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Recipe | nettle soda bread

Lottie Storey March 11, 2020

Now’s the time to gather treasures from the hedgerows. And then head home and into the kitchen to make this nettle soda bread.

Nettle Soda Bread

Good handful of young nettle leaves and/or wild garlic
½ pint buttermilk
6oz self raising flour (wholemeal or brown)
3oz plain flour
3oz seed & grain bread flour
½ tsp salt
½ tsp bicarbonate of soda

Gather your nettle tips (with gloves on) before they flower. Strip off the stems until you have enough for one large handful of leaves.

Heat oven to 200C/Fan 180/400F

In a blender or large jug, add leaves and buttermilk. Blend until smooth.

Put flour, salt and soda into a mixing bowl. Form a well in the middle and pour in the nettle buttermilk. Quickly mix together with a fork until a soft dough is formed.

Turn out mixture onto a floured surface, lightly need for 2 minutes then form into a round shape.

Put on a floured baking tray. Flatten the top of the dough and score the top in a cross.

Cook for 30 minutes until the dough sounds hollow. Leave to cool on a wire rack.

 

N.B. You can substitute nettles for ramsons or crow garlic. For a seed top, before baking rub a little buttermilk over the top and add some sedge seeds (found in autumn) or sunflower seeds also work nicely.

 In this month’s Blossom issue, we have a beautiful feature we think you’ll love by Lia Leendertz, in which she looks at cooking and enjoying some of the season’s bounty. Nature’s Table is the first in a new series. Do tell us what you think! This soda bread recipe with photography by Kirstie Young, was first published in our March 2016 issue but it tastes just as good (if not better) four years on.

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From our March issue…

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In Eating Tags issue 46, april, foraging, nettle, bread, baking
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Give it a grow: Spring onions

Lottie Storey April 27, 2016


WHY GROW THEM? 

Easy and fast- growing, spring onions are also very versatile. They make a great addition to the veg patch, work well squeezed in between ornamental plants in a herbaceous border and are very happy in containers. Just make sure they have some sunshine and are in well-drained soil. 

WHEN TO SOW? 

If you want to be able to enjoy fresh spring onions over the summer, start them off in April and sow every three weeks. There’s no need to start seeds off in small pots, pop them in a prepared channel about 2cm deep – you can make this with the edge of your trowel. It’s important to rake the soil first, removing any weeds, so that it’s a fine, crumbly texture and the seeds can settle into the soil rather than falling in between large lumps.

WHEN TO HARVEST? 

Ready in just eight weeks. You’ll get small, but deliciously sweet, crops if you sow in July. Sow in August and September to overwinter for early spring pickings.

WHICH ONE? 

‘White Lisbon’ is a crisp, tasty traditional variety but for something a bit different, Sarah Raven recommends ‘North Holland Blood Red’ for its flavour, looks and excellent value for money,as it will bulk up to the size of a red onion if left in the ground.

 

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From the April issue

Gardening posts

Herb posts

 

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View the sampler here

In Growing Tags issue 46, april, growing, gardening, spring onions, give it a grow
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The Domestic Alchemist: Homemade Hayfever Mead

Lottie Storey April 25, 2016


Clear the sinuses with this natural hayfever repellent

MAKES 575ml
KEEPS more than a year 

INGREDIENTS
1 handful of elderflowers
1 handful of thyme, leaves and flowers
1 handful of eyebright, leaves and flowers
1 handful of plantain leaves
1 handful of chamomile flowers
1 handful of nettle tops
600ml mead

METHOD
1 Gather the herbs, if using fresh.
2 Remove from stems, then cut up or shred.
3 Mix the herbs together and make a tincture using the mead.
4 If already suffering from hayfever, take 1–2 tsp three times daily. To prevent onset, try 1⁄2-1 tsp. Children can take 10–20 drops three times daily.

