Daily Mail

‘ FRESH’ PRET BAGUETTES ARE UP TO A YEAR OLD

Revealed: Chain’s bread is churned out in foreign factory

- From Glen Keogh in Servon-sur-Vilaine, France

PRET a Manger’s ‘fresh’ baguettes are made in a French factory and can keep for up to a year, the Mail reveals today.

The sandwich chain regularly describes its products as natural and boasts of baking bread throughout the day in-store with ‘wonderful baker’s ovens’.

Of its baguettes, Pret’s website says: ‘The fresher the better.’

However they are made on an industrial estate near Rennes by the global food giant Bridor. Part-baked and frozen to -18C, they are shipped to Pret stores where ‘best before’ labels suggest they can be kept in freezers for up to 12 months before use.

Staff finish cooking the bread in ovens before adding fillings.

‘ I can’t believe the bare- faced cheek,’ said Chris Young of the Real Bread Campaign. ‘They merely use their ovens as “loaf-tanning” salons.

‘This is downright misleading. To now learn that the factory isn’t even in the UK is simply shocking.’

The revelation follows news that a second Pret customer had died following an allergic reaction.

She was named yesterday as Celia Marsh, 42. The mother of five died last December after eating a ‘super-veg rainbow flatbread’ containing a yoghurt that was supposed to be dairy-free but contained milk.

Pret was already in the spotlight because of last month’s inquest into the death of Natasha Ednan-Laperouse from an allergic reaction to sesame seeds in a baguette that did not have

specific allergen warnings on the label. The firm has pledged to review its labelling methods following criticism from the coroner.

The Bridor plant in Servon-sur-Vilaine that supplies Pret dominates an industrial estate just off the E50 arterial motorway across Europe.

The complex is surrounded by a large security fence, with its financial success only alluded to by an adjoining glass building housing the headquarte­rs of its multi-billion parent company, Group le Duff.

Bakers leaving the factory over the weekend were reluctant to speak and Bridor did not respond to requests for comment. However one worker in the firm’s head office confirmed the factory provided bread to Pret in Britain.

Bridor also has a base in Camberley, Surrey, staffed by young bakers from Eastern Europe, France, italy and even China, all working round the clock.

The Mail has seen a label from a box of 30 part-baked frozen Bridor baguettes which were in use at a central london Pret last week. The date of production was September 6 2018 and the best before September 6 2019.

Bridor is not believed to Pret’s only bread supplier. George Fuller of the Craft Bakers Associatio­n said: ‘Their products could easily be made in Britain, which is quite frustratin­g.

‘Their decision to describe their products as fresh and natural has the potential to annoy our members. There is no legal definition for this, as such, so you end up in a situation where they can call their products what they want.

‘The demise of the high street baker is a serious concern to us and the fact a chain with such a big presence in Britain is making their bread abroad is a worry.’

Earlier this year, Pret was at the centre of a case involving the Advertisin­g Standards Authority about the descriptio­ns it uses for its products. As a result it was told to stop using the word ‘natural’ in its marketing and on its website because of the use of several additives in its supplier-made bread.

The Real Bread Campaign had found E-numbers in its bread which were not labelled on packs. However, Pret was allowed to keep saying its bread was freshlybak­ed as the ASA said customers would not necessaril­y think that meant it was made from scratch.

Yesterday, Pret did not dispute that it used Bridor as a supplier. When asked specifical­ly about describing frozen products as fresh, it referred the Mail to the ASA ruling.

The Pret statement said: ‘The ASA ruled that consumers were unlikely to interpret “baked in store” to mean only products that were made from scratch using basic raw materials such as flour and butter.

‘We considered that consumers were likely to interpret it to include products which were cooked from frozen raw dough or from part-baked dough.’

Pret also said: ‘once the bread is fully-baked in shops it is sold on the day or given to charity.’

There is no suggestion that Bridor was in any way responsibl­e for natasha’s death, a point made by a Pret a Manger spokesman.

Boxes of baguettes sent to Pret a Manger from Bridor, which is said to make products for coffee chains Starbucks, Costa and Caffè nero, clearly label all ingredient­s and allergen informatio­n in four languages.

one ‘artisan’ baguette label seen by the Mail also listed the potential allergens wheat, gluten and nuts.

The founder of Bridor is billionair­e Frenchman louis le Duff, known as the “pastry king”.

He made his fortune after founding French cafe chain Brioche Dorée in 1976. it now has more than 600 bakeries around the world, with le Duff vowing that it would have a turnover of one billion euros a year by 2020.

 ??  ?? Supplier: The French factory and one ne of its best before labels
Supplier: The French factory and one ne of its best before labels

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