Sorry, But Bakewell Tart is Not in Imminent Danger of Disappearing Due to Climate Change
Coffee, olive oil, bananas, you name it and someone has suggested they will soon disappear due to human-induced climate change. All easily debunked of course, but a recent piece in the Telegraph has added to this growing portfolio of nonsense with an article headlined: “Climate change ‘could kill off the traditional Bakewell tart’.” Weather-related problems in California, where 80% of almonds, a key ingredient of the delicious Bakewell, are grown are blamed, but replacement synthetic flavours are said to be available. Curiously missing from the story is the fact that almond production in California is touching record highs with the 2024 crop the third highest on record. What a great effort – climate change fear mongering combined with a plug for industrial chemical slurry being passed off as a Bakewell tart.
Highly Processed News and Highly Processed Food, all in one fake, cherry-topped package.
Written by recent graduate trainee Tim Sigsworth, the story reports that the Derbyshire delicacy is now being produced without almonds by some makers “because of supply chain problems linked to global warming”. Supplies are said to be under strain due to heat and drought episodes. In fact, water droughts are intrinsic to the climate in California, particularly in the near-desert south of the state. Overall rainfall can be patchy, with droughts alternating with plentiful precipitation that quickly fills up reservoirs. In addition, annual snow melt provides a variable but important base level. As the precipitation graph measured in annual inches shows below, the 20th and early 21st Centuries had numerous short-term droughts. However, they might be considered somewhat wet compared with the paleoclimate record over the last millennium. This reveals two mega droughts that were each well over 100 years long. Longer term records reveal that decade-long droughts are an ordinary feature of California’s climate. On the evidence available, there is scant scientific proof to link current rainfall trends to recent warming or climate change, human-caused or otherwise.

Far from being blasted by heat and drought, the almond-growing business in California has come on by leaps and bounds over the last 30 years. Over that period, production has been transformed from relatively small scale businesses producing an annual crop of around 370 millions pounds weight to recent totals approaching three billion pounds. Prices have trended a little higher since 2020-21 when a record crop and Covid depressed returns.
Prices stayed below the cost of production at the beginning of 2023, although high world demand has raised rates since then. Perhaps, like most farmers around the world, there are complaints that profits remains a challenge.
But however many nuts are grown, it is a natural product that demands a sustainable market price. A chemical confection produced in a food laboratory is always likely to be cheaper. The Telegraph story gives prominence to Kirsty Matthews of Macphie, a food manufacturer that has launched a new almond-free product called ‘Cherry Bakewell Sensation’. She enthuses: “Customers who’ve known us for years are suddenly seeing it as a solution for supply chain stability.” No doubt the receipt for this sensational treat is a closely guarded trade secret but the chemistry behind replicating almond flavours is not. Benzaldehyde is the primary compound responsible for the almond aroma and can be added in the Bakewell frangipane or pastry to replicate a nutty sweet taste. Also used is acetate that can be blended with other flavourings to create the desired nutty taste, while Ethyl Vanillian can provide a sweet creamy note to add fake depth to the Bakewell custard.
It is curious how many of the planet savers have embraced industrial slurries that replace natural ingredients with cheap chemical concoctions. The UK Government-funded UK FIRES recently laid out an absolute Net Zero future based on this highly processed muck. The need to collapse the existing agro-food system is said to represent opportunities for ‘hybrid’ food products. Thus plants and alternative proteins can be blended with half the chemistry lab thrown in, including stabilisers, colourings, E numbers and preservatives. Any semblance of taste can boosted, as is common in many highly processed foods, by adding masses of salt and sugar.
“We can still give you the experience you expect, the same aroma, the same balance of flavours, the same indulgence, but with an ingredient list that works in today’s supply climate,” notes the Bakewell Queen Kirsty Matthews. Obviously part of a marketing push, Matthews also wrote on August 14th in the trade journal British Baker that there was a sustainability factor at play. “In a world where imported ingredients can be affected by everything from extreme weather to fuel prices, there’s a value in reducing dependency on global supply chains,” she wrote.
Particularly when chemicals are cheap and I can get some under-cooked journalist to compose a load of old conkers about climate change, she didn’t add.
Chris Morrison is the Daily Sceptic’s Environment Editor. Follow him on X.
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Nailed it – it’s cheaper to make with fake ingredients… cost above quality.
yet interestingly almond milk is everywhere…
A blatant lie and ill-disguised advertising passes for journalism in the new normal.
Traditional?
Bakewell pudding!
The tart is a recent abomination. From that most reliable of sources, Wikipedia:
Well possibly… but surely, abomination is a little harsh, I rarely eat dessert but bakewell whatever is quite tasty .
…and it doesn’t have a cherry on top!🤭
It was invented by accident in the Rutland arms Hotel in Bakewell Derbyshire and the real puddings are well worth a visit!😋 😋
Food production in CA would be higher if water reservoir construction had kept up with population demand. The left who currently run CA consider water used for growing food is wasted so they limit its availability.
same as UK really.
Ghastly stuff. Anything with cyanogenic glycosides (amygdalin is one such) in it… marzipan, frangipane, ground almonds… revolting.
Some 25% of people (me too) have a genetic supersensitive taste receptor which detects even trace amounts of amygdalin which is in almonds and which is broken down by enzymes during digestion to Hydrogen Cyanide – deadly poison.
Fortunately only trace amounts are produced from cultivated almonds, so nobody dies.
However a sensitivity (not allergy) to amygdalin probably is an evolutionary throw-back, defence mechanism to avoid possibly poisonous foods.
If you hate marzipan and Bakewell tart and wondered why – now you know.
I, on the other hand, love marzipan and other almond-derived products. I must have a death wish!
Actually, I love marzipan. I bought a big block, 400gr a couple of weeks ago and I will thoroughly enjoy chomping my way through it.
https://order-order.com/2025/08/22/home-office-to-appeal-closure-of-eppings-bell-hotel-for-migrants/
Now I wonder why they are doing this. It wouldn’t be an excuse to waste a few more millions of taxpayers money would it?
No, surely not.
… I wonder why they are doing this
Because to the madleft mass unlimited unvetted endless immigration is their most important social project.
Almonds, along with the other items mentioned, are more likely to disappear from our diets because of unaffordability rather than unavailability, their prices ridiculously bloated by all sorts of “green” levies and fuel/energy costs, and our spending power reduced by the wilful impoverishment of the general public through governmental tax policy.
I know Bakewell very well indeed. Believe me. They wont run out of Tarts, or Puddings
“In a world where imported ingredients can be affected by everything from extreme weather to fuel prices, there’s a value in reducing dependency on global supply chains,” she wrote.”
Presumably Kirsty Matthews has made Kneel’s government of ghouls aware of this assuming of course that she is aware of his determination to destroy British farming and therefore our own food supply?
I read that the California growers were ripping out trees when the price dropped to plant other crops. Also ground rice and flour with almond essence has been used as the frangipane replacement for decades, probably since during the war. The Be-Ro cookery book uses it I think.
And now Billy boy is introducing a whole range of chemical ”foods” under the brand name “Savour”….. He was on X this week extolling the virtues of some butter-like chemical sludge ….
We probably will still have Bananas and Bakewell Tarts due to climate change, but frogs will soon start to burst and pigs will fart up a minor third. Bats will fly into buildings and Herring Gulls will become partial to lettuce.