Our Patch September 2016 | Page 8

OUR PATCH SEPTEMBER 2016 A cabinet of temptation. Inside the King Street palace of pastries BONJOUR W6 BUT ADIEU Competition for bargain lunch deals is fierce in King Street… which makes this classy French bakery even more remarkable, writes Tim Harrison L overs of classy pastries and artisan bread couldn’t believe their luck when an established Parisian bakery upped sticks and moved from Paris to King Street two years ago. Opposite the Methodist church spire in King Street, and just a camembert’s lob from Ravenscourt Park tube, 8/9 Patisserie Sainte-Anne is the one with the Barbie pink frontage that could have been drawn in crayon by a child. lt is now the go-to destination for the freshest, tastiest, cheapest lunches in Hammersmith. For £6 you not only get a toasted baguette (jambon et fromage highly recommended), made with the bakery’s own delightfully flavoursome crusty bread, or a thick slice of quiche, or soup of the day, plus a dessert (if you can resist the eclairs, the fig and apple tarte is exquisite) and also a can of San Pellegrino fruit juice or water. The bargain lunch is only eclipsed for value by the £3.40 breakfast – a half baguette with homemade jam and butter, or pain au chocolat, or croissant, plus coffee – another inflation-buster. Dotted around the display case are vivid macarons, pizza slices, chocolates, eclairs and stunning gateaux. Sainte-Anne is run by FrancoJapanese couple Alain and Keiko Marache, who recently celebrated 30 years of wedded bliss with a weekend in Brighton. Their work philosophy is defiantly chalked and gilt-framed on the wall. “In France, by law, only a shop that makes its own dough, shapes it and cooks it on the premises can call itself a bakery,” it says, pointedly. Alain is a fourth-generation baker; photos of his father’s patisserie in France and his uncle’s bakery hang on the wall. And the fifth generation is hard on their heels – the couple’s 29-year-old pastry chef son.