and gardens good thing you were tearing that recipe out
should be tearing up the rest of that magazine. They didn't put us on any lists.
I have no beef with them.
I have no dried beef with Better Homes and Gardens.
So the recipe has a point of origin that is established.
There's a provenance, as they say.
Correct?
Correct.
And you made these cookies and you brought them
and you plopped them right next down to the Holy Trinity of Meat Dips
in the huge open
space where Doug's family didn't even bother to provide a decent dessert. And what happened?
They were a huge hit. Everybody loved them. Yeah, they were devoured. Everybody wanted the recipe.
Who's everybody? Brother Jim, Brother Scott. I know those guys from the evidence. We're talking
about mother-in-law, father-in-law. Correct.
Yeah.
And at that point, Doug was the only one who'd brought somebody else into the family so far.
But that evening, the three brothers who have a well-documented history of, let's call it brotherly banter gone too far,
let's call it brotherly banter gone too far.
They started kind of winding each other up with this story about these cookies,
that they were not actually cookies that I had brought into the family, but they were in fact cookies that reminded them of the ones made by their grandma Mary
and that they ate when they would come home from school and be with her.
And then they decided that she had learned the recipe for those
cookies from her mother, their great-grandmother Habig, who they'd never met or had cookies from
or had any evidence that she had ever made cookies like this. They just reminded them of the ones
their grandmother had made. Okay, so let me make sure that I understand this. You drop these
cookies, everyone enjoys them, and then Doug and his two brothers say, you know what, these remind me of
those cookies that our grandmother used to give us. And those cookies originated with our great
Grammy hay big. So now we're going to call these great Grammy hay big cookies. Is that right?
That's right. And they had had a couple drinks at this point. And we're, you know,
you know, Doug and Jim and Scott.
Doug, where are you in the birth order of Jim and Scott?
I'm the middle child.
And so, all right, so you're doing whatever you need to to just get attention, like go on a podcast about a cookie fight.
I got you.
Is this true about like brotherly banter go too far?
Well, I wouldn't say it's gone too far, but it was definitely brotherly banter.
The way we see it is we are kind of appreciating
Rachel reintroducing this cookie
that we have really fond memories of from our childhood.
My dad has fond memories from his childhood.
And it was this recipe that my grandmother had made
was lost to time.
We have no idea what happened to it.
And we thought, you know, we appreciate that Rachel was reinvigorating this tradition of these
cookies and bringing them back in a way to our family. And so.
So you were surprised and happy.
Exactly.
Let me be perfectly clear here. Did the cookies remind you of these childhood cookies you used to have from your grandmother? Or did you believe that somehow through the magic of the Holy Trinity of dips,
Rachel's cookies had been transubstantiated into the very cookies,
the body of hay big that you would eat at this last supper?
Is that what happened here?
I really like that explanation.
Yes.
Well, you've set a magical table table but you are a rational person you're just saying these cookies reminded you
of grandma haybig's cookies but since then you refer to them how how do you refer to these
cookies should rachel ever make them as great grandma haybig's uh ginger or molasses who else
is making the cookies now everybody yeah. Yeah. Who else, Rachel?
Who else is stealing your IP? Well, so when the other sister-in-laws married into the family,
you know, they were told these were great grandma Havig's cookies. They, Doug, his brothers,
they've all made them for office parties, for neighbors.
Nieces and nephews now have made the cookies.
They've really gotten around and people always ask for the recipe.
And even more than that, Doug's brothers, Scott and Jim, have infiltrated two children's cookbooks and gotten this recipe put into those cookbooks, the one from the magazine,
with the title Great-Grandma Habeg's Cookies.
And so, I mean, who knows how many people are making these cookies now.
So your accusation is that they are messing with the timeline.
They are changing history.
They are erasing not only that recipe's original origin in that magazine,
but also your legacy of bringing them to the
table at the first place. Correct. Their nostalgia for their childhood is short-circuiting the true
narrative of these cookies. Well, let's talk about nostalgia, the most toxic impulse for a moment,
Doug. Describe for me the moment that you ate this cookie and flashed back to that time when you were a French novelist eating a Madeleine.
What was wonderful about rediscovering molasses cookies was I spent, you know, when I was young, my grandmother would watch us after school.
