Our Patch April 2016 | Page 9

Our Patch APRIL 2016 year-old, Fiona… as well as the occasional picture that her daughter has done at her Hammersmith nursery. FAMILY TRADITION The intensity of the chocolate is simply superb. Another line is cinnamon buns – the aroma of which always pulls in the yummy mummies as they’re pushing their youngsters to the park. And let's not forget the marmalades, jams, honey and olive oil from specialist producers that she sells. EASTER DELIGHTS Easter promises novelties. “It’s as big a festival as Christmas in Romania,” said Raluca, who strolls to the shop each day from the family home in Thorpebank Road. “In terms of baking we do a sweet dough bread filled with cocoa powder and crushed walnuts. However, my husband says that there’s no such thing as a sweet dough unless it’s filled with Turkish delight.” Raluca’s Easter offerings include a kind of hot cross loaf, filled with spiced currants… a bit like Italian panettone, but perhaps not as moist. The dough is similar to brioche, enriched with sugar, milk, butter and eggs. “We also make a sort of cake with a plait of the dough filled with a sweet cheese, sour cream and raisins.” Everything is kneaded by hand (Raluca may be pint-sized, but she has impressive upper body strength capable of lugging the 25-kilo flour sacks around) in the micro-bakery, decorated with framed pictures of her three- Yet Raluca never set out to be an artisan baker. She did a marketing degree at university, then a masters in PR before working in telecoms for 11 years. It was only after she took redundancy that she swapped keypads for oven gloves. “My grandmother baked, and I used to help and watch,” she said. “And I remember my great grandmother baking in a tiny oven, producing dense loaves over a wood fire.” She was eight when the revolution came, and remembers seeing the tanks in the streets. But it was an era when home-cooking dominated domestic life in Romania. “Everyone was cooking, stewing and souping, and we’d eat loads of bread, using it to mop everything up.” Her interest in artisan baking has prompted her to read more widely about traditional cooking and breadmaking. “I realise now that we were eating quite well,” she said. “Half our food was fermented, which is now seen as very good.” Baking takes 24 hours. “I started this morning at 7am, and that dough will be baked tomorrow morning at 7am,” she explained, adding that she finds it amusing if she runs out of one type of bread and is instructed by a customer: “Well bake some more, then!” WHAT'S IN A NAME? So, come on. Why October 26? “Well, the official answer is that it’s my birthday,” she said. “But my half-sister was born 10 years after me, on the same day. And my mum died on the same day too, so it’s significant. “It’s a good conversation starter.” And with that settled, I leave Raluca to continue her batch of baguettes; a cloud of steam and smoke engulfing her as she opens the oven door. The October 26 bakery is located at 153 Askew Road, Shepherds Bush. It is open Monday-Saturday. Visit www.october26.co.uk or email Raluca@october26. co.uk EXPERT OPINION WHY BAKE YOUR OWN BREAD? Loaves and tins ready for the oven at October 26 We buy our daily bread wrapped in plastic bags, without noticing that the list of ingredients includes high fructose corn syrup, ammonium chloride and more... But with sourdough bread, Raluca Micu returns to the traditional method of baking using just flour, water and salt to make bread. Here’s why: 1 Only three ingredients A good sourdough bread will only ever contain flour, salt and water – while seeds, grains, nuts, fruit, spices may be added to taste. 2 Friendly gluten The long fermentation a sourdough bread should go through breaks down the gluten strands, making the bread easier to digest. 3 Happy guts The long fermentation also breaks down the grains releasing most of the nutrients and vitamins that otherwise will not be accessible. It also produces a number of good enzymes that give us a happier digestive system. 4 Fewer calories Sourdough bread has fewer calories than your shop-bought loaf because a plain loaf should not have any added sugars or syrups, and because the fermentation breaks down the carbohydrates as well.