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Pascal Rigo

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(Redirected fromBay Bread)
French businessman
Pascal Rigo
Born (1960-09-04)4 September 1960 (age 65)
Alma materMACI-BEM.Master in International Trade- CAP Boulanger
OccupationBaker. SVP Starbucks
Known forOwner of The Bay Bread Group and La Boulange

Pascal Rigo (born 4 September 1960) is a FrenchRestaurateur who owns a small "empire"[1][2] ofboulangeries, restaurants, and wholesale and retail bakeries inSan Francisco andMill Valley, California, that operate asLa Boulangerie de San Francisco,Bay Bread,La Boulange, and (formerly)Cortez,Chez Nous,Gallette, and others.

Early life

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Pascal Rigo was born inN'Djamena, formally known as Fort-Lamy. At the age of 7, after running a daily errand to buy two baguettes for his family,[3] Rigo apprenticed at his village's bakery.[4] He later earned a business degree from theUniversity of Bordeaux and became a certified professional baker. Rigo first moved to California to begin importing local wine from France. He stayed in the U.S. to open a bakery inLos Angeles and later moved to San Francisco.

Bakery

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In 1996, Rigo founded Panissimo Group, which ran the bakery on Pine Street that later became Bay Bread.[4] He chose to live and have an office at the central location in a former French laundry on the busy thoroughfare. Rigo also bought and continues to operate San Francisco's oldestflour mill, which Bay Bread uses to produce organic flour for its loaves.[4] Rigo originally intended to operate his business as a wholesale bakery, but soon began selling loaves and thencroissants directly to the public. A positive review in theSan Francisco Examiner initially popularized the bakery.[5] Rigo renamed it the "Boulangerie" after painting the word on the colorful awning over the sidewalk, and then opened similarly themed dine-in bakeries throughout the city. One, inCole Valley, is the site of the formerTassajara Bakery,[6][7] where San Francisco's modernartisan bread movement began.

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Rigo and his business partners invested in and founded a number of restaurants, including Soleil, Rigolo, Gallette, La Table, Le Petit Robert, Chez Nous, Americano,[3][8] and Plantanos.[1] One of these restaurants, Cortez, earned aMichelin Star.[9] In 2001, Rigo and partners bought Oh-La-La, one of San Francisco's oldest coffee house chains.[6][10] The group later divested of most of its restaurants to concentrate on its bakeries.[11][12] In 2009, they bought a share of Miette, a small chain of candy stores and cupcake bakers.[13]

In addition to its retail operations, the company supplies bread to grocery stores, restaurants, and hotels in the area.[4] Some rival food entrepreneurs in San Francisco's small French entrepreneur community have criticized Rigo for his fast expansion efforts.[14] TheNew York Times called Rigo "the only real entrepreneur" among the community.[15] Rigo has intentionally avoided publicity to avoid encouraging a backlash from critics.[4]

In 2003 Rigo co-wrote a cookbook titled "The American Boulangerie: Authentic French Pastries and Breads for the Home Kitchen."[3][16]

On June 4, 2012, Rigo sold La Boulange Bakery to Starbucks for $100 million.[17] However, in June 2015, Starbucks announced it would close all of its La Boulange cafes by the end of September 2015.[18]

Later, Rigo announced plans to re-open six of the La Boulange locations under the name "La Boulangerie de San Francisco."[19]

References

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  1. ^abGraceAnn Walden (2005-09-14)."Rigo expands his empire". San Francisco Chronicle.
  2. ^Greg Hugunin (2001-06-20)."Galette:Into the Fold". SF Weekly.
  3. ^abcKarola Saekel (2003-12-24)."Bread bakers bank on lots of dough:Tips from Bay Area's Rigo and others make baking easy". San Francisco Chronicle.
  4. ^abcdeJulie Ratner (2001-09-14)."Rising profile:Businessman and baker Pascal Rigo is rolling out restaurants across the city". San Francisco Business Times.
  5. ^"Boulangerie at Pine Street". Bay Bread. Archived fromthe original on 2005-12-08.
  6. ^abHeidi Benson (2001-09-16)."Trendspotting". San Francisco Chronicle.
  7. ^"Boulange de Cole". Bay Bread. Archived fromthe original on 2007-01-07.
  8. ^"Gastronomique: Sous le Soleil Exactement". SFist. 2005-06-02. Archived fromthe original on 2011-07-16.
  9. ^"New Michelin guide sprinkles stars in Bay Area".Los Angeles Times. 2007-10-24. Archived fromthe original on 2013-01-28.
  10. ^Carol Emert (1999-10-03)."Breadmaker Rises Up to Swallow Oh-La-La Coffee Chain". San Francisco Chronicle.
  11. ^"The Inside Scoop: San Francisco's Cortez, Pescheria sold; Perry's closes". San Francisco Chronicle. 2008-04-02.
  12. ^"The Inside Scoop: Gastropub planned for Marina; Ponzu gets a new chef". San Francisco Chronicle. 2008-07-23.
  13. ^"Manresa's Syhabout eyes Jojo's space". San Francisco Chronicle. 2009-01-14.
  14. ^GraceAnn Walden (2000-11-29)."Galette to Open in Pacific Heights". San Francisco Chronicle.
  15. ^Amanda Hesser (2002-12-11)."A taste of San Francisco: Fluent in French, with a West Coast accent".The New York Times.
  16. ^"The American Boulangerie". Gayot. Archived fromthe original on 2009-11-06. Retrieved2009-04-02.
  17. ^Lucchesi, Paolo."La Boulange sold to Starbucks for $100 million".Inside Scoop. RetrievedJune 4, 2012.
  18. ^"Starbucks to close all La Boulange retail locations".Reuters. 2015-06-17. Retrieved2015-06-17.
  19. ^Sarah Fritsche (2015-09-27)."La Boulange will live again as La Boulangerie de San Francisco". San Francisco Chronicle.

External links

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