So I spent a lot of time at her house and a lot of really fond memories of that time with her.
My brothers similarly have fond memories.
And so honestly hadn't thought about those particular cookies for a number of years because
grandmother at that point wasn't making those anymore.
And it had been a while since she made them.
And so it really was a warm kind of good memory for me and for my brothers from childhood.
And so it was just really exciting to kind of be reconnected to that and be able to reminisce and to think that this has been brought back to our family.
Let's take a quick recess. We'll be back in just a moment on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
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may i presume that your grandmother mary is no longer living correct i mean did she ever write
down the recipe for the actual hay big cookies to the best of my knowledge no um there are other
recipes of things that she would make that survived but we don't know where that recipe is, if it lives on somewhere,
or we have no idea. Once the style of molassesy, gingery, savory cookie was reintroduced to your
taste buds, sending you hurtling back through time to your beloved childhood, and you sought
to reclaim that childhood, did it occur to you that you could maybe ask, go through her stuff, see if that original recipe was there somewhere?
Did not that curiosity spark you to go on a journey to find the original recipe?
Because I would have.
No.
I, at that point, felt like we had, in essence, rediscovered her recipe and felt like it was already there with us.
already there with us.
Was it you, Doug, or was it Jim or Scott who led the charge to take these cookies and ascribe them to your mythical great-grandmother if she did indeed exist?
I was the first person to bring up the idea, and both my brothers heartily agreed.
Oh, okay.
So you are the originator of this.
I think I am, yeah.
How does it make you feel, Rachel, when they are referred to as great-grandma Ebbing's cookies?
I think that food has a really important place in family history.
And I think looking at the stories of food and families, it both brings back memories, but it also, you know, there's something about it and families merging and how when new people come into families, recipes change and new recipes are introduced.
And I feel like they have kind of short-circuited that story for our nieces and nephews who they love these cookies.
They now are a part of our Christmas traditions with Doug's families.
They've all, you know, made them for other parties. And
I think they've lost the opportunity to have that full family story and what really happened
with these cookies. And I think it's an interesting and nuanced story. When I brought this case,
that was the moment, unfortunately, when some of the children in the family learned
the true origins of the recipe. And I think it was really
upsetting for one of them in particular, my nephew Jack. And I submitted evidence for the case about
Jack's reaction. And I just, you know, lying to children isn't great. They don't like it. You
know, I brought this case on behalf of my nephew Jack and others who have learned by my bringing this case that they were
not great grandma Havig's recipe. You did send in some evidence, and let me please take a look at
that now. All of the evidence that is visual in nature, of course, will be available on the Judge
John Hodgman page at MaximumFun.org, as well as on our Instagram page at Instagram.com slash
Judge John Hodgman. And as long as I'm saying URLs, I might as well just say bit.com slash judge john hodgman and as long as i'm saying urls i might as well
just say bit.ly slash medallion status always be plugging okay here we go exhibit a the original
recipe better homes and garden november 1998 here is the recipe itself for giant ginger cookies is
published wow you still have this piece of paper is Is that correct? I sure do. Wow. Doug, your wife is coming in with a lot of hard evidence.
A paper trail, I dare say.
This isn't something that she retrieved off of Google search or Google magazine doc.
This is the thing. This is a picture you took.
It includes the incredibly disgusting advertisement at the bottom of the page.
That's an advertisement for Lysol.
It says spread joy, not salmonella this holiday.
And it's a Lysol bottle pointed at a raw turkey.
They really knew how to sell products in those days.
Now you've circled something here and I'm trying to get closer to see it.
Oh, it's just the, it's just the date.
It's just the date.
Yeah.
Who is the author of this recipe?
I wonder.
Did it ever occur to you to look into that, Rachel?
Or were you were you content to steal?
I guess my my feeling is that unless you have, you know, a professional chef in your family,
every recipe that's assigned to a member of that family probably came from somewhere,
a cookbook or a magazine.
Right. But you're here petitioning to have your name reentered into family history after it has
been erased by Doug and his brothers. And yet you're content to sit and erase the name of this
person. You also felt no curiosity to go back to the original source. I'm just bringing it up.
