The Simple Things

Taking time to live well
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • SHOP
  • Newsletter
  • About
  • Work with us
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • SHOP
  • Newsletter
  • About
  • Work with us

Blog

Taking Time to Live Well

  • All
  • Chalkboard
  • Christmas
  • Competition
  • could do
  • Eating
  • Escape
  • Escaping
  • Fresh
  • Fun
  • gardening
  • Gathered
  • Gathering
  • Growing
  • Haikus
  • Interview
  • Living
  • Looking back
  • Magazine
  • magical creatures
  • Making
  • Miscellany
  • My Neighbourhood
  • Nature
  • Nest
  • Nesting
  • outing
  • playlist
  • Reader event
  • Reader offer
  • Shop
  • Sponsored post
  • Sunday Best
  • Think
  • Uncategorized
  • Wellbeing
  • Wisdom
Photography: Jonathan Cherry

Photography: Jonathan Cherry

Make | a pumpkin beer keg

Iona Bower October 31, 2023

Because there’s lots more fun to be had with a pumpkin than just carving it

Fancy making this pumpking beer keg as a centrepiece for your own pumpkin party or Halloween celebrations? Of course you do! You’re only human! Inserting a spigot into a hollowed-out pumpkin will transform it into a keg that’ll give your favourite tipple a subtle flavour and keep it cool till pumpkin time.

You will need

Pumpkin Knife
Spoon
Ruler
Spigot (tap)
Sharpie
Drill
Seasonal beer

1 Cut off the crown of the pumpkin and set aside. Scoop out all of the pumpkin seeds (save the seeds to toast later if you wish). 
2 After measuring the diameter of your spigot, select a drill bit 2mm smaller so your spigot will fit snugly and be ‘beer tight’. 
3 Mark and drill a hole towards the base of the pumpkin. Insert the spigot into the hole. 
4 Fill with seasonal beer and replace the crown. 
5 Allow to infuse for a couple of hours and enjoy. 

This make was first featured in our Pumpkin Party ‘Gathering’ in our October 2019 issue, with recipes by Bex Long, including beetroot raita, parsnip soup, acorn squash with chermoula dressing, sausage rolls, kale, walnut and pomegranate salad and more. It’s so autumnal it’s enough to burnish your conkers. You can buy a copy of the back issue from our online store.

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our October 2023 issue…

Featured
AdobeStock_276831672_Preview.jpg
Oct 23, 2023
Project | Make Seed Bombs
Oct 23, 2023
Oct 23, 2023
Jessica Benhar-Little red riding hood-1200 dpi.jpg
Oct 21, 2023
Create | Fairytale Story Starters
Oct 21, 2023
Oct 21, 2023
Longboarding.jpg
Oct 17, 2023
Learn to | Dance on a Longboard
Oct 17, 2023
Oct 17, 2023

More pumpkinspiration…

Featured
Pumpkin Beer Keg Jonathan Cherry.jpg
Oct 31, 2023
Make | a pumpkin beer keg
Oct 31, 2023
Oct 31, 2023
David Grant Suttie.jpg
Oct 24, 2021
Pumpkin varieties | What are they gourd for?
Oct 24, 2021
Oct 24, 2021
Pumpkin creme brulee.JPG
Oct 16, 2021
Recipe | Mini Pumpkin Creme Brulees
Oct 16, 2021
Oct 16, 2021


In Making Tags halloween, autumn, pumpkin, pumpkins, October, issue 88, pumpkin craft
Comment

Photography by Cathy Pyle

Primer | Know Your Apples

Iona Bower October 22, 2022

Whether browsing at a market or selecting from an orchard, apple ID is essential. Here’s our field (well, orchard) guide to the best of the crop

George Cave
What George lacks in aroma he makes up for in intensity: a crisp, sharp bite gives way to a gently sweet mouthful, not overly juicy.

Grenadier
The gnarled, knobbled skin may give this cooking apple a battle-weary appearance, but beneath the rugged armour there’s a yielding, creamy flesh, ideal for sauces and chutneys.

D’arcy Spice
The ultimate coleslaw/cheeseboard apple offers firm, crisp flesh gently infused with subtle, sophisticated undertones of star anise, clove and white pepper.

Howgate Wonder
Sweet, firm and only mildly acidic, this waxy-fleshed, blushing beauty keeps well, cooks well and makes a proper pie.

James Grieve
Take a bite of this crisp, juicy beauty fresh off the tree in late July and the acidic overtones may induce a wince. Allow James to mellow until at least September, however, and he offers an altogether softer, creamier mouthful.

Chelmsford Wonder
Softish flesh reminiscent of macadamia nuts yields distinctly Chardonnay-esque flavours, sophisticated only gently acidic.

Lane’s Prince Albert
A winter-season treat, offering substantial character that brings real personality to a crumble and delivers complexity to chutney.

Margil
Widely acclaimed by apple connoisseurs for its firm, crisp bite and highly aromatic, candyfloss overtones – to cook with the Margil would be a crime.

Pam’s Delight
This red-tinged beauty is a lunchbox classic, juicy enough to quench thirst and sweet enough to curb sugar cravings.

Beauty of Bath
Blink as this one falls from the tree and you’ll miss the best bite of this soft, sensual beauty featuring pink-tinged, creamy flesh with an almost strawberry flavour.

Peasgood’s Nonsuch
This big, sturdy stalwart delivers a densely characterful flavour-punch, good teamed with cheddar cheese or cooked in a pie.

Apple Day is celebrated on 21st October but there are apple-related events all over the country this weekend. The primer above is taken from our feature, The Apples of Our Eye in our October issue, which is on sale now. It was originally published in the first ever issue of The Simple Things and we’ve reprinted it to make our 10th birthday! Because simple things like apple picking never cease to be good fun!

