The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, March 14, 2013 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, March 14, 2013 - 3B ZINGERMAN'S From Page 1A Zingerman's has achieved extraordinary success, but instead of keeping their formula to themselves, they share it freely. Weinzweig has written several books about effective manage- ment. ZingTrain offers consult- ing on the art of customer service. BAKE!, a hands-on teaching bak- ery shares the secrets of Zinger- man's most delectable breads and pastries with over 60 different courses. School of Music, Theatre & Dance sophomore Heather Ken- drick has worked for Zingerman's for two years and has taken three of the BAKE! courses. "It's super fun, and it's really worth your dollar because you end up leaving with so many things you make," Kendrick said. "I took a donut-making class - my mom and my sister and I took it together, and we ended up with 160 donuts!" Though firmly rooted in Ann Arbor, Zingerman's has a mail- order program that extends the business's reach to the entire Unit- ed States. In 1994, Mo Frechette became a founding partner of the mail order, which now rivals the deli in terms ofsales volume. When Frechette was first startingout, his business was a curiosity inthe food world. "There was no food mail-order business industry; there were no television shows about food; there were no blogs about food," Frechette said. "It wasn't com- mon for people to have an interest in food, or to have that as a pas- sion." Another passion of the Zinger- man's gang is travel. Frechette and the other Zingerman's partners go on epic adventures, sort of culi- naryvision quests, to find the ideal foods for their businesses. "Ifyou travel with me, I'm going to drag you to a grocery store," Frechette said. "It's my museum." On a whirlwind tour through Spain, from Bilbao to San Sebas- tian, Frechette spent hours perus- ing the grocery stores' seafood aisles. "You consider tinned seafood to be a low-end commodity," Frechette said. "They treat it like a great and amazing thing. Things you'd never think would be in a tin Give old- fashioned, local bookstores a try MARLENE LACASSE/Daily Zingerman's offers a customer service training program called ZingTrain that teaches their effective management strategies. can be found there - barnacles off the side of a boat, for instance." After these journeys, employees share their finds with the rest of the discerning staff. On an aver- age month, Zingerman's employ- ees will taste 200 foods and maybe two will be considered worthy additions tothe menu. "What's considered mundane in one place and sold in a gas station is sometimes special somewhere else," Weinzweig said. "Almost everything we sell is poor people's food, but if you're not from the area where it's produced, it seems exotic." The haters are out there Another partner with a global perspective is the Bakehouse. For 20 years, Frank Carollo and his staff have hand-crafted every hearth-baked loaf. They've also scouredthe globe in search of new recipes. Since 2011, members of the Bakehouse staff have traveled to Hungary three times to eat and to learn traditional artisan bread baking. The bakers brought their experiences back with them, sell- ing Hungarian torts, breads and soups in the Bakehouse shop. Zingerman's also offers Hungar- ian baking classes. As Carollo put it, "We want our customers to learn with us." Weinzweig has a unique busi- ness philosophy, which may have been a catalyst for Zingerman's success. As a Russian history major, his focus was on the anar- has shaped his managerial style and noted that there are striking similarities between hundred- year-old anarchist writings and modern progressive business books. "Except one group was going to jail and one was on the best-seller list," Weinzweigsaidwithalaugh. Weinzweig's anarchist utopia stresses free choice and respect for individuals, with the belief that a strong work ethic comes from conviction in one's work. In fact, Zingerman's is a place where the employees truly run the busi- ness. "We wanted to push decision down as far as in the organization as we could, so that decisions were not going to be made based on who had the most authority, but who has a good idea - who has a solu- tion," Saginaw said. Zingerman's has been called "The Coolest Small Company in America" by INC Magazine and received high praise from celebrity chefs Bobby Flay and Mario Batali. But as Saginaw put it, "The hat- ers are out there. They hate us to the bone." These detractors take to Internet forums bitterly moan- ing that Zingerman's food is over- priced, as if they'd been tricked into ordering a $12 sandwich. After AnnArbor.com published a story about Bobby Flay tweeting from Zingerman's, user "Goober" griped: "He has the moneyto eat at Zingerman's." Saginaw was quick to admit that Zingerman's isn't a necessity. "Nobody gets up and says, 'If I don't get an $8 loaf of bread, life isn't worth living.' We don't sell anything that anybody needs," Saginaw said. Despite the naysayers, Zing- erman's has flourished by offer- ing traditional, full-flavored food whose production value explains the price tag. The specialty ingre- dients are imported; Saginaw noted that by definition you can onlyget parmigiano reggiano from Italy. Being a good corporate citizen However, many of the ingredi- ents in Zingerman's goodies are grown with pride in Michigan. "I believe that the local busi- ness is the backbone of the eco- nomic system," Saginaw said. "It is what will drive it and help cre- ate vibrance." "You earn your right to do business in a community by being a good corporate citizen," Saginaw added. "You need to be profitable but you need to make a profit responsibly and share that responsibly with the people you work with and the community from which that profit comes." Saginaw tries to support the Ann Arbor community by buy- ing locally whenever possible and through other philanthropic endeavors. After taking stock of the rampant waste in the food industry he founded Food Gather- ers, a hunger relief organization. "The reality is that a line cook after working 12 hours isn't driv- ing across town to look for home- less people," Weinzweig said. That's