Gardening for Victory

Green Fingers Again by Reginald Arkell

This week saw the arrival of some great new second-hand books courtesy of our eternal book-hoarder, Simon (although we had to prise them out of his reluctant hands). Amongst them was an intriguing edition of gardening poetry called ‘Green Fingers Again’ by Reginald Arkell, published in 1942.

I’m always fascinated by anything published during the Second World War and this one didn’t let me down – the wartime context is referred to directly and indirectly throughout, often through the titles which are comments on events and slogans of the time (‘Digging For Victory’, ‘Defeatist’, ‘Sanctuary’, ‘Battle Dress’, ‘Total War’ etc) but which also hide a double meaning – the war on the garden!

There are a couple of intriguing poems which give a hint as to what was going on at the time – the first is ‘London Railings’, and I think it displays the spirit which we always relate to those times:

London railings are taken down;
The country has come to London town.
Hyde Park Corner and Marble Arch
Look like a collar without the starch:
(Twice as comfy and just as clean);
Kensington looks like a village green,
And London’s loss will be London’s gain
If the railings are never brought back again.

Of course, many of the railings never were returned again and sadly it now seems that their removal was largely a propaganda exercise to make Londoners feel they’d contributed to the war effort (there’s an interesting article here.)

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Preserving – the River Cottage way.

I always thought that to make jam successfully you had to own an Aga or be a card carrying member of the W.I.  I have a not-so-latent baking gene but to be honest I was always a bit scared of making jam. It’s the big pans, the thermometers and the jar-sterilizing palaver that put me off. However 2 things helped to change my mind – a ‘make do & mend’ approach to Christmas presents this year, and the arrival in the shop of ‘Preserves: River Cottage Handbook No. 2′ by Pam Corbin.

It’s a neat little hard back that’s going to survive spine crunching and any splashes of hot sticky stuff. The second in a series of 5 handbooks on no-nonsense subjects such as bread, mushrooms and veg gardening, and at £14.99 a bargain to boot.

Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall hired Pam Corbin to organise River Cottage’s Preserving Days, and she’s done him proud with this book. She’s passionate about preserving and is keen to remind us that not so long ago it was something that most everyone did as a way of using up seasonal gluts and honouring the ebb and flow of the fruit and vegetable world.

She’s meticulous on health and safety in a modern up-to-date way, including sterilising, filling and sealing tables – chutneys are treated slightly differently than marmalades etc. – which makes you feel in incredibly safe hands. And she includes three different tests for setting.

The style is chatty and informative, the layout simple, with each recipe having its own page. There are lovely photographs too. Most recipes include suggestions for modifications if you have different ingredients or want to try something a little more adventurous.

Armed with a preserving pan, thermometer, recycled jam jars and long wooden spoon I started with a glut of damsons and made jam using the Plum Jam recipe. It’s delicious – soft but not runny, fruity and not too sweet:  the recipe uses more fruit than sugar, rather than the usual half and half. O.k, so I didn’t manage to skim off all the pips but I warned all recipients!

Next up came the more challenging Quince Cheese, aka Membrillo. This is delicious eaten with cheese, particularly Manchego, and also brilliant for giving a certain zing to stews and tagines or pork gravy. It’s also good after dinner with coffee. Chopping quinces is a trial, and stirring the molten lava that they turn into when they break down rather hairy, but once poured into the tray it is jewel like. It needs to mature in the fridge for a few weeks.  I then cut it into small squares and rolled in a little caster sugar before putting into bags for Christmas presents – beautiful and delicious.

Lastly I made Melissa’s Chestnut Jam. I had been given a large bag of wild chestnuts collected in a forest in Shropshire. Peeling chestnuts is extraordinarily fiddly, especially wild chestnuts which are tiny.  I now realize why they are so expensive! Once you’ve got this bit over the jam is straightforward to make and made a perfect present to give back to the chestnut giver!  I used vanilla sugar rather than honey and rum instead of brandy but any combination would be good I’m sure. It’s rich but utterly delicious. I’m planning mini Mont Blancs for New Years eve dinner: meringues with cream, chestnut jam and a little melted dark chocolate.