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More apple inspiration…

Featured
Apples Cathy Pyle.jpg
Oct 22, 2022
Primer | Know Your Apples
Oct 22, 2022
Oct 22, 2022
Apples Stocksy.jpg
Sep 25, 2021
Etymology | Scrumping
Sep 25, 2021
Sep 25, 2021
toffee apples Jacqui Melville.jpg
Oct 5, 2019
Clever tips for tricky apples
Oct 5, 2019
Oct 5, 2019

More from our October issue…

Featured
Alamy_2CCAJN3Alamy horror.jpg
Oct 25, 2022
Fun | Gothic Book Title Generator
Oct 25, 2022
Oct 25, 2022
Apples Cathy Pyle.jpg
Oct 22, 2022
Primer | Know Your Apples
Oct 22, 2022
Oct 22, 2022
Pg 93_Like My Father Always Said.jpg
Oct 18, 2022
For Fun | Spine Poems
Oct 18, 2022
Oct 18, 2022
In Growing Tags issue 124, October, apple, apples, Apple Day
Comment
Getty Simple Thing.jpg

A simple thing | darker days

Iona Bower October 12, 2021

Rather than rail against the darker days, gather your blankets, a brew and a willing companion and sink into the delights of getting cosy for an afternoon. Helpful additions might be a good book, a just-tricky-enough puzzle, or a notebook for dreams and plans, but the key ingredient is probably the knowledge that there’s nowhere else you need to be right now; it’s about pausing and acknowledging the pleasures that are found in this moment. Photography: Getty

This was one of our ‘simple things’ from the October ‘Humble’ issue. You’ll find more simple things in every issue, which you can buy in shops or in our online store.

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our October issue…

Featured
Neighbourhood awards.jpg
Aug 24, 2022
Enter | Our Neighbourhood Awards 2022
Aug 24, 2022
Aug 24, 2022
HColebrook_Gratitude 2.jpg
Oct 19, 2021
How to | Start a Bullet Journal
Oct 19, 2021
Oct 19, 2021
Pumpkin creme brulee.JPG
Oct 16, 2021
Recipe | Mini Pumpkin Creme Brulees
Oct 16, 2021
Oct 16, 2021

More simple things…

Featured
boardgames.jpg
Dec 26, 2023
The beginnings of board games
Dec 26, 2023
Dec 26, 2023
From Gathering for Simple Summer Pleasures.jpg
Aug 16, 2022
Simple Things | Summer's Tiny Pleasures
Aug 16, 2022
Aug 16, 2022
Playlist.JPG
Feb 20, 2020
Playlist | a playlist about playlists
Feb 20, 2020
Feb 20, 2020
In Nest Tags simple thing, issue 112, October, cosy, blankets
Comment
Beetroot Chocolate Cake.jpg

Cake facts | root veg baking

Iona Bower October 10, 2020

We love a cake. We love root veg. Root veg cake are simply double the joy

We are firm believers in always having a cake in, here at The Simple Things. Our October Cake in the House page has a recipe for this deliciously moreish Beetroot Chocolate Cake from Abel & Cole., who, happily, know a thing or two about root veg, too. You can find the recipe on page 25. Root veg definitely do something magical to a cake, adding both natural sweetness as well as moist texture. Here are a few more root veg that translate well into cake form. 

Parsnips

Always pairs well with apples, as well as smoky syrups such as maple. 

Parsnip and maple syrup cake by Darina Allen


Carrots

All nuts, but particularly walnuts) love a carrot. They pair well with oranges, too. 

Carrot cake with ginger and walnuts by Nigella Lawson


Beetroot

Beetroot’s natural partner is dark chocolate which is an excellent, slightly piquant foil to beetroot’s earthiness. A creamy frosting also does the job beautifully. 

Red Velvet Beetroot Cake by Lakeland


Sweet potatoes

Sweet ingredients like maple syrup and chocolate complement sweet potatoes, as do spices such as cinnamon, cloves and ginger. 

Chocolate and sweet potato loaf cake by Waitrose


Potatoes

Traditionally, potatoes are paired mainly with savoury foods but they’re great at taking on flavours, too, and are a good vehicle for citrus flavours in a cake. 

Gluten free lemon drizzle cake by BBC Food

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our October issue…

Featured
QA_-39.jpg
Oct 13, 2020
Competition | Win a £300 skincare treat
Oct 13, 2020
Oct 13, 2020
Toadstools.jpg
Oct 13, 2020
Nature studies | Fly Agaric Toadstools
Oct 13, 2020
Oct 13, 2020
Beetroot Chocolate Cake.jpg
Oct 10, 2020
Cake facts | root veg baking
Oct 10, 2020
Oct 10, 2020

More from Cake in the House…

Featured
20230609_Every_Last_Bite_Rosie_Sykes_Quadrille_Amazing_Chocolate_Coconut_Squares_017_Patricia_Niven.jpeg
Feb 8, 2025
Cake | Chocolate Coconut Squares
Feb 8, 2025
Feb 8, 2025
Tin Can Pannetone.jpg
Nov 30, 2024
Make | Tin Can Panettone
Nov 30, 2024
Nov 30, 2024
Bedtime Cake.jpg
Nov 16, 2024
Recipe | Bedtime Cake
Nov 16, 2024
Nov 16, 2024


In Eating Tags cake, cake facts, cake in the house, root veg, October, Issue 100, issue 100
Comment
Photography: Emma Croman

Photography: Emma Croman

Recipe | Warm Blackberry and Almond Overnight Oats

Iona Bower October 3, 2020

This breakfast is autumn in a bowl and will give you something to get up for on dark mornings

Overnight oats are slow food at their best. Spend a quiet evening making the blackberry compote to warm gently when you need it ,and putting your oats in to soak, and in the morning you’ll be rewarded with a filling breakfast to put a spring in your step all morning. It’s an ideal use for one of your pots of frozen blackberries, but it’s very easy to subsitute other fruit, or a diffiernt nut butter. Get creative and make the recipe your own if you like.

Serves 2

½ large red apple
2 tbsp almond butter

For the blackberry compote:

250g blackberries
1 tbsp maple syrup
1 bay leaf
Squeeze of lemon juice

For the porridge:

100g rolled oats, soaked in 250ml water for at least 30 mins, ideally overnight
250ml unsweetened almond milk
¼ tsp sea salt
1 tsp coconut oil
2 tsp raw cacao powder

1 Make the blackberry compote by heating the blackberries, maple syrup, bay leaf and lemon juice in a small pan with 1 tbsp of water. Once bubbling, remove from the heat and set aside.

2 Put all the porridge ingredients, including the soaking water, in a medium pan set over a medium heat. Stir for 3-4 mins, until the oats start to come together, the coconut oil has melted and the cacao powder has blended in.

3 Grate the apple (reserving a couple of slices to garnish). Spoon the porridge into deep bowls and top each with 1 heaped tbsp of blackberry compote and 1 tbsp of the almond butter. Finish with the grated and sliced apple .

Cook’s note:Soaking grains helps to break down their tough outer layer, making them easier to digest.

