Volcanic Wine Awards | The Jancis Robinson Story | Mission Blind Tasting

The master baker of Miel

• 1 min read
Shaheen Peerbhai

The subcontinent provides London's best bakers. And long queues for their produce and café.

London’s most delicious baguettes are baked every morning in a basement in Fitzrovia by bakers from India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. (Brexit, followed by COVID, sent most French bakers in London back to France.)

The bakery is owned by a 38-year-old woman who grew up in Mumbai. Her parents constantly, but ultimately unsuccessfully I’m delighted to report, tried to dissuade her from turning what had been her lifelong passion, baking, into a career.

This bakery also produces bags of sablé biscuits which they describe as ‘mixed with dark chocolate and sea salt’. These, more accurately in my opinion, should be labelled ‘dangerously addictive’.

Miel, a treasure trove of a bakery which supplies thirsty and hungry customers throughout the day, is on Warren Street, 100 yards from Warren Street tube station and 200 yards from the extremely busy University College Hospital. As I was interviewing Miel’s owner, founder and inspiration Shaheen Peerbhai, she stopped talking, walked over to the window and waved at a nurse who was just about to walk in.

Miel's repertoire

Many qualities are needed to establish yourself as a top-class, independent baker: determination, commitment, skill at adapting and enhancing basic recipes, the ability to plan, and a willingness to put in long hours.

Cooking in any restaurant involves quite a lot of repetitive work but this is as nothing compared to a retail bakery with café attached. And Miel is open every day of the week from 7.30 am, including many bank holidays, which means that the bakers start work at 6 am, although Peerbhai admitted that she herself is no longer on the rota. Miel was the first of Warren Street’s shops to open on a Sunday, which has played a part in making the whole street much friendlier.

Baking has preoccupied Peerbhai for the past 20-odd years. While she obediently took a day job in marketing, she pursued a secondary career teaching baking classes in Mumbai and Delhi. When her husband was offered the chance to study for his MBA in France, she won scholarships to study French cooking and patisserie at Cordon Bleu and the École Ducasse in Paris and it was there that she discovered that she had the ability to inspire others.

A move to London for her husband’s job ensued and Peerbhai began to refine her thoughts. Could she find a small space where baking, teaching and distributing her skills could be put to profitable use? She was convinced that London was ready for all that she had to offer.

But the landlords she approached initially didn’t seem to share that opinion and the fact that she did not have a track record was another serious disadvantage. ‘I must have looked at about 60 sites’, she confessed with a brave smile, ‘but I never got very far. Then one day I was walking down Warren Street – for some reason which I cannot remember – and I saw a board outside number 57 that the property was for rent. It was small, it had been a nail salon, but the agent was immediately so encouraging, as were the landlords who liked the idea of a bakery on their premises. My presentation by this stage was pretty impressive and we opened Miel in 2019. And then after COVID we moved along the street to number 61.’

Miel on Warren Street

Peerbhai now has 2,500 sq ft (230 m2) over two floors, which she laughingly describes as ‘my playground. Miel occupies the ground floors of two neighbouring properties, of which the intervening wall has been cleverly refigured.

The right-hand side is the shop with its ground-floor window full of just-baked croissants, palmiers, canelés (a particular favourite of Peerbhai who uses antique moulds for them), pains au chocolat and their extremely popular cinnamon buns (go early for everything!). There is invariably a queue with customers waiting on the left for their coffee order to be fulfilled under the picture of Miel's repertoire shown above. At the back are ovens, fridges and stacks of baking trays as well as cooks filling the sandwiches of the day. Just past the coffee station is a winding staircase that leads downstairs to the bakery proper.

Miel's neatness

I have been in quite a few bakeries but Miel’s certainly wins the prize for the tidiest. Even the sourdough loaves seem to have been artfully arranged close to the deck oven which Peerbhai showed me with great pride. ‘Before you ask, this was craned in in layers’, she added with a smile and then somewhat unnecessarily added, ‘I planned it all’. And my compliments as to its tidiness were quickly dismissed, ‘I’m flattered that you think it’s tidy because, honestly, it needs to be tidier. I’m quite particular about each tool or ingredient being in its place’, came her reply.

On the ground floor, in addition to the two tables outside on the pavement, the left-hand side has been divided into two, with the café in the front room under a large window. The rear half is the room in which I found Peerbhai sitting in front of her laptop, facing a large bowl of recently-picked fig leaves with which she planned to experiment, and a shelf crammed with books on pastry. This is where all her recipes originate.

She showed me her screen and let me into her world. Each particular item of bread, patisserie or viennoiserie has a page to itself. Across the top she lists the chefs and bakers who have delivered their particular recipes and below are the various ingredients prescribed and the percentages of each which they stipulate. ‘It’s these I play around with, trying to minimise the sugar in most cases but bearing in mind the consequences for the overall taste and flavour when I do that. Because that is what I am after: the best overall flavour of everything we produce.’ When I prompt her to disclose the two baker-authors she respects the most, her response is immediate, ‘Without a doubt it is Pierre Hermé and Philippe Conticini’.

