Judge John Hodgman - Grand Theft Risotto
Episode Date: May 11, 2016Mike brings the case against his mom, Maribeth. He says Maribeth knowingly took her daughter-in-law's recipes for a family cookbook and passed them off as her own. Maribeth says that the attribution w...as implied and there was no wrongdoing.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, grand theft risotto.
Mike brings the case against his mom, Mary Beth.
He says Mary Beth knowingly took her daughter-in-law's recipes for a family cookbook and passed them off as her own.
Mary Beth says that the attribution was implied and there was no wrongdoing.
Who's right? Who's wrong?
Only one man can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom
and presents the obscure cultural reference.
You can still live with grace and wisdom,
thanks partly to the many people who write about how to do it,
and perhaps talk over much about riboflavin and economy,
and partly to your own innate sense of what you must do with the resources you have
to keep the wolf from snuffing too hungrily through the keyhole.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, swear them in.
Please rise 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.
I do. Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that when cooking, he never uses recipes, preferring to rely instead on his innate sense of recipe?
I do.
I do.
Very well. Judge Hodgman?
Mike, Emily, Mary Beth, you may be seated.
Judgement.
Mike, Emily, Mary Beth, you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment in either Mike's or Mary Beth's favor.
Can any of you name the piece of culture that I referenced as I entered the courtroom?
Now, Mike and Emily, you're kind of on the same side or Emily, you're standing by as a neutral expert witness to this case.
Really, it's Mike taking his mother to court.
Is that correct?
Correct.
All right.
So, Mary Beth, hello. Hello.
How are you? Good. Good. My name is Judge John Hodgman and you're on a podcast. Did your son
even tell you what's going on? Yes, he did. All right, good. I don't like it when moms take their
sons to court. It's rather unseemly if you ask me. But since you're here against your will,
you can either guess the piece of culture that I was quoting as I entered the room, or you can make your son guess first and hope to glean some information from his, I'm sure, to be wrong guess.
And if you guess correctly, the origin of the cultural reference, that means God or whatever favors you in this case, and you get automatic divine justice and the win.
Well, I'll pass it on to him.
All right.
Mike, it goes to you.
Does God or whatever favor you or the mother who raised you and fed you as a child?
What is your guess?
It would seem he does not favor me.
I have no idea. What do you mean he? He, she, or he does not favor me. I have no idea.
What do you mean he?
He, she, or whatever would not favor me.
Right, but you have to make a guess.
All right, Mike, would you like to hear the reference again?
Yes, please.
No.
What is your guess?
God, I don't know.
It's hard to guess when you know that you're going to guess wrong.
Suddenly you can't think of anything.
It is.
Did you want to guess The Art of Eating by MFK Fisher?
I was just about to say The Art of Eating by Mr. Fisher.
Okay.
Now, Mary Beth, it's time for you to guess.
Okay. My guess is going to be James Beard.
That's a very interesting guess. And Mike, yours was particularly interesting. But all guesses are wrong.
I feel a little bit bad, Mary Beth, because you didn't catch on to what I was doing, which was giving you a big hint.
Oh, I'm usually pretty good at that.
The author of that is, in fact, MFK Fisher, who is not a mister, but a miz, or was.
She was miz.
Now is was.
But it was not from The Art of Eating. It was from How to Cook a Wolf, a different book by her,
about a subject that we very rarely hear about in food writing terms,
which is how to keep your family from starving
by making what little food you have after the war last longer.
It's not something that we read about a lot anymore.
Now it's more like, how much food can you throw away?
I read a lot about food.
I used to write about food and non-wine alcohol for Men's Journal magazine.
That's how I met Alton Brown, one of my very favorite food personalities, who's been a guest on this program a couple of times. But MFK Fisher for me was the person who really made me understand why food was worth writing about. And she wrote took a semester abroad in London during college, during a drink abroad program that I designed myself, and was sleeping on the floor of my friend's dormitory at University College of London. I was of age, children, by the way. I was legal age for drinking in England, at least.
in England at least.
And then I would bathe in the dormitories,
bathing, like they didn't have showers very much over there at that time.
So they just had rooms with a single bathtub in it.
And I would lie in that bathtub
and I would read this big, giant,
omnibus edition of M.S.K. Fisher
and it was one of my fondest memories.
Well, I was not going to say this,
but there was one time when I woke up and I, for reasons that I still don't know, had vomit in my hair and I had to wash it out. And MFK Fisher was the soothing balm that filled my soul's hunger at a time when I could not feed myself for fear of vomiting again. So that's my takeaway from her, and I highly, highly recommend her works.
We have on this food and recipe-related podcast a new expert witness, though,
another food writer, one who is not dead, but who yet lives.
And we've been trying to get him on the podcast for a long time.
And we're going to bring him on now so he can just get on with the expert witnessing.
And his name is Kenji Lopez-Alt.
He is the managing culinary director of Serious Eats.
And he's also the author of The Food Lab, which is a book,
The Food Lab, Better Home Cooking Through Science, which Mary Beth just won a James Beard Award.
Is that not correct, Kenji?
That's correct.
Congratulations to you and welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Did you recognize my MFK Fisher quote?
