The one and only Eli’s Cheesecake, considered a
Chicago food icon, could be the largest specialty
cheesecake bakery in the country, producing
more than 15,000 products a day at its 62,000-sq.-ft.
Cheesecake World state-of-the-art bakery/retail
shop/visitors’ center.
Lauren R. Hartman, Editor-in-Chief
E
li Schulman, a renowned Chicago
restaurateur famous for his
award-winning restaurant, Eli’s
the Place for Steak, had a dream
of one day taking his tasty signature
cheesecake dessert to new heights. A
legend in Chicago for 39 years, the restaurant
was a hit and so was the dessert. Customers
proclaimed the cheesecake “Chicago’s finest.”
But could Eli Schulman ever have dreamed
that his cheesecakes would one day be the
subject of online videos, be featured on the
Home Shopping Network; or be the subject of
a social media smart-phone app?
Eli Schulman’s dream years ago was to create
a signature food item that he could take outside
of the restaurant. That food item was the
cheesecake, which made its debut at the first
Taste of Chicago on July 4, 1980, and soon led
to the creation of its own company.
Fast-forward 30-plus years. With son Marc
Schulman at the helm of the Eli’s Cheesecake
Co. as president, Eli Schulman’s dream has
more than been fulfilled. And the cheesecake
company is still committed to its heritage and
to artisan baking to grow even further.
And grow it has. Eli’s has created enormous,
multi-tiered cheesecakes for the 1993 and
1997 presidential inaugurations of Bill Clinton
and the 2009 and 2013 inaugurations of
Barack Obama. “Our cheesecake has gone
into the lexicon of great Chicago foods,” Marc
Schulman points out. “The cheesecakes are in
a category today with the great barbecued ribs
and deep-dish pizzas of Chicago as a signature
gift. One highlight is our kiosk at O’Hare Airport. But we’re an artisan bakery and
stick to our values, quality and heritage,
which goes back 73 years with my father’s
restaurant business.”
Posing in front of a large mural
featuring his father, Eli Schulman,
right, Marc Schulman, president of
Eli's Cheesecake, left, enjoys a taste
of Lemon Mixed Berry cheesecake.
Also immortalizing the likenesses
of Jay Leno and Bill Clinton, the
mural resides at the entrance of the
company's production facility called
Cheesecake World.
The popularity of the cheesecakes and
other delectable desserts became so great
that the company was able to build a large
corporate office and production plant on the
northwest side of Chicago in 1996. The facility
houses a retail store, a visitors’ center and
dessert café. Affectionately called Cheesecake
World, the 62,000-sq.-ft., state-of-the-art
complex generates more than 15,000 cheesecakes
and other treats each day. The retail
café sells many of the cheesecake varieties
as well as Eli’s merchandise, such as hats
and shirts.
“We have continued to develop the business
and products, market channels and
events ever since,” Schulman says. “And
we’ve stayed with what we believe in.”
That means the bakery still takes its time
to create its high-quality desserts slowly, in
small batches, using top-notch ingredients
to develop optimum flavors. The artisan desserts
are still made with the finest ingredients
like cultured cream cheese and Madagascar
Bourbon vanilla and are hand-decorated by
pastry artists.
But it’s also highly automated. In fact, the
Cheesecake World production plant goes
through more than 4 million lb. of cream
cheese, 500,000 lb. of eggs, 250,000 lb. of
butter and 13,000 lb. of Bourbon vanilla
each year. Operating 24 hours a day, usually
five days a week, the bakery has a knack for
making special-occasion cheesecakes for large
events such as the White Sox 2005 World
Series Championship, many Taste of Chicago
summer food festivals and special events for
celebrities such as Jay Leno, Hillary Clinton
and Oprah Winfrey.
Many varieties, many channels
All of the products, which come in myriad
shapes and flavors, are shipped frozen and
are sold in all 50 states, Canada, Europe,
Asia and the Middle East. Customers include
retail, foodservice and wholesale clients.
“We serve restaurants, hotels, supermarkets,
small fast-casual eateries, airlines, sporting events, you name it,” Schulman says. “We’re
distributor-based, and partner with chains.
We have created products for many of the
major supermarkets, we have videos of how
we make the cakes on YouTube, we’re featured
in various catalogs of companies such
as Williams-Sonoma, HoneyBaked Ham and
Macy’s, and we’re also featured on the Home
Shopping Network.”
Approximately 60% of Eli’s business is in
foodservice and 40% covers retail. “Foodservice
is so many different things, from
transportation to coffee shops,” he notes.
“We’re trying to offer our products to every
one of them.”