This delicious breakfast is just one of the recipes from our October feature Against the Grain by Louise Gorrod, with photography by Emma Croman. It also features recipes for Barley Porridge with Roasted Plums, Yoghurt and Toasted Almonds; Porridge with Caramel Sauce, Apples and Toasted Hazelnuts; Pumpkin Barleyotto with Manchego and Pumpkin Seeds; and Cheesy Rye Gratin with Ale and Mustard. The October issue is in shops now.

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our October issue…

Featured
QA_-39.jpg
Oct 13, 2020
Competition | Win a £300 skincare treat
Oct 13, 2020
Oct 13, 2020
Toadstools.jpg
Oct 13, 2020
Nature studies | Fly Agaric Toadstools
Oct 13, 2020
Oct 13, 2020
Beetroot Chocolate Cake.jpg
Oct 10, 2020
Cake facts | root veg baking
Oct 10, 2020
Oct 10, 2020

More breakfasts for cold mornings…

Featured
Alamy Full English.jpg
Feb 24, 2024
Breakfast Rules | How To Do a Full English
Feb 24, 2024
Feb 24, 2024
Reasons to wake up early.jpg
Jul 16, 2022
Go gökotta | (wake up with the birds)
Jul 16, 2022
Jul 16, 2022
Blackberry porridge Emma Cronan.JPG
Oct 3, 2020
Recipe | Warm Blackberry and Almond Overnight Oats
Oct 3, 2020
Oct 3, 2020
In Fresh Tags issue 100, Issue 100, October, porridge, breakfast, autumn recipes, oats
Comment
Photography: Cathy Pyle

Photography: Cathy Pyle

Recipe | Cinnamon Popcorn

Iona Bower September 26, 2020

In our October issue we have a special ‘Crafternoon’ Gathering feature, with ideas for making an autumnal wreath and a few delicious snacks to fuel your creativity. We think this cinnamon popcorn would be just as good with a Saturday night movie, too. Here’s how to make it…

Makes 1 large bowl

100g popping corn kernels
2 tbsp coconut oil
2 tbsp maple syrup
1 tsp cinnamon

1 Pop your kernels using your preferred method (popcorn machine, microwave or hob).
2 Melt the coconut oil in a small saucepan on the hob, then stir in the maple syrup and cinnamon.
3 Pour the warm liquid over the popcorn, season to taste with salt and stir until thoroughly coated.

You can find this and the rest of the recipes by Kay Prestney and photographed by Cathy Pyle in our October issue on page 8, including Cranberry and Camembert Puffs, Rosemary and Orange Mocktails , Smoked Trout Dip, Spinach Twists and Chocolate Brownies. There are also instructions on how to make your autumnal wreath.

Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our October issue…

Featured
QA_-39.jpg
Oct 13, 2020
Competition | Win a £300 skincare treat
Oct 13, 2020
Oct 13, 2020
Toadstools.jpg
Oct 13, 2020
Nature studies | Fly Agaric Toadstools
Oct 13, 2020
Oct 13, 2020
Beetroot Chocolate Cake.jpg
Oct 10, 2020
Cake facts | root veg baking
Oct 10, 2020
Oct 10, 2020

More autumn recipes…

Featured
Hasselback Squash.JPG
Nov 9, 2024
Recipe | Hasselback Squash with Chestnuts, Pancetta & Mushrooms
Nov 9, 2024
Nov 9, 2024
Rainbow minestrone good things to eat.jpg
Oct 5, 2024
Recipe | Rainbow Minestrone Soup with Basil Mayo Topping
Oct 5, 2024
Oct 5, 2024
Apple Rose Cake Rebecca Lewis.jpg
Sep 28, 2024
Recipe | Apple & Cinnamon Rose Cake
Sep 28, 2024
Sep 28, 2024
In Eating Tags issue 100, Issue 100, October, popcorn, autumn recipes, autumn ideas, movies
Comment
Photography: Alamy

Photography: Alamy

Build your own spooky story

Iona Bower October 19, 2019

Frighten friends and freak out family with your own spooky story

If you love a scary tale, especially at this time of year, why not try penning your own? How hard can it be, after all*? To show you just how easy it is, we asked author and creative writing tutor Susan Elliot Wright to help us put together this Spooky Story Kit. Simply choose one beginning, one ending and five scary elements from below, string them together with a few verbs and conjunctions and Bob’s your Uncle (and The Bride of Frankenstein’s your Aunt). Go!

Beginnings (choose one)

  1. She had thought the house was empty as she pushed open the creaking door…

  2. Four hundred years after her death, Esmerelda sat up in her coffin…

  3. A mile or two into the forest road, Roger Peebles’ car choked to a halt. He had run out of petrol…


Endings (choose one)

  1. And that would be the last the town saw of those vampires, for now at least.

  2. He put the knife back where he had found it. No one would ever know he had been there at all.

  3. But the rats continued to run.


Scary Elements to add to your story’s sandwich filling

  1. An electric light that doesn’t work. Characters may pull on it frantically and pointlessly. 

  2. A crow. Particularly one with beady eyes or a malformed foot or two.

  3. A rocking chair that rocks of its own accord. Just a little bit too quickly and silently to have been set off by a human.

  4. A clown. Not a funny one though. A malign-looking, silent one, preferably seen from a distance. 

  5. Long corridors (they really should be <very> long, and also shadowy to allow plenty of opportunity for evil to skulk in their corners).

  6. The distant sound of a weeping woman that can’t be located. The listener should ideally dash from room to room, with the noise of weeping becoming  louder and quieter again at random. 

  7. A face at the window of a house. The protagonist should not be able to locate the room the face appeared in once inside the property. 

  8. Some things that ‘go’ when no one has set them off: a television, a gramophone, a slightly manic-looking wind-up toy monkey bashing cymbals together.

  9. Something seen from the corner of one’s eye, only fleetingly. It should move swiftly and be gone when the protagonist whirls round (one never simply turns in spooky stories).

  10. A deserted institution. An asylum is ideal but hospitals, churches and prisons are all good. Any building that would once have been bustling and may hide dark secrets. 

  11. Any child’s toy in the wrong context. A rag doll that appears in someone’s home and has never been seen before. A doll’s house in an abandoned home. Any mechanical toy that moves of its own accord. 

*It’s quite a bit harder than we have made this sound, actually.