You know, I was too busy making sure that my oven wasn't buzzing and my fan wasn't going off and all those things you have to do for radio that I actually didn't even hear your quote when you said it.
Oh, not to worry. I'll repeat the quote for you. Beans, beans, the wonderful fruit. The more you eat, the more you eat.
Got it. Yes.
MFK Fisher, right?
Absolutely. Yeah.
Now, you are an expert in food science.
Sure, we could say that. Is that not so? Yeah, you know, I'm an expert in writing about food
science. Right. And so what does that, how does that manifest itself? Well, you know, my job is
basically to take complicated scientific ideas and explain them in ways that your average home
cook can understand and to
explain how understanding these concepts can make you a better cook. Now, this dispute is around
recipes. Specifically, Mike accuses Mary Beth of stealing Mike's wife's Emily's recipes for a
family cookbook. And one of the things I like about the work that you're doing and people who are interested in food science like you is taking this long – cooking is science, but it is a science that has long existed exclusively in the realm of essentially folklore, which is what family recipes are. You know, trial and error, honed over time, passed down generation by generation,
but never tested rigorously for its scientific properties, right?
And you're taking cooking, which has long been sort of an arts and crafts of the home,
and examining it from a scientific point of view.
Is that about right?
Yeah, that's pretty fair.
Good.
I like to be fair. I'm a justice after all. So Mike, your mom is a thief.
Talk to me about what a terrible person she is.
So my mom, I think to start with both me and my mother, and I get it from her,
have a very competitive nature. And as far as that relates
to this cookbook, this cookbook was created. It has a little blurb at the beginning about how all
these recipes have history. And, you know, like some of our families should be able to look at
these recipes and drudge up memories and things and times when we've had them. And there's a lot
of these recipes in there like that my aunt and other people submitted that do just that. So when I received...
It is true that food has a real quality of dredging up memories. I think that's what
Proust wrote about, right? Ugh, these Madeleines making me think about my childhood, dredging up
those memories again. Ugh. So he said it in French and wrote it down also. Well, but let's go, let's back up a little
bit and just get to the crime you're accusing her of. I don't care about your competitive nature.
Okay. Well, maybe some people don't know what a family cookbook is. A family cookbook is what,
Mary Beth? It is a compilation of recipes that the family has made over the years,
repeatedly made over the years, repeatedly made over the years,
and brought to family functions and holidays. And you Xerox it up for each other?
She made a little spiral bound book for anyone that wanted one.
She, she, who's she? Who's she all of a sudden?
I'm sorry, my sister, Lynn.
Oh, okay. You don't want to name check Lynn, huh? You don't want to give anyone credit for anything, do you, Mary Beth?
No, I try not to.
Excellent.
So, Mike, you claim that Mary Beth took recipes from your wife, Emily.
Yes.
Who is currently suffering in silent shame and mortification.
Exactly.
suffering and silent shame and mortification.
Exactly.
So I got a copy of this book and started leafing through it.
And as I came across like the first recipe, I recognized that, you know, Leafing through it going, how am I going to nail mom this time?
Probably something.
Exactly.
So the first recipe I came across was like, well,
this seems a lot like that one that Emily made.
And then I just didn't really think everything of it. I kept going. And as I flipped through these pages, by the time I was
done, I realized, I think it was about four out of the five recipes that my mom submitted.
She had wholesale got for my wife and had never once made herself.
She never even married Beth. Is that true?
True with explanation.
True with explanation usually means not really.
Can I explain?
You may.
I'll allow it.
Thank you.
Yes, they were ones I had tasted that she had made and I loved.
tasted that she had made and I loved. So when my sister did a revised edition of the cookbook and asked if there were any ones we wanted to add, I sent them to her, not giving any thought,
just like the first edition, of submitting them. So it wasn't just credit.
So you sent them to her as a, and let's get specific here.
You sent in some evidence, right, Mike?
Mm-hmm.
And these are pages from the cookbook.
Correct.
The Brogan Family Cookbook.
There, I name checked you.
Okay.
Now you'll be found.
Some old, excuse me, some new, some old.
And here's a little, oh, here's a photo on the front from left to right.
Lynn, your sister.
Larry, Kathy, some other people.
Then there's Kevin, Tommy, and then there's you, Mary Beth.
The cute one on the end.
You're very adorable.
Thank you.
How old were you in that photo?
14.
Probably about five.
Yeah.
Mike, I know you're very competitive, but let your mom, let your mom assess her own age.
She remembers being there.
14.
I can look at that and know that she wasn't 14 in that photo.
Anyone who wants to see what a dumb, dumb Mike is, go to our website where you can see this.
14.
Man, you're going to get arrested if you're not careful.
I just thought old photos added 10 years.
And where does the Brogan family make its home?
What part of the world?
We're all kind of in the suburbs of Detroit.
There's Allen Park.
There's Riverview.
Okay.
Michigan.
Yes.
Michigan around Detroit.
Some new, some old.
First edition, November 2000. Revised edition,
December 2012. I presume, Mary Beth, that is this revised edition to which you
added these recipes? Yes. All right. So Mike, oh, here we go. There's some pictures of your home,
some specific addresses. This will be fun for the listeners. They'll love to come and pay homage to you.
