BUSINESS Rugalicious W hen Roz Schwartz was thumbing through a cook- book and came across a recipe for rugalach a few years ago, she tried it. To her dismay, Mrs. Schwartz, who loved baking for her family, didn't like the final product. "It had no pizazz," Mrs. Schwartz recalls. So she experimented with the ingredients just a few times until she stumbled onto a prized secret recipe that has become a successful business venture for Mrs. Schwartz, 47, once a housewife. With financial assistance from her husband, Mrs. Schwartz opened Rozie's Ruggies in a small storefront on Orchard Lake Road in West Bloomfield last March. She makes 4,000 of the small, sweet, hand-shaped treats covered in cinnamon each day. "The soap operas weren't enough for me. I wanted to do something," says Mrs. Schwartz, mother of three children. "People want good homemade food, but they don't have the time to do it. I thought this (rugalach) would be something diff- erent and would catch on." She started off small. While waiting in line one day for a table at The Stage in West Bloomfield, Mrs. Schwartz started talking about rugalach with the owner, Jack Goldberg. If they were good, he told her, he'd buy some. And he did. For the next 21/2 years, Mrs. Schwartz worked out of her double oven in her kit- chen baking 400 to 500 rugalach a day for The Stage, her only customer. For a while that was enough. "But my husband, Robert, decided I've either got to grow or stagnate," Mrs. Schwartz says. At first, she wasn't sure she wanted to expand. "My husband and my kids really pushed me into this," she says. "They are very supportive. Otherwise I couldn't have done this." Before she opened the shop, Mrs. Schwartz thought making rugalach at the Roz Schwartz shows off her cinnamon rugalach. store wouldn't be much diff- erent than making them in her kitchen. She was wrong. She envisioned she'd be done baking and be home by 2 p.m. After all, the store ovens were larger than her own and she had hired one employee. "I haven't been home since the day I opened the door," Mrs. Schwartz says. "This has become my entire life." She's at the store from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., six days a week. After employees leave at 5, she makes the rugalach dough. It's a secret she doesn't want to share. Mrs. Schwartz also had trouble in one area she never • Roz Schwartz has turned a recipe for rugalach into sweet success. 1.• ■ •=1 SUSAN GRANT Staff Writer expected would be a prob- lem: learning how to operate the oven. She had been cook- ing all her life. But this was a convection oven, and it worked differently than her electric stove. Eventually, she got the hang of it. The ruggies come in six varieties: cinnamon, cin- namon and raisin, raspberry, chocolate chip, apricot and poppy seed. She also makes a cookie called a scone which comes in three flavors — cinnamon raisin, honey nut cinnamon and raspberry chocolate chip. She has more than 100 regular customers, including Tam O'Shanter Country Club and Shopping Center Market. Her dark blue Cadillac has become the store's delivery truck. Even with seven employees, she delivers most of the orders herself. "The people are wonderful. They come from every walk of life," she says. "We've never done any advertising. We get customers by word of mouth." Or sometimes it is curiosi- ty about the store's name which draws customers in. A woman on her way to work walks into "Rozie's Ruggies," attracted by the odd name and the spicy aroma of cinnamon which fills the store. Curious to know what a ruggie is, the customer asks for a sample. Mrs. Schwartz gives the woman a freshly made cinnamon rugulach and carefully watches her face as the customer lifts the treat to her mouth and takes a tentative bite. "I love to see the look on someone's face as they take that first bite," Mrs. Schwartz says. "It's an ego trip." To make sure each rugalach has the taste she and her customers have come to expect, Mrs. Schwartz spends much of her time in the kitchen. She carefully watches as her newest employee removes the three trays of cinnamon rugalach out of the oven and onto a cooling rack. In the background, the other employees, wearing blue and white smocks, form an assembly line, rolling out dough, sprinkling it with cinnamon and shaping it in a crescent. The treats are put into the oven. Twelve minutes later, they're done. Mrs. Schwartz is there to watch every step of the cook- ing process. "It has to be done my way," she says. "I'm very picky. I won't settle for se- cond best. I wouldn't do it. This is the way I am with everything. My family calls me 'the Warden. " Mrs. Schwartz, is surprised at her success. "I still can't believe I put it together. It's wonderful," she says. "I'm enjoying it." LI THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 53