e5 Bakehouse

e5 Bakehouse

100% of Hamantashen profits to Ukraine @ Polish Humanitarian Action

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Mar 7:

🇺🇦 Hamantashen for Ukraine 🇺🇦

We would like to share that we will be taking part in baking @hamantashen_for_ukraine from today!

Hamantashen for Ukraine is a show of bakery solidarity for the people of Ukraine. Bakeries around the world are making these cookies with the profits being donated directly to the Polish Humanitarian Action.( @polskaakcjahumanitarna ) This helps them to assist Ukrainian refugees at the Polish boarder.

Ukraine has one of the largest Jewish communities in Europe. Hamantashen are a symbolic cookie for the Jewish holiday of Purim – a time of reflection and triumph of good over evil.

Ours are filled with a traditional poppy seed honey & lemon zest filling in a shortcrust pastry made using our stoneground flour.

These will be sold at both our Hackney and Poplar sites and 100% of our profits will be donated.

Big thanks to @infinityfoodscooperative for their generosity of donating the poppy seeds to our team!

💙💛

E5 BAKEHOUSE

e5 Bakehouse began in the spring of 2010, after Ben had taken a short course in the essentials of sourdough bread- making at the School of Artisan Food. Returning to his home in Hackney, he re-invented himself as a baker and set about commissioning and building a clay oven in the corner of a railway arch, which he fuelled using off-cuts from local carpenters. This became home to a small group of bakers, all learning as they went along and sharing knowledge gleaned from books and the internet. Local chefs followed their noses and supported the Bakehouse by becoming wholesale customers, and the local community journeyed with us from our novice beginnings as we developed and refined what we offered. First bread, followed by lunches, then coffee, hot drinks and cakes, which were initially made and delivered to us by locals.

e5 Bakehouse strives to operate our business in as ethical a manner as possible and place great emphasis on our legacy to future generations. We source local ingredients that are grown in systems which benefit the ecological health of the planet, and we work with farmers who share our vision of an Agrarian Renaissance. Making food that is healthy, for ourselves and for the planet, and sharing this process in an open manner with as many people as possible are key aspirations of our company.

We would like to thank all the photographers and illustrators that have supplied us with beautiful images over the years. Thank you to Analisa Fernandes, Helen Cathcart, Andy Sewell, Kaan Diskaya, Florencia Lucila, Carlotta Marangone, Dan Cartwright and Sarah Bates.

ORGANIC BAKERY, MILL AND SHOP.

We moved into our own arch in the summer of 2011 and expanded over the years, tunnelling left and then right into adjacent arches, adding a pastry department, flour mill, chocolate facility, and a deli shop to the mix.

As an extension of the Just Bread refugee training programme we ran in collaboration with the Refugee Council, we opened Poplar Bakehouse in 2017 in Tower Hamlets. The main aim of this cafe and coffee roastery, which is now also a shop and bakery, was to employ and train people from refugee communities whilst investing profits back into projects which support and welcome refugees arriving in the UK.

The company also owns Fellows Farm in Suffolk, which is transitioning intensively farmed arable fields into hubs for biodiversity and food production based on regenerative agriculture practices. The farm supplies cereals, vegetables and fruit to the bakery on a weekly basis. Overall, the company was founded and has continued to develop with an intense commitment to sustainability, and we strive to better our social, economic and environmental impact through our business activities.

Top-quality flour is at the heart of what we do, and we’ve put a lot of thought into where ours come from. Our sourcing influences people and planet, from farmers’ livelihoods to soil health, genetic diversity, CO2 sequestration and biodiversity. Our commitment to sourcing organically grown wheat, and other grains, led us to discover heritage wheats. These are varieties that were grown before the agricultural revolution and thus were not bred for agricultural systems that make use of artificial fertilisers, herbicides, fungicides and pesticides.

We are now growing these varieties at Fellows Farm and stone-milling the grain using our French stone mill at e5 Bakehouse to create the freshest flour for our products and retain the nutritious germ and bran, which are largely lost through conventional roller-milling. We also work directly with other farmers to commission and source genetically diverse grains which are grown, as much as possible, with consideration of the principles we so believe in. We pre-purchase grains at secure prices and support the farmers’ R&D towards more agro-ecological farming practices.

The name e5 is a nod to our former local postcode and our intention to remain rooted in our community. As such, we only deliver bread by bicycle to a local customer base. We are certified as an organic business by the Soil Association and source the majority of our products as locally as possible and from organic producers. We pay the London Living Wage and above to all staff, and all of the power used at e5 is sourced from renewable energy sources, including at Fellows Farm, which is off-grid and uses an electric van to deliver produce to the Bakehouse. We were awarded a special commendation by the judges of the Food and Farming awards in 2017 for our contribution to the rise in real bread and artisan bakeries across the country. Many members of our team have gone on to open their own small bakehouses, and we have trained thousands of home bakers on the art of sourdough baking through our one-day sourdough courses. As the area around us continues to change, e5 remains steadfast in offering a constant supply of long-fermented sourdough bread, hearty organic lunches and delicious cakes.

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