Behind Buttercooky Bakerys transformation
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| Buttercooky Bakery's lineup of
European-style desserts. |
Borgognone is the kind of guy who doesn’t take no for an
answer.
Whether he was trying harder as one of the smaller guys on the
football team at New York’s Institute of Technology or
getting his foot in the door at the Plaza Hotel by offering to work
in the pastry kitchen for free, Borgognone’s passion propels
him to action. At 41, he’s already been in the bakery
business for 32 years. This month, he opens his second Buttercooky
Bakery in Manhasset, Long Island, a satellite of the original shop
in Floral Park, N.Y., which he’s owned since 1995.
Despite his French-sounding name, Borgognone is Sicilian through
and through, one possible source for his fierce work ethic. His
father Frank immigrated from Arigento, Sicily to New York City 45
years ago and partnered with another Italian immigrant to run a
bakery in Brooklyn.
“I started working when I was nine years old, cleaning up and
washing pots, then filling cannolis and gradually working on cakes
and pastries,” Ben Borgognone says.
Borgognone’s passion for the business was first ignited in
his father’s shop. Later, when he studied hotel and
restaurant management at college, he was convinced that baking was
in his blood.
But Borgognone’s path to success was not in taking over
his father’s bakery, with its Italian pedigree and familial
history. Instead, Borgognone drove into the city and cold called
for a job at the Plaza Hotel.
![]() |
| Ben Borgognone grew up in the bakery
business and had long envisioned owning his own pastry
shop. |
“I didn’t even have a resume,” Borgognone says. “I’d only worked for my father.”
He offered to work for two weeks for free, and four months
later, he was assistant pastry chef. His three-year tenure at the
hotel, where he worked closely with Alain Sailhac, now a dean of
culinary studies at the French Culinary Institute, New York City,
polished his pastry technique and exposed him to a world of
high-end European pastry.
Learned from the family
For the next two years, Borgognone worked for his uncle at
Veniero’s Pastry Shop, a multi-million dollar a year Italian
bakery operation in Manhattan. There, he learned volume production
and honed his management skills.
With these skills in place, Borgognone felt ready to go into the
bakery business for himself. A mom-and-pop German bakery in Floral
Park turned out to be just the ticket. “It was dark and
dingy, really in need of an update,” he recalls. “But
the location, in a well established residential neighborhood on a
commuter drive, was perfect.”
The challenge was clear: take over an existing bakery and change
the product line from basic buttercream cakes and traditional
breakfast products to fancy European pastry. Borgognone envisioned
an upscale product line, and a bakery design to go along with
it.
![]() |
| Gourmet cakes and pastries as well as
sharply uniformed sales people contribute to Buttercooky's
professional image. |
The original shop was 2,000 sq. ft. with 600 sq. ft. of retail
space and the remainder for production and storage. He spent
$500,000 on bakery upgrades–everything from electrical wiring
to custom cherry wood cases. Borgognone’s idea was to
replicate a European coffee bar, complete with homemade gelato and
Italian flavored sodas.
“The transition took time,” Borgognone says.
“Customers generally don’t like change.”
Made it his own
The Buttercooky name was the only thing that remained the same in
the Floral Park shop. Borgognone transformed the physical space
into a bright, open, full-service pastry shop. The remodel sent
customers the clear message that the new Buttercooky was
professional and committed to high-quality bakery products.
To further win over customers, Buttercooky encouraged them to
sample products. Being willing to accommodate last minute orders
and offering custom cakes quickly earned Borgognone the loyalty of
existing customers and attracted new ones to the positive changes
in the bakery.
Buttercooky produces cakes for every imaginable holiday, an
overture to the neighborhood’s diversity. He slowly
introduced fancy cakes to his 95 percent scratch product line.
Buttercooky’s Fruit Salad Cake, for example, is filled with
light custard, pineapple, bananas, peaches and strawberries and
topped with heavy cream.
Finishing cakes with special touches is Borgognone’s forte.
Chocolate shavings and chocolate-dipped ladyfingers adorn
Buttercooky’s chocolate tiramisu. Towering meringue rises in
Alpine peaks above the banana cream pie. A mirrored pool of dark
chocolate envelopes the silken chocolate mousse cake, rich with
Belgium chocolate ganache.
“The guy before me made Black Forest cake and white and
chocolate cake with buttercream icing. That’s it,”
Borgognone says. “I wanted to use my knowledge of European
pastry.”
Along with 40 different kinds of cakes, Buttercooky sells a full
line of breakfast items, including coffee cake, Danish, croissants
and donuts, as well as cookies and bread.
Although committed to being primarily a retail operation,
Borgognone acquired some wholesale accounts in the beginning to
jumpstart his cash flow, supplying cakes and breakfast items to
caterers and country clubs. His retail business jumped 40 percent
after the renovation. “I think the new look, bright lighting
and visibility made all the difference. People really started
noticing us.”