Adapted from The Domestic Alchemist: 501 Herbal Recipes for Home, Health and Happiness by Pip Waller (Leaping Hare Press)

Read more:

From the April issue

More home remedies

How to make herbs last

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In Miscellany Tags issue 46, april, home remedies, hayfever, mead, spring, the domestic alchemist
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Image: Cox and Cox

Image: Cox and Cox

Home: Make the most of your shower

Lottie Storey April 18, 2016

This month, in our series on what really goes on in a home, Clare Gogerty considers bathing and the pleasures of keeping clean.

Turn to page 116 of April's The Simple Things for the full feature.

Make the most of your shower

The mere experience of standing beneath a steady stream of falling warm water is pretty joyful and can be enough to revive and soothe. Especially if you sing while you’re about it. But there are a couple of things you can do to make the most of your shower time, so that you emerge ever more squeaky clean and sprightly.

❊ Keep the temperature moderate. It is tempting to crank it up and watch your skin turn rosy, but too-hot water dries out the skin. Somewhere between 95F and 100F is about right.

❊ Hang a bunch of fresh eucalyptus near the shower. It will release essential oils as the bathroom steams up. Eucalyptus is a good cleanser, helps fight bacteria and smells lovely.

❊ Apply conditioner to damp hair and then put on a shower cap. Continue to wash as the conditioner works its miracles. Then rinse it off.

❊ Avoid shower curtains if at all possible, as they have a propensity to get mouldy and cling creepily to your skin. If you can’t avoid one, wash it regularly with a couple of old hand towels and half a cup of white vinegar to prevent mildew. 

For more on bathing traditions, our pick of the best bathroom cabinets, towels 101, a word on flannels, the definitive answer on why your skin wrinkles, plus eight extra somethings for the smallest room, turn to page 116 of April's The Simple Things.

Read more:

From the April issue

Home truths

Home and interiors posts

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In Nest Tags issue 46, april, home truths, bathroom, home, interiors
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Rhubarb tart recipe: Lia LeendertzPhotography: Kirstie Young

Rhubarb tart recipe: Lia Leendertz
Photography: Kirstie Young

Recipe: Rhubarb and rosewater tart with cardamom and honey cream

Lottie Storey April 14, 2016

A delicious frangipane that balances sweet and sharp flavours, this rhubarb and rosewater tart is the triumphant finale to our supper club menu on page 24 of April’s The Simple Things. 

Rhubarb and rosewater tart with cardamom and honey cream

Serves 10
For the pastry
225g plain flour
100g chilled, salted butter, cubed
50g caster sugar
1 large egg
1⁄4 tsp rosewater
2 tbsp chilled water

For the filling
175g butter
175g caster sugar
4 large eggs
175g ground almonds
1 tsp almond extract
1⁄4 tsp rosewater
110g rhubarb cut into 2-inch pieces
2 tbsp slivered almonds

1 To make the pastry, put the flour and butter into a food processor and pulse until it resembles breadcrumbs. Add the sugar and whizz again, then add the egg, rosewater and water and pulse until the mixture starts to come together a little. Tip it into a large bowl and bring together with your hands, kneading briefly until it is a soft ball. Slightly flatten it with one hand, wrap in cling film, and chill for 30 minutes.
2 Roll the pastry out on a floured surface and use it to carefully line a 28cm loose-bottomed flan tin, pushing it gently into all of the corners but leaving the extra hanging over the edge. Prick the base all over using a fork and then chill again for ten minutes.
3 Preheat oven to 190C/Fan 170/375F and place a flat baking tray on the oven’s middle shelf. Take a large piece of kitchen foil, scrunch it up to soften it, then spread it out and use it to cover the pastry. Tip in baking beads to cover the surface well (use rice if you don’t have beads), then place this carefully onto the heated tray and cook for 15 minutes. Remove foil and beads and bake for a further 10 minutes. Remove from the oven and carefully trim off the excess pastry, using a serrated knife drawn in small movements horizontally across the edges.
4 Make the filling by blending the butter and sugar in a food processor or with a handheld electric whisk (or even a wooden spoon and elbow grease) until fluffy. Add the eggs, ground almonds, almond extract and rosewater and blend again. Tip into the pastry base and scatter over the rhubarb pieces and the almonds. Bake for 30-40 minutes, or until the filling is set. Remove from the oven and leave to cool.


