N., , ,fflaN. Baked New World The traditional Jewish bakery is changing to stay traditional. Yossi Adler has made changes at Zeman's New York Bakery. BILL CARROLL Special to the Jewish News M Iles Zeman lived above the family bakery on Hastings Street, and then 12th Street. "My bedroom was right over the ovens, and there was no air condi- tioning in those days — the heat was stifling," says Zeman, 84, now a semi- retired lawyer and business owner liv- ing in Franklin. For his parents, Louis and Leah Zeman, the famous Detroit bakery they founded in 1918 was practically their whole life, and they worked long hours. Zeman's New York Kosher Bakery flourishes today on Greenfield Road in Oak Park under Yossi Adler, 23, of Southfield, a dynamic young proprietor with innovative marketing ideas. He also studies Talmud three hours each day at the nearby Kollel Institute of Greater Detroit. Bakers don't reside above their bak- eries anymore. The employees behind the counters usually no longer blandly ask "what else?" and total the bill in pencil on one of the bags. And the owners aren't content to just sell chal- lahs and seven-layer cake and call it a day. Some bakers package their breads and rolls and sell them to supermar- kets, synagogues and caterers; some have recently begun to market dairy products and offer quick lunches. The co-owner of one "Jewish" estab- lishment, Modern Bakery in Oak Park, is an African-American who honed his baking skills in the heavily Orthodox Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, N.Y., and has been baking and selling for 42 years. It's a far cry from the heyday of bak- eries in the Detroit-area Jewish com- munity. Gone are the old-time bak- eries, like Epstein's, Goldstein's, Warsaw, Elson, Mertz and National. The Zeman's name endures. Adler added a dairy case recently and is turning part of Zeman's into a mini-supermarket, selling milk, cheese, eggs, coffee, soups and some frozen foods. We now make our own sandwiches to attract the lunch busi- ness," said Adler, "and after some remodeling, we plan to set up tables outside, like a cafe, for people to eat lunch." A few doors down, Rita Jerome of Unique Kosher Carryout is comple- menting the catering business with eight tables for the lunch crowd. "There's no conflict with Zeman's," she points out "because they have dairy lunches and I serve meat." Bonnie Fishman finally "came out" from the small house in Southfield where she operated-Bonnie's Patisserie for 25 years and is vying for the break- fast and lunch business at a new loca- tion "out in the open," she says. It's now called Bonnie's Kitchen, at Telegraph and Maple roads in Bloomfield Township. Some of the Jewish bakeries are con- tent to stay with the traditional over- the-counter business, as they dispense rye breads with seeds, corn breads, chocolate horns, kichel and other delights. The bakery section of Zingerman's Delicatessen in Ann Arbor still boasts about its pumper- nickel raisin bread, rugelach and man- delbroit. Star Bakeries, which originat- ed about 80 years ago, is still going strong with stores in Oak Park and Southfield. Diamond Bake Shop, which evolved from the Jewell Bakery chain 30 years ago, gets a good part of the West Bloomfield business. Most of these chains supply pack- aged baked goods to the area super- markets, many of which no longer have an old-fashioned bakery counter. Hiller's Markets are the exception. "Having a well-staffed bakery counter within the store gives us that personal touch and provides better service to our customers," said Mike Pasternak of Farmington Hills, Hiller's bakery department manager. "There's a better connection between us and the customers; we get to know them better." Three bakers at the Hiller's Commerce store produce many fancy, special-order cakes for all occasions, but the bakery also sells Zeman's chal- lahs and onion rolls and caterer Paul Kohn's kosher cakes at Passover time. 'And we even added frozen pizzas near the bakery department recently," said Pasternak. Other than the supervised kosher Zeman's, the bakeries and bakery sec- tions in all of the stores maintain a "kosher style" status. The only other Council of Orthodox Rabbis super- vised bakery in the area is the Bake Station in Southfield. Some synagogues alternate using Zeman's and the Bake Station for their baked goods each week. Bake Station owner Steve Katz declined to be inter- BAKED NEW WORLD on page 86 9/15 2005 85