Susan Elliot Wright loves a spooky story. Her latest novel, The Flight of Cornelia Blackwood (Simon and Schuster) features some rather spooky crows, of which she is a big fan. For more of her writing tips and advice on getting published visit susanelliotwright.co.uk.  For some more spooky inspiration, have a read of our feature Dare To Be Scared for ideas on paranormal outings you can do in a day (p80).

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

If you enjoy a good mystery, don’t miss our November issue, in which we will be announcing the winner of our competition to write the ending for a murder mystery penned by Sophie Hannah. We'll be publishing Sophie’s own ending to the story (and the rest of it too, so you can enjoy it all in one go) here on the blog later in the month.




More from our October issue…

Featured
Pumpkin Beer Keg Jonathan Cherry.jpg
Oct 31, 2023
Make | a pumpkin beer keg
Oct 31, 2023
Oct 31, 2023
Back cover cartoon.jpg
Oct 22, 2019
October | a final thought
Oct 22, 2019
Oct 22, 2019
Spooky Stories Alamy.jpg
Oct 19, 2019
Build your own spooky story
Oct 19, 2019
Oct 19, 2019

More spooky things for an autumn evening…

Featured
Pumpkin Beer Keg Jonathan Cherry.jpg
Oct 31, 2023
Make | a pumpkin beer keg
Oct 31, 2023
Oct 31, 2023
Alamy_2CCAJN3Alamy horror.jpg
Oct 25, 2022
Fun | Gothic Book Title Generator
Oct 25, 2022
Oct 25, 2022
Pumpkin creme brulee.JPG
Oct 16, 2021
Recipe | Mini Pumpkin Creme Brulees
Oct 16, 2021
Oct 16, 2021




In Think Tags issue 88, OCtober, spooky, October, writing, create, creativity, ghosts, halloween
Comment
Photography: Joseph Ford

Photography: Joseph Ford

Camouflage | a short primer

Iona Bower October 16, 2019

Now you see me… now you don’t


We tend to think of camouflage as matching one’s background. And indeed, this can be used to good effect, as seen in the picture above from Invisible Jumpers by Joseph Ford and Nina , published by Hoxton Mini Press (you can see more of these fabulous photographs in our October issue). 

But in the animal kingdom, it’s all a little more subtle and complex than this (and less knitted) and the theories of how camo works have been discussed by everyone from artists to zoologists for decades. Here are a few of the nifty tricks nature uses to make itself invisible. 


Countershading

Since the Cretaceous period, many animals have been darker on the top of their body and lighter on the underside (think about a shark with its dark back and white belly - it works just as well for predators as prey). When light falls from above on a 3D object of one shade the underside appears darker than the top because of the way shadows fall, giving the object a solid appearance. Countershading works against that, using shading to counterbalance light’s effects to make the object seem to disappear. 


Mimetic resemblance

This is the sort of camo we often think of first - those mad stick insects that look like leaves, moths that have wings that look just like bark. Devious little so-and-sos. 


Counter illumination

This is a bit subtler but seen from below, most marine animals are able to be seen because they have a dark silhouette against the water. Some, like the firefly squid, produce light from bioluminscent photophores on their undersides, which counteracts the effect of their dark silhouette making them harder to see.

Disruptive colouration

In layman’s terms, this is ‘splotchiness’, like on a leopard or a flatfish. The splotches make it harder to see the contours of the animal’s body.


Contour obliteration

Also known as ‘boundary disruption’. This makes the edges of an animal’s shape looks a bit roughed up so it’s harder to discern its body as a whole from its background. 


Concealment of the eye

By far our favourite camo trick. The eye can be a bit of a target for predators, as it stands out, so concealing it can be the difference between being a survivor and being dinner. Some animals have a dark band or stripe across the eye (like a raccoon) to hide the dark pupil, others have dark patches around the eye (pandas). While others still go for total misdirection, like some fish which have a fake ‘eye’ near the end of their tail and their real eyes are tiny and easily missed. Sneaky!


You can find more pictures of the fabulous knitted camo from Invisible jumpers in our October ‘Create’ issue. Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe


More from our October issue…

Featured
Pumpkin Beer Keg Jonathan Cherry.jpg
Oct 31, 2023
Make | a pumpkin beer keg
Oct 31, 2023
Oct 31, 2023
Back cover cartoon.jpg
Oct 22, 2019
October | a final thought
Oct 22, 2019
Oct 22, 2019
Spooky Stories Alamy.jpg
Oct 19, 2019
Build your own spooky story
Oct 19, 2019
Oct 19, 2019

More of nature’s wonders…

Featured
Ducks My Plot.jpeg
Apr 1, 2025
Language | Learn to speak 'Duck' abroad
Apr 1, 2025
Apr 1, 2025
Nature Diary.jpeg
Feb 22, 2025
How To | Keep a Nature Diary
Feb 22, 2025
Feb 22, 2025
grebe.jpg
Feb 14, 2025
Nature | Waterfowl Valentines
Feb 14, 2025
Feb 14, 2025



In Nature Tags nature, camouflage, animals, October, issue 88
Comment
Illustration: Zuza Misko

Illustration: Zuza Misko

Mythology | How the spider got eight legs

Iona Bower October 9, 2019

A little legend about one of our favourite creepy crawlies

There’s no doubt there’s something a bit special about spiders. In our October issue (in shops now), we are celebrating our eight-legged friends on our Magical Creatures page. But why did Mother Nature decide they needed quite so many legs? We suspect there’s a very scientific evolutionary answer, but we quite like this one...

The Greek myth of Arachne has several versions but Ovid told a slightly terrifying story about how the spider got eight legs.  

Arachne was a mortal woman, the daughter of a shepherd, and a top-notch weaver, but more than a little boastful regarding her skill. Foolishly, she began to boast that her weaving was better than that of the Goddess Athena, who overheard (as Gods are wont to) and popped to earth, disguised as an old lady to urge her to retract her claims in hopes the Gods would forgive her. 

Bumptious Arachne refused to say that her weaving was inferior to that of Athena’s and went one step further, in fact, saying that if Athena thought her weaving was so spectacular she should come to earth herself and join her in a weaving competition. Athena cast aside her old lady costume and they both began to weave. 

Athena’s weaving depicted contests between mortals and the Gods in which mortals were harshly punished for daring to set themselves against the Gods (an unsubtle hint of what was to come, but one Arachne chose to ignore). Arachne, meanwhile, ill-advisedly wove a picture showing the ways in which the Gods had abused mortals over the years. More inadvisedly still, her weaving turned out to be far superior than Athena’s.

