Dot's Homestyle Pretzels look like the typical russet-hued twists passed around while watching a game. Their seasoning is barely visible, but unmistakable: beginning with a whiff of synthetic butter, blooming into a garlicky umami with a slight tang, and finishing with a mild afterburn.
Whatever it is, it has people hooked.
Dorothy "Dot" Henke, who lives near Velva, N.D., a small town outside Minot, launched her seasoned pretzel business as a two-sheet-pan, home kitchen operation. Her timing couldn't have been better.
In 2012, gas stations around Minot picked up her zesty snack just as hordes of hungry oil workers descended.
Dot's then arrived at retailers in Minnesota and beyond, often in serendipitous ways. A nephew in Alexandria, Minn., helped her get the pretzels into a convenience store there; an enthusiastic Ace Hardware rep in North Dakota spread Dot's through the company's national network.
Although the pretzels have recently become available in most states, they're still relatively unknown outside the Midwest. But that's changing fast, as fans ship suitcases of Dot's to Florida, feed them to camels in the desert or, in the case of retired NBA star Shaquille O'Neal, rave about them at speaking engagements. It's only a matter of time before Brooklyn hipsters discover how well they pair with La Croix.
Dot herself has become the fastest rising icon of the salty snack sphere, on her way to rubbing pretzel-twist shoulders with the legendary Nabisco mascot Mr. Salty and Auntie Anne, doyenne of the mall-based soft-pretzel chain.
When the hosts of Milwaukee Public Radio's "The Pretzel Podcast" (of course there's a pretzel podcast) secured an interview with Henke, one gushed, "I don't know if there's a bigger pretzel celebrity!"