The extraordinary rise of bakery tourism: ‘People travel from all over the world. It’s mind-blowing!’

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Beer crawls are out and bakery crawls are in, with people arranging whole days, weekends or even holidays around the search for the perfect loaf or croissantJust one day into a 225-mile hike across the width of Scotland last August, Dan Warren was feeling the burn, his old trail shoes wearing painfully thin.But neither sore feet nor swarms of midges would stop the librarian and his scientist wife, Dee Johnson, from reaching their goal: the promise of pastries at the Bakehouse in the west coast fishing town of Mallaig, a 14-day trek plus two ferry hops away from their home near Montrose.The pair are so-called “bakery pilgrims”, travelling significant distances in the pursuit of a fine loaf or bun.“Some of the time we were pushing through overgrown tracks, and there were lots of bogs,” Warren says of their journey.But their eventual reward was a soft brioche bun, filled with crème pâtissière and finished with crumble and berries.

I can relate.The siren call of the honey buns at Popty’r Dref bakery in Dolgellau, Wales, drew my wife and me from Oxfordshire, nearly four hours away.We tagged on a hike up Mount Snowdon (Yr Wyddfa), but it was really just a scenic spot to enjoy our bakery haul.A couple of weeks ago, my family and I also travelled an hour or so to sample the babkas and honey croissants at Farro bakery in Bristol.Not long before that, it was a rhubarb-cardamom-brioche concoction at Pobl bakery in Talgarth Mill, near Hay-on-Wye.

Both were well worth the journey.But it turns out we are amateurs among hardened bakery tourists.Professional cyclist Maddy Nutt often plans long-distance routes around the promise of a croissant or a pain au chocolat.“I’ll go out of my way to get to the best bakeries,” she says, recounting a recent five-hour endurance ride from London to Ramsgate’s Staple Stores.A puncture meant she arrived three minutes before it closed.

She spent £3 on a charity shop rucksack and took home what remained of the bakery’s daily output.Long-distance bakery-seekers don’t mind a queue, and there is often a sense of camaraderie, with people who have travelled from far and wide swapping shop recommendations to pass the time.(The chewy almond thumbprint cookies at Briar Bakery in Ashburton, Devon, are one suggestion.)In the UK, you rarely need to travel far to find a bakery.Greggs has more than 2,600 outlets.

Gail’s, the chain associated with high-street gentrification, now has 170 branches,A pack of two croissants from a Tesco bakery costs £1,75,But it is the rarer treats that attract the bakery tourists,Usually, these are created by small operations, run by an owner-baker from a single site.

Many pride themselves on using sustainable ingredients, such as flour sourced from regenerative farming,The pastries are often an upmarket twist on the classics, as is the case with a kimchi and egg danish at Long Boi’s Bakehouse in Levenshulme, Manchester, and a spiral-shaped miso bacon escargot from London’s Arôme,Journeying to a far-flung bakery obviously carries a carbon cost, but for many people this kind of travel has replaced other holidays or breaks they would have taken,There are plenty of social media influencers on the hunt for pretty pastries to gorge their feeds, but bakery wanderlust is bigger than that,In Korea, they have a word for the trend: “bbangjisullae” is a portmanteau of “bbang” meaning “bread” and “seongjisullae” meaning “pilgrimage”.

Koreans, it seems, are increasingly prepared to travel to try the country’s best bakeries; some take overnight trains for fear of missing the morning’s limited supply.On a bright Saturday morning at Bath bakery Landrace, pilgrims share the queue with local residents.“They all come for the cinnamon buns,” says manager Charlotte Briggs.At £4 apiece, these fragrant, springy coils have kept a spot on the counter since the shop opened in 2019.Lycra-clad couple Tomos Owens and Hetty Niblett cycled nearly two hours to visit.

“I just love croissants,” says Owens.“We’ve been out here in line when it has been -3C in winter.” The pair are trying as many spots as they can from the book Britain’s Best Bakeries, which was published last year.Mother and daughter Chie and Karin Takita, from Ibaraki in Japan, included Landrace in their UK itinerary after Karin spotted its creations on Instagram.The pair came away with a newfound appreciation for hot cross buns – “So good!” – despite Chie’s previous impressions of “dry” British buns.

