Bangkok Post

Harrods’ famed food halls get makeover

- RICHARD VINES

LONDON: Harrods is a destinatio­n for shoppers from around the world, but ask most Londoners when they last visited and you may get a blank look.

The Knightsbri­dge store, housed in an exuberant Baroque building that ranks among the city’s most historic, is sometimes dismissed as a stop on the tourist trail, where jetlagged visitors mingle with hedge-fund managers and princes as their drivers sit in the Bentleys idling outside in the rain.

It’s not where many Londoners get their milk and meat. The magnificen­t Art Deco food halls, offering everything from mustard to rare champagnes, in recent years have begun to look tired: not retro, just dated.

To say that’s changing is an understate­ment as grand as Harrods’ new ambition.

The Qatari-owned department store, where no luxury is too extravagan­t, has begun a makeover that is transformi­ng the site. The first of the four halls — the roastery and bake hall — opened just before Christmas, and the other three will come in phases over the next two years.

It’s the first big change in more than 30 years. Things move slowly at a store that traces its history in the area to 1849, when a grocer called Charles Henry Harrod opened a store with two assistants selling tea, coffee, biscuits and other goods from a single counter.

Business boomed and Harrods installed the UK’s first escalator — then called a “revolving staircase” — in 1898. The Food Halls opened in 1902 and evolved over the next century.

Harrods wants to revive the whole experience of shopping. In this era of Amazon. com, the aim is to offer something customers can’t get online, especially the chance to see, smell and decide after consulting in-house experts.

The hall is now home to some big personalit­ies, including Master Baker Lance Gardner, who has worked with some of the top chefs in Michelin-starred kitchens.

He operates in full view of shoppers. A board on the wall shows what breads are done at what time, and a bell rings when the loaves are pulled from the oven.

Gardner and his team bake 15 varieties of bread, as well as pastries, cakes and cookies.

Across the aisle, Bartosz Ciepaj is roasting coffee.

Ciepaj has a decade of experience and has competed for the title of world’s best barista. He can talk for hours about different regions, varieties and roasting methods.

Nearby, Tea Tailor Angelo Tantillo can develop a patron’s own blend, which he or she can re-order at any time.

Of course, none of this is cheap. The “bespoke tea experience” costs £30 ($41). Personalis­ing bread costs £4, on top of the £5 loaf. The cakes are absolutely beautiful (and delicious) — as they should be: Some cost £50.

Having said that, few enter Harrods looking for a bargain.

Alex Dower, Harrods director of food and restaurant­s, says his aim is to entice more Londoners into the store, a noble goal.

Even a pop-up restaurant in 2011 by the revered American chef Thomas Keller — the French Laundry at Harrods — failed to set the world alight.

 ?? PHOTOS BY BLOOMBERG ?? A baker places a tray of focaccia breads into the display cabinet in the roastery and bake hall at Harrods in London.
PHOTOS BY BLOOMBERG A baker places a tray of focaccia breads into the display cabinet in the roastery and bake hall at Harrods in London.
 ??  ?? A tea blender stands behind a counter in the roastery and bake hall.
A tea blender stands behind a counter in the roastery and bake hall.
 ??  ?? A loaf of sourdough bread with personalis­ed initials sliced on the top sits on the bread counter in the roastery and bake hall.
A loaf of sourdough bread with personalis­ed initials sliced on the top sits on the bread counter in the roastery and bake hall.

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