The Mercury News

A match that will make a gastronome’s heaven

Expansion plans include each company offering the other’s products inU. S., overseas

- By Patrick May pmay@ mercurynew­s. com

Blue Bottle Coffee founder and owner James Freeman sips from cups of coffee to maintain strict quality control. A cookbook from Tartine Bakery promises tasty pastries that may soon turn up in NewYork, Los Angeles or Tokyo.

James Freeman, the compulsive perfection­ist behind Oaklandbas­ed cult coffee purveyor Blue Bottle, once described a particular Brazilian blend as having a “beautiful brightness and layers and layers of flavors’’ that might cause its joyful taster to think about his or her “wedding day.”

Well, in a sort of restaurant­industry marriage that’s sure to send foodies and java junkies around the Bay Area into caffeinate­d convulsion­s, Blue Bottle is merging with Tartine, a small San Francisco bakery with its own cult of sweet- toothed supporters.

While Tartine Bakery will operate as a separate entity under the guidance of legendary bakers Chad Robertson and his wife, Elisabeth Prueitt, each company will offer the other’s products as they expand throughout the United States and overseas. Monetary details were not released, but Blue Bottle has raised nearly $ 50 million, some of it from big- name Silicon Valley investors, including Instagram co- founder Kevin Systrom.

“To me, this is an ideal match,’’ said Jessica Battilana, a Bay Area food writer who helped edit Robertson’s latest book and is friends with Freeman as well. “Both are true artisans committed to highqualit­y products. And both have always invested in their employees, which is huge.

“I can’t think of better ambassador­s for the Bay Area’s food scene,’’ said Battilana, adding that customers at Tartine’s planned outlets in New York, Los Angeles and Tokyo are in for double- barreled treat: “Any place that gets a Blue Bottle or a Tartine is really lucky.’’

The popular Bar Tartine, just a couple of blocks from the Guerrero Street bakery in San Francisco’s Mission District, will not be part of the merger, but instead will be sold to its head chefs.

The merger brings Robertson and his wife, and their mouthwater­ing breads and sweet and savory breakfast treats, together with Freeman, an old friend and legendary prophet of the so- called “third wave of coffee.’’ This ar-

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