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HELMS BAKERY — Helms Bakery wasn't really a
restaurant but it's my website. I can write about it here if I want to.
The Helms Bakery Building still stands on Venice Boulevard with
many of its signage still intact...but inside, they bake no bread or sugar
cookies. It's a furniture mart in there now but once upon a time beginning
in 1931, they made bread and sugar cookies and rolls and cupcakes and all the
things that great bakeries bake. Then nice men would load them into their
Helms Bakery Trucks and drive about surrounding neighborhoods, selling them to
housewives and kids.
If you wanted the Helms Man to stop at your residence, you had to,
first of all, put the Helms placard up in your front window...although a good
Helms Man knew his territory, knew that certain homes expected him whether they
had the sign up or not. He'd pull up in front and blow his distinctive
whistle and you'd scurry out to his truck and buy stuff.

Inside the truck, he had drawers full of cookies and donuts and
rolls and I think they even carried milk and butter, though at somewhat higher
prices than the nearby Safeway Market. All the goods in the Helms Truck
seemed a bit overpriced but they were fresh and tasty and you were paying a
little extra for curbside delivery.
When I was very young, you could often find me waiting outside our
home for the Helms Man. We had a rough idea of when he'd get to our street
and I'd go play out front, keeping an eye out for the guy. When he
approached, it was very exciting and I'd run in and get my mother. She'd
buy a loaf of bread and maybe some rolls and always at least a cookie for me.
Actually, the first thing our Helms Man would do when we stepped up inside his
truck to make our purchases was to hand me a free cookie, usually one of their
terrific sugar cookies.
Once, I got to go inside the plant thanks to an L.A. City School
District program of field trips. We all piled into buses which drove us
over to Culver City for a tour. Upon arrival, we were marched through the place and
shown how the bread was baked, how the cookies were mixed and formed on large
conveyor belts...and you couldn't help but love how great it smelled in there.
The aroma was heavenly and a whole lot better than the tuna cannery or the dairy we
toured on other field trips. On the way out, each student received a small
loaf of bread and a little cardboard Helms Truck.
The rise of supermarkets in the sixties meant the end of the Helms
Bakery. It closed in 1969 and I still remember the day its trucks made
their last, melancholy rounds. There was a real sense of loss when our
Helms Man drove off, having sold us our rolls and sugar cookies for the last time.
The big building on Venice Boulevard sat vacant for a few years
and rumors abounded as to what would become of it. In 1972, it was
acquired by a real estate firm that soon began its transformation into a complex
of furniture dealers...and even a little jazz club called The Jazz Bakery.
Happily, as noted, they kept a lot of the old Helms Bakery decor intact and
sometimes when you drive past it, you can almost imagine you're smelling the
sugar cookies, fresh out of those huge ovens.
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