![]() |
| The bakery's redesigned retail area
features new showcases, coffee equipment and cafe
seating. |
Envisioned a café
A few years ago, when the lease for the beauty shop next door was
up, Borgognone decided to expand. A major coffee chain was coming
into the neighborhood, and he wanted to increase his presence in
the increasingly competitive market. He broke through next door,
doubling his space to a total of 4,000 sq. ft. The larger space
allowed room for café tables, a beautiful copper imported
espresso machine and a gelato case during the summer.
An avid reader of everything related to the bakery business,
Borgognone knew what kind of bakery he wanted to run. “I
wanted it to be inviting, the kind of place where people felt
comfortable,” he says. The bakery is pristine, modern and
spotlessly clean. An admitted clean freak, Borgognone notices every
fingerprint on the shop’s brass rail and every smear on the
glass cases. No product is displayed unless it meets
Borgognone’s standards.
Most of Buttercooky’s employees have been with the company
for years. “I promote from within,” Borgognone says.
“Attitude is the most important thing to me. You can teach
everything else.”
Borgognone sets the example, addressing nearly every customer by
name and beaming with pride when he is complimented on a special
cake he made for a 50th anniversary. “I never turn anyone
away. If somebody comes in and needs a birthday cake 10 minutes
before we close, they get it,” he says. Buttercooky typically
bakes 240 sheet cakes and 400 tortes a week, in addition to
breakfast items and cookies.
After the expansion, Borgognone experimented with longer store
hours by offering sandwiches and savory snacks and staying open
until 10 p.m. “We really didn’t get the traffic in the
evening. There wasn’t enough business,” he says.
“This is a coffee and pastry place, so we went back to our 6
a.m. to 8 p.m. schedule, seven days a week.”
Solid base for growth
With nearly 3,000 sq. ft. of production space, including an
elevator to transfer product to five large basement walks-in
refrigerators and freezers, Buttercooky had the capacity to support
another location. “I figure if I’m going to send trucks
out to deliver product, it might as well be to my own place instead
of going the wholesale route,” Borgognone says.
A second location in the business district of the upscale village
of Manhasset on Long Island’s North Shore opens this month.
“I had customers begging me to open there for the past three,
four years,” he says.
The second Buttercooky Bakery is a 1,200 sq. ft. space with 600 sq.
ft. of storage in the basement. Staffed by a pastry chef and two
assistants, plus retail sales help, the Manhasset store bakes bread
and breakfast items. The bakery finishes some cake products, but
most of the fancy cakes and tortes are delivered from Floral Park
daily.
“If we can do half of the business we do in Floral Park,
I’d be happy,” Borgognone says. A recent demographic
study revealed that Buttercooky draws customers from a broad
geographic area, including Suffolk County, Brooklyn and even
Connecticut. The Manhasset store will extend its reach into
northern Long Island.
A strong believer in building a word-of-mouth reputation,
Borgognone does not spend money on advertising. For his dollar, he
prefers to boost his community profile by donating product to
charity events and sponsoring local sports teams. “I like to
give back that way. And, truthfully, I think it’s a better
way to get our name out there,” he says.
Plans more stores
With ample production space and a tight round-the-clock production
schedule that keeps the freezers full of enough product to carry
him through a week of business, Borgognone believes Buttercooky can
support more locations. “I think we can handle a couple more
stores,” he says.
Wedding cakes are an untapped area of Buttercooky’s business
ripe for growth.
“We’re only doing about 150 to 200 cakes a year
right now, and we can do more,” Borgognone says.
Despite having three decades of baking under his belt, Borgognone
is revved up and ready to go. “No question, it’s a life
of sacrifice. I miss out on time with my family. If it
weren’t for my wife, Barbara, none of this would be possible.
She’s supported me in every way from the
beginning.”
Borgognone has come a long way since stuffing cannolis in his
father’s bakery as a child. He’s done things his way
and he’s proud of it. “When I create a product that
totally surpasses my customers’ expectations, that’s
when I realize why I do what I do, and I love it.”
A sampling of Buttercooky Bakery
prices
Fruit salad cake, 9 ins.… $17.95
Chocolate mousse cake, 7 ins.…$18.95
Red velvet chocolate cake… $17.95
Fresh fruit torte, 10 ins.… $21.95
New York cheesecake, 7 ins.…$8.95
Tiramisu, 5 ins. (miniature)…$3.45
Cannoli…$2
Linzer tort cookie, 4 ins. …$1.50
Pecan tart, 4 ins.… $3.95
Buttercooky Bakery...at a glance
Locations: Floral Park, N.Y. (main location) and
Manhasset, N.Y.
Management: Ben Borgognone, owner/pastry
chef
Bakery’s primary business: retail
Number of stores: 2
Store size(s): 4,000 sq. ft., 1,200 sq. ft. (new
shop)
Market served: Long Island
Product line: cakes, European pastry, fruit tarts,
cookies, pies, breakfast pastries
Annual sales: $800,000 (original location
only)
Product breakdown: cakes, 50%; cookies, 30%;
bread, 10%; breakfast pastries, 10%
Employees: 13
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