Apollonia Poilâne is a Franco-American third-generation baker, CEO and gallerist based in Paris, France. She is the eldest daughter of Lionel Poilâne and Irena Poilâne and sister of artist Athena Poilâne. Together with her sister, they own Poilâne bakery, which runs the world renowned, independent, family-owned Poilâne bakery that has been based at 8 rue de Cherche-Midi in Paris, France since 1932. The Poilâne bakery is reputed to be one of the world's best bakeries specializing in sourdough breads baked in wood-fired ovens and is considered Paris's most famous bakery. It is most well known for their nearly 4lb “miche Poilâne®” – a rustic, country style bread introduced to the bakery by Apollonia Poilâne's grandfather, bakery founder Pierre Leon Poilâne.
Background and early life
Apollonia's mother, Irena Poilâne was an architect and after moving to Paris considered herself a “designer” focusing on interior architectural design, sculpting, and jewelry. She was considered a taste-maker throughout Paris and collaborated with the likes of Karl Lagerfield and Bernardeau ceramics. In his later years, Lionel Poilâne was considered the most-famous and celebrated baker worldwide. Alongside bread baking, he was a celebrity in his own right for and stood as a champion for artisanal craftmanship throughout France. He also cultivated a passion for aeronautics, eventually becoming a helicopter pilot and the President of the Groupement Français de l’Hélicoptère. From a young age, he found himself collaborating with Salvador Dalí, César and other prominent artists using bread as an inspiration and source material. Apollonia Poilâne grew up in this environment, educated in her mother's workshops in craftmanship and by her father's in the family's tradition of “the true taste of bread” – which focused not only on bread as food, but how bread touches all aspects of life. Lionel Poilâne had built the bakery into an internationally recognized name, known for the breads produced and his public persona. He is credited with being one of the leaders reviving a focus on artisan breadmaking at a time when industrialized breadmaking dominated and bread consumption was on a decline. He was considered as contemporary of the “nouvelle cuisine” movement and the breads appreciated and utilized by France's top chefs, such as Joel Robuchon, Paul Bocuse. Together, Irena and Lionel Poilâne, conceived of a “Manufacture” just outside of Paris, which houses 24 100-tonne wood fired ovens built to replicate the bakehouse at 8 Rue de Cherche-Midi. By doing so, the bakery could produce up to 5,000 loaves of bread a day, each one baked by a single baker using traditional methods. As such, the bakery had clients worldwide as early as the 1970s, notably in The United States of America and parts of Asia.
Asked as child what she would like to be when she grew up, she responded “Why not be a baker in the morning and an architect the afternoon?” Poilâne grew up playing and working in her mother's workshop and the family's bakery. As a child, Poilâne's spending money came from working at the historic bakery. She formally began working in the family bakery at 16 years old, when Apollonia Poilâne began her apprenticeship as a baker in the bakery's 9-month bakers apprenticeship program. Poilâne's bread baking is known for its physical nature, which relies on the baker to utilize all of their senses and body as the tools. For their sourdough, only mechanical materials are used in the baking process eschewing the use of thermometers or refrigeration – save for use of an electric mixer designed to mimic the human arm movement. At age 18, on October 31, 2002, Apollonia Poilâne's parents were killed in a helicopter crash. The next mornings, the precocious Poilâne entered the bakery and sat behind her father's former business desk, assuming the head of the family business at the age of 18. At the time, Poilâne was already a 13 million euro/year business with three bakeries in Paris, one location in London, and an e-commerce website that had existed since 1997. It accounted between 1-2.5% of bread found in Paris and its surrounding areas restaurants as well as being a supplier to the Elysée Presidential Palace. In 2019, she published Poilâne: The Secrets of the World-Famous Bread Bakery, which includes recipes for several of the bakery's breads and pasteries.