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bakery products

German Bakery Products — Breads, Pretzels & Baking Ingredients

 

Germany has over 3,200 registered bread varieties — recognized by UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage since 2014. Our bakery section brings more than 270 of those traditions to your kitchen, from long-life Vollkornbrot and Pumpernickel to pretzel mixes, cake ingredients, and breadcrumbs. Brands include Bahlsen, Diamant, Schär, and Leimer — the same names stocked in every German supermarket, shipped to the USA, UK, and Canada.

 

A Baking Culture Like No Other

The German Institute for Bread (Deutsches Brotinstitut) maintains a registry of over 3,200 officially recognized bread types — more than any other country. This tradition earned UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage status in 2014, and it shapes everything from the dense, seed-packed Vollkornbrot to the airy Brötchen eaten at breakfast tables across the country.

What You'll Find in Our Bakery Range

Bread & Rolls: Long-life German breads like Pumpernickel, Schwarzbrot, and Sonnenblumenkernbrot ship well internationally. These naturally dense breads stay fresh for months in sealed packaging — and taste exactly like what you'd buy at Edeka or Rewe.

Baking Ingredients: Diamant offers professional-grade German flours, baking sugars, and specialty products like Gelierzucker (jam sugar) and Vanillezucker. If you've ever tried to replicate a German recipe with local ingredients and gotten different results, the flour type is usually the reason. German flour grades (Type 405, 550, 1050) are classified by mineral content, not protein — which directly affects baking outcomes.

Breadcrumbs & Coatings: Leimer Semmelbrösel are a staple for authentic Schnitzel, Frikadellen, and Knödel. The texture is finer and lighter than most American-style breadcrumbs.

For Specialty Diets

Schär provides certified gluten-free breads, rolls, and baking mixes. Herzberger Bäckerei offers organic options. Alnatura rounds out the range with organic baking essentials.

 

FAQ

Q: Why is German bread different from bread in the US or UK?

A: German bread relies heavily on whole grains, rye, spelt, and sourdough starters rather than refined wheat. The flour grading system (Type 405, 550, 1050) is based on mineral/ash content, resulting in different textures and flavors. Many German breads also ferment for longer periods, developing a depth of flavor uncommon in commercial breads elsewhere.

Q: How do long-life German breads stay fresh without preservatives?

A: Traditional German Pumpernickel and Vollkornbrot are baked at low temperatures for 16–24 hours, which naturally sterilizes the bread. Combined with vacuum or airtight packaging, this allows shelf lives of several months without preservatives — the same method used in Germany for decades.

Q: What German flour should I use for baking at home?

A: For everyday cakes and cookies, Diamant Type 405 is the standard — it's roughly equivalent to all-purpose flour but has a lower protein content, producing lighter results. For bread baking, Type 1050 (dark wheat) or Roggenmehl (rye flour) is more appropriate. The type number refers to ash content in milligrams per 100g of flour.

Q: Are pretzels available as ready-to-eat or only as baking mixes?

A: We carry both. Ready-to-eat pretzel sticks and snack pretzels are available alongside pretzel baking mixes from brands like Diamant, so you can bake fresh Laugenbrezeln at home.