Texarkana Gazette

B. Dylan Hollis gives wacky vintage cookbook recipes a new life

- JESS ENG

You never know what B. Dylan Hollis might be cooking. Today, it’s an innocent-looking peanut butter bread. But tomorrow, Velveeta fudge and tuna salad Jell-O are fair game.

These recipes, wacky as they might sound, are not figurative foods from a mad tea party. Hollis only needs to open one of his 20th-century vintage cookbooks for inspiratio­n, an obsession that he now shares with an audience of 9 million followers on TikTok.

“I can assure you the absurdity of recipes you can find in old print, I have no need to make anything up,” says Hollis, who posts as bdylanholl­is. “Just buy a cookbook from 1970, and you’ll know what I mean.”

While pandemic bakers dug their hands into sourdough and banana bread, Hollis, 27, found another source of inspiratio­n: vintage cookery. From his humble kitchen, Hollis researches, bakes and tests his way through the 20th century. It’s a journey that’s led him to Depression-era fake apple pies, 1960s SpaghettiO­s Jell-O rings and through eras marked by shortages, war and ultraproce­ssed groceries. It’s not only the weird recipes that viewers cling to; Hollis’s animated personalit­y and slapstick jokes make him an endearing guide of a former century.

Hollis had never baked seriously before the pandemic. Mid-century America, on the other hand, had been a long-nurtured obsession. Born and raised in Bermuda, Hollis moved in 2014 to attend college in Laramie, Wyo., where he studied 1940s big band jazz and drove around in a classic 1963 Cadillac. At the start of the pandemic, he began posting funny shorts to TikTok about Wyoming and jazz, mostly to avoid boredom. But once he stumbled upon his first few vintage recipes, he was hooked.

“I would be baking, say, a 1932 quick bread. And I felt for a moment, just as if I was in 1932 with all of the restrictio­ns that they had at the time,” he says. “I don’t think there’s much else that can bring about that reaction. I fell in love with it.”

When Hollis attempts a vintage recipe, results are never guaranteed. Groans and grimaces often accompany his on-camera recipe tests - especially when gelatin or canned food is involved. What sets Hollis apart from other TikTok food creators is his daringness to try, and be surprised, by these absurd-sounding recipes.

In his first vintage recipe video, he makes a pork cake. After insulting every element of the recipe, he skepticall­y digs a fork into a lumpy cake slice and casts a review that only arouses more curiosity. “It tastes like a question mark,” Hollis says. “A good question mark.”

Not all of the recipes involve curious ingredient combinatio­ns. To date, his most popular video is a peanut butter bread from the Great Depression that requires only six ingredient­s and has been viewed nearly 34 million times. According to Hollis, recipes like this have attracted viewers not just for their simplicity but also for their historical perspectiv­e. At the end of the video, when it’s time to sample the bread, his skeptical face relaxes into a satisfied grin: “This is why I bake.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States