An affordable loaf for Stirchley

It will come as no surprise that we’re having to increase the price of our bread from this week. While most of the cost of a loaf of bread is our labour, other costs have increased significantly recently to the point where we need to pass some of them on.

Here are our new prices.

OldNew
White Sourdough – Large£3.50£3.75
White Sourdough – Small£2.20£2.50
Wholemeal Sourdough£3.50£4.00
Spelt Sourdough£3.50£4.00
Sourdough Tin£3.50£3.75
Sourdough Special£2.50£3.00
Rye – Large£3.50£3.75
Rye – Small£2.20£2.50
Rye Specialno change£3.00
White Tin£2.20£2.50
Multigrain Tin – Large£2.20£2.50
Multigrain Tin – Small£1.10£1.20
Stirchley Loaf – Largeno change£2.00
Stirchley Loaf – Smallno change£1.00
Honey Oat£2.00£2.50
Focaccia£2.00£2.50
Sourdough Focaccia£2.00£2.50
Baguetteno change£2.00
Sourdough Baguette£2.00£2.50
Fruit Loafno change£3.50
Bloomerno change£2.20
Ciabattano change£2.00

Naturally we thought a lot about what to increase and by how much. What follows is a glimpse into that process.

One of the key issues in the world of Real Bread is how to keep it affordable. We believe that good bread is worth paying a fair price for and that factory bread is only cheap because the true costs are hidden. But it is also vitally important that real bread is within reach of as many people as possible.

Last month Molly and Rach went to London for the Real Bread For All conference, looking at how small, local bakeries like Loaf can make Real Bread affordable and accessible for people on lower incomes. On the other hand bakeries have be economically sustainable and ensure that neither people or their products are undervalued.

There were no easy answers but they came back buzzing with ideas, one of which we’re planning to roll out over the next few months. And it was a good reminder that we’re already doing something to keep bread affordable…

Our Stirchley Loaf is an unassuming loaf of bread but it’s very important to us. It’s a simple, yeasted loaf made with a blend of white, wholemeal and rye flour with grated potato added for softness. Because there’s no tin involved we can mix, shape and bake it with the minimum of work and keep the cost down as much as possible. It’s not a lesser bread, but it is much more accessible.

We made the decision a while back that we will always charge £1 for a small and £2 for a large Stirchley, and that the ingredients will not change in quantity or quality. No shrinkflation here. As costs increase the Stirchley will be subsidised to keep it at this price as long as possible.

Meanwhile the majority of our other breads are going up. Some price variations are based on ingredients and there are a couple of overdue corrections, but it’s fairly equitable across the board. This mostly reflects our electricity bill which is more than doubling this year, and given that’s what powers the oven there’s not much we can do about it! (Other than continue to fight for systemic global socioeconomic change, of course.)

Thank you for continuing to buy our bread and keep us trading. As our prices are forced to increase we will continue to work to make Real Bread as affordable and accessible as we can, with your support.

We’re taking donations for Free Kids Lunches

The response to our free kids lunches programme has been great. From a standing start we’ve given away loads of packed lunches to people who need them — no questions asked.

And then, without prompting, some of you asked if you could send us money to cover the costs, which led to some quite emotional scenes on the Loaf group chat. So we’re making it official.

Our fundraising for the summer holidays will go towards the material costs of the packed lunches. We will provide the labour and logistics. Any surplus will go to the B30 Food Bank.

If you are able (and please don’t feel bad if you are not), you can make a donation on the website or at the counter with your purchase.

Thank you.

Free lunches for kids this summer

During the summer holidays, to help cover the shortfall of free lunches while the schools are closed, we are giving away children’s packed lunches to anyone who needs them, no questions asked, and no purchase necessary.

We have a limited number available each day so we ask you to reserve them online.

They are available Wednesday, Thursday and Friday afternoons during opening hours.

Included in the bag will be:
1 x Cheddar or Jam Roll
1 x Pack of Pom Bears
1 x Piece of Fruit
1 x Chocolate Chip Cookie
1 x Cawston Press Juice Carton

Lunches will be available

  • July 27-29
  • Aug 3-5
  • Aug 10-12
  • (Loaf closed Aug 17-26)
  • Aug 31 – Sep 2

These lunches are not a promotional offer or anything like that. They are intended for families that rely on free school meals which are not available in the school holidays.

