FREE
I N
F O C U S
VOL.19, NO.3
F O R
P E O P L E
O V E R
More than 125,000 readers throughout Greater Baltimore
H&S Bakery rises to the occasion
Modest beginnings, lucky break The beloved H&S Bakery opened in 1943 in a rented rowhouse on Fagley Street in Highlandtown. Greek immigrants
MARCH 2022
I N S I D E …
PHOTO BY JOE ANDRUCYK
By Margaret Foster On a frigid day in January, a stretch of Interstate 95 became a 10-mile-long parking lot. Stranded by ice and snow, hundreds of drivers just south of Washington, including a U.S. senator, were trapped in their cars for nearly 40 hours, shivering and starving. Gazing hungrily at a stranded bakery truck near their car, Casey Holihan Noe, an Ellicott City resident, and her husband, John Noe, decided to act. She called the Baltimore-based bakery’s customer service number, pleading that they share the truck’s contents with travelers. Within 20 minutes, she received a call from the company’s leadership: Yes. Take it all. “When Casey took the initiative to reach out and let us know about all of the travelers stranded on that icy highway, it was without question or pause that we would… help those hungry and in need,” said Chuck Paterakis, vice president of transportation and logistics at H&S Family of Bakeries, in a statement. “As a familyowned business, we are able to be nimble and mobilize quickly.” With Paterakis’ permission, the truck driver, Ron Hill, unlocked his back hatch. He and the Noes trudged up and down the icy highway, knocking on car windows and passing out 600 loaves of whole-wheat bread and potato rolls through rolled-down windows. Thankfully, no one lost their life in the treacherous traffic jam. News of the generous act “went viral quickly,” bakery spokesman Shawn Paterakis told the Beacon. He received 7,000 emails over five days while getting the word out. Most media outlets covered the story, and the Noes were interviewed on several talk shows. Gov. Larry Hogan awarded H&S Bakery, Ron Hill and the Noes a governor’s citation on Jan. 13. “It has touched our hearts that our good deed resonated with so many people. We are just happy that people were fed and safe,” Casey Holihan Noe told the Beacon. “Everything else was sweet.”
5 0
L E I S U R E & T R AV E L
Warm up to the mansions and manatees of Florida’s Palm Beach County; plus, what’s (probably) in store for travel this year page 16
Gov. Larry Hogan gave a governor’s citation to H&S truck driver Ron Hill, left, who distributed free bread to gridlocked travelers on I-95 in January. Gov. Hogan also recognized Chuck Paterakis, right, principal owner and vice president of the Baltimorebased H&S Family of Bakeries for its generosity during the crisis.
Harry Tsakalos and Isodore “Steve” Paterakis started Athens Bakery there, baking loaves in a hearth oven for Baltimore delis and restaurants. The bakery’s big break came in 1965, when Ray Kroc made a handshake deal with Steve’s son, John Paterakis Sr., to supply bread to his hamburger chain, McDonald’s. “I’m just a little Greek baker that got lucky,” the late John Paterakis Sr. used to say. Under Paterakis, the company grew from a corner bakery to the behemoth it is today. The H&S Family of Bakeries includes H&S Bakery, Northeast Foods and, since 2004, Schmidt Baking Company, founded in Baltimore in 1886. (Schmidt’s advertising jingle, “I like bread and butter / I like toast and jam” made its Old Tyme products memorable in our area.) Chances are you’ve tasted H&S bread. The company still supplies rolls to McDonald’s — over half of their U.S. franchises — as well as Chick-Fil-A, Roy Rogers, Popeyes, Olive Garden, and 90 percent of Maryland’s public schools. They also sell their products in national supermarket
chains such as Costco, Safeway and Giant. Still true to its roots, the company supplies bread to local restaurants, including Ikaros in East Baltimore and Jenning’s Café in Catonsville.
Commitment to charity Today, the four owners of H&S Family of Bakeries, who are in their 60s and 70s, work from a historic brick warehouse on the corner of South Caroline and Fleet Streets in Fells Point. “A lot of people in Baltimore still don’t know the full extent of the story,” said Shawn Paterakis, great-grandson of the cofounder. “That was a generational thing: Always keep humble.” But like it or not, January’s I-95 story brought a national spotlight to the massive but modest company. “We tend to not like to promote ourselves,” he said. “But this was a great thing. We’re happy people can see we live by our values.” In its 79-year history, H&S Bakery has made a point to donate to the needy. During See BAKERY, page 20
ARTS & STYLE
Chesapeake Shakespeare Company celebrates 20 years with “A Raisin in the Sun” and other classics this season page 19
FITNESS & HEALTH 4 k How to eat healthy for less k Smoke or used to? Get scanned LAW & MONEY 12 k Bonds that pay more with inflation k Financial tips for single women ADVERTISER DIRECTORY
23
PLUS CROSSWORD, BEACON BITS, CLASSIFIEDS & MORE