where Food Gatherers comes in. The organization liber- ates perfectly good leftovers that would otherwise end up in trash heaps from local restaurants and distributes them to community kitchens. Weinzweig added, "For some- body who is in need of a nutri- tious meal, it's totally healthy, but maybe it wasn't as tasty as the res- taurant wanted." In a time when many busi- nesses are struggling to stay open, Zingerman's is already planning its business strategy for the com- ing decade. The plan states that Zinger- man's will run up to 18 indepen- dent businesses by the year 2020. A Tunisian restaurant is already in the works. "We've been selling many Tunisian products that come from one family, and we've become very close with the family," Sagi- naw said. "They are consulting on this, and the two employees who are interested in doing this have stayed with the family and learned from them." Always the overachievers, Zingerman's bought a herd of Tunisian sheep in order to serve a very specific type of Tunisian lamb in the restaurant. From a tiny delicatessen with four employees, Zingerman's has grown to a nationally known enterprise. They will end this fis- cal year with $47 million in sales, 18 partners, eight businesses and about 600 employees. Though their official birthday is March 15, Zingerman's will commemorate over three decades of service, philanthropy and culi- nary exploration with an evening entitled "Celebrating 31 Years with Ari," on April 3. The event will highlight the deli's history and provide a tanta- lizing glimpse of things to come. "It'll be a lot of good food and probably some of the things that I'm excited about moving for- ward," Weinzweig said. "A little past, a little present and a little future." The first book Ilever bought at Dawn Treader was "Dostoevsky" by Nicholas Berdyaev. When I found it, or rather when it found me, I had never even heard of Berdyaev, but I couldn't- be happier. During my senior year of high school, I took a lot JOHN of interest in BOHN Dostoevsky. His existen- tial treatment of Christianity served to guide me through what was then my vague, liberal Protestantism. In "Dostoevsky," Berdyaev articulated what he thought were the main themes of Dostoevsky's work, and I con- sumed the book quickly. Unlike many, that was howI spent my freshman year's wel- come week. I don't know exactly how I would view the book and its ideas today - Ithave yet to reread it - but what I won't ever forget was that rush of excite- ment I experienced when I thought I had found the book I needed to be reading at this time in my life. I love browsing bookstores. The prospect of findingwhat you didn't set out to find, of coming across the unexpected, provides me with a secret thrill. This past summer, I experienced that rush of excitement again. I sat down in one of the chairs at Dawn Treader, and when I looked in front of me at the shelf, there sat "The Rise of Eurocen- trism: Anatomy of Interpreta- tion" by Vassilis Lambropoulos, a professor at the University. I don't know why this book was there (especially a practically new hardcover copy), but it was. For many reasons, it seemed as if this was the book I needed to read. I hadn't heard of it, nor had Iever really looked at that shelf before, the one where gen- eral history meets conspiracy theory books. At the time, I didn't have the sufficient background to fully understand what it discussed, and while I probably still won't understand all the references ranging from the Reformation to Derrida, that excitement rushed over me. Having just come out of a course on Samuel Beckett, and in a crisis over the question of interpretation, this booked seemed to offer some light. Obviously, there are plenty of other opportunities by which I could have attempted to reconcile my anxieties about interpretation; feel free to write me off as a mystic for defend- ing this one. There's definitely room for that interpretation. Or call ita gambler's addiction, if you fancy. Nevertheless, I cher- ish the experience of walking into an old bookstore and let- ting my mind wander. For this reason, I find myself sensitive to the possibility of losing this experience. Businesses come and go in Ann Arbor; every student has a different memory of the city. The welcoming signs of old State Street businesses hung overhead my Freshman year while construction work- ers busily reminded us that things were changing. During my experiences in Ann Arbor, bookstores seem to have been most affected. I never got a chance to check out the famous Shaman Drum; I only ever saw the sign hanging above the door leading into its gutted-out insides. Borders and Dave's Books, two bookstores close to campus, closed within my first year in Ann Arbor. These places I went to during my freshman year no longer existed by the end. Let the book find you. So I'm a mystic, and now you have the opportunity to call me a luddite or a cultural conserva- tive after the following: Part of me laments what the Internet has done to browsing culture. Looming in the background, the cheaper alternative of Amazon ruins the browsing culture experience. Now I buy books because I've been told I need them. Chance encounters with new knowledge no longer slip through the cracks; my life and my readings now all have a pur- pose and isn't it wonderful? Certainly Amazon and other sites have chipped away at these bookstore's profits. No one would deny that. I don't know if this column makes a good enough case, butI really encourage those reading to look at next semester's reading lists and head over to Dawn Treader, West End Books and Common Language among others and see if they have the book you need. Who knows - they might! And I make this argument especially today because we have coming to our community a new book- store, Literati. True,the book- store sits a little bit off campus, but the trek out there would really make a difference. And even if you don't have a particular book in mind, check it out anyway. You'll never know what you didn't know unless you step in and see. Bohn is wandering in a bookstore. To join, e-mail obohn@umich.edu. MARLENE LACASS/Daily On April 3, Zingerman's will have an event to celebrate its 31st anniversary.