Now January beckons and hopefully there will be some seville oranges in the supermarket for my next preserving adventure: marmalade. But there’s lots of other things I want to try too: fruit leather, cordials, jellies, & ketchup. I’ll have Christmas presents for next year all sewn up by October!

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Gardener & Cook Winter Fairs

Christmas may be a couple of months away still, but we’re getting prepared early at Gardener & Cook. Beat the last minute rush and join us for some relaxed Christmas shopping! We’re attending two very special Christmas fairs this year, both in glorious settings (Sissinghurst in Kent and Glyndebourne in East Sussex) plus our regular Lewes late night shopping evening, so don’t miss out.

Sissinghurst

Sissinghurst

Wealden Times Midwinter Fair

Thursday 3rd – Friday 4th December 2009
11am – 4pm
Sissinghurst Castle Garden, Sissinghurst nr Cranbrook, Kent TN17 2AB
Tel: 01580 710700

A great opportunity to buy your Christmas presents in the luxury of heated marquees surrounded by the renowned gardens of Vita Sackville-West and Harold Nicholson. The fair is held upstairs in the Restaurant and Oast Exhibition. You also get a chance to visit the Book Barn where writers including Sissinghurst residents Adam Nicolson, Juliet Nicolson and Sarah Raven will be talking about their work.

Costs £5.00 booked in advance and £6.50 on the gate. Children under 5 are free and 5-12s pay £3.25. Book Barn is £2.00 (all talk proceeds go to charity). To book tickets call: 0800 294 9011 or book online.

For more information go to The Wealden Times website.

Glyndebourne

Glyndebourne

Glyndebourne Christmas Fair

Tuesday 3rd November
10am – 4pm
Glyndebourne, Lewes, East Sussex, BN8 5UU
Tel: 01273 812321

What better way to shop for your Christmas presents than in the beautiful and esteemed grounds of Glyndebourne?

Enjoy a day in this stunning setting, courtesy of the Christie Family, and take lunch and light refreshments in the Mildmay Restaurant. The event will be held in a Marquee and is in aid of Lewes and District Group of East Sussex Disability Association.

Entrance £3.

Gardener & Cook, Lewes

Gardener & Cook, Lewes

Lewes Late Night Shopping

Thursday 3rd December
10am – 9pm
Gardener & Cook, 33a Cliffe High Street, Lewes, East Sussex, BN7 2AN
tel: 01273 47749

We are thrilled to say we’ll be open until 9pm for Lewes Late Night Shopping night. Traditionally this is a lively and atmospheric evening particularly in Cliffe High Street – brass bands and stalls add a sense of Christmas spirit to the occasion (as does the mulled wine flowing freely on the night!)

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Gardener & Cook Summer Sale

Neptune Montpellier Bench & Chair

Neptune Montpellier Bench & Chair

Our summer sale is now on – we kicked off with a ’10% off everything’ day in both our stores which saw those in the know rushing in to stock up on presents!

Look out for discounts off large and small items, including 20% off all Neptune furniture orders.

If you’d like to be kept informed of our future sales and special discount days (or any other Gardener & Cook news), why not sign up to receive our e-newsletter – you’ll kick yourself if you miss out on another sale!

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Homemade with love

Homemade Craft Book

Homemade Craft Book

Feeling crafty?  We’ve got just the thing for you – a rather lovely book gracing our shelves at the moment to fulfill our creative urges.  ‘Homemade: Gorgeous Things to Make With Love’ by Ros Badger and Elspeth Thompson is a collection of how to make things for the home and garden, including knitting and sewing projects, ‘restoring a garden table’, elderflower cordial, and (currently on my list of things to do), a rather lovely patchwork throw made from assorted pieces of denim, ticking and tea towels.