Furious at both Arachne’s cheek and her talent, Athena struck her about the head three times and tore her work to pieces. Shamed and fearful, Arachne hanged herself.

Athena, who shows a frightening lack of moral compassion here, we must say, even for a Goddess, told her: "Live on then, and yet hang, condemned one, but, lest you are careless in future, this same condition is declared, in punishment, against your descendants, to the last generation!" She sprinkled her with some of Hecate’s poisonous herbs, at which point Arachne’s hair fell out, her nose fell off and her head and body shrank. Her talented weaver’s fingers stuck to her sides and became legs, which would spin thread from her belly for ever. 

The moral of the story? Keep your light under a bushel… unless you’re a Goddess with a bit of an anger problem. 

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More from our October issue…

Featured
Pumpkin Beer Keg Jonathan Cherry.jpg
Oct 31, 2023
Make | a pumpkin beer keg
Oct 31, 2023
Oct 31, 2023
Back cover cartoon.jpg
Oct 22, 2019
October | a final thought
Oct 22, 2019
Oct 22, 2019
Spooky Stories Alamy.jpg
Oct 19, 2019
Build your own spooky story
Oct 19, 2019
Oct 19, 2019

More creatures we think are magical…

Featured
Water Boatman.jpg
May 24, 2025
Nature | Pond-Dipping for Grown-ups
May 24, 2025
May 24, 2025
Moths2.jpg
Oct 10, 2023
Learn | To Tell Moth Jokes
Oct 10, 2023
Oct 10, 2023
Stoat Zuza Mysko.JPG
Jan 11, 2022
Magical Creatures | Weasels vs Stoats
Jan 11, 2022
Jan 11, 2022
In magical creatures Tags issue 88, October, magical creatures, spiders, mythology, myth, spooky
Comment
Illustration: Kavel Rafferty

Illustration: Kavel Rafferty

How to | make an astronomy mirror

Iona Bower October 2, 2019

Go stargazing without straining your neck with this clever make

This make is fairly easy to put together and will provide you with hours of fun on a clear Autumn night. Head out with a Thermos and your guide to the night sky and see what you can spot.

You will need

A mirror, the bigger the better
Weather-proof sealant (optional)
Robust table or flat, stable surface large enough to hold the mirror
Binoculars
Planks of wood (one per viewer)
Clean pieces of cloth

1 Find a mirror and give it a clean so it’s as clear as possible. Treating the frame with weather-proof sealant can help it last longer.
2 Lay mirror onto your flat surface facing upwards. Secure in place.
3 Prop your plank against the mirror and wedge into place so it doesn’t move. Put your binoculars on top and angle so you can see the mirror.
4 Keep the mirror covered up until it’s dark, then use your binoculars to look at the reflection of the skies. Use a bit of cloth to wipe the mirror if it gets fogged up.
5 Make sure you take the mirror back inside or cover it up once you’re finished staring at the stars.

Find more makes, fun and facts on our Miscellany pages every issue.

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe


More from our October issue…

Featured
Pumpkin Beer Keg Jonathan Cherry.jpg
Oct 31, 2023
Make | a pumpkin beer keg
Oct 31, 2023
Oct 31, 2023
Back cover cartoon.jpg
Oct 22, 2019
October | a final thought
Oct 22, 2019
Oct 22, 2019
Spooky Stories Alamy.jpg
Oct 19, 2019
Build your own spooky story
Oct 19, 2019
Oct 19, 2019

More from our miscellanies…

Featured
PANCAKES.jpg
Mar 4, 2025
How to | Improve Your Pancake Toss
Mar 4, 2025
Mar 4, 2025
yellowhammer.jpg
Jun 21, 2023
Competition | Win a copy of A Year of Birdsong
Jun 21, 2023
Jun 21, 2023
EGGShell-tealights-the-simple-things.png
Apr 10, 2023
Eggshell tea lights
Apr 10, 2023
Apr 10, 2023
In Miscellany Tags issue 88, October, miscellany, stargazing, how to
Comment
Photography: Ali Allen

Photography: Ali Allen

The lost art of squirreling away

Iona Bower September 28, 2019

Why we love a larder, and why you should, too

Somewhere in the last 50-or-so years, larders were lost and became a bit of a thing of the past. We probably all remember a grandparent or auntie who had a really decent larder. If you were lucky it was a proper cold room with shelves on all four sides, precariously stacked with tins, jars, packets and boxes. Otherwise it might have been an outhouse, or just a particularly big kitchen cupboard. Either way, they were a bit magic. A woman of a certain age could don a tabard, stick her head briefly inside the larder and - ta dah! - emerge with an armful of packets and tins from which a cake would appear, or a jelly filled with fruit, or simply a tin of cocoa powder and a packet of biscuits. 

But, as post-war kitchens became smaller and fridges ever bigger, the larder fell out of favour, no longer needed as we filled our American-style fridges with food that would last for days and freezers took more of the strain. 

However, in the last decade, larders have been having a moment again, with several big kitchen companies creating beautiful, freestanding larder-armoires, that open their capacious doors as if to hug you to the bosom of their dried goods and tins. And we’re not surprised. Because what is nicer than a larder?

We all aspire to the sort of larder stocked with home-bottled tomatoes, chutney from the allotment and jars of apples dried in a low oven (the sort of larder that calls for large Kilner jars and chalkboard labels). 

But all larders are a joy. The kind you can lean on one Thursday night when the supermarket shut just as you arrived and the fridge is bare, but just at the back of the larder is a packet of dry pasta, a jar of roasted peppers that came in a hamper at Christmas and a bottle of red, and suddenly dinner is saved. Or the sort of larder that seems to be full to the gunwales with flour, currants, rice and other utilitarian things, but you know that one rainy afternoon, if you have a bit of a dig about you will emerge, victorious, with the remains of a homemade fruit cake and a chocolate orange you hid from yourself for just such an occasion.

You don’t even need to have a larder to larder well. Got a shed? Give it a tidy and set up a small book shelf in there for your jars and tins. An outdoor bunker does the job equally well, with the addition of a small storage unit. A cupboard under the stairs makes a good larder, and means you don’t have to set foot outside in inclement weather. Or, for ultimate convenience, dedicate a cupboard in your kitchen to be a larder cupboard and feel the joy every time you open the door. Wherever you choose to create your larder, do make sure it’s mouse and bug proof (there’s nothing sadder than another creature stealing all your hard work). Once you’ve got your space sorted you can set about planning the contents.

