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Jobs risk as people lose taste for Tesco loaves

Real Bread Campaign coordinator Chris Young asks why.

Taken in a Tesco store without a bakery by Chris Young / realbreadcampaign.org CC-BY-SA 4.0

Taken in a Tesco store without a bakery by Chris Young / realbreadcampaign.org CC-BY-SA 4.0

Yesterday the retailer announced that, from May, it will stop baking from scratch in 58 stores, while also reducing the number of products it bakes from scratch at a further 201 stores. Freshly made products will be replaced with ones made elsewhere, frozen or chilled and then re-baked in-store using what the Real Bread Campaign calls loaf-tanning salons. 

The company has now admitted that ‘Due to some stores doing less scratch baking, as well as the simplified routines these changes will bring, we will unfortunately need fewer colleagues to work in these areas. As a result, there are 1,816 bakery colleagues being put at risk of redundancy.’ I hope that the bakers can find jobs elsewhere soon.

This is all despite Tesco stating less than a month ago that ‘we do not plan to make any significant changes to bakery this year.’ Do I detect the left hand not knowing what the right hand is doing, Tesco dismissing 1,816 potential redundancies as insignificant, or plain old porky pies?

Not cheap enough or not good enough?

Tesco blamed its decision on ‘a big shift in customer tastes and preferences. Customers are buying fewer traditional loaves…’ This seems odd as what we are seeing are people turning towards, not away from lovingly-crafted, delicious, nutritious, additive-free loaves. Is this an admission from Tesco that it just can’t do the job as well as small, local, Real Bread bakeries? Have the chain’s customers decided that, while the company might try to emulate the look of Real Bread that’s been crafted by genuine artisan bakers, what they’re selling is neither the real thing or value for money?

Perhaps people are split between those willing and able to pay an honest price for an honest loaf of Real Bread from a local, independent bakery, and those who’ll accept a cheaply-priced industrial loaf product. Maybe what much of what supermarkets churn out falls between these two stools, if people find it doesn’t have the same great taste, texture and aroma, but it’s not particularly cheap, either.

To me the retailer’s claim that it will be ‘growing our regional bakery ranges in partnership with small local suppliers’ seems to support this.

Stop talking the talk

Once Tesco has axed those bakers and doesn’t bake everything from scratch in the affected stores, we urge the company to stop naming the section the bakery and to discontinue making ‘freshly baked’ and similar claims.

Anyone familiar with our work will know that, as well as urging all retailers to do the right thing, we are calling for an Honest Crust Act of improved loaf labelling and marketing legislation. We will resume our lobbying soon after Real Bread Week ends this Sunday.

Published Wednesday 26 February 2020

Real Bread Campaign: The Real Bread Campaign finds and shares ways to make bread better for us, better for our communities and better for the planet. Whether your interest is local food, community-focussed small enterprises, honest labelling, therapeutic baking, or simply tasty toast, everyone is invited to become a Campaign supporter.

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Chris Young has coordinated the Real Bread Campaign since March 2009. In addition to lobbying for an Honest Crust Act of better loaf composition, labelling and marketing laws; he created and runs Sourdough September; Real Bread Week; Real Bread For All; Together We Rise promoting therapeutic/social benefits and bread making; the No Loaf Lost surplus reduction initiative; as well as Lessons in Loaf and Bake Your Lawn for schools. He’s the author of the Knead to Know…more microbakery handbook and Slow Dough: Real Bread recipe book; and edits True Loaf magazine.

Chris Young
Campaign Coordinator Real Bread Campaign

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