Mm-hmm.
Give me one of these recipes.
I'm looking at page seven.
Is it the recipe for deviled eggs?
One of them is for farmstay and salsa.
Right.
Okay, yeah, no, no, this is perfect because you can really tell.
Like, it really stands out.
Let me walk listeners through this the first recipe the first recipe
is for deviled eggs
which is
hard and the recipe
goes make deviled eggs basically
the second recipe
has two ingredients
one of which is Lipton's onion soup
mix and the other, which
is one container regular or light sour cream.
And guess what that's called?
Lipton brand onion soup dip.
I don't think that that's Emily's own recipe.
And then we get to farm stand salsa.
One of these things is not like the other.
We get to farm stand salsa.
One of these things is not like the other.
Because now we got two avocados, cherry tomatoes, three ears of corn, cut off the cob, uncooked, green onions, red onion diced, lemon, lime, sea salt.
Holy moly, this is a beautiful, fresh salsa that does not involve onion soup in any way.
Emily, do I guess right that this is your recipe?
It is.
I don't know if I'd call it a recipe,
but it is something that I made and brought to some events.
It sounds delicious.
Did you name it farm stand salsa?
You know, I don't know.
I don't think what I've named it.
I don't recall.
Well, how did you get the name farm stand salsa? Because I think that's a pretty good name for a salsa. It's a pretty good name. Do you think that,
did you name it when you sent it or do you think I named it? Mary Beth? No, I did not name it.
Emily, if this is your recipe and you did not name it and Mary Beth did not name it,
who could have named it? Well, again, it wasn't to credit or discredit.
Maybe Emily got it from somewhere and then she liked it and then it wound up.
Oh, you're saying your daughter-in-law takes a thief to know a thief and your daughter-in-law
is herself a thief.
Well, she's picking up on my traits, yes.
Is this your recipe, Emily, or not?
Yes, and I must have named it farm stand salsa at some point because I have it on a card.
It's one of the things that over time she'll say, oh, what's in that?
That was great.
I'm going to bring that to a party.
We prepare big amounts of it for summer backyard get-togethers, that kind of stuff.
It's, I had to have named it at some point along the way.
I think you better stick with that story.
Okay.
Kenji.
Yes.
Here's a question for you.
Okay.
What do you think?
Are recipes intellectual property?
Well, I mean, I can tell you what I think. I can also tell you what the government thinks.
I'll allow both opinions if they're different.
Well, so my question would be in the context of this particular recipe book, there are clearly
recipes that violate, you know, at least government intellectual property laws, like,
you know, famous Lipton onion
soup dip.
That's not Mary Beth's recipe.
That's not, that's nobody's recipe, but the Lipton company's recipe.
Yeah.
And so she does seem to be taking liberties anyway, which to me means that, you know,
it can be assumed that none of the recipes in this book are truly sort of developed from
whole cloth original.
And what does that really mean in a recipe anyway?
Are any recipes developed from whole cloth original. And what does that really mean in a recipe anyway? Are any recipes developed from whole cloth original?
I would say no.
Even recipes that are newly developed,
like the type of recipes that I work on,
they're still based on existing techniques.
Maybe we're modifying the techniques a little bit.
What I can tell you is that if I publish a recipe in a book,
the only claim that someone can make that I stole it from them is if I'm using the exact same language.
If the ingredients list is identical and the wording in the language is identical.
A recipe on its own, just the concept of combining ingredients and cooking them in a certain way, it's not something that you can copyright.
The language which you use to express those ideas it's not something that you can copyright. The language which you use to express those ideas,
that is something that you can copyright.
If I took this farm stand salsa recipe
and I cut and pasted it into my own cookbook,
that would be obviously a violation of copyright.
But if you rewrote it in your own words,
then it wouldn't.
This is off the hook five or six times.
Like I'm taking this to Flavortown.
Kenji, I don't know if you listen to the show, but these are Judge Sean Hodgman's famous catchphrases.
Yeah.
We're going downtown to Flavortown.
Yeah, downtown to Flavortown, which is a smaller town located in one district of a larger town.
It's technically a township.
Yeah.
But we call it Flavortown.
Right.
My question would actually be, where did that recipe for farm stand salsa come from in the first place?
Well, that's the thing.
Recipes, you know, are traditionally either adapted from cookbooks or passed down from the mother or father to son or daughter.
They are passed on and improved upon and changed over time.
They are folkloric in that way.
Very rarely does a woman in Michigan wake up in the middle of the night and see glowing in front of her two avocados halved, scooped out into chunks.
One container of cherry
tomatoes halved. Three ears of corn cut off cob uncooked. Lime, lemon, sea salt, etc. Emily,
did you make this up out of your mind or did you adapt it from some other place?
It didn't appear that way to me in the middle of the night in Michigan. No, I think actually this
is a spinoff of something that I ate at another party.
So other friends of ours that I used to work with, I think it had black beans in it. There
might've been some variation, but it's probably pretty similar to something that I had eaten
already. To me, the great innovation is that you or someone called it farm stand salsa. I think
that's the only cool thing. Now, here we go. It's not the only cool thing.