There’s an art to squirreling away, you see. Some squirreling requires hard work and forward planning while other aspects require a bit of recklessness and a glint in your eye. You have to consider not only what you might need, but also what you might just fancy. October is prime squirreling time: you can use up the last of the summer gluts making jams, biscuits and other goodies that will cheer the winter months. In fact, we have some fabulous ideas for this from Rachel de Thample in our October issue, everything from marrow marmalade to homemade Worcestershire sauce. But it’s also a good time to stash away a fancy tin of biscuits, some posh chocolates (or maybe simply a Crunchie bar, just for you, hidden on the top shelf behind the butter beans, to be eaten under the duvet with a book on a sad, snowy Sunday). The Norwegians might say: ‘There’s no such thing as bad weather, only bad clothes’. We say ‘there’s no such thing as bad weather, only a badly prepared larder’. Get ready to hunker down. 

Our October issue has several recipes from Gifts from the Modern Larder: Homemade Presents to Make  and Give by Rachel de Thample (Kyle Books). Photography by Ali Allen. The ‘Create’ issue is in shops now.

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More things we love about October…

Featured
Pumpkin Beer Keg Jonathan Cherry.jpg
Oct 31, 2023
Make | a pumpkin beer keg
Oct 31, 2023
Oct 31, 2023
Apples Cathy Pyle.jpg
Oct 22, 2022
Primer | Know Your Apples
Oct 22, 2022
Oct 22, 2022
Getty Simple Thing.jpg
Oct 12, 2021
A simple thing | darker days
Oct 12, 2021
Oct 12, 2021

More from our October issue…



In Eating Tags issue 88, October, larder, baking, food
2 Comments
Image: Shutterstock

Image: Shutterstock

Competition | Design a Christmas gift tag

Iona Bower September 19, 2019

See your design printed for all readers of The Simple Things to enjoy

We know it’s only October and generally at The Simple Things we don’t like to even mention Christmas until at least after Bonfire Night. But this year we wanted to invite you to bring a bit of extra joy to the giving process by designing a gift tag for others to use and to share.

We’ll turn our favourite designs into a sheet of actual gift tags in the December issue so everyone can enjoy your handiwork.

How to enter

Download the gift tag template here.

You can print it and draw on it directly, or use a computer to help you design it, or any other creative means that you have at your fingertips.

Email us a PDF or jpeg of your design with your name and phone number to
thesimplethings@iceberg press.co.uk, marked Gift Tag Competition, or post it to The Simple Things, Iceberg Press, Exchange Workspace, 1 Matthews Yard, Off Surrey Street, Croydon, CR0 1UH. You have until 23 October. Good luck!

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

More projects for a rainy afternoon…

Featured
TEA COSY JUMPER.jpg
Jan 25, 2025
How to | Make a Tea Cosy from an Old Jumper
Jan 25, 2025
Jan 25, 2025
Chalkboard tray.jpg
Jun 23, 2024
Make | A Chalk Board Serving Tray
Jun 23, 2024
Jun 23, 2024
AdobeStock_276831672_Preview.jpg
Oct 23, 2023
Project | Make Seed Bombs
Oct 23, 2023
Oct 23, 2023

More from our September issue…

Featured
Pumpkin Beer Keg Jonathan Cherry.jpg
Oct 31, 2023
Make | a pumpkin beer keg
Oct 31, 2023
Oct 31, 2023
Back cover cartoon.jpg
Oct 22, 2019
October | a final thought
Oct 22, 2019
Oct 22, 2019
Spooky Stories Alamy.jpg
Oct 19, 2019
Build your own spooky story
Oct 19, 2019
Oct 19, 2019
In Competition Tags issue 88, competition, October
Comment
Photography: Jonathan Cherry. Recipe: Bex Long. Styling: Gemma Cherry

Photography: Jonathan Cherry. Recipe: Bex Long. Styling: Gemma Cherry

Recipe | Ginger snaps

Iona Bower September 19, 2019

Crunchy, spicy biscuits ideal for eating with pumpkin ice cream

Our October issue has a very special ‘gathering’ feature with recipes for a pumpkin party. It’s got everything from autumnal salads to a fabulously moreish sausage roll and even a pumpkin beer keg. But we have made a date to create the pumpkin ice cream sandwiches pictured above - sweet pumpkin ice cream squidged between ginger snaps and rolled in pistachios. Who says ice cream is for summer?

You can make them using any shop-bought ginger snaps but if you fancy going the whole hog, you can make the ginger snaps using the recipe below.

Ginger snaps

Makes 24

225g plain flour

1 tsp baking powder

1 tsp bicarbonate of soda

1 tbsp ground ginger

Pinch of salt

120g unsalted butter

120g caster sugar

5 tbsp (75g) golden syrup

1 Preheat oven to 180C/Fan 160C/Gas 4. Line 2 baking trays with greaseproof

paper.

2 Sift the flour, baking powder, bicarbonate of soda, ginger and salt into a large

bowl. Cut the butter into cubes and rub into the flour until the mixture

resembles fine breadcrumbs.

3 Stir in the sugar. Add the golden syrup and mix together well. Bring it all

together with your hands to make a smooth ball of dough.

4 Break off small walnut-sized pieces, roll into balls and place on the lined

baking trays. Allow space between each ball as they will spread during cooking.

5 Bake for 10-15 mins until the ginger snaps have spread and turned golden

brown.

6 Leave to cool for 5 mins on the baking trays before using a spatula to

carefully move them to wire racks to cool completely.


Don’t forget to buy the October ‘create’ issue for the rest of the recipes for our pumpkin party.

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe


More biscuit inspiration…

Featured
Shortbread.jpg
Nov 11, 2023
Recipe | Chai Spiced Shortbread
Nov 11, 2023
Nov 11, 2023
jammie dodgers Louise Gorrod.jpg
Nov 6, 2021
Recipe | Homemade Jammie Dodgers
Nov 6, 2021
Nov 6, 2021
Feb 13, 2021
Recipe: Peanut butter jammie dodgers
Feb 13, 2021
Feb 13, 2021

More from our September issue…

Featured
Pumpkin Beer Keg Jonathan Cherry.jpg
Oct 31, 2023
Make | a pumpkin beer keg
Oct 31, 2023
Oct 31, 2023
Back cover cartoon.jpg
Oct 22, 2019
October | a final thought
Oct 22, 2019
Oct 22, 2019
Spooky Stories Alamy.jpg
Oct 19, 2019
Build your own spooky story
Oct 19, 2019
Oct 19, 2019


In Eating Tags issue 88, October, baking, biscuits, halloween, pumpkin, ice cream
Comment
pumpkin.png

How to make a pumpkin bird feeder

lsykes October 31, 2014

Don't ditch the Halloween pumpkin just yet... Give it a new lease of life in the garden as a pumpkin bird feeder. Pumpkins spend all summer ballooning into huge, majestic,super-squash, then come autumn, most are either made into soup or carved into a lantern at Hallowe’en. These heavyweights of the fruit world – they often reach 35kg – have a rigid shell that’s great for hacking into. This year, why not carve out a new purpose for your pumpkin, as a bird feeder?