This fragrant rhubarb and rosewater tart combines with a punchy cream and sweet syrup to make a memorable finale

Rhubarb syrup
250g rhubarb
300ml water
sugar

1 Chop the rhubarb into 2-inch pieces and put it into a small saucepan with the water. Bring to the boil and simmer for 20 minutes or until the colour has leached out of the rhubarb, staining the water pink.
2 Strain the liquid into a measuring jug and discard the fruit pieces. Note the level of the liquid and then pour it back into the (washed) saucepan, and wash and dry the measuring jug before measuring out double the volume of sugar.
3 Tip this into the rhubarb liquid and heat slowly, stirring occasionally, until the sugar is dissolved. Then simmer gently for about 10 minutes until the syrup starts to thicken. Remove from the heat and allow to cool.

Honey and cardamom cream
6 cardamom pods
300ml crème fraîche
1 tbsp runny honey

With a pestle and mortar, lightly bash at the cardamom pods to release the seeds, fish out the seed cases, and grind the seeds to a fine powder. Put the crème fraîche, honey and cardamom into a bowl and mix well.


Come to The Simple Things Supper Club!

Want to see how it’s done, or just enjoy an evening out with other readers and The Simple Things team? We are co-hosting events in Dorset, Brighton, London and Manchester in May #supperclubsaturday, thanks to support from Neptune. Book now.
British brand, Neptune, is renowned for its hand-crafted furniture, gorgeous textiles and home accessories. They curate the finest designs for every room of the home, indoors and out. 

Want to run your own supper club?

Download our free supper club stationery. There are three designs to choose from, including menus, invitations, place cards and a donations envelope.


Read more:

From the April issue

Rhubarb recipes

Gathering menus

 

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View the sampler here

In Eating, Gathering Tags rhubarb, supper club, gathering, issue 46, april, dessert, pudding
2 Comments

Cake recipe: Cardamom banana bread

Lottie Storey April 13, 2016

A twist on a baking classic, this moist and moreish banana cake contains cardamom, which enhances the fruit’s subtle sweetness

CARDAMOM BANANA CAKE
Serves 8

170g softened butter, plus extra for greasing
5 cardamom pods
4 ripe bananas, mashed
170g caster sugar
3 eggs
115g chopped walnuts
350g plain flour
1⁄4 tsp bicarbonate of soda
23⁄4 tsp baking powder
1⁄2 tsp salt
icing sugar to serve (optional)

1 Preheat the oven to 180C/Fan 160/350F and grease a nonstick 25cm square cake tin.
2 Crush the cardamom pods, removing the seeds and discarding the pods. Crush the seeds to release their flavour, add them to the mashed bananas, and set aside.
3 Combine the butter and sugar in a large bowl and beat with an electric handheld mixer until pale and creamy. Add the eggs, one at a time, and continue to beat.
4 Next, add the chopped walnuts and mashed banana and fold in. Sift the flour, bicarbonate of soda, baking powder and salt over the mixture and gently fold all the ingredients together.
5 Spoon the batter into the buttered cake tin and use the back of a spoon to smooth the surface evenly. Bake for 35-40 minutes, or until a skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean. Cool in the pan for 10 minutes then turn out and let cool completely on a wire rack. Dust with icing sugar.

Recipe from The Middle Eastern Vegetarian Cookbook by Salma Hage (Phaidon). Photography by Liz and Max Haarala Hamilton


Read more:

From the April issue

Cake recipes

Middle Eastern recipes

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

View the sampler here

In Eating Tags cake, cake in the house, recipe, issue 46, april, banana bread, brunch recipe
3 Comments

Make your own bath bombs

Lottie Storey April 11, 2016

These bath bombs are fun to make and the reward for your efforts is a long soak in a heavenly scented bath. Kids love them and if you can bear to give them away, they make great gifts.