Tonight on Loaf TV

A couple of videos came our way this week which we thought you might be interested in.

How The US Ruined Bread by Johnny Harris is extremely YouTubey in style, all fast-cuts and hyperkinetic memes, comparing standard US supermarket bread with the boulangeries of Paris. An unfair comparison, you might say, but in doing so he tells the story of how bread in the States got to be so bad and why that matters. He also has the most enjoyable one-minute explanation of How Bread Works starting at 4:24

While Harris is talking about the US, he could easily be talking about the UK and our cursed Chorleywood system. His talking points are essentially those of the Real Bread Campaign, of which we are enthusiastic supporters, so seeing them in this style was somewhat jarring, but not in a bad way. Maybe the campaign could take some notes!

Co-operation Calderdale is a survey of the businesses and organisations in the borough of Calderdale, West Yorkshire, that run as co-operatives. Their video couldn’t be more different in its style, but also not in a bad way, just different.

Of particular note is a visit to the Suma warehouse, from where our wholesale orders are dispatched every fortnight.

The focus on the history of co-operatives in 19th-century Calderdale reflecting on the surprising number of them in operation today reminded us of Stirchley. As you may know, Stirchley has a long history of co-operative societies starting with TASCOS in 1875, and we’re delighted to be continuing that tradition. Maybe we’ll make a video like this one day.

A food system strategy for Birmingham?

The draft Birmingham Food System Strategy document came to our attention today. While we haven’t had a chance to digest it (pun not intended) a cursory read shows it covers a lot of the issues Loaf is passionate about. It also features a number of organisations we’ve worked with over the years, which is reassuring.

It’s good to see something like this coming from Birmingham City Council, although that scale means it covers a lot and has some lofty ambitions. The document itself is very clearly presented, so please download it, have a read and if you have views and ideas, put them in the consultation.

We will be watching this with interest and cautious optimism!

Back to Baskerville

We managed to fit in another visit to Baskerville School last week for an afternoon of baking with the students. They had great fun and it was a rewarding experience for all involved, including us.

More pics and a video of the end results!

When we wrote up our previous visit to Baskerville, and mentioned our plans to work more in the area of education, we were inundated with offers of advice and requests. We haven’t had a chance to anything with them due to extreme busyness of this year but it’s still on our development plan. We will be in touch, don’t worry!

Savoury buns are a thing now

A few weeks ago we experimented with some savoury buns. Using the same process as our sweet cinnamon buns, these have a cheese sauce filling with a variety of toppings. They’re proving popular so it’s time to start shouting about them!

This week we have sundried tomato, green olive and provolone on Wednesday and Thursday, while on Saturday they’re spring onion, chive and provolone.

B30 Foodbank update

Every Thursday we bake extra bread and bag any leftovers to be collected by the B30 Foodbank on Friday mornings. It’s usually somewhere between 30 and 60 loaves and they get distributed to people in need by the dedicated team of volunteers at the food bank warehouse.

They got in touch this week with an update which we thought we’d pass on verbatim. We can afford to give the bread away every week because of the volumes you buy, so it’s really you, our customers, who should be thanked.

Dear All at Loaf,

Thank you so much for your recent kind donations of food to the B30 Foodbank.

As you probably know we are a completely voluntary organisation, supported by the Trussell Trust. We rely solely on donations from organisations and generous supporters such as yourselves to provide for people, including families, within our local community who, for whatever reason, find themselves in immediate crisis, and are therefore going without.

Just to give you an idea of the scale of the work we do at the B30 Foodbank: during 2021 we gave out 95,257kg of food to feed 6,770 people (of whom 2,307 were children) across 3,340 households. Unfortunately we noticed a significant rise in the number of families requiring help in 2021 and with the anticipated increases in the cost of living we expect this trend to continue as 2022 progresses.

Should you wish to learn more and keep up to date with the work of the B30 Foodbank please visit us on our website, Facebook or Twitter.

We would like to reiterate how important your donation will be in helping us to make a real difference to individuals and families who would otherwise go hungry — and on their behalf we thank you wholeheartedly once again for your generous support.

Kind regards,

The B30 Foodbank Volunteer Team

The CoCoMad programme is out

It’s only a month until CoCoMad, the big community festival in Cotteridge Park, and the programme is back from the printers. This year it’s a tabloid newspaper chock full of articles and activities, beautifully illustrated by Edie Woolf and designed with care by Kerry Leslie.

