Bermaline Bread
15 CommentsYear: 1935
Item #: 253
Source: Weekly Illustrated. May 4, 1935.
My father and grandfather use to make this in our Leeds, Harehills Lane, Bakery
We used to eat this wonderful bread in the 60's ut here in West Australia, but over the years it has disappeared which is very sad as it was highly nutritious and was wonderful spread with butter, apricot jam and a slim of ell matured Cheddar cheese.
Two of us have just metal detected 11 thimbles advertising the bread in a Norfolk field
Two of us have just metal detected 11 thimbles advertising the bread in a Norfolk field
I have a sewing thimble:the words inscribed on the thimble are:EAT BERMALINE BREAD
I used to be the Sales Rep for Bermaline Bread back in the late 2950,so covered Derbyshire, Yorkshire and Durham.Company was bought out by a Conglomerate and that,she whenI left
My grandad used to make bermaline bread at a mill in Haddington in Scotland
As a child Mum bought a loaf of Bermaline ocaisonally from Burton's Bakery at the corner of Albert Road, opposite Central Station, Blackpool. I loved the distinctive shape and malty flavour. I now replicate the nutty richness by using rye and wholemeal at home,
Is it still made in the UK?
I well remember my Mum buying it from 'The Tudor Cafe' in Sevenoaks in the mid to late 60's. Used to love the flavour and did manage to find the flour when the cafe shut down but all a long time ago now, sad to say.
This really was my favourite bread ! Where can it be purchased now ?
When I was a kid growing up in Stratford-on-Avon in the 50s, I used to love Bermaline Bread
I had never heard of Bermaline bread but recently brought a thimble advertising it. It looks good!
In the 1950s, when the baker still came to the house with a basket full of his various loaves, Bermaline was one of my favourites. My mother bought it from time to time, and I loved the taste and the texture. I don't suppose it's available anywhere now - there are few people who have ever heard of it. The comment below about its lack of popular appeal suggests the reason it was discontinued, though I don't know when that was.
My father was a baker in Exmouth, Devon, from 1935 to the 1960's. From about the age of 10 to 16 I used to help him in his bakery as well as being the delivery boy! My younger brother also did his bit. I remember he baked BERMALINE. I have a strong memory of it for its very distinctive shape and the embossed name on the side. It was sold with a little paper band around it. Did its invention have anything to do with providing a tastier alternative to the "national Loaf" of 2nd World War time? It was a wholemeal loaf and was not at all popular. I don't remember Bermaline still being baked by Dad by the mid-to-late 1950's.