It's not determining. I'm just bringing it up. It's a little of what we call what about ism that we use to
muddy the waters when one obvious crime has been committed and you want to cover you want to keep
it interesting so you so that cable news will have something to talk about or you keep the podcast
going all right exhibit b the compromised nephew look everybody I've seen a lot of evidence in my time here
on the Judge Sean Hodgman podcast.
Rachel is killing it with her evidence.
Killing it.
It's well organized.
It's pertinent.
I don't see one gratuitous picture of a pet yet.
Actually, there's a lot of evidence.
I didn't even see all of this.
But let's go to this.
This is Jack ready for his bake sale.
I'm quoting your caption.
And then the thread between jack aunt rachel uncles doug and jim that's you doug and jack's dad scott after jack learned that
his cookies were a fraud jack says i've been lied to my whole life and i will not take these crimes
lightly and then jim says what is the truth jack where did the cookies really originate and jack
says cookie fraud and doug says your parents need to sit you down and talk this through with you. And Jack
says, they have. I've never been the same. It's something that's hard to face crimes in history.
Has he learned about Native American genocide yet? He seems very sensitive. I'm concerned.
He's actually a huge history buff. He's a big World War II history buff.
actually a huge history buff. He's a big World War II history buff. Oh, right. Yeah, exactly.
Jack is into this. Doug says, then you understand that history is a complex narrative. Doug,
weasel words. Jack says, I'm already preparing my case. Scott says, this is a complex narrative,
Jack. Life isn't black and white. Jack says, that's very clear now. And then someone jumps in and says, I will always tell you the truth, Jack.
Who's that?
That's me.
Yeah, Rachel.
Let me ask you a question, and then there's more evidence.
We'll come back to this in a second.
But do you still make the cookies, Rachel?
I don't often have a chance anymore because Doug rushes to make them usually a few weeks before Christmas and then again for the Christmas Eve buffet.
He also makes them for office parties.
He's kind of taken over that recipe to the point that when I brought this case, he admitted to me that he had actually forgotten that I had been the one to make them first.
And he thought he had.
Wow that is a total rewriting of history. Exhibit C, The Compromise Cookbook, Great
Recipes from Great Grandparents. Is this Jack's cookbook? No this is a cookbook
that my mother prepared for our son a couple years ago. Our son was an aspiring
chef at the time and she compiled recipes from his great-grandparents and great-great-grandparents from both sides of the family.
And she did biographies of all of them and collected recipes by interviewing all of our family members. where Scott and Jim trolled his cookbook and got that recipe put in.
And you can see my mom's author note that the relationship of these cookies to Great-Grandma Havig is not entirely clear,
but that Uncle Jim and Uncle Scott felt the recipe definitely had to be in the cookbook.
This is an incredible thing that Rachel's mom made for her grandson,
Sam, with a long and wonderful introduction to this family cookbook. And here is a very detailed
biography of great grandma, Haybig, born and raised on a farm in Minnesota. She moved to
Carroll, Iowa to attend boarding school at St. Angela's Domestic Sciences School for Girls,
to carroll iowa to attend boarding school at saint angela's domestic sciences school for girls etc etc fantastic just biographies of everybody putting them in as great grandma mary haybig's
ginger cookies although the relationship of their great grandma haybig your great great grandma
haybig to these cookies is as you know not entirely clear what jim and scott both feel
the recipe should be included in the cookbook shocking not entirely clear it's obvious we know where these cookies came from
doug the relationship is entirely clear it is the imagination of you and your brothers
we're we're expanding upon family history we're expanding upon family history. Right.
Yeah.
Okay.
I see.
This is like fan fiction.
Family history fan fic.
In your head canon, these are your great grandmother's cookies.
I think we really just found a new lane of revenue for Ancestry.com.
And now I'm scrolling through this cookbook through all of these bios,
like great grandma,
Nana,
great grandpa,
Victor,
blah,
blah,
blah.
And then it comes down to Rachel.
Not sure who she is.
Maybe your mom.
That was a weird bio to put in this thing.
And there's lots more evidence that you can peruse,
but I think that we've seen most of the important stuff here.
