Big things take time.
Just ask Steve Horton. He's the baker who created and ran Rustica bakery in Minneapolis for 11 years, receiving national attention for his world-class baked goods. In March 2015, just as he was nominated for the third time for an elusive James Beard award, Horton bowed out, with no known destination. Bread lovers were on the edges of their seats.
Now Horton is back, with Baker's Field Flour & Bakery.
Last spring, Baker's Field was a dream. And ambitious dreams, like great bread, can't be rushed.
When he left Rustica, Horton had some big ideas about how he wanted to do things at his next business. He found a partner in Kieran Folliard, and a space in the Food Building, the über-local food production hub where the Lone Grazer Creamery and Red Table Meats make their cheeses and meats in northeast Minneapolis. The slogan there is "Farmed Near, Made Here."
Horton began to envision a bakery and milling operation that would fully realize his ideas about what bread should be. He figured it would take a year, so he started by grinding wheat and mixing it with water, and started the process of nurturing wild yeasts in the starter that would leaven all the breads at his new bakery.
That starter is working overtime now because Baker's Field has brought stone milling back to the Mill City, and is baking great breads.
Horton has joined a small, groundbreaking group of bakers and millers, scattered across the country in places like San Francisco, Chicago and Portland, who are making bread the old-fashioned way: pre-Industrial Revolution style. These bakers buy local grain, mill it and use it that day. It's an idea thousands of years old, but it's new. And it's disrupting the status quo.