We’ll have copies on the bakery counter this week (while stocks last) and you can read it on your computer here. Kerry says she’d like to make it a regular thing with more articles next year so if you’re interested, get in touch!

Bike beer

News has reached us that our sibling worker co-op, the Birmingham Bike Foundry, have had a beer made for them by Attic. Musette, named for the refreshment packs handed out to cyclists in long-stage races, is a lower-alcohol beer for summer riding days and comes in a eye catching can. Sadly we can’t sell it at Loaf without a licence, but you can get it from Stirchley Wines and Attic themselves.

So why doesn’t Loaf have an Attic beer? We both work with fermentation and there’s a long history of bread-related beers. Rest assured, we’re on it. Watch for something later in the year…

Alright, Babka?

For the last couple of weeks, Molly’s been making loaves of babka for Saturday. Babka is a braided sweetbread originating in the Jewish communities of Poland, Russia and Ukraine. Our variant is a braided sweetbread with a generous chocolate filling, folded into a tin and baked as a loaf.

This is a new thing for us so if you’ve bought one we’d love to hear what you think, especially if you’re already a babka fan! Look for babka on Saturday mornings…

Top: ready to go in the oven. Bottom: baked and on sale!

Bread and Butler’s Kickstarter

Andy Butler was one of the first bakers at Loaf when we opened on Stirchley high street a decade ago. In 2015 he left for Deptford in London to start Bread and Butler, first baking at home for friends, then in a café’s shipping container kitchen and finally in 2018 in their own building with a team of eight.

The pandemic has been tough, of course, but an expired lease meant they also lost their home in January. Treating this as an opportunity, they’ve secured a new space and are building something new from their successes. They’re crowdfunding £30,000 for new equipment including an oven, and are at 80% in five days so they must be doing something right!

Excitingly, part of their plans include teaching which we’re naturally big advocates of. In order to teach, you need to understand your skills in deep and nuanced ways, and we’re convinced that running bread courses has made us better bakers. The more bakeries that teach the better!

One of the best things about having been around for a while is watching seeds planted at Loaf grow into mighty trees. We’re very proud of what Andy’s built and hope you’ll join us in wishing him well on this exciting new chapter.

As we approach our 10th anniversary on the high street this year we want to share more stories like this. If you’ve had a connection with Loaf which has led to something interesting, do get in touch. We’d love to hear about it!

Say hello to Ian, our new trainee baker

Ian became a permanent member of the Loaf team last month so we asked him to write a bit about his experience.

For the last nine-and-a-half years, I’ve been working as a software engineer in the visual effects industry. This journey has taken me from London to Vancouver and now to a remote working arrangement in Birmingham. While in Canada, I started baking bread at home as a creative pursuit to improve my mental health.

Three months ago (with lots of encouragement from my partner), I approached Loaf to see if they would be interested in taking me on as a trainee, part-time. Since then, I have been fortunate enough to train with their experienced team of bakers – getting to grips with bakery schedules and larger-scale baking processes and techniques.

The bake shifts remind me of a long day on the ski slopes – fun, exhausting and the first après beer is pure bliss. There was a chance this journey could take the joy out of baking, but it has been just the opposite. I’m excited to bake for a wider audience and hope to continue to spread the love for real bread.

It’s also been a real breath of fresh air to be part of the Loaf co-operative. Having an equal voice in the bakery and company decisions, self-responsibility, and a focus on serving the local community is what gets me out of bed for those 5am starts!

When I’m not baking, I love to run, play board games, build LEGO and discover local craft beer.

My favourite loaf is a tie between the seeded spelt sourdough and the white tin.

You can look back on Ian’s baking journey and follow his progress at @ianbakesbread.

Fruit galettes

Sarah is covering the sweets shift this week and decided to go off-script, with spectacular results. The bread puddings and oat slices are taking a break and filling the gaps are some delicious fruit galettes.

A galette is a type of single crust, free-form pie with a fruit filling where the crust is folded partway over the top of the filling. This week we have apple, cherry, rhubarb and strawberry, and raspberry and strawberry – all on a pistachio frangipane cream filling.

And if that wasn’t enough, there’s also an upside down blood orange polenta cake!

Thanks Sarah!