Bread In Common

Bread making session with the mobile oven.
Bread making session with the mobile oven Image: Paul Pickard

Our Heritage

Dyddiad a ddyfarnwyd
Lleoliad
Town
Awdurdod Lleol
Newcastle-under-Lyme
Ceisydd
Beavers Arts Ltd (B Arts)
Rhoddir y wobr
£27600
Bread in Common explored 2,000 years of Newcastle baking traditions, from wartime loaves made from potato to the arrival of new breads from Poland and the Middle East.

Volunteers and artists collected local people’s baking memories to create a searchable online database. This included tales of communities brought together by shared bread ovens and the growth of local businesses Wright’s Pies and Allied Bakeries to feed the nation on an industrial scale. An accompanying online timeline and series of ‘try at home’ recipes stretched back to the closely guarded secrets of the Roman bakers’ guild and the potential Viking origins of the Staffordshire oatcake.

Families then tried out the recipes themselves with support from heritage bread experts, while a mobile outdoor oven brought traditional treats to the masses.

Steve Cooling, B Arts project co-ordinator, said: “People who took part learned a local heritage story that still has relevance today.”

There was such a demand for heritage bread that a crowd-funding campaign raised enough to set up a local heritage bakery.