For about eight bombs you will need:

440g baking soda (bicarbonate of soda) 
180g cornstarch (cornflour)
220g citric acid
110g Epsom salts
2 to 4 tbsp water
food colouring (optional)
20 drops essential oil* (optional)
a stiff plastic or metal mould, like a muffin tin

1 In a large bowl, mix together the dry ingredients. In a small bowl, mix 2 tbsp of the water with the food colouring and essential oils.
2 Stirring the dry mixture constantly with a whisk, drizzle in the wet mixture a drop at a time until it just holds together if you squeeze a bit in one hand. If it doesn’t hold at all, drizzle more drops of water, one or two at a time. If you start to see fizzing, that means there is too much water in one area and you should stir that area quickly to distribute the moisture. Be warned it doesn’t take much water so keep stirring and go slow.
3 Pack the mixture into moulds tightly, then smooth the surface of each bomb. Carefully unmould them onto a flat, dry surface. If any break during unmolding, just scoop up the crumbs and repack them in the mould. Let the bath bombs dry for about 24 hours, until fully dry. They should keep for up to six months.
4 Fill a tub with hot water and drop in 1 or 2 bath bombs. Relax... 

From The Hands-On Home by Erica Strauss (Sasquatch Books).
Photography by Charity Burrgraaf.

* Try matching the colour and fragrance, eg purple with lavender essential oil and a pale yellow-green with lemongrass.

 

Read more:

From the April issue

Homemade salt scrubs

Homemade reed diffuser

 

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In Making Tags homemade, home remedies, issue 46, april, bath, school holiday ideas
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Supper club sponsored post: Making food and creating mood

Lottie Storey April 6, 2016

Supper clubs aren't all about the food, they're about the loveliest company and beautiful surroundings. Enter Neptune.  Perhaps most well known for their envy-inducing kitchens, Neptune is a go-to destination for hand-crafted furniture, textiles and accessories for both home and garden. Every one of their designs was made to work together with ease, promising instant elegance in every setting. So it’s only fitting that they are supporting The Simple Things Supper Clubs, to help you host an event to remember. Download our free stationery designs – menu cards, invitations, place cards and donation envelopes. 

From finding the right table linen to gleaming glasses and relaxed serveware, take a peek at the Neptune tabletop collection. Plus, garner style ideas from Neptune as they share their tips and tricks to effortless entertaining on their blog. 

In Sponsored post Tags sponsored, supper club, issue 46, april, neptune
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Escape: Caravan of love

Lottie Storey April 4, 2016

See, do, stay, love the UK. This month: slow living in a showman's wagon in Scotland. Words and photography by Sarah-Lou Francis.

Pilot-Panther-SarahLouFrancis1-Detail-Bed.png Pilot-Panther-SarahLouFrancis11-View-from-Walk.png Pilot-Panther-SarahLouFrancis2-Kitchen-Detail.png Pilot-Panther-SarahLouFrancis9-Highland-Cow.png Pilot-Panther-SarahLouFrancis-View.png

Our new series comes from online UK travel guide This is Your Kingdom, whose handpicked contributors explore favourite places, special finds and great goings on.

You can read about one we love each month in The Simple Things - turn to page 74 of the April issue for more of this Scottish showman's wagon adventure - and plenty of others at thisisyourkingdom.co.uk.

Sarah-Lou Francis is a contributor to thisisyourkingdom.co.uk. She is a lifestyle and portrait visual storyteller, blogs at lapinblu.com and shares stories from and behind the blog on Instagram as @lapinblu. 

 

 

 

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From the April issue

Escape posts

Spring posts

In Escape Tags issue 46, april, this is your kingdom, scotland, slow living, slow holidays
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Wisdom: April cover reveal

Lottie Storey March 30, 2016

Let rain never stop play – put on some mood music, pack a nice lunchbox and head outdoors. Go on, have a poke around a park, garden or hedgerow. Get your hands dirty and find good things to nibble. When you come home to a hot bath and banana bread, you’ll enjoy it all the more. Pop on a jumpsuit, browse your bookshelf and learn something new. Take time to find some headspace or stretch your limbs. It’s spring and all’s well. Feeling better now? That’s The Simple Things for you.

