Throughout the pandemic, Brooklyn-based baker Carla Finley became an unexpected local hero for loaf lovers (and, subsequently, those who never took up bread-baking) when she founded Apt. 2 Bread, a homemade bread pick-up and subscription service that she operates out of her rental apartment in Clinton Hill. Sure, we’ve all had delicious bread before but Finley’s loaves hit the mouth differently — her boules are consistent and exact, with a crisp crust and a chewy, fluffy center full of airy crumbs that were perfect vessels for soft butter and flaky salt.
Finley’s success is not surprising, given her background: Before striking it out on her own in April 2020, Finley was on the bread team at famed Italian eaterie and market Il Buco Alimentari and before that, she honed her baking chops at She Wolf Bakery. At the onset of the pandemic, Finely was laid off, and Apt 2 Bread was born: Suddenly, her loaves, which were previously only available for Il Buco restaurant diners, could be ordered by anyone in her Brooklyn vicinity. Through word-of-mouth, Finley’s humble, one-woman operation took off and she eventually transformed her standard kitchen into a space where she could bake more efficiently.
“I gutted the guest bedroom and put in real equipment with an oven that could fit nine loaves at a time. That changed everything,” says Finley, whose original apartment oven only fit two loaves. “I was finally able to join a farmer’s market and make enough bread to actually live off of this business and get off of unemployment.” Finley has kneaded, risen, and shaped hundreds of carbo-loaded creations: “My main thing is what I call my ‘daily bread,’ my white sourdough, that I was literally making every day for the past two years,” says Finley. When focaccia was introduced to her lineup, it became the most popular bread (toppings included plump green olives and sesame seeds), followed by her cinnamon rolls slathered in gooey frosting.
Over the summer, Finley has paused on subscription orders to focus on creative bread-related projects — like making bread magnets (which Finley says will be restocked soon) and bread-border mirrors, or collaborating on pop-up dinner series — as a way to prevent herself from the burnout of producing like a factory. (She had flirted with the idea of expanding as a brick-and-mortar but ultimately scaled back as a way of “honoring the original vision of the project and the business” which has always been to provide quality bread for her neighbors. She still bakes for her CSA once a week.)
For now, Finley recommends keeping an eye on the @apt2bread Instagram account for holiday pre-orders, events, and other bake sale announcements. To tide us over till then, Finley shares her most trusted kitchen tools that bakers at any level will surely find useful.