The King of Crust(-y Bread)

Meet Chef Sim
baguettes

When UK-born Chef Sim Cass first arrived in New York City, the craft of artisanal bread was just beginning to take shape in America. As the founding baker of Balthazar Bakery, Sims deeply toasted, crusty loaves earned him the nickname and introduced a new benchmark for the citys aspiring bakers.

chef sim cass

 

Seventeen years later, Balthazar Bakery continues to inspire our nations now widespread passion for hand-crafted, naturally fermented loaves, and Sim serves as a bread consultant for some of the world's most respected restaurants and bakeries. He has been featured in such outlets as the New York Times, Food Arts magazine and the Martha Stewart show. Most recently, he developed the curriculum for ICE's exclusive Techniques and Art of Professional Bread Baking program, which launched in 2013.

 

Yet at the mere age of 13, Sim was not unlike our young ICE studentseager to leave school and work with his hands. His first job was at a butchers shop in London, and by age 16 he had enrolled in a full-time bakers apprenticeship program. After training in the 5-star kitchens of the Carlton Tower and Park Lane hotels, Sim took a job on board the cruise ship SS Arcadia, working the overnight shift. At sea, Sims passion for bread rose to the forefront, and upon his return to London, he found work at the then famous Maison Bouquillon, crafting breads, pastries, laminates and viennoiserie. His skill also began to be recognized by his peers in the industry, earning a silver medal in the Hotel Olympia International Culinary Competition. 

kneading dough

Having caught the eye of fellow Londoner Keith McNallydeemed The Man Who Invented Downtown by the New York TimesSim launched his New York City career in the kitchen of Lucky Strike. From 1989 through 2006when he joined the staff at ICESim remained McNallys prizewinning baker, crafting the signature loaves that helped cement the restaurateur among the industrys most influential tastemakers.

Balthazar Bakery's signature miche, emblazoned with a B. (Photo Credit: NJ.com)
Balthazar Bakery's signature miche, emblazoned with a B. (Photo Credit: NJ.com)

Of McNallys many properties, it was at Balthazar that Sims work really shined. Though there were naysayers who claimed, You wont be able to sell that bread because its too dark, Sim and his colleague Paula Oland proudly pushed back with their carefully caramelized loaves and found themselves at the center of a true restaurant phenomenon. To this day, Balthazar reigns among the citys most popular restaurants and was even featured in the New York Times magazines 2013 food and drink issue as a paragon of long-term success. 

chef sim class with his class in new yorkTwenty-five years after Sims arrival in New York, the state of bread has changed dramatically. Sim remarks that in France and Germanylong known as the epicenters for artisanal European breadthe mastery of hand-crafted loaves now competes with the mass production of supermarkets inferior products. At the same time, American micro-bakeries have raised the bar and gained recognition in international bread baking competitions, most notably for the naturally leavened style that Sims work has helped popularize.

 

When asked what it takes to succeed in the field of bread baking, Sim explains, "The Spanish bakers say that once you've touched and worked with the dough, you have to go back and touch it again, the feel of it. You've got to do the practicethe repetitionand the real joy is in the end result that comes from that repetition."

 

He may be the Prince of Darkness, but judging by the legions of passionate ICE students who have studied under Sim, the future of bread has never looked so bright.

 

Click here to read an interview with Sim about ICE's Techniques & Art of Bread Baking program.

Carly was ICE's social media and content manager from 2012 to 2016. She is a writer, lifestyle journalist and brand strategist in Brooklyn.