In a city where food trends often come and go, one Ottawa bakery is taking a different approach, by going back to where it all started.
Tucked into Little Italy, Almanac Grain is redefining what bread can be by focusing on something most people rarely think about: the flour itself. Instead of relying on commercial products, the bakery mills its own flour on-site every morning using heritage grains sourced from Ontario farms.
It’s a process that feels almost old-world, but that’s exactly the point.
At Almanac, flour isn’t treated as a shelf-stable ingredient. It’s treated more like produce, fresh, perishable, and full of character. By using traditional stone-milling methods, the entire grain is preserved, including the bran, germ, and natural oils that are often stripped away in industrial production. The result is flour with deeper flavour, more texture, and a noticeably different baking experience.
That difference shows up in everything coming out of the kitchen.
From sourdough loaves to pastries, the bakery builds its menu around grains like Red Fife, rye, and einkorn, varieties that were once common in Canada but have largely disappeared from modern supply chains. These grains bring distinct flavours, from nutty and rich to slightly sweet, giving even the simplest loaf a complexity that stands out.
But beyond taste, there’s a bigger idea driving the concept.
Almanac is part of a growing movement that reconnects the chain between farmer, miller, and baker. By sourcing directly from local producers and milling in-house, the bakery supports smaller farms while reintroducing a more transparent, localized food system, one that prioritizes quality over efficiency.
The approach isn’t the easiest, or the fastest.
Fresh-milled flour behaves differently, requires more time, and challenges many conventional baking techniques. But that’s part of the appeal. In a space where convenience has long dominated, Almanac is proving there’s still room for craftsmanship, and that sometimes, the most forward-thinking ideas start by looking back.