The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Rising stars... the best hotels with their own bakeries

As smash-hit series returns, Sarah Turner cooks up a mouthwater­ing list of the hotel world’s star bakers...

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THE Great British Bake Off is back and we’re all once again craving the irresistib­le aroma of newly baked bread. When it comes to travel, an in-house bakery is the ultimate hotel welcome package, dispensing an alchemy of wholesomen­ess and indulgence with every delicious croissant or golden roll. Whether they’re venerable establishm­ents or new to this hotel trend, here’s where you can use your dough to really loaf around.

HOTEL RIVAL Stockholm

When the Rival opened in 2003, owner Benny Andersson of Abba told me having a bakery would help the hotel connect to the community. And sure enough, on any day of the week, you’ll see the only-in-Scandinavi­a sight of a rank of prams outside, all with sleeping babies, while parents catch up over a coffee and a straight-from-the-oven pastry inside.

The rest of the hotel is as thoughtful as its bakery, 99 spacious rooms, some with balconies, in the trendy area of Sodermalm.

Signature bake: Cinnamon rolls. B&B doubles from £150. rival.se

HAMBLETON HALL Rutland

When this Michelin-starred hotel wanted to ensure its guests got the perfect breakfast in the morning, the owner started his own bakery business.

Now, with five branches of the bakery in local towns, it specialise­s in quintessen­tially British-baked goods, including English muffins, eccles cakes and, most recently, a reinterpre­tation of the Second World War National Loaf.

Hambleton has created its own culinary classic, too – the Rutland Pippin, an apple-shaped pastry with ham hock, sausage meat, apple and quince, which also appears on the afternoon tea menu in the hotel.

Signature bake: Rutland Pippin. B&B doubles from £325. hambletonh­all.com

BABYLONSTO­REN South Africa

South Africa’s foodiest hotel doesn’t have far to go to get the ingredient­s for bread; the wheat and rye comes from its own farm. This is also one of the country’s most beautiful hotels; a white-washed, gabled series of buildings in the Cape Winelands near Franschhoe­k.

The heart is the bakery; all guests get the chance to join the baking team for a session.

Signature bake: Pear and gorgonzola bread. B&B doubles from £350. babylonsto­ren.com

THE ANGEL INN Abergavenn­y

A coaching inn since 1829, a posh foodie hotel since 2002, The Angel has 35 rooms spread between the hotel and its nearby Michelinst­arred outpost, The Walnut Tree restaurant. Since 2016, it’s also had the Angel Bakery next door.

Open at 8am from Tuesday to Saturday, it’s an uplifting blend of organic flours and French butter and the pick of the baked goods go to the hotel guests, as well as providing key elements of an award-winning afternoon tea.

Signature bake: Welsh cakes. B&B doubles from £119. angelaberg­avenny.com

LE BRISTOL Paris

One of Paris’s most luxurious hotels has gone one step further than its Michelin-starred competitor­s. It has installed a working flour mill to produce bread for its three-Michelin-star Epicure restaurant. It mills a selection of ancient seeds, grown near Corbieres, including spelt, emmer and khorasan, designed to taste fresher and cause less bloating than wheat loaves (important in fashion-minded Paris).

Guests at the hotel can visit the mill as well as taste the results. If you eat at Epicure, you’ll go home with a loaf. Signature bake: Epicure Living Loaf. Doubles from £1,000, room-only. oetkercoll­ection.com

AT THE CHAPEL Bruton

In this beautiful Somerset town, a former Baptist chapel has been turned into a bakery with rooms. A wood-fired oven is the basis for baker Tom Hitchmough’s products, alongside stone-ground organic flour and long fermentati­on periods. Upstairs, the seven rooms follow the same principle, with clean designs and a touch of luxury; each morning freshly baked croissants are brought to your room. Signature bake: Gluten-free flaxseed bread. B&B doubles from £125 a night. atthechape­l.co.uk

HOTEL SACHER Vienna

Some cakes are worth a 50-year legal battle to protect the recipe. Sacher torte – a chocolate cake with a layer of apricot jam and chocolate icing – has been made at the Hotel Sacher since 1876. It’s Austria’s most famous cake, indulgent and historic in equal measure and the hotel that surrounds it doesn’t disappoint either, with gilding and grand rooms overlookin­g the Vienna Opera House.

Signature bake: Sacher torte. Doubles from £449, room-only. sacher.com

HOTEL PRAKTIK BAKERY Barcelona

They don’t pipe the smell of the bakery into the rooms but this hotel in the classy Eixample district is small enough to make it feel that way. The first thing guests see is the glasswalle­d kitchen where the bakers are kneading away under the eye of watchful owner Anna Bellsola. Speak Spanish? You can also take a baking class. The 74 rooms upstairs are as practical as the hotel’s name suggests, simple and white with tiling and wafty curtains.

Signature bake: Fruit bread. B&B doubles from £49. hotelprakt­ikbakery.com

HOTEL JOSEF Prague

This severely modernist hotel in the Czech capital has a warm heart, thanks to its bakery which was placed at the centre. Guests can look into the ovens to watch the croissants rise – the butter comes from the Czech hills, the flour is imported from France.

Signature bake: Dark rye bread with dates and figs Doubles from £104, room-only. hoteljosef.com

MUEHLPOINT­HOF Salzburg

High in the mountains around Salzburg in Austria, this hearty, sporty hotel has grown up around its bakery. It started in 1865 and has been turning out bread and rolls ever since, using local flour, water from the Steinberg spring, yeast and salt (there are mines nearby too).

It’s a hotel that you’ll be able to work up an appetite for; in summer, guests have the opportunit­y to swim in the lake and go hill-walking, rafting and canyoning, while in the winter, there’s skiing.

Signature bake: Five-grain curd cheese bread. B&B doubles from £378 for three nights. muehlpoint­hof.at

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 ??  ?? A SLICE OF THE HIGH LIFE: Le Bristol hotel in Paris, right, and a baker hard at work at The Angel Inn, Abergavenn­y, left
A SLICE OF THE HIGH LIFE: Le Bristol hotel in Paris, right, and a baker hard at work at The Angel Inn, Abergavenn­y, left
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 ??  ?? LOCAL FLAVOUR: Home-baked goodies on display at Stockholm’s Hotel Rival, above, mouthwater­ing brownies at Hambleton Hall in Rutland, right, and a selection of loaves at the Hotel Josef in Prague, far left
LOCAL FLAVOUR: Home-baked goodies on display at Stockholm’s Hotel Rival, above, mouthwater­ing brownies at Hambleton Hall in Rutland, right, and a selection of loaves at the Hotel Josef in Prague, far left
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