It sounds like a delicious salad or salsa or whatever it is.
But the true unique intellectual property is this pretty cool name that you gave it.
Not your desire to use avocados in a thing.
Right.
So let's move on here to this next page.
Baked blueberry pecan French toast. Now,
whose recipe is this, Mike? This is without a doubt my
wife's recipe. All right. Now, Kenji, we're getting into a different
territory here because when you are making a
salsa, which is basically just a lot of junk that's rotting in your fridge
cut up and put into a bowl, you can really improvise. And really, a recipe is not necessarily required,
much like any salad or sandwich. You just kind of go with what you got.
Right.
Baking is a science, far more so than making a salad, wouldn't you say?
I would say so, yeah.
I mean, you know, you do tend to measure more precisely when you're baking.
Because if you put in, if you just freehand the baking powder,
it's going to affect the outcome.
Yes, that is true.
Definitely true.
Yeah.
Can I add a quick piece of evidence to the file here?
I'd be glad if you would.
You know, I'm sitting at my computer,
and I just did a quick Google search for baked blueberry pecan French toast.
Oh, my God.
What have you turned up?
First of all, there are over 600,000 results.
But the very first one from Epicurious is this exact recipe.
Emily.
Takes a thief to know a thief.
Oh, wow.
Law and order sound times
a hundred.
Yep. And I made it for Mother's Day
brunch and then repeated to make
it because it was a favorite of my
mother-in-law. And so
she stole it from you.
You stole it from the internet.
And I stole it from Epicurious.
All right.
Now, if I could add one thing in Emily's defense.
No, thank you.
Anyway.
What is in, what is, all right, I take it back, Mike.
What is it?
So the way, the way I watch her cook is that she will definitely start out with a recipe
like this from Epicurious
and the first time she makes it she tends to follow you know what's here and she doesn't
always write down the changes that she makes but after having done this like four or five times
it's not going to be a dramatically different product when it's done but she's definitely
started to like incorporate her own substitutions and her own just additives so that it's not quite the same be specific mike
what does she change well i would say less salt does she not grate the nutmeg just throw a whole
nutmeg in different fruits and the blueberries and the apples or, I mean, I'm not the one who watched her really make the recipe.
I guess this is her process for most things is when she looks up something to start, she usually tries to follow it pretty closely the first time.
But by the time she's made it five or six times, it's maybe not drastically so, but it is definitely different than the original recipe off the website.
You heard expert witness.
This recipe reproduced here is directly from the Internet.
Well, that would be because...
What she does in practice does not matter to me.
It's what she publishes.
That would be because when my mom asked her for the recipe, this would be the recipe that she forwarded to my mom.
Oh, and the great tradition of older people asking younger people to Google things for
them.
But I guarantee Emily
at home has this recipe
marked with notes
in her own little changes.
Well, it's a good thing she can't speak for
herself.
It also
seems to me like right now you're saying that the recipe published in the book is not actually Emily's recipe.
So then I don't understand what your problem with including that.
You're saying, first of all, that your mom is stealing recipes from Emily.
And now you're saying that this actually isn't her recipe.
You hear that, you guys?
You know what that's the sound of?
That's the sound of our expert witness finding a crux.
that's the sound of that's the sound that's the sound of our expert witness finding a crux well i i would i would agree with you except that if you go back to the preface of the cookbook
where it says that all of these recipes have like a deeper family history um and and many of them do
like the ones submitted my aunts like i read these and i can remember my aunt making them
um you know i remember at christmas where like lots of these recipes were used. Whereas my mom has submitted a recipe.
She has never made before,
has no family history.
And she has just taken from Emily to put in this cookbook where it kind of
violates that opening,
that opening description of what this cookbook is supposed to represent.
I'm going to do,
I'll direct quote.
All recipes have a history.
Each one seems to recall some memory of a good meal, a fun time, or a special event.
For example, baking was a favorite pastime growing up in a house full of six kids,
where food was everything. And remember that time we opened that packet of Lipton's onion soup and dumped it into some regular or light
sour cream. It really brings me back. By the way, Lipton onion soup mixed onion dip is good. So
I'm not being a snob, just being silly. You're saying that reprinting a recipe
directly from the internet and putting it in here violates the principle of
the preface of the book right and even that lipton recipe that you quoted like as soon as you said
that i actually have some memories that come with it of you know of eating that soup or you know of
it being like a somewhat little mini special occasion where that's come out and wait a minute
so you're saying corporate soup dip means more to you than blueberry pecan french toast as far as like my childhood and i've never had that blake blueberry
as part of growing up oh i forgot that everything has to be defined around the significance to your
childhood or our family history there is no one in my family who has any history. There will be order here. Mike, this inclusion of this recipe, could it not be argued that this is an expression of Mary Beth's affection for her daughter-in-law?
Making a new recipe, stolen from the internet, but introduced to your family and now become a new tradition of your
family could that not be an argument yeah i suppose that's fair i just feel like it violates
that opening page of saying that this stuff already has a history like i i get where your
point where maybe did you write the preface no well what about the note at the bottom of that page which mentions new clan members?
