Dorothy Henke grew up the youngest of six children on a small farm north of Wahpeton, North Dakota, and because of family circumstances was left to essentially work much of the operation as a teenager. Decades later, she was on a first-name basis as Dot with Americans across the country because of a pretzel recipe she invented while living on a farm south of Minot, North Dakota. Dot's pretzels was no accidental discovery, but more a product of her hard-work upbringing combined with her husband Randy, her team of dedicated workers and an inner resolve to get the job done. It's an amazing American success story.
Dorothy Henke grew up the youngest of six children on a small farm north of Wahpeton, North Dakota, and because of family circumstances was left to essentially work much of the operation as a teenager. Decades later, she was on a first-name basis as Dot with Americans across the country because of a pretzel recipe she invented while living on a farm south of Minot, North Dakota. Dot's pretzels was no accidental discovery, but more a product of her hard-work upbringing combined with her husband Randy, her team of dedicated workers and an inner resolve to get the job done. It's an amazing American success story.