Cauliflower soup with blue cheese and orange zest recipe

Posted in Leftovers, Save Money, Starters and Soups | 6 comments

Cauliflower soup with blue cheese and orange zest recipe

  This is another in our skinflint soup series. This delicious soup was run up with leftovers that could easily have just been thrown away. They made an elegant soup. The two key ingredients are mushroom ketchup and the zest of the orange which transformed this soup from good to sublime. Danny chickened out on the orange zest front. Refused even to taste it.  He missed out on a real treat. I got the idea of combining orange and vegetables from a video from dehydrate2store where Tammy mixes dried ground orange peel with dried beetroot and...

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Dusk

Posted in Cottage tales | 10 comments

Dusk

  I love the light in a lot of Carel Weight’s paintings. He often favours dusk – the time the French call day for night – the brief drift of minutes when everything seems to shimmer in a strange somnolent way. I often think of his paintings these days as I tend to work in the garden between three and four thirty. I choose the vegetables for supper quite early and they wait in a little trug on top of the feedbins until I return indoors. When long arrows of flying ducks or geese fill the sky I know that dusk is approaching. It’s a...

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Homemade pine needle vinegar

Posted in Hedgerow food, Preserving, Sauces Gravy Dressings | 12 comments

Homemade pine needle vinegar

  It was Danny’s turn to buy the Balsamic vinegar last weekend. Someone had put an expensive bottle of Balsamic beside the cheap ones in Tesco and he ended up paying five times more than he could have. The resulting shriek got me thinking about Balsamic vinegar in general. The price and quality of Balsamic vinegar can vary enormously. We have a very expensive bottle that we use occasionally for dipping or salads and generally have a ‘cheap’ bottle that we use for cooking. But cheap Balsamic vinegar is still much more expensive than...

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Blogs worth visiting: The Treehouse Diaries

Posted in Reviews | 7 comments

Blogs worth visiting: The Treehouse Diaries

  Yesterday our network started to get very creaky and then suddenly I couldn’t connect to the internet. Panic. My window on the world was suddenly blank. Danny fiddled about for hours while I continued with clearing the leaves to distract myself. And then on a foray upstairs I noticed that there was a newsfeed on the laptop’s screen. “It’s working. How did you do it?” “I don’t know.” Danny is always claims he’s done nothing when he fixes something. Suddenly my laptop was a friend again. Woke before dawn this morning and...

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Save money supermarket shopping online

Posted in Save Money | 21 comments

Save money supermarket shopping online

  “I usually shop at Sainsbury’s.” Sam confided. He likes good food. He’s a great chef. But was it really worth motoring over to Cambridge or Bury to shop? “Oh no I don’t have time to do that. I buy online. I’ve done it for ages. Initially my neighbours all thought I was mad. But gradually, one by one they are all doing it. Go for it – you can save time and money, Fiona. And the delivery rates are much cheaper now.” We don’t have brilliant local shops in Newmarket. No green grocer, no fishmonger. There are several good...

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Stir fry with skirt of beef, green pepper and spring onion recipe

Posted in Beef and Steak and Veal | 5 comments

Stir fry with skirt of beef, green pepper and spring onion recipe

  Sometimes we need a hefty meat fix. For years it was steak every Friday night, then it was an occasional steak when we found them on sale. Now it will be skirt of beef. Not only is it economical at about £3.50 for 500g it’s tastier than steak and has a wonderful texture. In the UK skirt is generally a largely undiscovered cut of beef.  So thank you Jo and more recently Paula for pointing me in the direction of the broad range of ways to cook this superb cut. Having already made a skirt of beef casserole in the slow cooker I thought that...

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Review: Marcus Harrison’s Wild Food Mentor course

Posted in Hedgerow food, Reviews | 9 comments

Review: Marcus Harrison’s Wild Food Mentor course

  One of the things that I’ve always longed for is to spend time with someone who can teach me about foraging in depth. There are courses but rarely local to me. Also some of the best ones can be ridiculously expensive once you add the price of the petrol and staying overnight. I have several foraging books and these have proved to be very useful – especially the small edition of Richard Maybe’s Food for Free which can be slipped into a pocket or Jalopy’s glove compartment. But I knew that I wasn’t even beginning to take full...

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Strawberries

Posted in Fruit, General care | 9 comments

Strawberries

  One of the best cakes that I’ve ever tasted is my mum’s sponge cake with a wicked filling of strawberries and whipped cream. In fact when she was making this filling she discovered how to make butter with double cream and an electric whisk. So I was doubly blessed. Many varieties of strawberries with the best flavour don’t travel well. So you won’t find them in the market or supermarket. Waitrose tried stocking some old English varieties one year but the shelf life was so limited that they gave up. The great thing about growing...

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The slow cooker chef: Broccoli and watercress soup recipe

Posted in Starters and Soups, Vegetables and Sides, Vegetarian | 9 comments

The slow cooker chef: Broccoli and watercress soup recipe

  “I bet we’re the first in the world to be having broccoli soup and flash fried squid for breakfast.” Danny dunked a chunk of crusty bread in his soup. With me still at home we tend to have a late brunch these days but yesterday was the first day that we’d gone wild and had soup and seafood. I’d bought the broccoli in the market. Two giant heads for a pound. As the vegetables don’t have a long shelf life we ate broccoli with the skirt of beef stew and the rest was chopped and popped into the slow cooker to make soup. I’d also...

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The secret challenge

Posted in Save Money | 12 comments

The secret challenge

  We’ve had a secret challenge at the cottage this past year. In the old days when oil was cheap we were wanton with our central heating. Our 900 litre tank was filled up four times a year. In October last year we worked out that four fill ups might cost as much as £1600. It was quite a shock when we did the maths. For the first time ever I decided to shop around for the best price. In the end we saved £60 on filling the tank. Up until then I’d used the same supplier for 25 years – but he just couldn’t offer a similar discount. Then...

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