Nara Smith on Her Popular Cooking Videos and What’s Next

(Image credit: Daniella Midenge; Wardrobe: Schiaparelli coat, turtleneck, boots, bag, and earrings.)

Eighteen hours before I first meet Nara Smith, she becomes the main topic of discussion at a dinner party I’m at in Los Angeles. “You know,” one of my tablemates attests,”super beautiful, lots of kids, speaks in a whisper, wears these over-the-top looks, cooks things from scratch?” Everyone at the table concedes that we do, for the most part, know who she, an influencer of some clout, is talking about. “I just need to know. Is it, like, a joke?” the influencer asks the group. The answer, I suppose, depends on whether you find a combined 14.9 million TikTok and Instagram followers funny.

Here is a by-no-means-exhaustive list of items Smith, a 23-year-old model turned viral sensation, has made from scratch online in the past few months: churros; caramel apples, SpaghettiOs; a Crumbl cookie with pink frosting and homemade sprinkles; horchata; hot dogs, including buns; a blueberry birthday cake with buttercream frosting; Froot Loops; schnitzel and broiled red cabbage; raspberry crumble with vanilla whipped cream; Firecracker Popsicles; potato chips; Goldfish crackers; Capri-Sun; Coca-Cola; Takis; boba; ketchup; Cheez-Its; chewing gum; barbecue chicken pizza; salted caramel marshmallows; Oreos; soft-serve ice cream; Cookie Crisp cereal; and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches with homemade peanut butter, jelly, and bread. Regardless of the menu, each video begins the same way with soothing music and includes up-close process shots of Smith at the counter in her spotless gray-and-white kitchen and quick cuts between mixing bowls and knife work. She is always in the same carefully angled pose, always perfectly made-up and clad in something fetching and outrageous yet fashion-forward (diaphanous tulle for juicing pineapples, floral appliqué for sifting flour), and always eerily emotionless. The dish is always completed within the time frame and always introduced with the exact same whispered, husky, monotone voice-over—someone in her house has a craving.

(Image credit: Daniella Midenge; Wardrobe: Khaite dress and earrings; Rochas gloves; Roberto Cavalli bag; Cartier sunglasses; Bulgari bracelets; Dolce & Gabbana shoes.)

The whole thing began organically, Smith tells me in her regular voice, which is largely the same as on TikTok but at a normal volume, when we meet for tea in West Hollywood in October. A German native, she moved to America at 18 after falling in love and marrying her husband, the model Lucky Blue Smith. Having been so transplanted and quickly pregnant with her first child, she found her skin and autoimmune system flaring up. She developed severe eczema, evidence of which I can see on her palms, and was later diagnosed with lupus. She began to consider the ways food could be affecting her health and adjusted her diet. “It forced me to really reevaluate how I eat and what I put into my body,” she says. This concern extended to her family, including Lucky and her children, Rumble Honey (age 4), Slim Easy (age 2), and Whimsy Lou (6 months). She started making as much of their food as she could from scratch at home in Dallas and filming the process to share on social media. This soon included homespun takes on snack-aisle sensations. The more outrageous the prompt, the more her audience ate it up. “A lot of times—believe it or not—Lucky’s actually craving something, or he’s like, ‘I want you to cook this,’ or my kids ask me for random things,” she says of her viral videos. “People think that’s just my tagline, which it is, but that’s actually the truth. They actually do want these things.”

Admittedly, most people’s kids want specific things to eat, and they’ll go out and buy them if they are able for the sake of convenience, efficiency, and their sanity. (“Kids: mum I’m hungry. mum: that will be ready in 3-5 business days 😁” is one typical comment on a Nara Smith video.) “I feel like people think it’s super hard or takes super long, which some recipes for sure do. Sometimes, I’m in the kitchen for seven-plus hours,” Smith says, adding that the kids will be fed something else off camera in those cases. “Sometimes, some things are so much easier to do than one might think.” Apparently, I could be making my own cheese in less time than it takes me to go to Erewhon and back. “It’s fun to show people that they can actually make mozzarella if they want to at home in like 30 minutes,” she says.

(Image credit: Daniella Midenge; Wardrobe: Gucci dress; Octavia Elizabeth earrings; Cartier watch.)

By now, it’s been widely reported that food in much of the developed world is required to meet certain nutritional standards that food in America is not. Add to that the Trump-era regulatory rollbacks that have resulted in recent outbreaks of dangerous contaminants like salmonella in eggs, E.coli in fast food, and listeria in everything from deli meat to frozen waffles, and the concept of feeding your family with ingredients you personally handled (and can pronounce) starts to feel a lot less ridiculous. Factor in the cost of, say, baking bread versus buying it, and it’s no wonder that influencers promoting easy, cheap family recipes and soothing cooking-related content have been on the rise for years. Smith’s offerings are something slightly harder to define. They’re not all easy for the average home cook and not always inexpensive, especially when you consider the labor involved. Her most popular videos aren’t the ones where she’s suggesting meal prep for busy moms, though those do exist. They are the ones where she whips up something you’re used to seeing from massive conglomerates like Nabisco and Kellogg’s, seemingly without breaking a sweat. It’s just a little bit ludicrous, and the question of exactly how aware she is of how ludicrous it is has become part of the draw. Viewers tune in and ask, What mass-produced confection will she whip up next? What will she wear to do it? Above all, is she serious?