1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 29
Summary
Justin Cherry, a Charleston baker who uses 18th-century methods, is seeing demand surge ahead of America’s 250th celebrations and has already booked events from Pennsylvania to New Jersey.
At Mount Vernon, where he serves as baker-in-residence, Cherry works from a camp tent and clay oven modeled on Continental Army baking, producing loaves like those made for George Washington’s troops.
His demonstrations turn baking into a live history lesson: visitors watch a 10-hour process on a 12-acre field while Cherry and his family, dressed in period clothing, explain Revolutionary-era food and daily life.
The rush is a prelude to five more years of commemorations at Revolutionary War sites, suggesting sustained demand for hands-on historical interpreters as the U.S. marks its 250th anniversary.