Before moving to California from Leipzig, Germany, Anne Moser had never considered making sourdough bread. She didn’t know much about it and had no plans to become a professional baker.
In fact, after immigrating to Monterey Bay in 2009 to pursue her Master’s in International Studies, Moser became a part-time translator for half a decade before she ended up in Daly City with her husband, Robert, who grew up in the Bay Area.
So it’s especially noteworthy that Moser has established herself as one of the Bay Area’s brightest sourdough luminaries.

“I never baked sourdough before,” says Moser. “I started when I was here. I missed having bakeries I could walk to. I randomly ordered Chad Robertson’s book, Tartine Bread, and gave it a try in 2013. I was just baking for my family, and it became too much bread, so we started giving it to neighbors and friends.”
Moser went on to become the masterful head baker and founder of Backhaus, which began to sell loaves at local markets in 2016, eventually opening their first brick-and-mortar in downtown San Mateo. Now one of the Peninsula’s buzziest bread suppliers, the German-inspired “bakehouse” continues to rise like a loaf of naturally leavened dough. Last November, the couple opened their second location in Burlingame to much fanfare (and a dash of name confusion).