Excuse me?
What have I stumbled into?
There's a note at the bottom of page three
under the preface that says,
since then we have had many new additions
to the Brogan clan,
so there has been a variety of many new recipes
waiting to be shared i thought you were
talking about a different clan maybe maybe in the maybe in the in the 2017 revised edition
you might want to adjust that that note on the bottom of page three just say family
uh so your argument kenji is i'm not sure... My argument is that, so the original preface, it does say that this is a family recipe book,
and it's all about the recipes we had to bring up.
The note, though, mentions that there's new family members,
and that the new recipes are specifically new recipes waiting to be shared.
New favorites added.
Yeah, to build new memories around.
Kenji, you are like the court detective, and I hope you will always be.
Being a food writer is a little bit like being a detective, isn't it?
A little bit, yeah.
But I did not like your scoffing laugh.
Do you think I'm wrong or do you think I'm right?
No, it's like being a detective in ways that I can't think of right now.
Well, tracking down the provenance of a recipe requires a little bit of gumshoeing.
It does. And you do play a little bit of a scientific sleuth in the kitchen.
Right. Figure out why things work the way they do.
Yeah. Well, in large part, because most recipes, especially recipes that involve more than just
cutting things up and dumping them together, recipes that involve more than just cutting things up and dumping them together,
recipes that involve the chemical reaction of cooking,
as I said, were honed through trial and error.
Even the people who invented the recipes probably didn't understand the scientific principles that they were working with and got to something rather mysterious, like baking bread is a weird thing that humans made up.
Yeah. And they've done it so well for so long.
Right. And it's almost like since the inventors didn't know the scientific principles,
it's an after the fact, it's a, what you call it there in the CSI?
I don't know what you call it.
You know, forensic.
Forensic. Rightnsic, right.
Right, right.
We're looking at existing evidence.
Yeah, trying to figure out how that piece of bread got shot to death.
Full of holes.
I think it's really important to look at decay rates in all of these situations.
Oh, sure.
So, Mike, Kenji just blew a hole through your hole.
It violates the premise of the preface theory.
And analyzing the blood spatter on the wall, you are mortally wounded. Can I do one rebuttal to that?
Hang on just one second. Who is, Emily, was that you trying to get in there?
Yeah. So I thought maybe to describe it, and maybe this supports what Mike is saying,
and maybe it's the same thing that he's saying but i think this book more than a cookbook is like it like what a photo album is to a family
where it's this collection of like you said corporate dips and um you know other things that
people have made that are are not original to them but that madam you do not need to introduce me to the to the concept of the
self-published spiral bound family cookbook i am an owner i am an owner a proud owner of the
self-published spiral bound family cookbook i believe from 1989 that was put together
by the wives of the 1989 Hartford Whalers.
It's one of my prized possessions.
I think it involves, I honestly think it involves a recipe, quote unquote, for Franks and Beans.
And I love it.
It would fit right in.
Whose side are you on in this one?
Now that you've both been outed as thieves, you're taking your mother-in-law's side?
Well, I'd kind of like to stay neutral.
That's really, this is between them.
They like to battle.
They like to battle?
Because I'm an in-law and I'd like to stay on the good side.
Explain to me how they like to battle, Emily.
Well, I mean, from placing his mom in the garbage can when she was, I mean, they have
an ongoing Scrabble fight.
If there is an opportunity to compete, to be the first to get something, whether it's...
I'm sorry.
Did you say placing his mom in the garbage can?
Yeah, that's the part that I missed.
He did.
He did. I understand the Scrabble part 100%.
You almost distracted me with the Scrabble thing.
I almost take that bait.
But you can't just drop a mom in a garbage can and just try to move on to Scrabble from there.
Can I explain that?
Please.
Garbage can mom, go.
Yes.
He was asking me a question, and i gave him an answer i don't recall
the question and i said okay that's enough just drop it and go no no no if you don't whatever
i'm gonna put you in the garbage can and i'm like no no you're not he suggests i am how
how old was he at this time? He was in high school.
So you were having a dispute, and he said, if you don't do X, I'm going to put you in the garbage can.
Correct.
I completely disagree.
Silence, Mike.
And so he picked me up.
He's a stocky guy.
So he picked me up, and he put me in so that my arms and my legs were like sticking out.
I couldn't get out.
But first.
Correct.
But first.
Yeah, I'm just describing a thing.
Sorry, you don't like me describing your mom's butt, Mike?
You put her in a garbage can.
No, I'm actually having a lot of fun revisiting this memory.
I know.
It's like you just ate a Madeline out of the garbage and it reminds you
that time you put your mom in a garbage can but that is not how it went down it seems like it
went down somehow she she hid a bag of dog poop in my car to get back at me for something else. And when I got back and I had realized that,
um,
I confronted her on it.
And then she realized that I'm,
I'm kind of an over retaliator.
Um,
and she realized that she was in trouble.
And I forget what she had said,
but I was like,
the garbage just happened to be right there.
I was like, listen, I could probably pick you up and put you in that
garbage and you wouldn't be able to get out
until you apologized
for putting a bag of dog
poop in my car so
she refused to apologize she stood her
ground so I picked her up
and put her in bud first
and she was like a turtle on her back
and I forget what I asked her to do to get out of it.
