Keyword results: Bakery
Some people don't know how lucky they are. We, on the other hand, know exactly how lucky we are. We get to work in an office that is only a stone's throw away from some of Sydney's best bakeries and cafes.
Now our city friends can get lucky too, because there's a new baker in corporate town and he's brought a basket of Bourke Street treats.
The Rocks...what a strange mix it is of international retail and terribly garish Australian culture. While I find the fluorescent illustrations of koalas and emus beside Kate Moss' worst ambassadorial decision to date (yes, wearing Burberry IS worse than dating deadbeat Dougherty) endlessly amusing, my ultimate thing about Sydney's tourist Mecca is La Renaissance Bakery.
Surry Hills is no longer a one-bakery town, there's a new bread kitchen on the block and its dough is primed.
Le Pain Quotidien is a lofty bakery-restaurant so new that you can still smell its pine-tabled wax. Despite its size, there is something incredibly cosy about the interior. Coffee cups come handle-free - made to be cradled, menus rest in half-cut loaves and provincial jams sit ready for the spreading.
Before the mince pie was the mince pie, it was the 'chewette'. The chewette lived in medieval England, and contained the potent mix of chopped liver, boiled eggs, and ginger. This was a delicacy to medievalites, who were in the habit of sampling barley water and the occasional salted pigs’ ear.
Half the fun of buying hard drugs, scat porn, or black market babies is the illicit nature of it all - unmarked buildings, secret code words, big funny hats... don't you wish you could have that much seedy fun buying bread?
You can! Fuel Bakery supplies bread to Sydney high-rollers like Astral, Foveaux, Assiette, Fratelli Fresh, and Bills.
If you've been craving organic baked goods and café nosh prepared by folks in peasant clothing that live communally and worship Jesus under his original Hebrew name of Yahshua -boy have I got the place for you.
Common Ground Bakery in Rozelle serves up tasty baked goods, salads, sandwiches, and pizza in the evening.
You don't really feel at home in a new city until you find your favourite bakery. This bakery then becomes part of your family. It looks after you like a second mother, it bakes your birthday cake, it provides your crusty picnic bread and it even offers a juicy ham and cheese croissant after a big night out.
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