Current:Home > MarketsNashville baker makes beautiful cookies of Taylor Swift in her NFL era ahead of Super Bowl -WealthSpot
Nashville baker makes beautiful cookies of Taylor Swift in her NFL era ahead of Super Bowl
View
Date:2025-04-14 19:21:55
Emily Henegar is a frosting virtuoso known for her delectable creations that belong in museums. She delineates memories on sugar cookies for all occasions, and she's made her mark by designing cookies for the stars: Taylor Swift, Harry Styles, Ariana Grande, John Mayer, Travis Scott, The Lumineers and Maggie Rogers. Her latest jaw-dropping batch featured Taylor Swift in her “NFL era.”
Henegar, who lives in Nashville, frosted cookies in red-and-gold. Six rectangular sweets replicated Swift's Chiefs outfits: the custom jacket designed by NFL wife Kristin Juszczyk, the red-and-black sweatshirt she bought from small business Westside Storey and the custom white sweatshirt designed by Kilo Kish for GANT.
Another morsel is a cutout of Travis Kelce's gloves shaped in a heart, a symbol he made when he scored a touchdown during a game against the Bills. Swift often makes the gesture during the "Fearless" set of the Eras Tour.
Henegar also made a replica of the beanie Swift wore to a game made by Kansas City small business Kut the Knit. And then there's a rectangle with the line Swift famously sang to Kelce in Buenos Aires, Argentina: "Karma is the guy on the Chiefs coming straight home to me."
It's a trend!Iowa baker hand-paints Taylor Swift-Travis Kelce cookies that will blow your mind
That’s how the cookie crumbles
Before making the NFL-themed batch, the baker explained how she got a 25 custom treats hand delivered to Taylor Swift in May. All three assortments made it backstage at the Eras Tour.
“I cannot let Taylor Swift be in Nashville and not make her cookies,” the 24-year-old business owner said. “Like every great Taylor Swift story, it goes way back.”
Henegar began her business, Cookie in the Kitchen, 13 years ago when she was 11 years old. She combined her love of graphic design, business, music and baking into a winning recipe.
The chef sells sweets for birthdays, graduations, baby showers, wedding showers and corporate events. Her specialty is crafting sugary, custom-made memories for bands and artists.
“My tagline is making celebrities feel like people and people feel like celebrities,” she said. Her first big break happened senior year in Atlanta. Henegar took album covers, fan art and popular moments of Dua Lipa’s career and frosted them onto cookies.
“I made some cookies for her and passed them off to her security guard thinking, ‘I don’t know what’s going to happen,’” she said, “and then I’m driving away from the venue when my mom calls me.”
Dua Lipa had posted a photo of the cookies and a series of videos with people coming up to try each one.
“My mom said, ‘I think you’re on to something,’” she said.
In her pop star cookie era
So when Swift announced she was performing at Nissan Stadium for three nights, Henegar got to work making three sets of designs, one for each night.
For night one, she made a replica of Swift’s “Lover House,” a symbolic house where every room represents a different album. For night two, she frosted outfits Swift wore during her three-and-a-half-hour performance. And for night three, she had 25 cookies of inside jokes and memories from the “Anti-Hero” music video guests to the "ME!" mural Kelsey Montague painted to Swift's three cats Olivia, Meredith and Benjamin Button.
“[My contact at Nissan] told me they brought the ‘Lover House’ just generally backstage,” Henegar said. “And then the second night, they brought those to Taylor’s team, and then the third night, they brought the personalized set to her team, and then her team was like, ‘OK, we’re taking these to Taylor now.’”
Follow Bryan West, the USA TODAY Network's Taylor Swift reporter, on Instagram, TikTok and X as @BryanWestTV.
veryGood! (7975)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Deion Sanders' football sons jet to Paris to walk runway as fashion models
- Ryan Gosling's kids still haven't seen 'Barbie' movie — even though he plays Ken
- Melissa Rivers Reveals How Joan Rivers Would've Felt About Ozempic Craze
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Doomsday cult pastor and others will face murder and child torture charges over deaths of 429 in Kenya
- Why Kyle Richards Felt Weird Being in Public With Mauricio Umansky Before Separation
- 3 officers acquitted in death of Manny Ellis, who pleaded for breath, to get $500,00 each and leave Tacoma Police Dept.
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Some US states and NYC succeed in getting 2020 census numbers double-checked and increased
Ranking
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Minnesota man freed after 25 years in prison files suit over wrongful conviction
- Who is the Super Bowl 58 halftime show performer? What to know about this year's show
- Severed hand found in the pocket of man suspected of killing woman in Colorado, police say
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Some US states and NYC succeed in getting 2020 census numbers double-checked and increased
- Yola announces new EP 'My Way' and 6-stop tour to celebrate 'a utopia of Black creativity'
- How Natalia Bryant Is Channeling Late Dad Kobe Into Her Own Legacy
Recommendation
Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
Louisiana lawmakers advance bill that would shift the state’s open ‘jungle’ primary to a closed one
Ethnic Serbs in Kosovo hold a petition drive in hopes of ousting 4 ethnic Albanian mayors
South Carolina Republicans weigh transgender health restrictions as Missouri sees similar bills
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Contrails — the lines behind airplanes — are warming the planet. Could an easy AI solution be on the horizon?
Forest Service pulls right-of-way permit that would have allowed construction of Utah oil railroad
Retail sales up strongly in December as Americans showed continued willingness to spend