Oh, this is intense.
Because part of me is really enjoying this incredibly weird story about some ongoing increasing prank blood feud between the two of you. My favorite part was when she just offhandedly mentioned his stockiness,
as though that was a qualification for putting someone in a garbage can.
I think she meant that he's a strong dude.
Yeah.
She could have said he was a strong dude.
Right.
The conflict has so many layers here, is my point.
But I just need to say, everybody, don't assault your mother bodily.
Don't put your mom in the garbage can.
Even if she puts dog poop in your car?
Of course.
That is beyond over-retaliation.
Physical assault is not where you want to go with this.
I asked him to clean his car many times, and he didn't.
Madam, just because I'm saying you shouldn't be put in a garbage can doesn't mean you have the right to put
dog poop in his car.
I am saying that if you put
dog poop in his car for whatever reason,
a larf or just
a chance to get
back at him for not cleaning his car,
the proper response to that,
Mike, is increasing
level of prank.
Do you understand what I'm saying?
Not shoving people into the garbage.
I thought that was a good prank.
It's not a prank.
You know what's a fun prank? Punching someone in the teeth.
Mary Beth, how do you feel about
being put in the garbage can?
I wasn't happy.
Did you feel as though you'd been tricked?
Did you realize you were in a garbage can?
I'm trying to get at the essential prankiness of this.
No, I knew where I was, and I couldn't get out.
But when I did, I came out swinging in a fun way.
Sure.
I would never hurt.
I don't want to deny your family its own particular brand of fun,
but I do need to ask Mike,
are you truly bothered by this misappropriation of your wife's recipes?
Or is this just the flimsiest of excuses to attempt to figuratively put your
mom in a garbage can on my fake justice podcast.
I would be lying if I didn't say it was a pretty close mix of both.
And if I could only add that if the situation were reversed,
she would have no problem doing the same to me.
Emily, do you think that what Mike says is true?
Yes, I do.
I think had someone else in our family put a recipe of mine in a book, we wouldn't be on this podcast, though.
He has fun picking on her.
He's just ginned this whole thing up in order to humiliate her on a podcast.
It's a little exaggerated due to the fact that it is her.
order to humiliate her on a podcast? It's a little exaggerated due to the fact that it is her.
If I could, if I, I don't know if I've already described, like this has mostly to do with my discovery of how she went about it in the first place is what led me to actually submit the case.
I think it is more of a very pleasant and entertaining side effect that I get to rub
her nose in it. What would you have me order if I were to find in your favor?
nose in it. What would you have me order if I were to find in your favor? I would like her to have to issue
some kind of apology or retraction or
some kind of added page to the cookbook to apologize
and then give my wife credit
in a future edition. What about adding head
notes to each of the recipes
saying exactly what the special moment
or celebration they're included for is?
Something that captures the spirit of that preface.
Hold on, Kenji.
This isn't about a family's love.
Yeah, I think it's an inspired idea, Kenji, but it does encourage people to do more writing.
And that's something generally this court frowns upon.
What about this?
What if at the beginning of each recipe you put a fond memory of a time you hurt or embarrassed a family member?
That would be wonderful.
Preferably using that recipe, but I guess that would be strictly required.
If she's looking to attach a fond memory to some of those recipes,
I think the only fond memory my mom would have of those recipes
is of stealing them to include them in the cookbook.
Is that true, Mary Beth? Is that your fond memory?
No. I love my daughter-in-law. She's a wonderful cook.
And she cooks quite differently as a lot of people do today from when my mother cooked,
which was quite basic.
So the things that Emily makes are a little more involved and they're wonderful.
a little more involved and they're wonderful. So when my sister asked me for new recipes,
I gave her the ones like these certain four recipes just came off the top of my head as being these are wonderful, include these. So I didn't do it to discredit her. A lot of the recipes are not
credited. We kind of have an understanding, oh, so-and-so makes this, and that's kind of what spurred me.
I don't see any credits.
And I think, though, that I've heard enough in order to make my decision,
so I'm going to go into my testing kitchen and whip up a Justice Foam.
But before I do, I just want to read this recipe for chicken salad that is uncredited.
So I will say that it is by me.
It's from the Brogan Family Cookbook.
Two cups cubed chicken, cooked, an important detail.
Two cups cubed chicken, cooked, an important detail.
Two cups celery, one small green pepper, two tablespoons onion, one small jar pimento,
10 ounces frozen peas, cooked, one cup Hellman's brand mayonnaise, one small can Chinese noodles.
Mix all ingredients together.
Chill.
I'll be back in a moment with my decision.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom, perhaps to make himself a nice chicken salad.
Here's my question.
Here's my question for Emily and Mary Beth.
Have the two of you thought about leaving Mike behind and starting a new family elsewhere?
Yes.
It's been considered.
Why did you
decide against it?
Well, I love him.
Emily does too.
And, you know, he's
my son.
I tried my best.
I really did.
Mike, what food brings the best and deepest family memories for you?
My mom has several recipes, like a potato soup.
She used to make a beef stroganoff.
