June 17, 2026
Courtney Cook Brings the Ploughmanโ€™s Lunch to American TikTok



Courtney Cook Bales is certainly not the first person to eat a baked sweet potato whole โ€” nor even to stuff hunks of cheese into a baked sweet potato then eat it whole โ€” but she sure makes you want to do it.

Perhaps itโ€™s the wide-eyed expression of complete and utter ecstasy paired with the aggressive head tilt she does as she takes a bite.

Whatever it is, itโ€™s garnered her over a million followers on TikTok in a mere seven months. Her students brought her balloons to celebrate the milestone.

โ€œI do not feel interesting enough for all that,โ€ she tells TODAY.com in her first-ever interview. โ€œI donโ€™t know how this is happening.โ€

Cook Bales is a 36-year-old high school English teacher and bonsai enthusiast who lives in Fayetteville, Georgia, with her husband, James, and their four children. And in mid-May, she decided to start posting her meals on TikTok.

โ€œIโ€™m a nosy person, and I like to know what people have for lunch. As a teacher, sometimes we all eat together, and Iโ€™m always like, โ€˜What are you having for lunch?โ€™โ€ she says. โ€œItโ€™s like an insight into someoneโ€™s day and someoneโ€™s personality, someoneโ€™s preferences.โ€

And on that day in May, she was ready to share her rather unique preferences with the world.

โ€œI like British food, which is kind of a niche as an American,โ€ she says.

Teaching British literature to 12th graders, Cook Bales has long been intrigued by the cuisine that gave us queen of puddings and spotted dick.

โ€œI kind of just read British novels,โ€ she says, specifically shouting out Jane Austen, โ€œand there would be some sort of, like, banquet scene, and I would read the descriptions of the lavish foods,โ€ and she just had to try them.

It began with a humble can of Heinz beans in tomato sauce because thatโ€™s what her local Publix had, but it opened up a whole world of eating to her.

She began posting her British roast dinners โ€” always complete with a Yorkshire pudding โ€” on TikTok every Sunday. Then, a follower suggested she should try a ploughmanโ€™s lunch. Thatโ€™s when her account really started taking off.

For the uninitiated, a ploughmanโ€™s lunch is a British cold meal based around bread, cheese and fresh or pickled onions, commonly served with a beer at a pub. Though bread and cheese have been the basis of the diet of English rural laborers for centuries, this specific term was coined by the Milk Marketing Board as a PR push to increase the sale of cheese in the 1960s.

โ€œItโ€™s honestly one of my favorite lunches,โ€ says Cook Bales. โ€œIt hits all the categories: crunchy, sour, sweet, creamy. Itโ€™s just perfect.โ€

One could say the ploughmanโ€™s lunch is a precursor to the girl dinner, so it makes sense that it would strike such a similar chord on TikTok.

Her gleeful, liberal use of British condiments โ€” from Branston Pickle (which she lovingly refers to as โ€œBranny Pโ€) and Piccalilli to Heinz Salad Cream โ€” has viewers in an absolute chokehold.

โ€œYou have easily grown into my favorite creator,โ€ wrote one such fan on a video. โ€œI could literally watch you all day. You radiate sunshine and I loved learning new things!โ€

โ€œI love your videos so much that I ration them by not looking at your page and just letting them come to me naturally on my fyp like a little lottery if that makes sense,โ€ commented another.

This sunshiney attitude is the reason some of her followers now call her the โ€œMs. Rachel for adults.โ€

โ€œI love that comment so much,โ€ she says. โ€œ(Ms. Rachel) brings a lot of comfort, a lot of joy, a lot of engagement, and Iโ€™m glad that Iโ€™ve had such a positive influence on so many.โ€

Cook Bales has also had an influence on the way TikTok users eat. If youโ€™re on the Courtney Cook side of TikTok, your For You page is likely inundated with people eating whole sweet potatoes stuffed with Butterkรคse cheese.

Hereโ€™s how she makes them: Bake at 300 F in an air fryer or oven for 1 hour (add 20 minutes if itโ€™s a big one). Turn the air fryer/oven off and leave the sweet potato in there for 1 to 2 hours. (โ€œThe slow cooling is so important for the texture,โ€ she says.) She then sticks two rectangular pieces of cheese into the sweet potato, one on top of the other. And thatโ€™s it.

Cook Bales thinks the sweet potato symbolizes โ€œa new, modern way to connect with people,โ€ she says. โ€œYou hear ideas, other people try their own things, and then sometimes they comment or they share verbally, and itโ€™s just a way to make a friend even in this virtual 2025 world.โ€

And she is cultivating a community of sweet potato snackers.

This may come as a surprise to them, but she didnโ€™t grow up in an โ€œingredient household,โ€ one that has the ingredients used to make meals rather than ready-to-eat meals or snacks.

โ€œI had fabulous parents … but neither one of them were home cooks, so we had the late-โ€™90s, early-2000s freezer meals, Hamburger Helper,โ€ she says. โ€œSo I never really was exposed to any sort of global flavors.โ€

Now that sheโ€™s in charge of the food in her own home, thereโ€™s more of a โ€œbalance,โ€ she says. โ€œWe have simple ingredients and then we have the processed snacks.โ€

When she grocery shops, she doesnโ€™t make a plan. โ€œI just buy a bunch of ingredients and I just make it work somehow with whatever is in the fridge,โ€ she explains. โ€œAnd thatโ€™s probably what leads to my interesting combinations.

โ€œI bought the Butterkรคse cheese. I bought the sweet potatoes. I didnโ€™t know what I was going to do with them, but a new baby was born.โ€

Her own babies โ€œhave been good about trying new thingsโ€ since she started this online endeavor, she says. Beans on toast and sticky toffee pudding were hits. โ€œItโ€™s certainly widened their palates. And then James, heโ€™s an eat-whatever-is-in-front-of-him type of man.โ€

As far as whatโ€™s next on her journey, Cook Bales says sheโ€™s eager to travel. Sheโ€™s planning her first-ever trip to the U.K. for this summer.

โ€œIโ€™ve been in contact with a couple of new TikTok friends who have invited me to stay near them and show me around,โ€ she says. โ€œIโ€™m really looking forward to that.โ€

But her favorite dish of all time, perhaps surprisingly, isnโ€™t British โ€” itโ€™s Korean.

โ€œKorean army stew,โ€ she says, that familiar wide-eyed look returning to her face. She first tried budae-jjigae at a Korean restaurant in Okinawa, Japan, where she once lived with her husband when he was deployed there. โ€œItโ€™s comforting, itโ€™s salty, itโ€™s sweet, itโ€™s hot. You can have it with cold kimchi and daikon radish pickles and onion cups.โ€

She plans to return to both Japan and South Korea at some point and do some vlogging. But no matter how far this TikTok thing goes, she doesnโ€™t think she could ever give up teaching, she says. โ€œIt really fills my cup.โ€

It helps her fill the cups of so many on TikTok as their โ€œcomfort creator.โ€

โ€œGirlfriend, I just love your videos,โ€ commented one viewer. โ€œSimple, cute, homey, cozyyyyy. Does it get better?โ€

Others swear, as they watch her scarf down a whole green onion, she must have been a bunny in a past life.

โ€œI want to be the cute, happy bunny thatโ€™s eating good,โ€ says Cook Bales. โ€œMaybe in an onion field, living her best life.โ€



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