{"id":160342,"date":"2022-07-14T12:47:20","date_gmt":"2022-07-14T12:47:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/?p=160342"},"modified":"2022-07-14T12:47:20","modified_gmt":"2022-07-14T12:47:20","slug":"denver-bakeries-three-new-shops-to-watch-from-hearth-to-getrights-and-noisette","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/world-news\/denver-bakeries-three-new-shops-to-watch-from-hearth-to-getrights-and-noisette\/","title":{"rendered":"Denver bakeries: Three new shops to watch from Hearth to GetRight’s and Noisette"},"content":{"rendered":"

For a city with such a serious baking obsession, Denver started out on a much slower burn.<\/p>\n

We used to have what every other urban center could claim: a smattering of beloved neighborhood shops, plus the occasional destination baked good to seek out.<\/p>\n

Then, over the course of the pandemic, our collective baking lust led to an explosion of cottage bakeries, baking Instagram accounts and bake sales, the likes of which we hadn’t seen since junior high.<\/p>\n

Thanks to Colorado’s Cottage Foods Act, social justice fundraisers and social media, everyone from enthusiasts to pros started baking comfort foods and finding their own dedicated audience. By the end of 2020, pastry and bread devotees were even waiting outside of some Denver bakeries for hours just to get a bite. <\/p>\n

Now many of these small-business success stories that came about during the baking boom of 2020 are graduating into full-scale bricks-and-mortar restaurants and shops. <\/p>\n

Bittersweetly, they replace the businesses that closed before them in the pandemic. But they’re bringing a renewed energy to the dining scene — scratch that, to the baking<\/em> scene — that Denver didn’t know it was fermenting all these years. <\/p>\n

Here are three new bakeries worth getting in line for over the coming months.<\/p>\n