Several things that do evoke that same kind of historical memory for me,
which is why I found it odd that she wouldn't have put those in there
instead of stealing recipes from Emily.
And that's what I was going to say in her defense.
She has a few things in her toolbox there.
I'm sorry, did I ask you?
I missed the answer to my question there in that little soliloquy.
I was trying to make you human, but I give up.
Many of us have.
You seem like a lovely guy. We'll see what Judge John Hodgman has to say about all of this when we come back in just a second.
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That chicken salad was delicious.
How are those noodles in there?
They added a little crunch.
I like the pimento in particular.
Yeah, a whole jar.
The only thing that the whole experience of eating it was haunting because I had no idea who created the recipe.
Kenji.
Yes.
Thank you again so much for being with us.
Before I give you my opinion, which is, of course, binding by fake Internet law.
What's what's your take?
Should Mary Beth be punished?
I my take is, well, I don't think she should be punished for the crime that she is charged with right now.
I think the real crime that she should be punished for, actually, though, is including a recipe where 50% of the ingredients are Cool Whip and Snickers bar in the salads section instead of the desserts section.
But maybe that's a different trial.
I think that's a regionalism.
Where was that recipe?
I missed it. It's right above the chicken
salad. Oh, the apple snicker salad?
Yeah. Yeah, it's very misleading
because there are snickers. There are four snicker
bars in there. Wait, there's apples in there?
Yeah. Oh, I'm out.
When I thought it was
just Cool Whip and Snickers bars, I was on board.
There's a wonderful...
I've been trying to get more vegetables in my diet.
I really think you guys should get this up on as a Kindle single or something soon because this thing is going to fly off the shelves.
Listen to this.
Thank you, Kenji, for bringing my attention to the apple Snickers salad.
I missed that.
Listen to this.
Thank you, Kenji, for bringing my attention to the apple snicker salad.
I missed that.
My favorite aspect of apple snicker salad.
Is it the Graysmith apples, cool whip snicker bars, crushed pineapple and walnuts that are involved?
No.
Is it the fact that it also encourages you to chill?
No.
My favorite part is if you have any compliments or problems, call Katie.
The last line of the recipe.
Why?
Because it's credited.
It's credited.
Here's the thing.
There are two crimes here.
One is the crime of theft or plagiarism,
intentional or unintentional,
well-intentioned or mal-intentioned. There is no question that when you take a recipe, as with any other piece of writing, and present it without due
credit in a context where it might be reasonably misunderstood to be your original work, that is plagiarism.
And to someone walking through their favorite bookstore and stumbling across this wonderful book
and opening it and finding this recipe therein, obviously it's not a commercially produced book,
but someone finding this at a yard sale or whatever, being sold off with all the rest
of your possessions after we all are dead, would reasonably conclude that this was a
recipe from the Brogan family and not a recipe stolen from Epicurious.
Similarly, if with Farmstand Salsa, if indeed Emily did invent that recipe and that name and isn't just a liar who stole it again,
it would be reasonable to conclude at this yard sale that this was invented by some member of the broken family.
The second crime is, which one? We don't know.
No one's getting credit, even for the stuff they steal.
One, we don't know.
No one's getting credit, even for the stuff they steal.
Only Katie was brave enough to take responsibility and willing to offer her help with any problems that might arise with her apple snicker salad.
And there are, I can imagine, many problems might arise from it. And indeed, for a family cookbook, which both in spirit and in letter
of the preface is designed to help family members remember old family recipes and introduce new
recipes into an existing and ongoing and growing family tradition, you're leaving out an important
part of the exercise, which is helping people remember who made what, whose recipe was what,
who was famous for making that Lipton soup onion dip. I think, Kenji, you raised a very beautiful
point, which is if it is to collect memories, why not put in the memories? You have the lovely photos. You hint at the memories.
But crediting these recipes and maybe adding a line or two about what they meant to the family
will help make this whole endeavor much more meaningful. And I don't joke, this will be a
service to historians. Sometime in the future, when we are all dust in the ground and have gone to meet God
or whatever, someone will find this thing and for some reason be in a locked vault at the bottom of
the sea. And they'll wonder, how did this get here? But they'll also wonder, who were the Brogans?
What was it like to eat in Michigan? Where were people stealing recipes from then?
Which is all part of the wonderful detective story that is food history.
And so I therefore find, in Mike's favor, the court does not like this but it is compelled to follow justice
marybeth unknowingly plagiarized both her daughter and epicurious
and she must write a note and organize a revision of the cookbook in which she explains what she did
and apologizes, and thereafter works on her own or with Mike's cooperation, or maybe Emily's help,
poor woman, to give credit where credit is due for each cookbook and to give a little line of explanation as to why this is a memorable recipe and where it came from.
And for this pecan blueberry French toast, the line will be, I, Mary Beth, stole this recipe from Emily, who stole it from Epicurious.