And then there's evidence that you submitted. Doug, an affidavit from your brothers correct i'll just read a slightly
shortened version of this molasses cookies were introduced to us by our grandmother as children
we only knew this type of cookie to exist in one place our grandmother's kitchen it's a very strange
argument to make we were so ignorant of this kind of cookie that once we learned that
other people in the world made it, we had to have it for our grandmother. All right.
It wasn't until we were adults that we discovered that a recipe existed that replicates our
grandmother's cookies. It was introduced to us by our brother, Doug, and sister-in-law.
We don't remember the first time the cookies were baked by our brother and sister-in-law,
but we do remember how they immediately reminded us of our grandmother and her kitchen from
childhood. When Doug named them great-grandmalaw, but we do remember how they immediately reminded us of our grandmother and her kitchen from childhood.
When Doug named them Great Grandma
Hay Big's Molasses Cookies, we immediately
understood the joke. Oh, they're joking. It's comedy.
They were doing it as a character. I get it.
And thought it was a fine name for the recipe.
The name we've given
to the cookies is in no way meant
to lessen or denigrate the contributions
Rachel has made to our family. We are grateful thatachel found the recipe and helped reintroduce a treat to our family
that connected the generations wow so basically doug your brothers are basically saying it was
just a joke we are boundary pushers we take risks as comedians their intention was never to hurt
anyone and they're sorry if anyone was actually offended.
Do you stand by that?
You stand by your two brothers?
I don't know if I would characterize it so much as a joke.
Their words, sir.
Their words.
Right.
Right.
And I appreciate it.
I understand kind of the sentiment that they're expressing.
You know, when I come at it, it's more about, you know, how do we both honor kind of what the history, you know, generations of our family had contributed.
And I think it's just really fantastic that Rachel, as a new member to the family, was able to connect this history of this cookie and bring it in.
I think it's a really neat storyline to have.
She didn't connect. It's a really neat storyline to have. She didn't connect.
It's a neat storyline.
We're just waiting for her heel turn.
I think it's going to come in this podcast.
Rachel, do you correct people when they claim this cookie for Great Grandma Haybig?
And how do they feel when you do it?
I probably gave up a couple years in trying to correct it, only because, again, he and his brothers,
they're like this little improv troupe that just gets on a roll, and their mom is pretty much the only one who can shut them down.
So, you know, I haven't put a lot of effort into it.
I kind of push back on Doug sometimes about it.
effort into it. I kind of push back on Doug sometimes about it. But when Jack had this cookie bake sale and I saw that, you know, he was sort of being implicated in this,
that's when I felt like it was time to come forward with the truth.
When you say that these guys have sort of an improv troupe element to them,
and Scott and Jim did refer to a joke.
Like, do you think that part of this is them getting your goat for a laugh?
I mean, there's a precedent.
Go on. I'll allow it.
I mean, I can't think of a particular sort of joke. I mean, this is really kind of a long con.
The other ones are usually just kind of in the moment.
And they do it with everybody in the family.
They do it with each other.
They gaslight them into saying, these cookies are not your cookies.
What do they do?
So there's a very famous family story of when the boys were young, they were watching TV.
And Jim, the youngest, there was a JCPenney white sale add-on and he asked his brothers what a white sale was.
And he was about five or six at the time.
And they told him and they kept this going the whole day until their mom got home.
They told him that white sales.
I'm nervous about where this is going, but I'll allow it.
I'm nervous about where this is going, but I'll allow it.
He told them that a JCPenney white sale is where their parents got him, that that's where he had come from was a JCPenney white sale.
That he'd been purchased from JCPenney as a child.
Exactly. And he was in tears by the end of the day. And his mom, you know, I think there were some Hail Marys in the corner for Doug and Scott. But that basically, that's kind of precedent.
They're pranksters. They're jokesters.
Yes.
Right? They're just, everyone's too sensitive. Why can't they just laugh? They're equal opportunity offenders. I don't know what I'm referring to here. Someone does, though.
All right. Anyway, Doug, you've invented this connection between this cookie,
which has an obvious provenance that is not your great-grandmother.
