Garden & Gun

Creative Loafing

Siblings Evrim and Evin Dogu know there are easier ways to bake bread. But for the co-owners of Richmond’s Sub Rosa Bakery, using regionally grown grains and baking in a wood-fired masonry oven aren’t negotiable. Not when the resulting smoke-kissed are so remarkable. Not even when a fire nearly destroyed their bakery in 2013. They rebuilt, determined to keep sharing their love of old-world flavors, and now, seven years in, Sub Rosa has become a River City staple. But the Dogus—children of Turkish immigrants, they were born in Baton Rouge and spent their formative years in Northern Virginia, where their father operated a restaurant—want their breads to help change the way people eat. Last October, Evrim helped form the Common Grain Alliance, a nonprofit that links mid-Atlantic farmers, millers, and bakers with the aim of advancing the South’s sustainable food movement and putting more whole grains on the region’s tables.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Garden & Gun

Garden & Gun3 min read
Giving Gobblers a Wing Up
Georgia has done it. So have Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas, and Mississippi. South Carolina is considering doing it for the second time in recent years, with changes that would go into effect in 2025. Across the South and beyond, states are tightening
Garden & Gun2 min read
Red-Hot Talent
One evening at Virginia Commonwealth University, Corey Pemberton saw a glow coming from a room. It was a glassblowing studio; the aspiring graphic design and illustration student hadn’t realized his campus had one. But watching molten glass turn into
Garden & Gun2 min read
Aaron Sanders Head
LOCATIONGreensboro, AL MEDIUMTextiles HOMETOWNGrady, AL When he drives along the flower-lined back roads of the Alabama Black Belt toward his house in Greensboro, Aaron Sanders Head doesn’t see weeds. Queen Anne’s lace looks like summer, and the firs

Related Books & Audiobooks