Miel baguettes

When I complimented her on the taste and flavour of her baguette, she smiled modestly before replying. ‘I use a traditional recipe for a 330 g baguette, using sourdough flour and salt.’ When I interject that its overall length, which is relatively short, must concentrate its flavour, Peerbhai declared that her baguettes are the correct length, rather than the more common longer ones, for the weight of the loaf. Discussion over, I wrote in my notebook.

The week before I had listened to Australian wine producer, Michael Hill Smith MW, describe the difficulties he and his colleagues had when trying to find an original name for their new McLaren Vale winery, eventually settling for MMAD, the initials of the four partners. How, I asked with my final question, had the name Miel, French for honey, come about?

Miel ingredients

‘Well’, came the reply, ‘the name had to be French even though, or perhaps particularly because, I am not. Most of what we produce is based on French recipes and the flour, the chocolate and the butter we use are all French. The name had to be short, sweet and easy to pronounce. Miel fitted all these criteria.’ Almost as happily as today Miel fits into Warren Street.

Miel 60/61 Warren Street, London W1T 5NU

Every Sunday, Nick writes about restaurants. To stay abreast of his reviews, sign up for our weekly newsletter.

Wählen Sie Ihre Mitgliedschaft
Mitglied
$135
/Jahr
Über 15 % jährlich sparen
Ideal für Weinliebhaber
  • Zugang zu 295,065 Weinbewertungen und 16,087 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
Inner Circle
$249
/Jahr
 
Ideal für Sammler
  • Zugang zu 295,065 Weinbewertungen und 16,087 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
  • Frühzeitiger Zugang zu den neuesten Weinbewertungen und Artikeln, 48 Stunden im Voraus
Professional
$299
/Jahr
Für Weinprofis (Einzelnutzer)
  • Zugang zu 295,065 Weinbewertungen und 16,087 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
  • Frühzeitiger Zugang zu den neuesten Weinbewertungen und Artikeln, 48 Stunden im Voraus
  • Gewerbliche Nutzung von bis zu 25 Weinbewertungen und -punkten für Marketingzwecke
Gewerblich
$399
/Jahr
Für Unternehmen in der Weinbranche
  • Zugang zu 295,065 Weinbewertungen und 16,087 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
  • Frühzeitiger Zugang zu den neuesten Weinbewertungen und Artikeln, 48 Stunden im Voraus
  • Gewerbliche Nutzung von bis zu 250 Weinbewertungen und -punkten für Marketingzwecke
Bezahlen Sie mit
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Abonnieren Sie unseren Newsletter

Erhalten Sie die neuesten Beiträge von Jancis und ihrem Team führender Weinexperten.

Mit dem Abonnement erklären Sie sich mit unserer Datenschutzerklärung einverstanden und stimmen zu, Updates von unserem Unternehmen zu erhalten.

More Nick über Restaurants

Ballymaloe House May 2026
Nick über Restaurants An international institution in the southern Irish countryside. In 2011 I travelled to Ballymaloe House, a 40-minute drive from Cork...
Sally Abé of Teal
Nick über Restaurants An exciting new addition to the East London restaurant scene. Above, Sally Abé. Everything is on the small side at...
Saveur des Poissons exterior, Tangier
Nick über Restaurants Le Saveur de Poisson in Tangier is well worth the (slightly challenging) trip. Of the many sorts of restaurants in...
Jack and Will of Fallow and Roe
Nick über Restaurants It’s not so easy to open a second restaurant, however successful the first. Nick ventures from the West End into...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Tertius Boshoff of Stellenrust shows off multiple Chenins in London
Verkostungsberichte The many Cape Chenins and Chenin blends shown at a big South African tasting in London in May reviewed. Tertius...
The Pacific ocean view from Flowers Vineyards
Unverblümte Meinungen Chris Howard asks, if there’s such a thing as volcanic wine, can there be oceanic wine? Above, seals on the...
Beaujolais vineyard harvest imminent
Verkostungsberichte Bien Boire (‘drinking well’) en Beaujolais is more fun than Bordeaux’s primeurs and offers plenty of excellent wines, reports Natasha...
Alessandro Campatelli of Riecine
Verkostungsberichte Pleasant surprises from a torrid year. Above, Alessandro Campatelli, director and oenologist (and now owner) at Riecine, made a 2022...
Japanese Wine by Nick Rowan - book cover
Buchrezensionen Nick Rowan’s new book is an amazingly complete guide to the wine (and cheese!) of Japan, for amateurs and professionals...
female urban hands each holding a glass of wine - Shutterstock
Gratis für alle Pauline Vicard asks, can wine still justify its cultural relevance? The answer to this question, rather than economics, may become...
Thomas Walk Vineyard in Kinsale
Gratis für alle Jancis is put in her place, by the hybrid grapes of the Emerald Isle. A shorter version of this article...
Pine Ridge Chenin Blanc-Viognier bottle and glass of wine outdoors, on table with books
Weine der Woche A summer-ready, silky white wine that’s widely available from just $8.99, £20.90 . The sleeper hit of Napa winery Pine...
Weininspiration wöchentlich direkt in Ihr Postfach
Unser Newsletter erscheint jede Woche und ist für alle gratis
Mit Ihrem Abonnement erkennen Sie unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen an.