You've made this connection to your great-grandmother as a storyline and gone back through and created a new history, which erases your wife. Is this a joke or is this sincere that
you really love these cookies? And like, you know what I mean? Is your connection that you are
fabricating to your great-grandmother, Haybig, born of a genuine
love for that family history? Or are you just trying to get Rachel's goat? And I'll remind you,
you're under fake oath. I think there's a little in both camps. I'd say that I truly love these
cookies and they truly remind me of really fond childhood memories. And I like the fact that calling them Great-Grandma Habeck's cookies
gives an opportunity to talk about our childhood
and where these cookies fit in that history and everything like that.
There's no intention to erase racial.
I don't deny when asked if the specific recipe came from somewhere other than Great Crime and Hay Big.
You know, they came from Better Homes and Garden magazine.
And, you know, I would say, like, if Rachel had developed the recipe herself,
you know, tinkered and, you know, figured out the different measurements and everything like that,
I never would have in any way called them anything but
Rachel's Cookies. But, you know, as you pointed out, it came from a magazine that could be anybody's.
It's just like jokes. They have no author. You can just take them.
Yeah, post them on Instagram. Rewrite them in the notes app. Screen cap it. Post it in Instagram.
That's right. Because even if someone else makes a joke, it's just the way you put your spin on it.
She didn't actually put anything into this.
I got you.
I got you, Doug.
I'm holding a side trial in my own mind, I think.
Rachel, what would you have me order if I were to find in your favor?
I think, you know, I'd want to think of a new name for this cookie that creates an opportunity to really acknowledge their true history in our family.
At one point, I was thinking of kind of a mashup of my name and Doug's grandmother.
But I think that the adjudication of this recipe is now a part of their history, and it's now a part of our family history. And
in an effort to not sort of halt history with nostalgia and just say they're mine,
I would be fine with some kind of ruling that we rename these cookies in a way that reflects
their appearance on fake internet court. But most of all, I'd seek a mandate that when asked about the name or the cookie
that Doug and his brothers have to tell
the full and true story
and that they all share that story with their children.
Do they dissemble when asked?
You know, when someone says,
these are amazing,
are these really your great-grandmother's cookies?
Do they lie or evade the truth?
Yes, they absolutely do.
I'm not saying we always do that.
It's happened, but I think lots of times
I say that they're from a magazine.
Yeah, the number of...
You can't say the word Rachel, can you?
Is that the problem?
Magazine slash Rachel.
Doug, you make the cookies a lot now, right?
I do, yeah. Yeah, you're a cookies a lot now, right? I do.
Yeah.
You're a baker as well, right?
Yeah.
Super cool.
So what would you have me order if I were to rule in your favor?
You know, I don't expect Rachel to embrace great-grandma Habeg's cookies in the same way that I and my brothers.
I think she would enjoy embracing that family tradition and speaking to it if she chose to.
When you say embrace this tradition, you mean embrace it with a web of lies?
There's different ways to talk about it.
But, you know, I think there's fun in lifting up that family history.
And at the very least, it'd be nice if when we talk about them and say that they're great grandma's cookies,
that she doesn't instantly respond that we're liars.
Why is it important to you, Doug?
I think it's important because I really do enjoy, you know,
talking about them as a cookie that has a family tradition.
And I like to talk about the fact that...
It has a family tradition.
Your wife made them and brought them 20 years ago.
That's the tradition.
That is part of the tradition.
That is true.
Do you lack a connection to your ancestral past
such that you need to create this fetish object
out of nothing in order to feel a connection to it?
Well, I will say that my family,
particularly the side of the family
that we're referring to with Great Grandma Hibbock,
we're not big history folks.
We don't have a lot of conversation about kind of our roots, our level of stories that are passed down.
It's just not what we've done.
Have you read the cookbook that your mother-in-law, Rachel's mother, made?
It's amazing. Yeah. Yeah. It's a fantastic. She did an amazing job with that.
She did the homework. She didn't just steal a cookie.
I think I've heard everything I need to in order to make my decision.
I'm going to go into my test kitchen and I'll be back in a moment with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Doug, it's been an intense grilling for you.
How are you feeling right now?
Really bad.
Yeah, I'm not feeling good at all.
Just overall, physically, emotionally, or specifically about your chances in the case?
I think my chances in the case have affected my overall.
Doug, we got to tear you down if we're going to build you up.
Rachel, how are you feeling?
I have to say, having the judge say that this is the greatest set of evidence ever submitted
makes this pretty much the best day of my life.
It is genuinely impressive.