Here’s how:

1. Cut a 2kg pumpkin in half across its equator, scoop out the seeds but leave behind a wall of pumpkin flesh, around 2cm thick.

2. Cut a 1.5cm deep groove in the rim, then push the pumpkin seeds into the rim, making an attractive and edible border.

3. Create perches for robins, blackbirds and sparrows, which like to sit and eat, rather than hang, off a feeder. Poke holes into the pumpkin skin using a skewer or sharp knife and push twigs and sticks into them for perches.

4. Knot two lengths of twine or string together in the centre, then tack the knot of both lengths to the bottom of the pumpkin feeder, using a drawing pin. This creates a hanging basket effect.

5. Fill with seed and watch your birdie friends tuck in.

Want more Halloween reads? Take our Wicca quiz and find out which witch you are, or preserve your pumpkins with pride.

 

In Making, Nesting Tags autumn, birdwatching, garden, halloween, issue 28, October, pumpkin
1 Comment
new-boots.png

Passing on traditions: New boots

lsykes October 23, 2014

So shiny, not a mark on them. And all that leather, suede or, for the extrovert, patent. Your little bitty strappy sandals are all very well but with a pair of boots there’s far more shoe to show-off and tell. New boots are reassuringly expensive. Guilt-free, too: Fashion maths dictates that boots x per wear = good value. Is it the knowledge you’ll soon be in so-cosy woolly tights again or the fact that you can wear them every day till March that sends us skipping to the shops? Ooh, and that big box to take them home in. Nice.

Shallow, us? This is a seasonal ritual to be undertaken alongside harvest festivals and leaf kicking – maybe not in your splendid new boots though.

 

Our favourite winter boots, clockwise from top left:

1. UGG Kensington 1969 boots, £120, John Lewis

2. Horrigan boots, £150, Hudson

3. Nautical knee boots, £98, Office

4. Chelsea boots, £120, Timberland

5. Peu boots, £155, Camper

6. Grace ii boots, £90, Red or Dead

 

In Living Tags autumn, boots, fashion, issue 28, October, passing on traditions
Comment
cake-in-the-house.png

Cake in the house: Sticky toffee loaf

lsykes October 19, 2014

Gooey, gingery and cockle-warming, this sticky toffee loaf is comfort on a plate.

Sticky toffee ginger loaf

Serves 6–8

200g pitted dates, halved 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda 75g unsalted butter, softened 115g soft brown sugar 2 tsp ground ginger 3 eggs 80g (about 4 balls) stem ginger, finely chopped 225g self-raising flour, sifted

For the caramel glaze: 110g caster sugar 40g butter 225ml single cream

1. Line a 900g loaf tin with baking parchment and grease it. Preheat oven to 180C/Fan 160C/350F.

2. Put dates and bicarbonate of soda in a large mixing bowl, cover with 330ml boiling water, stir and set aside for at least 20 mins.

3. In a separate bowl, beat the butter and sugar until thick and pale. Add the ground ginger, then the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition.

4. Stir in the soaked date mixture, the stem ginger and flour and mix until well combined – the mixture should be quite loose. Pour the batter into the prepared tin and bake in the oven for 50-60 mins until a skewer comes out clean.

5. Remove from the oven and let the cake cool in the tin for 10 mins, then turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely.

6. To make the glaze, choose a pan large enough to ensure the sugar is no more than 2mm thick over the base, otherwise the heat won’t distribute evenly through the sugar. Set the pan over a gentle heat and add the sugar and 1 tsp water. Shake the pan rather than stir it with a spoon to avoid the sugar hardening before it liquifies – this will take around 15 mins and you want a deep, golden caramel. Remove from the heat and whisk in the butter until melted and well combined.

7. Heat cream in a separate pan over a gentle heat, then whisk it into the caramel until smooth and glossy. Set aside to cool and firm up slightly so that it has a good spreading consistency. Spread over the cooled cake and serve.

Recipe taken from Café Kitchen by Shelagh Ryan (Ryland Peters & Small, £17)

In Eating Tags autumn, cake, cake in the house, October, autumn recipes
Comment
hot-choc.png

Recipe: Tangerine and nutmeg hot chocolate

lsykes October 15, 2014

There is a spectrum of hot chocolates. At one end, the instant and saccharine; at the other, chunks of the real deal – melted and laced. This warming number sits at the luxurious end, with hints of citrus and aromatic nutmeg lifting it onto an altogether cosy, autumnal plane.

Tangerine and nutmeg hot chocolate

Makes one small cup 20g plain chocolate (at least 70% cocoa) 1 piece dried tangerine or orange peel 100ml cold water 1–2 tsp icing sugar, according to taste and quality of chocolate

To serve: 1–2 tsp double cream Extra nutmeg

You will need: Nutmeg grater Small skewer or cocktail stick

1. Put the chocolate and tangerine peel in a non-stick pan. Add the water and gently bring to simmering point on a low heat, stirring to melt the chocolate. 2. Add sugar to taste, simmer and stir for 5–10 mins until the mixture just begins to thicken. 3. Remove the peel and pour into a small cup or tea bowl and float cream on the top, swirling or marbling using a cocktail stick or small skewer. Serve sprinkled with a grating of nutmeg.

Tip: For a comforting bedtime treat, add 100ml milk to the pan and, once the chocolate has thickened and heated through, pour into a mug to take to bed.

Variation: Try adding a 1cm piece of vanilla pod and a pinch of ground cinnamon or chilli in place of the tangerine and nutmeg.

Hot chocolate recipe from Artisan Drinks by Lindy Wildsmith (Jacqui Small, £25)

In Eating Tags autumn, hot chocolate, October, october issue, recipe
Comment
DSC9403.jpg

156th Mendip Ploughing Match

lsykes October 11, 2014

The 156th Mendip Ploughing Match was held on Yeo Valley’s Priddy Hill Farm earlier this month. A celebration of the local community, the soil, and of the heritage of the countryside, the Match also forms a stage in the progress of the Mendip champion to the National Ploughing Championships.