But we have made amends by apologizing here and on the Judge
John Hodgman podcast. No one would have known without the detective work of Kenji Lopez-Alt,
author of The Food Lab, or words to that effect. I know you've already given your judgment. Could
I give one more quick piece of, quick little bit of of evidence? I would be very, very glad to. I would just like to ask
Mary Beth. I just Googled the Brogan family and it turns out they don't exist. Whether the memory
that you're going to write about in that farm stand salsa is maybe about the time that all of
you sat down to watch an episode of Food 911, specifically the episode Giddy Up Picnic.
all of you sat down to watch an episode of Food 911,
specifically the episode Giddy Up Picnic.
Oh.
Oh.
Let me tell you. Gung gung.
Law and order noise.
Also the first thing you get when you Google farm stands.
Yeah.
Kenji Lopez, I can't tell you how important it has been to have you here
and how grateful that you were here.
And maybe you shall be the official court Googler from now on.
Because I, like any other elderly person, need someone else to do it for me, apparently.
I could have done that.
Emily, how do you answer this new charge?
Oh, I don't know, Food 911.
Uh-huh.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Well, we wish you the best.
Yeah.
Let me tell you something that's not over. Meaningless, harmless violation of reprinting etiquette that was drummed up by Mike in order to hurt his mom.
Conscripting my podcast to be part of their ongoing feud has, you know, what you did not count on, which was that the process of discovery would uncover other crimes.
which was that the process of discovery would uncover other crimes. And maybe you should have let this drop before you even took it up.
You've already learned now that your wife is a thief twice over.
And although you seem very nice, Emily,
Kenji Lopez-Altz will forever make me distressed anything that you say.
Guilty as charged. And second of all,
Mike,
it was revealed that you assaulted
your mother when you were in high school.
And there has
never been justice for that crime.
That's a strong word. So, no, it's
not. No.
That's pretty much a descriptive word.
Yeah. Trust me.
She's laughing while it takes place?
Yeah.
You know, that's not affirmative consent.
That may be fear or worry overtaking your better senses.
But, yeah, you can't pick people up and put them in garbage cans, dude.
I'd say it was likely a sort of inherited madness.
Could be.
I'm sure everyone had a good time.
I did.
I did.
Mary Beth, if you have any PTSD you'd like to discuss later, we can get you to a safe space.
Thank you.
But all the same, Mike, I cannot order anyone to assault you, but I can order you to get in a garbage can.
I'll assist with that.
No, I mean right now.
I can do that.
Get in the garbage can, Mike.
The same garbage can I put her in is still here.
This could not be more perfect.
This is true justice.
This is what making memories is all about.
Pour some guacamole on him and then put that in the book.
Emily?
Emily, are you there?
I want you to describe what Mike is doing.
Oh, man.
He is trying to untangle his headphones to go to the garbage can.
Here we go.
Keep going.
I don't know if...
Because of the stockiness, I don't know if he's going to fit butt first.
I think you mean with strength.
I will fit butt first.
Oh, he's sitting on the garbage.
He didn't even bother to empty it.
He is butt first in the garbage can.
Are his feet off the floor?
They sure are.
And how does that make you feel to see Justice serve today?
It is a special moment.
I enjoy it.
It's actually kind of comfy.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules.
That is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the court.
Not you, Mike.
You stay in the garbage.
Emily, how do you feel right now?
You know, I think it was solved.
I love the idea of adding the memories.
And I think I'm going to take a picture of him in the garbage can right now for the new edition.
And put it in the cookbook.
How do you feel, Mary Beth?
Not the best.
I thought I was going to win.
Well, you know, you did not win.
Madam, your son is sitting in a garbage can
is that not winning enough for you well being the one that i raised him no it's not
you guys did expose there's others you guys have to learn to let it go
well i'm trying well uh mike emily maryb, thank you so much for sharing your unique family with us
on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
It's been a pleasure.
Thank you.
I'm losing circulation in my legs.
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If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I.
Hmm.
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.
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If you need a laugh and you're
on the go.
Kenji Lopez, thank you so much for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
What a pleasure. Thanks for having me. And Kenji's book, The Food Lab, is a book that I own a copy
of. Is that the subtitle? And I love referring to it and using its recipes and enjoying Kenji's
lively writing and his interesting insight. James Beard award winning. Everything in the book you can find on Google, by the way.
That's not how you sell books, Kenji.
I got a copy of this dang thing.
No, but it's your writing and it is delightful.
Yeah.
And interesting.
And certainly, I would say, James Beard award earning and winning.
Yeah.
So don't,
I'm congrats.
Which,
which,
uh, which,
uh,
category did you win in?
Uh,
general cooking.
That's the big one.
Yeah.
Did you have a good time at the ceremony?
Uh,
yeah,
I was,
I was nervous for the first half of it and then relieved for the second half.
You know what my nickname in the kitchen is?
Nervous and relieved. Well, I don't know. What's your general cooking?
General cooking. How did you know? Oh, so did you Google it? Too quick. Thank you so much, Kenji.
You're welcome. Thanks for having me.
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Thanks, guys.
We're going to be on tour, Judge Hodgman.
What? Yeah. We're going to be on tour, Judge Hodgman. What?
Yeah, we're going to the Pacific
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I think you mean the Atlantic Northeast.
The Pacific Northeast is that fictional
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Which, maybe we'll have some listeners
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Go to MaximumFun.org for all of the dates, all of the details.
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