Like many chefs who found themselves without a dining room full of people to cook for in the early months of the pandemic, Gavin Kaysen threw his culinary energy into a new project: cooking classes.
These interactive, livestreamed events came with a basket of ingredients so participants could cook along at home with the James Beard Award-winning chef. The format was relaxed, and Kaysen found that he could be more casual, even jokey, with his viewers than he ever was in a formal dining room. With his kids just off camera, dancing and fooling around, the videos opened up a side of Kaysen he'd rarely shown to strangers — the personal side.
Even after his Minneapolis restaurants, Demi and Spoon and Stable, had reopened, he continued teaching online. It turned out, he was building something.
"We kept doing it, and we kept leaning in to providing directions to people, and it got to the point where it was like, 'OK, now we have 80 recipes that are cataloged, we know that they all work because we tried them with everybody. Why don't we turn this into a cookbook?'" Kaysen said.
Kaysen wasn't the only chef with that idea.
A slate of cookbooks by Minnesota authors has hit shelves this year, with entries from lauded high-end chefs like Kaysen, to TV celebrities such as Justin Sutherland and Molly Yeh, to bloggers and recipe developers. Each of them used their time in pandemic lockdown to put their creative cooking skills on paper — and, in some cases, share more of themselves with the world.
Kaysen's new book, "At Home," is the chef's first. It compiles many of the recipes in his GK At Home series, recordings of which are still available to download online. Though two years have passed since he taught many of those classes, the looser, more candid version of Kaysen — who once chided a viewer who was too slow to cook her potatoes — is still around on its pages, giving readers a further glimpse into his personal life via what he cooks for his wife and children in his Edina home.
The "magic" of letting people peek into his home life "is that people had never really seen that side of me. All they see is what they read or what they hear, and then the three or four minutes I'm at your dinner table, and then you make the presumption of who I am," Kaysen said. "But I'm a dad, I've got a lot of stuff that I do at home, I've got a lot of errands that I need to run, and I love cooking at home — and this is my way of showing you that."