Toolbar

Printer Friendly Email RSS Feed Bookmark
Home Articles Celebrity Chefs Fabulous Features Celebrity Chefs
A Conversation with Barbecue King Famous Dave Anderson

Rate it!
Votes (3) | Comments (0)
By Cheri Sicard
Posted August 6th, 2007
Famous Dave's Backroads & Sidestreets
Buy Now
famous dave andersonFamous Dave: The Mino-Giizhig Fund, first of all...I don't believe that I would be here today if God hadn't had His hand over my life. I really believe that because other people have given me second chances in life that...I always tell everybody today that my higher purpose of life is being able to make a positive difference in the community. Actually I have a very active speaking schedule where I will speak to colleges, high schools, community groups. There was a time in my life where I was digging between the seat cushions to find change so I could buy milk for my children. I know how agonizingly embarrassing it is to ask my wife for her jewelry so I could take it to a pawnshop just to pay rent. I have been there. So today, I really believe because God has blessed me with a great palette, that I am able to create great recipes. We have been successful. Even when I do my training at Hog Heaven University where we have all of our young people come when they are first getting into Famous Dave's, I always tell them that this isn't about Dave Anderson, this isn't about Famous Dave's. And if you really understand what's going on, you will understand that this is about making a difference in the community.

Today I really believe that my whole purpose in life is to make a positive difference in our community. All of the proceeds, all of the money that comes from the sale of this cookbook is going to help disadvantaged children. Last April I personally donated $1.4 million to help start this fund. So far we have helped put 15 kids through alcohol and drug abuse treatment. We have helped build a roof for a school for disadvantaged children and we helped create a computer lab for an Indian tribe in northern Wisconsin working with Microsoft. A lot of good has come from the sale of this cookbook.

Cheri Sicard: That's wonderful. It's a beautiful book. I think everybody should get it.
Famous Dave: Everybody talks about how well their grandmother cooked and I tell people this cookbook is so wonderful, this is the one cookbook that your grandmother wished she had.

Cheri Sicard: You're right. That's a really good description of it. I also wanted to ask you about your own background growing up. What food traditions were like for you? I know you come from a Native American background. Was there barbecue in your family?
Famous Dave: It had a heavy, I think, Southern influence. My dad was a Choctaw Indian from Idabel, Oklahoma and my mom was a Lac Courte Chippewa Indian from Hayward, Wisconsin. You wouldn't think this happened in today's culture, but the Bureau of Indian Affairs took both my parents from their families. Typically, you would think this would be something that happened in Abraham Lincoln's Day. But this was both my parents and they were stuck in an Indian boarding school in Lawrence, Kansas, called the Haskell Institute. That's where they met. My dad became an electrician. They moved and got married and went to Chicago. My dad, every weekend, used to haul my mom down South until she learned how to cook Southern. That's how fanatical my family was about great home cooking.

Cheri Sicard: So it's not just you that's obsessed?
Famous Dave: No, it's a family tradition.

Cheri Sicard: Well that's a great tradition. A very great tradition that you're probably passing on to your children. Do they cook as well?
Famous Dave: Almost all of them do. We have a 30 x 40 foot kitchen in our house.

Cheri Sicard: Sounds like a dream house to me.
Famous Dave: It kind of is. You know, one of the things I have always said and one of the reasons why I always tell people I am not a chef but a cook, is that I really believe that a chef knows how to cut up a tomato a hundred and fifty-two ways, but I really believe that some of the best food made in America comes in family kitchens where moms have love and patience. Many times that food is tastier than anything you will find in some fancy restaurant because they are cooking with love.

Cheri Sicard: Right, there is heart and soul behind it, and the food is a lot more than just something to eat. That's really what we are trying to get across with our website as well. We really want to preserve people's culinary heritages. We have message boards where people can exchange recipes, holiday traditions and things like that. So we are kind of trying to accomplish the same thing.
Famous Dave: Good luck to you.

Cheri Sicard: Thank you and thanks for talking to us, Dave.



 

Comments

There are no comments for this item

Be the first to leave a comment

You must be a registered member to leave a comment. So why not sign up now?

 

Sign up for Cheri's FabulousFoods Newsletter/Blog

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Cheri's Twitter

    Follow me on Twitter
    FabulousLiving.comFabulousFoods.comFabulousTravel.comSheKnows