You put together a PDF.
You really went all the way here.
I feel like instead of evidence, I received a deck.
Whatever business people call a deck, I think that's what this is.
It's 20 years in the making.
Doug, Rachel, we'll see what Judge Hodgman has to say about all this when we come back in just a second.
Hello, teachers and faculty.
This is Janet Varney. I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year.
Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience, one you have no choice but to embrace,
because, yes, listening is mandatory.
The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday
on Maximum Fun or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember, no running in the halls.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom and presents his verdict.
So recipes are like jokes.
That was the half joke that I was making or alluding to earlier on.
And that authorship is something that is traditionally been a little slippery, right? People create recipes and then they give them
away in cookbooks and then those recipes get taken and made. They are designed to be reproduced
and essentially reproduced over and over and over again until the author kind of disappears.
Very rarely do authors retain a kind of ownership aside from that original edition of the cookbook over the recipes
that they put out into the world. And similarly, jokes are something that a certain subset of
people feel are similarly just like, here's a funny idea, take it, share it. I had an original
observation, but now it is for the world. And that's how joke thievery happens. And it happens
often with, I won't say the best of intentions, but the mediumist of intentions without fully
understanding that work goes into creating a recipe, just like work goes into creating
a joke.
It requires imagination and self-editing and reworking and testing.
And they are not just things to be taken away and re-ascribed to someone else.
Rachel, of course, you know, this is especially true.
I mean, this is true for jokes,
but it's like especially true for baking, right? Which is very specific. Unlike the kind of cooking
I do, which is like, that looks brown. Baking is chemistry and it requires very specific
ingredients. There are a wide variety of different kinds of molassesy, gingery type cookies.
Shout out to Elizabeth Connor's rugby cookies. One of the greatest cookie I've ever eaten in my life. Guinness pound cake. These are the sweets that
I like. This is why this whole conversation to me is delicious, even though I do not have a sweet
tooth. As you know, I have an alcohol molar. And Rachel took a recipe and brought it to her new
husband's family gathering. And her intentions were fine. She did not go in there saying, I
invented this recipe. She took it as as anyone would, from a magazine.
Only to have her labor stolen from her, almost immediately by Doug and his brothers.
And to create this fantasy that this is, in fact, great-grandma Habig's recipe.
You could probably sense, Doug, my immediate frustration with this IP theft,
and my double frustration with this rewriting of history
in a gaslighting kind of way,
where Rachel's position with regard to these cookies
was gradually being erased,
and a new history was being written in to the record
to prop up the fantasy.
But rather than being simply grateful that Rachel had introduced
a memory of these cookies that you had basically forgotten about, but now zoomed you back in a
series of sensations back to being a kid when your grandma Mary baked Haybig's cookies for you,
you instead take that away from Rachel and give them to Haybig. And that's frustrating too,
because joining a family is hard.
You guys have been married for 21 years.
Is that right?
Yes.
Yeah.
Joining a family is a hard thing, especially if you're joining a close-knit family that
itself has a lot of tri-brother traditions of bullying and choking and lying, and also
a family that has long traditions of meat dips.
You are the outsider coming in. And I feel bad for Rachel, almost at the very beginning of your marriage,
having her work essentially ignored by you and your brothers and only sort of like grudgingly
acknowledged when forced to. I know that your intentions are good. I believe that your brother's
apology or non-apology in their letter is clearly like they didn't mean to hurt anybody.
And even though Rachel isn't here saying this hurts me, I am hurt on her behalf. And there's
a reason that she brought this to the courtroom, right? One of the hardest things that we have to learn to understand is that even when our
intentions are good and fine, and we don't think we're doing anything wrong, sometimes
someone says, hey, you know what?
That hurts me.
And because you never intended to hurt that person, you're like, what are you talking
about?
You're easily offended.
Get out of here.
These are my great grandma's cookies, period, or whatever it it is and this is the third point of frustration that i feel there's a hard thing in life to learn
for all of us and some of us more than others that even when we feel our intentions are good
and we didn't think we were doing anything wrong when someone says this makes me feel bad you have
a choice to become either defensive and double down and say you you shouldn't
feel this way it's just a fun family tradition or to say oh holy moly you know i didn't think
about it let me think about that some more you're right rachel you have a place in this family
history she is now part of the family and part of the history is she sparked a memory in your mind with cookies,
which is obviously what cookies are so good for. That's what Proust knew, sparking memes. And she
deserves a place in that history. Now, here's what I'm going to order. And this goes for every
member of your family and includes you, Rachel. First of all, I want you both to do some homework, just like Rachel's mom did.
