Food

Take a Look Inside Bakers & Baristas (Photos and Menu)

A European-style bakeshop brings sweet buns, savory croissants, and local coffee to Penn Quarter.

Bakers & Baristas brings European-style baked goods and local coffee to Penn Quarter. Photographs by Jeff Elkins

A promising trend is on the rise in Washington: independent neighborhood bakeries. We’re thinking of places like Georgetown’s new Dog Tag Bakery, Bread Furst in Van Ness, and Rare Sweets in CityCenterDC. Now Penn Quarter can claim its own when Bakers & Baristas soft-opens on Thursday.

The 32-seat space will be open early for breakfast, and late for after-dinner sweets.

Unlike many sweet spots in the city that specialize in American baked goods, Bakers angles to fill a niche for locally made, European-style pastries and desserts. Owner Aaron Gordon, who’s also behind the adjacent Red Velvet Cupcakery, tapped Blue Duck Tavern pastry chef Naomi Gallego to design the menu of Danish and Viennese treats alongside ongoing chef Lindsay Meehan. A full pastry kitchen off the 32-seat cafe turns out citrus-streusel buns with orange-blossom cream, pretzel-shaped kringles, flaky danishes, and butterkuchen, a German almond cake that tastes as rich as it sounds. In the morning, guests can opt for egg-and-cheese breakfast sandwiches on house-made bread alongside locally roasted Compass Coffee, or a mix of sweet and savory croissants. A line of simple sandwiches on house-baked bread arrive at lunch, stuffed with roasted vegetables or ham and Gruyère.

The menu includes Danish- and Viennese-style sweets, like this citrus-streusel bun.

Though an all-day menu is offered, evenings are geared more to specialty Viennese desserts like the classic sachertorte—a dense chocolate cake—or fresh fruit tarts. After the soft-opening phase, Gordon plans to keep the bakeshop open until 11 daily for after-dinner sweet tooths.

Bakers & Baristas. 501 Seventh St., NW; 202-347-7893. Soft opening hours 7 to 6 daily. Full hours 7 to 11 daily.

Desserts such as a riff on the Viennese sachertorte, a dense chocolate cake, are the focus of evenings.

Food Editor

Anna Spiegel covers the dining and drinking scene in her native DC. Prior to joining Washingtonian in 2010, she attended the French Culinary Institute and Columbia University’s MFA program in New York, and held various cooking and writing positions in NYC and in St. John, US Virgin Islands.