Making dough: Warren Brown is baking his way to success.For the buzz it generates. Cake Love is tinier than one might imagine. Situated along a hip corridor of upscale bars and restaurants, a yoga studio, and a locksmith, the shop has two ovens, a stove, a walk in refrigerator, counters for assembling cakes, and a display case. Ten employees keep the place running, handcrafting mouthwatering mouth·wa·ter·ing or mouth-wa·ter·ing adj. Appealing to the sense of taste; appetizing: the mouthwatering aroma of a baking pie. concoctions like New German Chocolate Cake The German Chocolate Cake is a layered chocolate-buttermilk cake filled and topped with a coconut-pecan frosting. History This cake was not actually invented by Germans. The original recipe was sent by a homemaker in Dallas in 1957 to a newspaper in Texas. , with thick curls of toasted coconut; Sassy Pound Cake, with orange, mango, cayenne, and butter cream Butter cream or buttercream or mock cream is a type of icing used inside cakes, as a coating, and as decoration. In its simplest form, it is made by creaming butter with icing sugar, although other fats can be used, such as margarine. ; and Venus Bars, dense chocolate or hazelnut bars topped with chewy chew·y adj. chew·i·er, chew·i·est Needing much chewing: chewy candy. chew i·ness n. meringue. These are not fussy frills Frillssee frilled. , but tasty treats that look homemade. Cake Love earned $529,000 in revenues in 2003, its second year since it opened in March 2002. According to Modern Baking a publication for the trade, retail bakeries represent a $13 billion business in the United States. Specialty shops like Warren Brown's are a growing phenomenon. In 1999, Brown found his work as a lawyer unfulfilling. He stayed up late not over briefs and depositions, but mixing cakes for co-workers and friends. While walking through an airport with a homemade cake, passersby made gushing gush v. gushed, gush·ing, gush·es v.intr. 1. To flow forth suddenly in great volume: water gushing from a hydrant. 2. remarks usually reserved for adorable babies and bouquets of flowers. Brown realized the power that a simple cake can have. Brown began small. For 10 months he baked in his Washington, D.C., apartment. He came home after work around 6 p.m. and baked for four or five hours. He devoured books like On Food and Cooking by Harold McGee, The Art of the Cake by Bruce Healy, and Larousse Gastronomique by Prosper Montagne. While on a three-month leave of absence from his job, Brown leased space in a carryout car·ry·out adj. Intended to be consumed away from the place of sale; takeout: a shop offering carryout sandwiches. n. An item of food or a meal that is to be consumed away from the place of sale. kitchen for $310 a month and put $10,000 on his credit card for basic equipment, including an oven and a double-door refrigerator. He also took a free community course in entrepreneurship. Then he held a cake open house in an art gallery. Scores of enthusiastic cake lovers attended, and Brown says he left feeling very confident. That feeling, however, deflated de·flate v. de·flat·ed, de·flat·ing, de·flates v.tr. 1. a. To release contained air or gas from. b. To collapse by releasing contained air or gas. 2. a few months later when he quit his job, had no business plan, and few cake orders. The media saved him. A Washington Post reporter who overheard Brown discussing the intricacies of butter cream proposed an article about his evolution from lawyer to bakery owner. When it. was printed, "the phone didn't stop ringing, two days straight," says Brown. The story was picked up by other publications (Brown was one of People magazine's 50 most eligible bachelors in 2001), and then Oprah Winfrey called. When he appeared on her show, business spiked again. His toughest challenge was anxiety. "Each individual problem you face is totally surmountable sur·mount tr.v. sur·mount·ed, sur·mount·ing, sur·mounts 1. To overcome (an obstacle, for example); conquer. 2. To ascend to the top of; climb. 3. a. To place something above; top. ," he says, but as a business owner, "everything feels like a disaster when it's right in your face. You just have to be calm, look at what you're doing, and fix the problem." His motto for tackling any enterprise is: "Assess, visualize, execute, revise, and sustain." For now, Brown is revising and sustaining, but he's hoping to open another shop in 2005. And he feels compelled to share his story, so he's working on a book about his business and his philosophy: authenticity and hard work. "The bigger message of Cake Love," says Brown, "is finding your passion and working to reach your goals." Cake Love; 1506 U St., NW, Washington, DC 20009; 202-588-7100; www.cakelove.com |
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