Generations of Minnesotans baked — and swooned over — Al Sicherman's "Extreme Brownies" recipe.
Tens of thousands of Star Tribune readers laughed at his pithy, humorous and often self-deprecating columns about food, about his Milwaukee childhood, about his cars, about his dogs.
Even more cried with him in November 1989 when he wrote on the front page about the death of his 18-year-old son, Joe, who was on LSD when he fell from his seventh-floor dorm room at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. It was a rare Sicherman column that wasn't at all funny. It was reprinted in papers across the country and again in the Star Tribune in 1999.
"Hug your kids," Sicherman said at the end of that first column and on each anniversary afterward.
Sicherman, of Minneapolis, died early Sunday at Regions Hospital in St. Paul. He was 75 and was battling two rare blood diseases.
He wanted no funeral service; his body was donated to the University of Minnesota Medical School. Friends and family members plan a gathering for late fall, open to everyone.
Sicherman left the Star Tribune in March 2007 but he never left his beloved wordsmithing. He continued writing a popular blog until his death. He wrote the "Tidbits" column for this newspaper until a little more than a year ago.
He authored two books: "Caramel Knowledge" in 1981 and "Uncle Al's Geezer Salad" in 2007.