Try to find out who wrote that good housekeeping recipe. Rachel, that's your job, so that you can
credit it properly. You may never find out, and I accept that, but you can give it a try.
It wasn't good housekeeping, I'm sorry. It's Better Homes and Gardens. They still exist.
Somewhere in there, you could probably narrow it down. I'd like you to make a good faith effort.
And similarly, and perhaps more successfully, I'd like you, Doug, and Jim and Scott to make
a good faith effort. Try to find that recipe for Habig's molasses cookies. There were some
recipes written down. There have to be more of them. It may not be
possible. About all that stuff may have burned in a fire. I don't know. But you owe it to people
who create recipes to try to find out where they came from and to credit them properly. At least
make a good faith effort. I get that it might not work. The main reason I'm ordering this of both of
you is that my hope is that Rachel is going to find out that the person who wrote the Good
Housekeeping article is actually your great-grandmother Hey Big and it'll be another
yet another Doug family try meat dip miracle
but my main order is this from now on Rachel's recipe the better homes and gardens recipe
will no longer be called great grandma's
cookies sorry doug's family you are feasting in a palace of lies when you do that and the
repercussions are already clear jack was traumatized to learn that his family history
had been falsified and jack is our future and encourage, I want Jacks of the world to believe,
especially in this time,
that facts are facts
and not storylines.
That history is real
and not a narrative.
Even when that real history
is uncomfortable,
Jack wants to confront it
and I want to give him
every opportunity to do it.
From now on, those cookies,
which are part of family lore, will be called Great Rachel's.
As adapted from Better Homes and Gardens 1998 or whatever.
And that all needs to be there.
Great Rachel's as adapted from Better Homes and Garden Dateline November 98 or whatever it is.
And now you, do not despair though, Doug. You are
a nice guy and I bet you make really good cookies. All you need to do, my friend, is get in there and
mess around with that recipe a little bit more. Tinker with it. Put in the work. Find a new angle.
Add a pith of a mandarin orange or a satsuma or something. Figure out some new cookie.
First of all, a new cookie is a way forward as opposed to this nostalgic path backwards.
But second of all, maybe you'll spark an even stronger memory of your grandma and your great
grandma and your family history. And those cookies, when you make that small addition,
that small change, and that literally could be an extra gram of sugar, doesn't matter.
You have naming rights over those. Those become great-grandma hay bigs cookies,
because you're allowed to make up that false story if it's your own cookie.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules. That is all.
Judge John Hodgman rules. That is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
A somewhat more expansive verdict than you might have anticipated, Doug.
How are you feeling? I think it's fair.
He makes a lot of good points about respecting what Rachel's contributed and honoring her perspective.
So I think that's all very fair.
you know, honoring her perspective. So I think that's all very fair. And I'm excited about the opportunity to tinker with the recipe to be able to kind of make it my own and give it a name.
And so I might like, you know, see if I can get any of the dips in there or something like that
to change it up. Wait a minute, you're talking about putting dried beef dip into the cookies,
Doug? It's experimentation.
We'll see.
Okay.
Rachel, how are you feeling?
I feel good.
I'm excited about trying to track down the origins of the Better Homes and Gardens recipe.
And maybe I will bring my nephew, Jack, the aspiring historian, in on that with me to figure that out.
Rachel, Doug, thanks for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I.
Were you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
It'll never fit.
No, it will.
Let me try.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ah, we are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
Another Judge John Hodgman case in the books.
Before we dispense some swift justice,
we want to thank Jeremy Frank for naming this week's episode
Snickerdoodle Diligence, or Snickerdoodle Diligence, as you prefer.
If you'd like to name a future episode
like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook,
that's where we put out our calls for submissions.
And hey, remember that Jesse Thorne and I
are going to be on tour
with the Judge John Hodgman Live Justice Show this fall,
as well as I'll be out there
promoting my book Medallion Status.
