People come into the Cupcake Counter all day long, looking for cupcakes. Some even buy them at the tiny shop on Madison Street.
Others are just asking for directions to Crumbs Bake Shop, a New York cupcake chain that opened in Chicago at the end of December. They haven’t far to go; it’s right across the street from the Cupcake Counter — just turn around and walk out the door, having bought nothing, leave the little bakery that Samantha Wood and her mother, Holly Sjo, began in 2009 and keep afloat by working grueling 16-hour days, turn left, go 60 paces, crossing Franklin Street, and there you are at the 34th Crumbs branch nationwide.
“Your spirit ...” says Wood. “You get a little heartbroken.”
The Cupcake Counter, 229 W. Madison, is perhaps the smallest retail establishment downtown. The storefront is 9 feet wide, the total space, including the kitchen in back, is 290 square feet. For Valentine’s Day it is decorated like a kindergarten, with big red hearts cut out of construction paper.
Crumbs is more than twice the size, a difference also reflected in its products. It’s decorated with a lovely golden graphic of a jester juggling cupcakes.
Cupcake Counter cupcakes weigh about 2¾ ounces and look exactly like the cupcakes your mother would bake and bring to your first-grade classroom in a tinfoil-lined shoebox to celebrate your birthday. The icing can be spare — sometimes it doesn’t even cover the cupcake top, but leaves a gap of bare cake rimming the crinkly paper wrapping.
Decoration might be a single tiny red candy heart, set directly in the center. I would describe Cupcake Counter cupcakes as simple, classic cupcakes with a certain quiet dignity; solemn cupcakes, maybe even a little sorrowful; cupcakes as Wayne Thiebaud would paint them.
Sometimes only a handful are on display.
Across the street at Crumbs is a different story altogether. The display case is jammed with cupcakes, ranging from 1-ounce minis to the “Colossal Crumb” intended to feed eight people. The “signature” cupcakes are 7-ounce, 500-calorie behemoths the size and shape of grapefruits, domed high with icing, studded with candy, drenched in chocolate, crusted with sprinkles. Circus-like cupcakes. Mardi Gras cupcakes.
“Most people don’t eat them by themselves,” said Crumbs district manager Sara Fina. “They share them, because you want to try everything.”
Its “library of varieties” are produced at an outside bakery. “We give them the recipes,” said Fina, adding that Crumbs plans to open four more outposts in the Chicago area, the latest squalls in a cupcake downpour.
“Cupcakes, cupcakes, cupcakes,” said Sarah Levy, founder of Sarah’s Pastries & Candies, a Chicago bakery. “We are definitely being bombarded. You think it’s going to be gone but it’s still going.”
Levy said high-end cupcake boutiques first got recognition with New York’s Magnolia Bakery in “Sex and the City” and Sprinkles in Beverly Hills.
“Lines out the door,” Levy said.
Sprinkles opened its first shop in Chicago last July. Magnolia is planning to open here this spring.
Cupcake Counter cupcakes are $3 apiece; Crumbs’ signature cupcakes are $3.75. I bought a few from each store to take home, taste-test and compare, and here my David-and-Goliath story falls apart.
Though Cupcake Counter chocolate icing has a delicate cocoa note I savored, there was no night-and-day difference. The made-from-scratch-by-mom cake and the made-by-some-faceless-contractor cake tasted pretty much the same, and my family preferred Crumbs, which does give 250 percent more cupcake for 25 percent more in price.
Not that there aren’t reasons beyond cupcakes to patronize the Cupcake Counter.
“It was always a dream to do a business together,” said Wood. “Mom went to culinary school; I worked in advertising. That was our dream, to do something little and have it be real. We never had the interest to have 10 locations.”
They have a tough enough time running one.
“Food retail is so laborious,” she said, noting they arrive at 3 or 4 a.m. and stay until 7:30 p.m..
“That’s a day,” she said.
As for Crumbs.
“You want to believe that people can see through it,” she said.
Wood looked tired. What are the chances that she and her mother will hold up against a national chain?
“Mom and I are fighters, we will never not survive,” she said. “Someone else in our shoes, I would really be concerned. We will not compromise our integrity.”
Her mother has not stepped foot in Crumbs since it opened.
“Why would I?” said Holly Sjo. “It’s of no concern. I’ve been to them in Beverly Hills and in New York and they’re all the same.”
Is she concerned because they’re across the street?
“Concerned?” she said. “A little disappointed. We have completely different products. We make everything by scratch, by hand. We do it just like your mother would do for your birthday. Every single thing we sell goes through my hands. It’s a very long day, but for me, I have no interest to do it any other way.
“I think our recipes are different, our visual appeal, our personal commitment, you will sense that, if you were actually lucky enough to have a mom or grandma who did that. That’s what a baker is supposed to do.”
— Originally published Feb. 13, 2011
Update: The Cupcake Counter won. All 65 Crumbs stores went out of business in 2014. Sprinkles closed its Chicago operations last year. Magnolia Bakery still has a State Street location, as well as outlets in New York, California, India, Qatar, Kuwait, Turkey and the Philippines.
But what giant cupcakes could not kill, COVID did, and the Cupcake Counter went out of business in April, 2020. Samantha Wood moved to Florida where she formed the Sjo Agency — named for her mother — which does support work for UHNW, or "ultra high net worth" individuals.

Ghost city for sure. Not only retail disruption killing it but also changing culinary tastes.(Even The Beef & Brandy is gone, but they had rodents) Sugary fattening fare might be less appealing in the age of step-counting and body dismorphia. Ingesting a 500 calorie butter bomb makes me feel like I've smoked a pack of cigarettes.
