Meet John and James Caputo - father and son.

The clientele was noticeably different as it was a working-class Italian-American neighborhood. "If you wanted to work behind the counter and be a salesgirl, you had to speak fluent Italian," John recalls. "Our backhands? All Italian." Those scalita loaves went fast. "Today we only sell a couple of scalitas, but we used to make hundreds of them. Meat was expensive and so the staple was bread. You filled up on bread. My father used to say 'You can't have a piece of meat without a piece of bread'," John reminisces. James laughs and adds, "Our family still can't eat without the bread."
In the early 1960s, right around the time the old International Longshoremen's Association building was being built (now torn down in order to make room for upscale housing), the business moved to 332 Court Street (across the street from its present location). With bakery establishments on the rise, Caputo's saw competition from nine other stores. "There was such a demand for bread that it was okay to have so many open though," John explains. "Some did better than others but everyone, at least, made a living."

In 106 years, the business has been passed down amongst five generations of Caputos and we can only hope it doesn't end with James. Years ago, when James was working in finance, John actually considered working his way out of the bakery so that he could retire. James didn't like the sound of that. "I decided it was a bad idea," he jokes. "We were a family business and my Dad had put in forty, fifty years here. I couldn't let him go that easily."
This father and son duo have a fairly straightforward business motto that has been around a long, long time: KEEP THE PEOPLE HAPPY. They're a neighborhood bakery that caters to its inhabitants - always has, always will. "One of the reasons why we changed our mix of breads was to accommodate all of the young, new people who were moving in," John explains. "Fifteen years ago, bread was still a popular thing... but they came wanting the new breads - the kaiser rolls, the brioche, the olive." He lets out a little smile and says, "They thought they were gourmets." [Side note: the olive bread is my favorite bread there.] "But that's why we're still here," John says. "We bake what the people want. If we depended only on the basic items we sold forty and fifty years ago, people would pass right by." And pass right by, they do not. Not when you have baguettes and ciabattas, olive breads and onion loaves, rusticas and semolinas stacked warm and pretty in the window.

Caputo's Bake Shop
329 Court Street b/w Sackett and Union
718-875-6871
More by Sylvie Morgan Flatow
Photos by Max Flatow
Thanks for putting a spotlight on this wonderful treasure in Carroll Gardens. Keep on writing!
ReplyDeleteRKS
I stop there a couple of times a week when I take my lab out for a morning walk. It's gotten the point that when he sees me come out, he sits obediently, waiting for a hunk of ciabatta. Niether of us can ever resist.
ReplyDeleteIsn't this the bakery where a certain Italian-American singer from Hoboken got a special bread, known locally as "Sinats" after the Chairman of the Board ...?
ReplyDeleteYes, 9:53, you can get the Sinatra loaves at this Caputos.
ReplyDeletegreat piece about a great bakery. If Caputos ever goes, I will too.
ReplyDeleteMarie
Love it.... Best Bakery ever!!!!!!
ReplyDelete