Business & Tech
Recipe Ruined? Berger Cookies Could Disappear with Proposed Ban on Trans Fat
"It doesn't taste right," Berger Cookies' owner says of recipes the company has tried recently without trans fat as an ingredient.

A beloved Baltimore cookie may never taste the same if the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has its way with a proposed ban on trans fats.Â
Berger Cookies, cake-like cookies topped with a thick slab of fudge, have been prepared with the same basic recipe since the 1800s in Baltimore.
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But two of the cookiesâ key ingredientsâmargarine and fudgeâcontain partially hydrogenated soybean and cottonseed oil, a source of trans fat.
Earlier this month, the FDA announced its intention to ban the use of partially hydrogenated oils because of their link to coronary heart disease.
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The FDA will make a final decision on enacting the ban after a 60-day public comment period ends Jan. 7. If the ban goes into effect, food manufacturers will no longer be allowed to sell partially hydrogenated oils or products that contain them without special approval from the FDA.
In the past two weeks, the Berger Cookie bakery has made two attempts to produce the cookies without trans fat, said owner and president Charles DeBaufre Jr. The result was discouraging, he said.
âWeâve tried it and trust me, it is nasty. It doesnât taste right,â DeBaufre said. âThe textureâs not there. Itâs an entirely different product.â
Trans fats are essential to the taste and flavor of the cookie, DeBaufre said. If the ban goes into effect, he said he would apply for an exception. If the bakery is denied an exception, he said he would continue to test out new recipes or âgo out of business, one of the two.â
Food manufacturers across the country would be required to alter their recipes if the trans fat ban goes into effect. Many varieties of doughnuts, microwave popcorn, crackers and canned frosting depend on partially hydrogenated oils for their texture or flavor.
âMore reformulation would need to be done and additional substitute ingredients would need to be developed if partially hydrogenated oils were removed from the processed foods that still contain them,â FDA spokeswoman Theresa Eisenman said in an emailed statement.
Manufacturers would have time to change their recipes to meet FDA regulations if a trans fat ban takes effect, Eisenman said.
While some loyal Berger Cookie fans hope the bakery will comply with the FDA, others would rather not see the feds enforce a trans fat ban at all.
Berger Cookie enthusiast Liz Lane, 21, of Ellicott City, said she would not support the ban because she does not want the FDA to control her diet.
âI know to pace myself and not indulge myself too much. I understand that theyâre trying to make us healthy, but I donât know if I need them to tell me how and what to eat,â Lane said, adding that she would not buy Berger Cookies prepared with a new recipe if they tasted âtoo different.â
Samantha Blee, 25, of Arlington, Va., also a Berger Cookie enthusiast, said she wouldnât mind eating a Berger Cookie with a new recipe, as long as it tasted similar to the original.
âI can see big Berger Cookie fans getting upset about it, but I would hope that people take health into consideration first,â Blee said.
DeBaufre said he has heard from devoted cookie fans who hope the recipe will not change. He said he told them that itâs not up to him, but that he will do what he can to keep the original cookies on the shelves.
âWeâll go to the lengths that we can without destroying the integrity of the product,â he said. âI donât want to be in the conversation, âBerger Cookies used to be so good.â I donât want to be a part of that conversation.âGet more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.