East Bay Times

Starter Bakery finds its stride in Bay Area

Acclaimed chef, owner Wood's culinary journey came from humble beginnings

- By Lou Fancher Correspond­ent

Biting into swoon-worthy pastries created by Brian Wood, the founder, owner and executive pastry chef at Starter Bakery in Oakland's Rockridge district, it's unimaginab­le that it all started with Jiffy pancake mix scooped from a metal canister.

After all, the buttery caramel delicacy of kouign-amann or passion fruit-glazed clementine­s float on the tongue, proclaimin­g that spring has sprung. There are mouthfuls of commanding and dangerousl­y addictive Chocolate Decadence flourless cake and slices of crusty and flavorful sourdough miche and batard.

Adding waistband-expanding temptation­s, a constant threat lurks with holiday and specialocc­asion treats such as a marvelous carrot cake and macaroons dressed in orange zest and coated with chocolate.

“I remember waking up on weekends at my grandparen­ts' house,” Wood says. “I made pancakes with my grandfathe­r. I'd stand on a stool and scoop Jiffy pancake mix out, level the cup, pour it into a bowl. When he'd crack eggs, it was like a magic trick and suddenly, there was egg in a bowl with no shell. It was a special moment for me.”

Wood grew up in Rhode Island and says he remembers baking with his sister on snow days.

“No school, warm and cozy, eating fresh-baked chocolate chip cookies, what could be better? It was dreamy,” he recalls.

Later, a summer camp job as a cook had him making three meals a day from scratch for 400 people under a head chef from Hungary who smoked a cigar in the kitchen the entire time. Wood says he loved organizing the pantry, slamming head lettuce to dislodge stem

cores, cracking eggs twoat-a-time.

He took a gap year to work for AmeriCorps and toyed with the idea of becoming a teacher. In college, he gravitated to cultural anthropolo­gy but still enjoyed working with food, despite the chefs.

“In the 1990s, let's just say the level of profession­alism was lower and there was higher tolerance of crazy, unhinged, abusive chefs.”

Bounced forward by a college career counselor's suggestion that he buck thoughts of teaching after graduation and become a pastry chef, Wood attended a community college in Seattle, earned his chef's certificat­e, worked in two bakeries there and eventually landed in the East Bay.

Wood founded Starter Bakery (starterbak­ery. com/pages/about) as a wholesale and pop-up operation in 2010. By 2018, Starter was producing their in-demand, hand-made pastries in a 13,000-square-foot facility in West Berkeley and distributi­ng to seven Bay Area farmers markets and nearly a dozen coffee shops, groceries and coops.

In 2023, Wood opened Starter's first brick-andmortar shop and café in North Oakland's Rockridge. As with the company's fine pastries, Wood

was and is hands-on in every aspect of designing, establishi­ng and operating his first retail store.

“Retail was always my goal; no one sets out to be a wholesaler,” he sais. “Building out the menu was tricky. Making decisions around the music, plants, menu boards — I took a long time. I'd had the space for about 18 months from the lease signing to opening.

“The design and constructi­on process was intimate, and when we took down the window coverings to invite the public

in … well, wholesaler­s fly under the radar, but when you're a retailer, all eyes are on you.”

The 2,000-square-foot café was developed with architect Hallie Chen of Caha Design. He said having completed the finishing touches was rewarding.

“I'm not fast and furious, but my slower process makes clear the embellishm­ents I prefer and more (that) I want to add in my next retail stores.”

It's likely some of those features will support the safety and well-being of

employees, a reasonable prediction in light of the bakery's current operations. For the 100 employees at the Gilman wholesale location and 14 in Rockridge, worker protection­s include injury-prevention training, regular rest breaks and enough staff to avoid heavy overtime or backbreaki­ng pacing.

There are dishwashin­g machines able to accommodat­e 36 sheet pans, oven racks and loads 10 times the size of a home dishwasher. There are easily pushable floor scrubbers instead of mops and hand-saving machines to pump out cookie pucks, divide dough or deposit muffin batter.

“We have depositors that can portion out 24 muffins in 40 seconds versus the 30 seconds required for a person to measure out the 130 grams of batter in each muffin,” he says. “It's worker safety and also

greater productivi­ty. People ask if it takes work away from people. My goal is for them to do more interestin­g things and learn more skills instead. Our products are machine-assisted but still handmade.”

The café menu offers explorator­y creativity that the wholesale business cannot address, which must always prioritize volume, customer demand and streamline­d productivi­ty. Working with a team to develop the culinary portfolio, the menu is concise.

“Some of them we were testing right up to opening. The Cardamom Pistachio croissant has the old-school flavor of a danish but more pronounced. There were probably 15 versions, and it ended up being a team effort to dial in on the flavor notes, texture, amount of butter. It's a team product, and one person wouldn't have come up with it in one or two tries.”

Wood says the same approach results in regular tasting of updates and testing new products of all of the savory lines — sandwiches, quiche, salads — as well the sweet and specialtie­s sides of the menu. Passover and Mother's Day specials include brioche, macaroons, Chocolate Decadence, seasonally-focused Twice Baked Strawberry Rhubarb croissants, mille-feuille-style Napoleon Cake featuring various unusual ganaches, fruit poached in-house and more.

Future additions include a curated line of sustainabl­y-created and packaged wine from primarily women- and minorityow­ned vineyards, locally crafted beer and savory items such as jumbo pretzels with dip, gougère, focaccia, cheese and charcuteri­e boards and more.

“Now that we have our sea legs with retail, we're taking on larger orders for corporatio­ns, planing to add evening hours Thursday to Saturday and looking at locations to open a second store,” Wood says.

“I can only say it will be in the Bay Area … unless it's in Japan. I just got back two weeks ago, and it was incredible. The high level of execution on the products at the 100-year-old bakery I visited with longtime employees who are bakers by choice? it's definitely got me thinking.”

 ?? COURTESY OF KRISTEN LOKEN ?? Customers shop for goodies at Starter Bakery in Oakland's Rockridge district. The site opened in 2023.
COURTESY OF KRISTEN LOKEN Customers shop for goodies at Starter Bakery in Oakland's Rockridge district. The site opened in 2023.
 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY OF KRISTEN LOKEN ?? Brian Wood, the founder, owner and executive pastry chef at Starter Bakery in North Oakland's Rockridge district, displays one of his recent culinary creations.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF KRISTEN LOKEN Brian Wood, the founder, owner and executive pastry chef at Starter Bakery in North Oakland's Rockridge district, displays one of his recent culinary creations.
 ?? ?? The buttery caramel delicacy of Starter Bakery's kouignaman­n, or French “butter-cake” pastries, above, floats on the tongue and is one of the store's many delights.
The buttery caramel delicacy of Starter Bakery's kouignaman­n, or French “butter-cake” pastries, above, floats on the tongue and is one of the store's many delights.

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