The Sun (Malaysia)

French hoard baguettes in lockdown

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PARIS: As anxious consumers around the world stockpile toilet paper and pasta, the French are thronging bakeries for baguettes, fearing a shortage of their daily bread as they wait out the coronaviru­s epidemic in confinemen­t.

The country of 67 million people consumes nine billion of the long loaves every year, has an annual competitio­n for the best baguette in Paris, and a special word for the pointy end they chew off on their way home from the baker after work: the crouton.

Bakers are among the few essential-service businesses allowed to stay open in France under strict antivirus confinemen­t measures that took effect on Tuesday.

And they are thriving, with long lines in the cities and countrysid­e alike.

“Our numbers have doubled since Monday,“Addenour Koriche, sales manager of a bakery attached to a large supermarke­t north of Paris, told AFP on Wednesday.

“We are now on 800 baguettes per day. Yesterday, for example, we had no baguettes left to sell by 3pm.”

The store closes five hours later.

The bakery sported newly-applied black lines on the floor, improvised with lengths of tape, to help customers respect the suggested one-metre safety distance to limit spreading the virus that has sickened more than

7,700 people and killed 175 in France.

A brand-new perspex screen shielded the vendor – wearing latex gloves but no face mask, and atypically using tongs to handle the bread – from a steady stream of customers.

“We have people who normally take half a baguette or one baguette per day, who are now taking four or five to freeze them in case even stricter confinemen­t measures are announced,“Koriche said.

On Tuesday, France’s labour ministry approved a special waiver allowing bakeries to be open seven days a week instead of the legal limit of six days.

“The waiver will allow the French to buy bread without stress every day,“noted Matthieu Labbe of the Federation of Bakeries.

“We’ve seen people come in who want to buy 50 baguettes at a time.

“There’s something like a psychosis in some people.”

Labbe said there need not be concern over supply, even as some bakers have taken to placing a limit on sales per customer.

“We have flour, yeast and salt. There is no problem to produce bread.”

There are 33,000 bakeries in France, one to 2,000 people on average, but most neighbourh­oods boast several – sometimes even on the same street.

US-born historian Steven Kaplan, himself a trained baker, said French bread consumptio­n has decreased dramatical­ly – from 600gm per person per day in 1900 to 80gm today.

But despite bread no longer being viewed as a bare essential, it is engrained in French culture, even its politics – a source of pride and cultural exceptiona­lism.

“The welfare state is first sketched out in France as a state that assures people its bread,“Kaplan said.

“Bakeries have always been a quasi public service,“he added, noting that during the privations of the world wars, bread once again took its place as the main source of nutrition.

“Even in the worst kind of crisis, the baker has to be open, like the fire station, the pharmacy and the hospital,“Kaplan said. – AFP

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