Gorgeous Homemade quilt

Gorgeous Homemade quilt

The book is divided into seasons and starts with the words “in a world often said to be divided between those who spend money in order to save time and those who spend time in order to save money, our time is still seen as the ultimate luxury…” Well I’m definitely planning to spend a bit more of my time on that patchwork quilt!

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Decorative Living Fair

Decorative Living Fair, Eridge Park

Decorative Living Fair, Eridge Park

Another week another show!  After the fantastic weather and success of Firle, we’re hoping our luck will hold out with the weather and are gearing up for the Decorative Living Fair at Eridge near Tunbridge Wells next Tuesday 12th May.

It’s another beautiful setting (we do pick ‘em), set in beautiful rolling Kent parkland.  There’ll be a marquee full to bursting with coffee, lunch, tea and homemade locally produced food as an added incentive, so see you there.

Entry is £6.50 with £1 from each ticket donated to St John’s Ambulance Society. Full details can be found here.

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Firle Place Garden Show

Firle Place

Firle Place

We’re preparing for the Gardener & Cook stall at the beautiful Firle Place Garden Show this weekend (Saturday 25th & Sunday 26th April) so drop by and see us.  It’s a great event, beautiful surroundings and a lovely relaxed atmosphere, and if the weather continues like this we’ll be beaming!  Directions can be found here

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Simnel Cake Recipe

Mother's Day Simnel Cake

Mother's Day Simnel Cake

It’s Mother’s Day tomorrow (also known as Simnel Sunday – see post below), so we thought it would be timely to post a Simnel Cake recipe to save you the bother of searching for one!

This one was found in one of the books on our shelves in the Lewes shop – Prue Leith’s Cookery Bible.

Although the cake is now made more at Easter (the 11 balls of marzipan have come to represent the apostles, without Judas), it was originally associated with Mother’s Day.  Sometimes the marzipan balls are made into egg shapes, the symbol of spring and rebirth.

Happy cooking (and eating) …
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Mother’s Day – go a-mothering!

Mother's Day bulbs

Mother's Day bulbs

It’s that time of year when we get to celebrate the person who gave it her all by bringing us into the world – our mums!  The Gardener & Cook shops are looking especially gorgeous at the moment, a riot of bulbs and herbs and beautiful springlike gifts for that special lady.

I’ve recently heard a few mutterings about Mother’s Day being a marketing rip-off (or invented by the Victorians), which may be the truth in other countries but certainly not here – Mothering Sunday in the UK has its roots in pagan worship (the mother earth), then a Roman religious festival (existent in Europe since approximately 250BC when the Romans honoured the mother goddess Cybele), and finally appropriated by Christianity (the mother church).

During the 16th century people returned to their mother church to worship the day and were said to have gone “a-mothering”.

The other names attributed to this festival include Simnel Sunday, Refreshment Sunday and Rose Sunday. Simnel Sunday is named after the practice of baking Simnel cakes to celebrate the reuniting of families during the austerity of Lent.

Because there is traditionally a lightening of Lenten vows on this particular Sunday in celebration of the fellowship of family and church, the lesser-used label of Refreshment Sunday is also used, although rarely today.

Rose Sunday is sometimes used as an alternative title for Mothering Sunday as well. This title refers to the tradition of posies of flowers being collected and distributed at the service originally to all the mothers, but latterly to all women in the congregation.

So if you’re buying flowers or plants, take heart in the fact that you’re continuing a tradition!

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A Guide to Good Composting

Compost Bin

Kitchen Compost Bin

A new order of our popular kitchen compost bins has arrived, an attractive (and hygenic) solution as to where to keep your kitchen waste before you compost!

Composting has become a must in the garden again, with gardeners everywhere recognising the value in the rich dark waste matter which would only end up rotting in a landfill.

But what makes up a good compost?  What are the do’s and don’ts?  Here’s a quick guide and a useful compost recipe to help you on your way …

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