Variety is the spice of cheesecake, it
seems, and the company’s repertoire is large
and continues to expand. “We probably
make about 150 to 200 stock-keeping units
(SKU),” he says. “We have several seasonal
items; maybe 20% are seasonal/holiday-specific, such as our pumpkin cheesecake and
valentine heart-shaped cheesecake.”
"We’re an artisan
bakery and stick to
our values, quality and
heritage, which go back
73 years with my father’s
restaurant business.
"
Mark Schulman, president
New items
Vice president of marketing, Debbie Marchok,
explains that Eli’s also makes mini
cheesecakes and a 3-in. round version. There
are also 7- and 8-in. rounds that serve 12
people and 9- and 10-in. rounds that serve
14 to 16. Most of the desserts are pre-sliced
for convenience and last up to seven days in
the refrigerator, if kept it their original containers
and tightly wrapped in plastic wrap
after opening. They can be stored frozen at 0
deg. F for up to six months.
“We are about to launch a 10-in., Mediterranean
Honey Ricotta Almond cheesecake
with roasted almonds and pistachios,”
Marchok explains. “We source the honey locally
from our partnership with the National
Honey Board and the Chicago High School
for Agricultural Sciences, [a public school
offering urban students an agribusiness
curriculum]. The cake is designed for fine
dining and is a real hero in its size. It’s an
amazing recipe.”
The new cake speaks to the trend of Mediterranean
foods and their healthful benefits,
she adds. “These foods are very popular right
now, and the cake will debut at the National
Restaurant Show, so your timing couldn’t be
better,” she says with a smile.
Also new is a Key Lime cheesecake, which
joins about 100 other cheesecake flavors such
as Vanilla Bean, combinations of multiple
cheesecake flavors, Lemon Mixed Berry, Hot
Chocolate, Salted Caramel, Blackberry Sour
Cream, Strawberry Swirl, Red Velvet, White
Chocolate Raspberry, mini cheesecakes, bitesized
Cheesecake Cuties and many others.
The company’s other desserts include glutenfree
items, tarts featuring several unique
crusts, tiramisu and cakes such as Triple
Chocolate, Carrot Cake and Tres Leches
Cake. With the exception of an Irish Cream
Cheesecake, all of the cheesecakes and desserts
are certified kosher.
"We are about to launch
a 10-in., Mediterranean
Honey Ricotta Almond
cheesecake with roasted
almonds and pistachios.
"
Debbie Marchok,
vice president of marketing
“The success of our business isn’t necessarily
in the number of SKUs we make,” Schulman
remarks. “It also has to do with food safety and operational excellence. And we
thrive on the ability to be very flexible and
are very customer-service biased. We can get
involved very quickly in a project. It doesn’t
do any good to be rigid.”
Pure Chicago-style
Eli’s Cheesecake is what Schulman calls
Chicago-style, and is unique to Chicago in
that it’s baked with a high profile and has a
firm exterior and a very creamy interior. It’s
slowly baked to a golden brown in one of
the plant’s 70-ft.-long x 12-ft.-wide tunnel
ovens. The butter cookie crust is baked first,
also to a golden brown. Clean-label ingredients
are used, including cream cheese,
sugar, eggs, sour cream, pure vanilla, salt and
no preservatives.
Another unique aspect of the company
is that many of its fillings are actually made
in-house; it doesn’t purchase them from an
outside supplier.
On average, the cheesecakes contain
0.5-1.5 g. of trans-fat per serving, due to the
fact that they are baked with more than 65%
cultured cream cheese, cultured sour cream
and butter. But no margarine or partially
hydrogenated oils are used in any of the
internal recipes.
Schulman says the bakery is working with
its vendors to address the trans-fat issue. “It
is our goal to remove any hydrogenated fats
from all ingredients used in our products,”
he says.
“No one wants wasted calories,” adds
Marchok. “But people do want quality,
so we use these great ingredients, and we
are consistent.”
One of Eli’s most popular online products
is the C-cake, a made-to-order cheesecake
that customers create themselves online,
choosing their favorite toppings, borders,
decorations and even personalized messages.
The company decided to expand its market
by letting online customers design the
cheesecakes to their liking.
Spreading good will
“We’re also sponsoring a new introduction
for kids that they can find on smart phones and tablets that serves as a teaching tool,”
adds Schulman. “It’s a game where they can
create their own cakes, which will tie into the C-cake feature.”
Marchok says the company strives to reach
consumers in various ways, whether communicating
to them person-to-person, online,
on television, via computer, in print or by
smartphone. “This app will give children the
ability to develop hand coordination and
design skills,” she explains.