Sign up to FeastRecipes from all our star cooks, seasonal eating ideas and restaurant reviews.Get our best food writing every weekafter newsletter promotionCecilia Burgess, sitting outside the bakery with her nine-year-old daughter, Bella, tells how she first heard about another popular spot, Lovingly Artisan in Kendal, when it was voted among the best in the UK by British Baker magazine.“I drove for more than an hour from my parents’ home in Barnard Castle, across the Pennines, to get the sourdough.Everyone thought I was mad.To me, it was worth it!” At Landrace, Burgess’s favourite is an Italian-style croissant, with a filling of cream blended with pistachios that are roasted in-house.

Bakery Tŷ Melin, which means “mill house” in Welsh, is the creation of Angharad Conway and partner Lance Gardner.They have four sites in south Wales, all of which bake their signature “croissant bomb” – a crispy outer filled with chocolate or hazelnut or salted caramel – which has become a social media sensation.“We have been overwhelmed … we have customers willing to travel so far to try our products.It makes the hours and effort that we put in worth it,” says Conway.Their bestseller, however, is their almond croissant; one customer travelled from Scotland to Cardiff just to get their hands on one, says Conway.

But there are few bakeries that have drawn more tourists than Lannan in Edinburgh.Since opening in Stockbridge in July 2023, the shop has developed a cult-like following.“People travel from all over the world.It’s mind-blowing for me,” says baker-patron Darcie Maher.“We just had someone who had come all the way from Canada to try the bakery.

There was someone from New Zealand last year who booked their trip around coming to Lannan.”Maher cringes at any association with being a “viral bakery”, but she has become something of a star.Many bakery devotees are quick to reel off names of who owns which bakehouse, and where they worked previously.“I feel like I’ve been to Lannan just from seeing it on social media,” says Megan Hermes, who lives in Guildford, Surrey.She has yet to make the trip to Stockbridge, but she is happy to put in the miles for a good pastry.

What started as a way for the local government worker to treat herself at the end of a 25km run has become a plan to criss-cross the country, combining bakery visits with weekends away.“I’m not into a beer crawl but I am up for a bakery crawl,” she says.That has sometimes meant queueing for the best part of an hour at sites such as London’s Toad bakery, home to a sought-after yuzu-orange jaffa cake.Bakeries can be pricey: at Landrace, the sausage roll will set you back £5.But these treats are obviously far cheaper than a restaurant meal, or some of the other experiences and events that people have tended to travel for in the past.

Milly Kenny-Ryder, author of Britain’s Best Bakeries, planned a trip to visit Dublin’s Scéal with her husband and child – only to realise after booking flights that it had moved outside the city.The extra train journey didn’t deter her.“It was torrential rain; we all turned up in soggy socks.But it was worth the visit” A long queue doesn’t faze her, either: she waited for more than an hour at Eric’s, the London bakery whose recent creations include a lime and mascarpone mousse pastry.In February, Evie Clement from Somerset went to Paris to seek out the best bakeries, planningher trip around where to have breakfast,” she says.

Stops included Land&Monkeys, Leonie and Café Nuances, where she tried an “amazing” pain suisse.In the UK, Clement has hopped on the bus with her brother, Guy, for the 40-minute journey to have baked goods at Bristol’s East Village Cafe.For bakers, renown can bring pressures.When Lannan first opened, says Maher, “we were busier than I expected.I was working 120 hours a week and sleeping on a foam mattress in the basement of the bakery.

”Thankfully, Lannan has now grown from two to 10 bakers,There have been rumours that some of the most sought-after bakeries deliberately limit supply, creating an artificial scarcity to push up the hype factor – but this seems absurd to Maher, who has spoken about maxing out the bakery’s oven capacity,Lannan is staffed seven days a week, despite only being open to customers Wednesday to Sunday,A willingness to follow the breadcrumbs far across the map often comes from an appreciation of just how difficult it is to achieve baked nirvana,Many bakery tourists are home cooks who appreciate the chasm between their banana bread and the intricate hazelnut and vanilla poached pear danish from London’s Fortitude Bakehouse or the perfectly constructed rosemary and sea salt twists at Mabel in Norfolk.