View the sampler here

In Magazine Tags issue 46, april, cover reveal
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Recipe: Muhammara and an easy flatbread recipe

Lottie Storey March 22, 2016

Want to be wiser? Eating a handful of walnuts a day can improve your memory, concentration and cognitive function, according to a recent study. Swap hummus or baba ganoush for this walnut pepper dip and, as well as treating your tastebuds, you’ll be recharging your brainpower.
Turn to page 128 of April's The Simple Things for a Muhammara recipe.

Want to make your own flatbread? We're trying Nigel Slater's recipe, as it reignited his passion for pita. Try it here.

 

Read more:

From the April issue

Middle Eastern recipes

Bread recipes

 

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View the sampler here

 

In Miscellany, Eating Tags issue 46, april, bread, baking, middle eastern
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Listen: Rainy day playlist

Lottie Storey March 22, 2016

This playlist from our April 2016 issue is music to accompany puddle-splashing and shower-dodging. Plus, some cheery tunes for sunny intervals and bright sunshine days. 

Listen now

 

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In Think Tags spotify, issue 46, april, music, playlist
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Image: Lottie Storey/Oyster and Pearl

Image: Lottie Storey/Oyster and Pearl

Competition: Win a year of books from The Folio Society (closed 13 May 2016)

Lottie Storey March 21, 2016

We’ve teamed up with The Folio Society, publishers of illustrated editions of the world’s greatest literature, to offer one reader a book of their choice* every month for a year. To enter, tweet, instagram or upload a pic of your bookshelf and give us your details below.

The Folio Society publishes an extensive range of fiction and non-fiction, so the only problem the winner will face will be which of the titles to choose each month. Selected from the best-loved books in literature, each Folio edition is produced with careful attention to detail and high production values. 

Enter now

 

* The winner will receive a single Folio book each month, worth up to the value of £50. Closing date: 13 May 2016. UK residents only. For full terms and conditions, see icebergpress.co.uk/comprules

Visit foliosociety.com to find out more and browse its titles. 

Read more:

From the April issue

More competitions

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In Competition Tags competition, issue 46, april, books
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Competition: Win a custom deluxe bedding set from The Wool Room (closed 16 May 2016)

Lottie Storey March 21, 2016

THE WOOL ROOM IS GIVING AWAY THREE LUXURY SETS OF DUVET, PILLOWS AND MATTRESS PROTECTOR, FOR A WARM, COSY, HEALTHIER SNOOZE

You’ll never need to count sheep again when you can drift off in your own wool cocoon. The Wool Room, the UK’s leading provider of British wool beds and bedding, is offering readers the chance to win one of three sets of wool duvet, mattress protector and pillows, worth almost £500 each.

Wool does so much more than keep you warm – this amazing natural fibre guarantees a better night’s sleep than with synthetic bedding as it regulates moisture levels, heat and humidity as we sleep.

The Wool Room has also developed its wool bedding to make it machine washable, so you can have both luxury and practicality.

The Wool Room’s bedding is approved by Allergy UK as being effective at eliminating house dust mites and other allergens, making it a great choice for asthma and eczema sufferers. It’s also much more breathable than other natural fibres.

Cocooning yourself with a wool duvet, mattress protector and pillow, then adding a wool mattress or bed for ultimate cosiness, makes for the most comfortable night’s sleep, according to The Wool Room. So confident are they you’ll love it, there’s even a free no-quibble 30-day sleep guarantee for any bedding set bought. 

Launch me!

Each Custom Deluxe Bedding Set includes a duvet, mattress protector and pillows in the weight/size of your choice.

For more about wool bedding, visit thewoolroom.com.

Closing date 16 May. For full T&Cs, see icebergpress.co.uk/comprules. 

 

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From the April issue

More competitions

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In Competition Tags competition, issue 46, april
77 Comments
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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.

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