The idea that those involved in food are
becoming rock stars, such as farmers, chefs
and bakers, is nothing new to Schulman,
who has a way of finding the spotlight and
publicity wherever he goes. The company has
staged and been a part of many significant events all across the country.
“Marc has really adopted a role of entrepreneurship
here,” says Jolene Worthington,
vice president of operations. “He’s very
involved in agricultural endeavors and has
had many friends come and ask him how to
get into business and carry things forward for
the future.”
In fact, the company gets involved in a lot
of community events and projects, which
shows how much the role of the chef and
baker have changed, Schulman says. “We
pride ourselves on being able to socialize,
have fun and spread good will, but we also
take our business very seriously. Bakers and
other food manufacturers as well as farmers
are very sophisticated these days; they have
lots of technology, education, money, etc.
Bakers are into social media. So we see many
opportunities to affect change and do good
things for the community and the people
of Chicago.”
Food safety first
Currently, the bakery is in the process of
completing its Safe Quality Food (SQF) Level
2 food-safety training. “We started working on SQF about six months ago,” says Schulman.
“The great thing about SQF is that it
makes people so responsible. There’s a lot
of discipline required, but clearly, the stakes
are so high, it has to be the first thing you do
every day: Make sure your food is safe.”
Standing in front of a memory wall in the facility's bakery/cafe area are (left to right) Laurel
Boger, executive pastry chef, R&D, Tara Lane, pastry chef, Aurelio Ayala, quality assurance
supervisor and Juanita Chajon, product development coordinator.
Clockwise from left: Jolene Worthington, vice president of operations, Erin Arceo, director of
foodservice sales, Marc Schulman, president, Debbie Marchok, vice president of marketing,
Donna Carberry, director of customer service, Jeff Anderson, vice president of purchasing and
operations (kneeling) and Joe Nogal, CFO (kneeling).
Jeff Anderson, the company’s vice president
of purchasing and operations, recalls the
significant changes involved with the training.
“I’ve been in the food business for 20
years and [the Food Safety Management Act]
is the biggest change I’ve seen,” he says. “We
have been rated by the American Institute
of Baking (AIB) International as Superior for many years, and have had numerous GMP
(Good Manufacturing Practices) audits. But
SQF is a whole new world. It changes your
perceptions. And everything must be documented,
because if you don’t write it down,
it might not be considered as being done.
All of your policies and procedures have to
be documented.”
SQF will be great for everyone at Eli’s in
the long term, but has a way of separating the
grown-ups from the kids, if you will, Schulman
says. “You really have to rethink your
operation in terms of allergens and other
products, and it makes things very challenging,”
he says. “But you can’t say you don’t
care. If we achieve our new goals regarding
the food-safety standards, we’ll be where we
should be to meet anyone’s requirements. We
all need to worry about food safety. Clearly,
the regulations and initiatives on food safety
are driven by customers, too.”
Talented team
Schulman sees many opportunities for the
employees at Eli’s and says he appreciates the staff. “We create jobs and our staff here
is very talented,” he says. “Our product
development team can take a concept from
sales and source the ingredients, develop
the product and packaging, commercialize
and implement everything and then create it
consistently all of the time, which is also why
we’re successful.
“We strive to excel at what we make. We
perfect things, make them excellent. I think
that has to be the driving force. You have to
have the resources to do things right these
days, and that’s why we are successful and
will remain independent for many years to
come. We’re proud of our heritage, but really,
people are our heritage. I think they go
together. When you grow up in this business,
you find that it’s the individuals who make
the business.”
Next on the table…
Not surprisingly, many exciting projects are
in the works at Eli’s. The company plans to
expand its facility in 2014 with an addition
that will most likely double the size of the
bakery, Schulman adds. “We need additional
oven capacity and improvement in some
areas,” he explains. “Clearly, the facility
has done a great job for us, but we need
more space. When we designed it, we were
fortunate that it’s on a large site that we can
expand, so that’s what our team is working
on right now.”
The company is also committed to cutting
its energy consumption and recycles various
materials and food waste. “We want to be just
as thoughtful in our expansion,” Schulman
says. “In addition, sustainability is a high
priority for our customers and for us as well.”
There’s never a dull day at Eli’s. “It’s an exciting
time in the baking industry,” Schulman
says. “We can sell to very large, sophisticated
customers as well as small and mid-sized
ones, so we just have to be focused. The
number-one priority we have right now is
food-safety (training) and quality. There’s so
much going on and so many things to do,
we just have to be focused on continuing to
produce the best products ever.”
Source by
www.snackandbakery.com