A
HEAVYWEIGHT'S HANDIWORK!
By
Cliff Matheson & Ilda Jacobs
Americans and nostalgic expats can now buy mosbolletjies and koeksisters
at the Cape Dutch Bakery which recently opened in Maryland, USA.
Other South African delicacies such as rooibos tea and ouma beskuit are
available at the bakery, which has a distinct Cape-Dutch feel to it and
a comfy tea room.
Expats embarking on the 18 mile great trek from Washington DC, will
encounter the former SA Springbok Power lifter Kevin Fraser behind
the counter of his bakery decorating cakes with exquisite
precision. That's him on the right outside his bakery.
Kevin represented
South Africa at the World Powerlifting Championships in Dayton, Ohio in
1987 in the heavy weight division. He broke the SA bench press record
with a lift of over 560 pounds.
Bakery duty called when
the 230 pound rugby player and weight lifter was peeping over his wife's
shoulder at a cake decoration class which she attended. He has been in
the Washington area for the past five years, making meat pies, biltong,
boerewors, and other SA delicacies.
Kevin is originally from
Cape Town where he grew up Newlands. He joined SA Airforce at Swartkops
and later managed a steak house in Bellville called "The Oklahoma" before
he leaving for the States.
He ran a catering business
from his home in Maryland until he ran out of space. Kevin
snapped up the opportunity for new premises and opened the bakery.
He did all the refurbishing himself.
The bakery marks Kevin's
graduation from his kitchen in his 19th century Accokeek farmhouse
to retail premises just half a mile up the street, now proudly
displaying its sign, "Cape Dutch Bakery."
The bakery does 2 bakes
a day for the a.m. and p.m. local traffic and is a popular stop-off for
local Americans wanting some real bread -- not the local air-filled white
loaf that tastes like puffed up paper.
Kevin makes a weekly run into Washington to deliver his assorted meat pies
to various embassies -- like the British, Zambian, Botswana and Lesotho
to name a few. He does not get orders from the SA embassy but the staff
is often spotted buying Kevin's products at the British embassy tuck shop.
The bakery provides
employment in an area which is less developed than Washington. One of his
bakers is Marie Knobel, who is well known in the area for being an expert
cake decorator. Also helping is Verna Bannister, full time behind the counter.
Marie is the president
of the Maryland Cake Club and also the local representative of the International
Cake Exploration Society.
She taught Fraser's
wife, Amanda, when she took a paid class in cake decorating
a couple years ago. Kevin could not afford to pay for the course but asked
if he could peek over Amanda's shoulder in class.
Kevin loves
rugby and refs local games. He is head coach for the Severn River
Rugby Club in Annapolis, Maryland, home to the US Naval Academy.
Despite his
brutish look, girth and huge thick fingers, Kevin makes the most delicate
edible orchids and other foliage for the cakes sold at the bakery.
The Cape Dutch Bakery also
sells milktart, rusks, plain and buttermilk and muesli rusks will
follow soon. The fudge sold in the jar on the counter top is the real stuff
-- good old standard S.A. fudge which is unobtainable in the States.
For more information,
contact reporter@erols.com
BACK
TO MAIN PAGE
, 1999.
Best
Viewed with Netscape Navigator
Webmaster:
COLIN DEDRICKS
(C)
Copyright '97.
|