Mendip Ploughing Match

Featuring ploughing by hand, by horse, by tractor and even by steam engine, the art of ploughing through the ages is represented. Many of these forms of ploughing are unsustainable in modern agriculture so matches such as this enable people to come together and keep the skills alive. The love for these old machines - the tiny horticultural ploughs, a vintage Massey Ferguson that is over 50 years old - and the skill of those who maintain them is apparent all around. Vintage tractor entries made up the majority of competitors.

Mendip Ploughing Match

Yeo Valley Farm Manager, Jon Wilson, judged the grain and fodder classes, in which the best bale of hay, or 20lb bushel of oats is awarded a prize. There is even a class for the best piece of turf, and the heaviest pumpkin!

Mendip Ploughing Match

The atmosphere is that of a village fete. Mary Mead,  founder of Yeo Valley, is one of the vice presidents of the society and a number of staff participated. Some ploughed, some judged, and some just turned up for the fun.

Mendip Ploughing Match

Want more? Watch the film of the 2012 Mendip Ploughing Match.

In Escaping Tags autumn, country, mendip ploughing match, October, traditions, yeo valley
Comment
want-knead-love.png

Want, knead, love: Real, down-to-earth bread baking

lsykes October 8, 2014

There's something about bread that is so fundamental, so magical, so right. Our passionate baker boy, Alex Gooch, is here to pass on his bread baking knowhow.

Meet Alex Gooch, our new baker boy, in the first of his new series about baking bread.

“Good bread takes patience, passion and instinct. Making it brings you into the moment completely. It stimulates all of the senses, whether it be the feel of the dough, the sweet smell of the baking bread, or the crackle as you squeeze a ciabatta. “When I was growing up, my brothers and I ate toast, toast and more toast! And that was about as close to bread as I got until I started as a kitchen porter when I was doing my A levels. “I loved the camaraderie of the kitchen and felt at home there. They offered to train me, so I ditched the idea of college and settled into the chef’s life of long hours and a surrogate family of fellow foodies. “I liked baking bread and worked at a few Italians where I mastered focaccia pretty well and at hotels I made plenty of pastry and croissants. But it was while at Penrhos Court in Herefordshire that I started experimenting, encouraged by chef Daphne lambert (who I named my first sourdough starter after). In 2007 she let me take over one of the kitchens at night and this was my first bakery. I began selling bread and jams at farmers’ markets and food festivals, then the following year I opened my bakery called Alex Gooch Artisan Baker in Hay-on-Wye. “There are so many possibilities with bread: rye sourdough, mixed grain, ciabatta, brioche but one of the things that keeps me excited and inspired is following the seasons, and letting them dictate the bread I make. It turns out that pink fir apple potatoes make the most scrumptious potato and onion bread, and the magical cep makes a mind-blowing garlic and cep foccacia with herb oil. “Baking is a hard job – pulling all-nighters and the need to step up a gear when things are busy. But baking at home is different: one of the reasons I think it is now so popular is because the results are so rewarding. The process is so enjoyable, too. It is very natural; you can listen to the radio or chill out for a while – bread is at its best when it is left to rest a lot.”

 

Turn to page 49 of October's The Simple Things for Alex's seasonal bread bakes, including Black garlic flatbread with sesame, nigella and a kale, miso dressing; Roast pumpkin and apple rolls; and Plum and ginger bread with a cider and honey glaze.

Buy or download your copy now.

Alex Gooch supplies restaurants, hotels, delis, functions and events and sells at markets in different towns four days a week. He also runs bread-making courses: www.alexgoochbaker.com. Tweet Alex @alexgoochbaker to let him know how your bread bakes.

In Eating Tags autumn, bake, baking, bread, issue 28, October, recipes
Comment
tumblr_lrw0m5r5yG1qkqpmjo1_500.jpg

Go meteor-spotting this month

lsykes October 6, 2014

Head outside and enjoy the show! Find out how to spot meteors with our guide.

The annual Draconids and Orionids meteor showers come to town this month. Here's what to expect...

Draconids

Around ten meteors an hour, but some years feature meteor storms with hundreds an hour.

When: peaking in the early evening on 7 and 8 October - no need to stay up late to spot them!

Orinids

Around 15 meteors an hour, produced by the debris stream from Halley's Comet, with occasional bright fireballs.

When: 20 and 21 October.

 

Astronomical glossary

Asteroid: rocky, smaller than a planet and very old; often left over from the formation of the Solar System.

Meteor: an asteroid that burns and vaporises as it enters the earth's atmosphere; AKA a shooting star.

Meteorite: any meteor that survives the plunge through the atmosphere and lands on the surface of the Earth.

Comet: a relatively small odd that orbits the Sun, displaying a fuzzy outline and sometimes a tail.

 

The Simple Things guide to meteor-spotting is part of October's Miscellany: a curious combination of the practical and the playful. Turn to page 123 of The Simple Things for more. Buy or download your copy now.

And look out for November's The Simple Things - stargazing and a trip to the moon and stars!

 

Image: The radiant meteor storm of 9 October 1933, Larousse Encyclopedia of Astronomy, found on Pinterest.

 

In Escaping Tags issue 28, meteor, October, stargazing
Comment
  • Blog
  • Older
  • Newer
Featured
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well
Feb 27, 2025
Feb 27, 2025

Buy, download or subscribe

See the sample of our latest issue here

Buy a copy of our latest anthology: A Year of Celebrations

Buy a copy of Flourish 2, our wellbeing bookazine

Listen to our podcast - Small Ways to Live Well

Feb 27, 2025
Join our Newsletter
Name
Email *

We respect your privacy and won't share your data.

email marketing by activecampaign
facebook-unauth twitter pinterest spotify instagram
  • Subscriber Login
  • Stockists
  • Advertise
  • Contact

The Simple Things is published by Iceberg Press

The Simple Things

Taking time to live well

We celebrate slowing down, enjoying what you have, making the most of where you live, enjoying the company of of friends and family, and feeding them well. We like to grow some of our own vegetables, visit local markets, rummage for vintage finds, and decorate our home with the plunder. We love being outdoors and enjoy the satisfaction that comes with a job well done.

facebook-unauth twitter pinterest spotify instagram