Martin Philip (baker)
Martin Philip | |
---|---|
Born | Martin Rainey Philip |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Bread maker |
Years active | 2006-present |
Spouse | Julie Ness |
Children | 3 |
Website | breadwright |
Martin Rainey Philip is an American baker, author, and banjoist.[1][2] He is the head bread baker at King Arthur Flour in Norwich, Vermont.[3][4]
Early life and education
[edit]Philip was born in the Ozark Mountains area of Arkansas.[5] He grew up in Fayetteville, Arkansas.[6]
In 1992, Philip received a Bachelor of Music in performance (voice) from the Oberlin College's conservatory for classical music.[7]
Career
[edit]After college, Philip lived in San Francisco until 2000. After moving to New York City to pursue work in opera,[8] Philip worked in the operations division of the investment bank Credit Suisse until 2006.[9] He attended classes at Art Students League of New York for drawing. Philip wrote about how being in the City during September 11 attacks initiated a career change.[10]
In May 2006, after a long period of home baking,[11] Philip moved to Vermont to work at King Arthur Flour in Norwich, Vermont.[10] He was hired by King Arthur head baker Jeffrey Hamelman.[9][12] He is now head bread baker.[13]
In 2017, Philip wrote the book Breaking Bread: A Baker's Journey Home in 75 Recipes.[5][14] He wrote the book – part memoir, part cook book – in Hanover Town Library in Hanover, New Hampshire[9] and during a 2016 residency at the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough, New Hampshire.[15] The authors Sarah Stewart Taylor and Jodi Picoult provided guidance and Picoult connected him to a book agent.[12][9]
As part of the book release, Philip did a week long tour of the Ozark region where he grew up, that he called Baker Maker Roadshow and Biscuits for Strangers,[16] where he rode his bike with his banjo and baking ingredients as a way to connect with the community where he grew up.[17]
In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic where self-isolation and physical distancing increased the popularity of home bread baking,[18] Philip shared regular baking stories on Instagram, often with his son as an assistant and his daughter behind the camera.[19]
Personal life
[edit]Philip is married to Julie Ness.[20] They have three children and live in White River Junction, Vermont.[9]
Philip plays the banjo, typically clawhammer-style. He is also an avid trail runner in the Vermont woods near his home.[11]
Honors
[edit]- 2013: Coupe du Monde de la Boulangerie (Paris, France)[21][22]
- 2013: SIGEP Golden Cup (Rimini, Italy), Team USA finalist[21]
- 2016: MacDowell Colony, fellow[15]
- 2017: New England Book Festival, Grand Prize
- 2018: Vermont College of Fine Arts, Vermont Book Award[9]
- 2018: New York Book Industry Guild, best cookbook of 2018[23]
Selected works and publications
[edit]- Philip, Martin; Reed, Julia A. (photography by) (2017). Breaking Bread: A Baker's Journey Home in 75 Recipes. New York, NY: Harper Wave, HaperCollinsPublishers. ISBN 978-0-062-44793-7. OCLC 1132370646.
- Philip, Martin (26 October 2017). "I Was Too Busy to Run. So I Started a Streak, and It Changed Everything". Runner's World.
- Philip, Martin (13 September 2018). "We slept in that day". Medium.
- Philip, Martin (6 April 2020). "Don't be a bread hostage". King Arthur Flour.
References
[edit]- ^ Unrein, John (11 December 2018). "Bake Twentyfive: Martin Philip". Bake Magazine.
- ^ Kellams, Kyle (15 May 2018). "Baking, Writing, Playing the Banjo". KUAF.
- ^ Conte, Annemarie (9 April 2019). "I Took a 3-Day Bread Baking Class, and Walked Away With More Than a Full Stomach". Woman's Day.
- ^ Barry, Jordan (3 September 2019). "Martin Philip Talks Baking, Conversation and Humanity". Seven Days.
- ^ a b Monk, Ginny (22 November 2017). "Ex-Arkansan's Bread quest ends at home". Arkansas Online.
- ^ "Breaking Bread: A Baker's Journey Home in 75 Recipes with Martin Philip". Fayetteville Public Library. 31 March 2018.
- ^ "Recipe: For Nights at Round Table". Oberlin Alumni Magazine: 17. Winter 2018–19.
- ^ Hill, Amanda (15 February 2018). "Breaking Bread; how an opera singer became a baker". WCSH, News Center Maine.
- ^ a b c d e f Smith, Nicola (4 October 2018). "Upper Valley Baker and Writer Garners Vermont Book Award". Valley News.
- ^ a b Philip, Martin (13 September 2018). "We slept in that day". Medium.
- ^ a b Prescott, Virginia; McCarthy, Hannah (18 May 2017). "From Investment Banker to Head Baker". NHPR.
- ^ a b Dyck, Mark; Philip, Martin (12 September 2018). "Rise Up #25: Martin Philip". Rise Up! The Baker Podcast with Mark Dyck.
- ^ Lindholm, Jane; Smith, Matthew F. (6 November 2017). "Sharing Stories And 'Breaking Bread' With King Arthur Flour's Head Baker". VPR.
- ^ Philip, Martin; Reed, Julia A. (photography by) (2017). Breaking Bread: A Baker's Journey Home in 75 Recipes. New York, NY: Harper Wave, HaperCollinsPublishers. ISBN 978-0-062-44793-7. OCLC 1132370646.
- ^ a b "Martin Philip - Artist". MacDowell Colony. 2016.
- ^ Smittle, Stephanie (1 November 2019). "Feeding strangers on the Pig Trail: Martin Philip's "Baker Maker Roadshow"". Arkansas Times.
- ^ Martin-Brown, Becca (4 October 2018). "A bicycle, a banjo and biscuits - Baker takes to road to collect stories of the Ozarks". Arkansas Online.
- ^ Hanson, Alex (1 May 2020). "The Great American Baking Boom shakes the Upper Valley". Valley News.
- ^ Grayson, Margaret (15 April 2020). "King Arthur Flour's Martin Philip Talks Sourdough and Baking With Kids". Seven Days.
- ^ "Bio". Breadwright. Retrieved 12 May 2020.
- ^ a b Cloud, Kristen (18 January 2013). "King Arthur's Martin Philip Competing In Golden Bread Cup This Weekend". Shelby Report.
- ^ Reed, Julia (28 May 2016). "The Coupe du Monde de la Boulangerie". King Arthur Flour.
- ^ "32nd Annual New York Book Show Catalog". Book Industry Guild of New York. 2018. pp. 26–27.