Whether it’s on your street or halfway across the country, that moment when you step outside a bakery, open your brown paper bag and sample the goods inside is always a promising start to the day,Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here,
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How an American businessman lost his job and found himself in an old French vineyard

One Friday night 24 years ago, Peter Hahn was sitting in the back of a cab to Heathrow, sleepless after yet another 48-hour work bender.“My computer’s on my lap,” the American-born organic winegrower from France recalls, the spring sun lighting up the deep pink walls of his study in his ancient manor house in the Loire Valley, his beloved vines outside, “and I’m doing a spreadsheet.“My boss is giving me shit because I hadn’t stayed at work – I’d promised my French girlfriend after I don’t know how many promises that we’d go away that weekend – then she calls and starts yelling at me because she knows I am going to miss the flight to Paris.”Moments later, “something was inside of me and just going like this” – he does a vice grip with his right hand – “crunch crunch crunch.” Paralysed, unable to breathe, the 36-year-old corporate strategy consultant was having a panic attack

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The extraordinary rise of bakery tourism: ‘People travel from all over the world. It’s mind-blowing!’

Beer crawls are out and bakery crawls are in, with people arranging whole days, weekends or even holidays around the search for the perfect loaf or croissantJust one day into a 225-mile hike across the width of Scotland last August, Dan Warren was feeling the burn, his old trail shoes wearing painfully thin. But neither sore feet nor swarms of midges would stop the librarian and his scientist wife, Dee Johnson, from reaching their goal: the promise of pastries at the Bakehouse in the west coast fishing town of Mallaig, a 14-day trek plus two ferry hops away from their home near Montrose.The pair are so-called “bakery pilgrims”, travelling significant distances in the pursuit of a fine loaf or bun. “Some of the time we were pushing through overgrown tracks, and there were lots of bogs,” Warren says of their journey. But their eventual reward was a soft brioche bun, filled with crème pâtissière and finished with crumble and berries

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Georgina Hayden’s recipe for spring onion flatbreads with smoked salmon

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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for roast hake with tomato and chilli sambal | Quick and easy

This is a lovely, fiery variation on my favourite weeknight dinner, namely “any fish topped with harissa”. Hake is my new go-to white fish: it’s sustainable, it has a lovely texture, it roasts beautifully and it’s the perfect foil for a spicy topping. My sambal pays homage to the Indonesian versions made with tomatoes and chilli – it starts off as a light, fresh sauce that cooks down beautifully with the fish and tomatoes.For ease, I use a high-speed blender to make the sambal.Prep 15 min Cook 25 min Serves 2300g cherry vine tomatoes, halved4 echalion shallots, peeled and quartered1 tbsp neutral oil 1 tsp sea salt flakes 2 thick hake fillets (about 160g each)30g salted peanuts, roughly chopped5g chives, finely slicedHot white rice, to serveFor the sambal2 large long red chillies, like really large ones, deseeded60g cherry vine tomatoes½ lemongrass stick, roughly chopped2 echalion shallots, peeled2 garlic cloves1 tsp sea salt flakes, plus extra to serve20ml neutral oil1 tbsp palm sugar, or dark brown sugar½ lime, juiced, plus extra to serve Heat the oven to 220C (200C fan)/425F/gas 7

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Rachel Roddy’s homage to Anna del Conte and Vincenzo Corrado’s fennel with pistachio, lemon and anchovy sauce | A kitchen in Rome

I am looking after a pile of cookbooks at the moment. They belonged to the late cook and teacher Carla Tomasi, who wanted them to be useful, so gave them to the Latteria cooking studio. However, until the studio has more shelves, I have 15 of Carla’s 60 books sitting by my desk. They are a well-loved pile, but five in particular stand out as having been used and used. The first is Dan Lepard’s Short and Sweet, which, thanks to grey duct tape, is just about holding together, and the second is Thane Prince’s Perfect Preserves, also duct-taped

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‘It was very difficult to hold on to’: are Michelin stars a blessing - or a curse?

The esteemed restaurant guide has struggled to stay relevant, with some leading chefs even barring reviewers or asking for their stars to be removed. Is this the end of fine dining?Time was, the ultimate honour for any ambitious chef was to gain a Michelin star or two. Better still, three. But these days, the world of fine dining is in a state of flux. Far from going to any lengths to schmooze critics or diners, restaurateurs are taking them on, from publicly berating customers who don’t spend enough to ejecting anyone who even threatens to leave an unfavourable review