In fact, I had a little conversation
with Doug and Rachel. They're going to book Medallion Status. In fact, I had a little conversation with Doug and Rachel.
They're going to be at my Chicago event at the Chicago Festival of the Humanities in November.
And they're going to bring me a great Rachel and they're going to bring me a new Hey Big.
And I'm going to figure out which one is better.
So you can be there when that happens, if you wish, or at any of our great events across this land of ours and Toronto by going to johnhodgman.com slash tour or the events page on Maximum Fun.
Where can they follow us, Jesse?
They can follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
Hashtag your judge John Hodgman tweets hashtag JJHO.
I love to see what folks are saying about the show.
Check out the Maximum Fun subreddit at MaximumFun.reddit.com.
Another place for pleasant discussion.
Yeah, I've been enjoying it.
I've been dropping in.
I discovered that I have a login at Reddit that I forgot about from my book six years ago.
And now I'm getting in the mix.
I'm talking to people over there.
It's a lot of fun.
It's great.
I love checking out what everyone is talking about about the show.
I love deleting the posts of people who are being jerks. I love everything about it. It's a great
place. It's one of the warmest and friendliest places on Reddit, maximumfun.reddit.com. And of
course, our evidence, including some really beautiful evidence for this week's show,
is on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman. You can follow
us there. We post evidence there, other fun stuff. It's great. At Judge John Hodgman. This week's
episode recorded by Colin Ashmead Bobbitt at WBEZ in Chicago. Our editor is Jesus Ambrosio.
This episode produced by Hannah Smith and Jennifer Marmer. Now, Swift Justice, we answer your small disputes with quick judgment.
Andrew wants to know, Judge Hodgman, penguins, adorable or terrifying?
I have never thought this was a question at all.
I love a penguin.
All penguins are great.
They're adorable.
Everybody loves penguins except for little fish.
Yeah, right. Exactly. Everyone loves penguins. You know, I've been in a penguin tank inside.
When I was young and dumb and thought I was immortal and figured that I probably would
never be prosecuted for anything in my life because of what I look like. And I was kind
of right. I snuck into the London Zoo. You may have heard about this
on This American Life many years ago.
Snuck into that London Zoo.
Very little security at the London Zoo at this time.
1990s.
It was a great, great decade for sneaking into zoos.
I got there.
I looked at the penguins.
I'm like, those penguins look great.
I'm going to climb in that enclosure with them.
And I did it.
And I walked among the sleeping penguins and I reached up to pet a penguin and that penguin
bit me on the finger. And even that was adorable and obviously warranted too, because I was
invading its home. And that's the story of how John was cast in the film, the Batman.
I only wish I just got thrown in a London jail for a night, immediately caught.
And they had to hold me until they could determine that none of the penguins were
harmed or injured.
And then they let us go because there was a bombing in Paddington Station.
It was the 90s in London, the swinging 90s.
They were adorable, Andrew.
Penguins are wonderful.
But you know what?
Give them their space.
They deserve it.
They're creatures.
That's it for this week's Judge John Hodgman.
Submit your cases at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO. And remember, we are particularly looking for
cases in those cities that we are visiting on our national tour of several cities.
That's Durham, North Carolina, Washington, D.C., our nation's capital, Portland, Maine, of course,
Toronto, which everyone is yelling at me on the Internet to say Toronto instead of Toronto and a fifth city, which you're going to remember, Jesse.
Atlanta, Georgia.
Yes. Atlanta, the capital of Georgia.
I will from from now on always remember to say Toronto as a native of San Francisco.
San Francisco.
If you've got a dispute in any of those cities or you're coming to the show from wherever you may be coming, please write in.
Maximumfund.org slash JJ Ho or Hodgman at Maximumfund.org.
Let us know that it's for consideration in a particular city.
We'll put it in a special pile.
And if we choose to hear your case on stage, guess what?
You're getting in for free and I'll say hello to you. So come on.
Pick a fight.
I'll stare at you icily. You've the warmest i'll probably say no i'll probably say hello
john you're so no you've got the you've got the warmest eyes in podcasting i have to say jesse
thorne the kindest eyes in podcasting and basically because of your beard it's the only part of your
face that's visible.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.