ReplyDeleteMrs. Field's Cookies comes to mind. Where is she? Is Dunkin Donuts next? Given the costs of ingredients, labor and overhead...what is the limit one will pay for a stale munchkin? Will DD be robot 'manned'? I can't even imagine how things will change in another 15 years. I hope you will be here to write about it.
Dunkin is everywhere, occasionally partnered with some other restaurant. Dunkin is far better than the vastly overrated Krispy Kreme & less expensive than Stan's.
DeleteDunkin donuts is owned by Inspire Brands a multinational that does 32 billion dollars in YEARLY sales
Delete650,000 franchises of various restaurants
Franco
If you want to see lots of chicago area places that aren't around anymore, go to https://www.craigslostchicago.com/
DeleteI retired from a Loop office job after 45 years in the the City in 2012. Loved the "business" of the entire Loop. Wherever you went people were there. Stores -- galore. Had your pick of big or little. Restaurants - again big or little. It saddens me now to walk down LaSalle Street from the Rock Island station. Ghost Town comes to mind. I am sad that Cupcake Counter was one of the lost. I am hoping that Samantha Wood has found another dream. Thanks Neil for reminding us of what is happening before our eyes.
ReplyDeleteYou explore a topic I know nothing about but I enjoyed it more than I would a cupcake. I am still sorry that all but one of the outlets are gone from here, especially Cupcake Counter.
ReplyDeleteEww In Florida supporting ultra high net worth individuals. Not my cup of cake.
ReplyDeleteYeah, that update swiped away the compassion I was feeling for Samantha.
DeleteYes, that was surprising. But I felt duty-bound to include it, and the whole dreamer-purusing-a-dream trope can disguise a rich person indulging in a lark.
DeleteMortgages and health insurance fees must be paid -- so I don't blame people for finding income how they can. Moving to Florida, though ... !
DeleteWe need to set aside a specific day where all purchases are made from mom-and-pop type shops. Call it Independents Day. No chains, no big box, no Amazon (no Amazon should be all days, but that's a different matter).
ReplyDeleteThe initiative you describe has existed for some time. It’s called Small Business Saturday, which occurs annually in the Saturday following Thanksgiving.
DeleteIt was established to encourage consumers to frequent and purchase items at small businesses, such as the mom-and-daughter shop described in the post.
Unfortunately, more often than not small businesses suffer during economic downturns and also from over-saturation during more positive economic times as well as rapidly changing and highly fickle tastes, driven by social media, amongst the younger generations, i.e. non-Boomers.
For example, witness the closings of many beer microbreweries across the Chicago area. The microbrews proliferated initially until there were far more than economically sustainable, especially so during an economic downturn. In order to differentiate themselves, the microbrews had to create more exotic flavors, in hopes of drawing customers due to the novelty, trending away from traditional brews preferred by long time beer consumers. The microbrews also suffered from tastes evolving away from brews and towards hard seltzers and other lighter alcoholic beverages.
Having a great idea and hard work are important for a small business, but a sustainable idea that can weather economic times and changing tastes is more important. The ability to manipulate social media and get the attention of the algorithms may be far more important in these times. It takes more than passion to survive.
It already exists, it's called Small Business Saturday.
DeleteBarb of Edgewater- trump’s obscene tariffs have done more to destroy ‘mom and pop’ businesses than any ‘chain’! ‘Chains’ have closed their doors as well! When a Chicago shop that sells educational supplies received an order from abroad-the invoice was $30,000 more than when they placed the order. They couldn’t pay it and had to refuse delivery! SCOTUS declared trump's tariffs were illegal! So trump argued with the Supreme Court and is plots to foist tariffs on us and the world by bypassing the court’s decision!
ReplyDeleteAnd did you really expect anything else?
DeleteMister S will celebrate yet another trip around the sun this summer, as will I. But I will have completed 13 more than our proprietor has. Left Chicago for good almost 34 years ago, at 45. Return visits have dwindled to every few years now...and often far less.
ReplyDeleteMuch of what was familiar and meaningful about my city, in my childhood, youth, and adulthood, has vanished. Whole neighborhoods, not just buildings, have been erased and replaced. Many more have been rendered almost unrecognizable by rampant and pervasive gentrification. Miss riding on the "L"... and experiencing the Loop that once was. The downtown of my adopted city (Cleveland) has been a ghost town for decades.
And the people who mattered to me? They have either moved elsewhere...or they are gone. Too many of my old bleacher pals at Wrigley now have season tickets for the Angels. The 70s Florida I knew is also history, as are the relatives who once lived there.
Inevitably, one begins to discover that the world they have known and loved is disintegrating. Does it routinely happen in one's fifties? Sixties? Seventies? Whatever that age is, a goodly number of EGD community members appear to have attained it.
Goodness. I hope you have a golden retriever to hug. I have 2 to get me through those kind of moments. I find Chicago different from when I lived there but not worse, and in many ways better.
DeleteAll I know Grizz, is that in my mid eighties I can walk down the strrets of the many (unrecognizable) neighborhoods I used to live in, and be viewed as something of a curiosity by their inhabitants who all seem to be at least half my age.
DeleteWhat kind of “support” do UHNW individuals require? Where can I go to get my money weighed, because there’s too much to count?
ReplyDeletelate stage capitalism is horrific.
ReplyDeleteWe used to work to live, now we live to work.
The people with money -- UHNW individuals -- never lose their money, they just amass more. And why cut the slack of someone renting from you, when you can just save money with an empty shop.
Probably "concierge services" -- get me a ticket to..., pick up my..., call... and ask about..., what should I get... for their birthday, suchlike.
ReplyDelete