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Sponsored post: Story Horse

Lottie Storey December 23, 2015

Story Horse offer a collection of toiletries, luggage, knitwear, jewellery and outdoor accessories at affordable prices that are a bit different from what’s on the high street.

After recently launching its new collection aptly themed ‘Chilly days out and Cosy nights in’, the new collection is bursting with autumnal shades in abundance. From mustards and greens to blues and rich purples, creating a lasting, visual impression which is key for Story Horse this season.  The collection also uses a range of durable materials like cotton and polyester for luggage and a wool acrylic mix for knitwear.

The latest collection from the Story Horse brand marks a new direction, which will continue to evolve from season to season; aiming to create practical yet visually appealing lines which are a testament for real and style conscious women all over the world.

In Sponsored post Tags sponsored post, story horse
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Escape: January cover reveal

Lottie Storey December 23, 2015

If ever there was a time for comfortable pleasures, it’s the new year. See old friends for tea, share plates of hearty food and afterwards, make plans. There are new neighbourhoods to explore and a project to throw yourself into. Need to escape the dark days? Seek out snow, hold a fondue or find sunshine in a fiery salad if the southern summer is too far away. Lose yourself in a play or poem and, if it all gets too much, sit down to supper on the sofa. The Simple Things will see you through. 

January's The Simple Things is out today - buy, download or subscribe now.

In Magazine Tags cover reveal, issue 43, january
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Recipe: Christmas Breakfast

Lottie Storey December 22, 2015

Easier and lighter than a full English, these cute bacon and egg toasts look really impressive and don’t take much effort. A good one for hungover guests

Christmas Breakfast

3 tablespoons melted unsalted butter
6 medium slices white or brown bread
6 rashers smoked streaky bacon
4 spring onions, thinly sliced
6 eggs
salt and freshly ground black pepper
6 Portobello mushrooms, grilled, to serve
vine tomatoes, roasted, to serve

1 Preheat the oven to 190C/Fan 170/375F) and grease a muffin tin with the melted butter. 
2 Flatten the slices of bread by rolling over each one a few times with a rolling pin. Use a 10cm round biscuit cutter to cut a circle out of each slice of bread. If you don’t have one, you can use a pair of kitchen scissors to cut the circle instead. 
3 Cut one of the circles in half and push one half down into a mould in the muffin tin, with the curved edge at the top, so the edges of the bread stick up out of the mould. 
4 Then push the other half in the mould so that the two halves overlap slightly and completely line the mould. If you find you have some gaps, just use some of the bread you cut off to fill them in. Brush the bread with the remaining butter. 
5 In a heavy-based frying pan, fry the bacon on one side over a medium heat for four mins. 
6 Lay a piece of bacon, cooked side down, into each muffin cup. Sprinkle some spring onion over the bacon, then crack an egg into each muffin cup. 
7 Season and bake in the oven for 20 mins. 
8 Run a small knife around the bread, which will now be toasted, and pop out each muffin from the tin. 
9 Serve immediately with a large grilled mushroom and some roasted vine tomatoes to make a complete dish. Otherwise they’re great on their own for a little ‘elevenses’.


Recipe from Breakfast Morning, Noon & Night by Fern Green (Hardie Grant)

 

Read more:

From the December issue

Christmas posts

Breakfast recipes

 

December's The Simple Things is full of festive makes and bakes, wreaths of hawthorn and bay, and twinkly lights a-plenty. Buy, download or subscribe now.

In Christmas, Eating Tags december, issue 42, christmas, breakfast recipe, festive recipes
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Make do and mend: Homemade deodorant

Lottie Storey December 16, 2015

How much more meaningful to commit to a project for a year, giving yourself time to learn and grow. It’s not about abstinence or breaking bad habits but rich new experiences and a re-shaping of your world view. It doesn’t even have to start in January...

View Jen Gale’s Ted Talk on ‘My Make Do and Mend Year’.

And try her Homemade Deodorant recipe. 

Homemade Deodorant

6-8 tablespoons of coconut oil
¼- ½  cup of bicarbonate of soda
¼ cup of cornflour
8-10 drops of essential oils of your choice (optional)

With the exception of the essential oils, all of the ingredients can be sourced from the supermarket. However, as I use bicarb for cleaning, and coconut oil for all kinds of things (moisturiser, and hair conditioner to name two!), I buy both in bulk online from a site called Summer Naturals as it works out cheaper. 

The exact ratio of ingredients will vary from person to person.

The bicarb can be quite astringent, and I find that if I use ½ cup, it can cause some redness and irritation. So it might be better to start with ¼ cup, and if don’t experience any problems, and want to ‘boost’ the anti-perspirant powers of the deodorant, then go up to ½ a cup.

My own personal version is: 8 tablespoons of coconut oil, ¼ cup bicarb, ¼ cup cornflour, and 5 drops each of lemon verbena, and tea tree essential oils.

 

Method:

1. Use a fork to mash all the ingredients together in largish bowl until well combined. (At first it looks like it will never all come together, but keep mashing and squishing the coconut oil and you will end up with a smooth paste.)
2. All you then need to do is find a suitable container to keep it in – I re-use a cleaned out body moisturiser tub, which is just about the right size.
3. To use it, scoop up a small amount on the end of your index finger, and apply! You only need the tiniest bit, and the coconut oil melts at body temperature, so it goes on really smoothly.

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Outing: Local theatre

Lottie Storey December 16, 2015

The Simple Things’ resident theatre-goer (and former actress) is art editor Cathy McKinnon. Here are her favourite theatres outside London. Matthew Austin, director of Bristol’s Mayfest contemporary theatre festival, chooses the theatre he thinks we should look out for. There’s more on local theatre in the January issue.

The Wardrobe Theatre, Bristol

Founded in 2011 by a group of young theatre-makers with a passion for live performance, The Wardrobe Theatre is now an established artist-led organisation and arts venue that has been providing Bristol with fantastic theatre, comedy and regular local nights for over four years. It pulses with energy and invention.

The Watermill Theatre, Newbury

From their home in a converted Watermill in rural West Berkshire, which seats just 220 people, they have produced award-winning work that has been recognised throughout the UK and abroad.

The Rondo Theatre, Bath

Each year over 90 different companies visit this 100-seat intimate space, bringing with them a wide variety of theatre, music and comedy performances. It also runs a youth theatre, a scriptwriters group, theatre workshops and afternoon tea concerts.

The Bike Shed Theatre, Exeter

At the end of an alley in the middle of the city of Exeter, the Bike Shed Theatre has a 60-seat subterranean auditorium and vintage cocktail tavern. Always a great evening out!

Slung Low’s The HUB, Leeds

Slung Low’s aim is to transport audiences to new places and to make them see familiar places from new perspectives. Its original adventures each have a powerful, moving story at their heart. It’s home is Holbeck Underground Ballroom (The HUB), five railway arches in south Leeds.

Tramway & Oran Mor, Glasgow

Formerly Kelvinside Parish Church, Òran Mór is Gaelic for ‘great melody of life’ or ‘big song’, is a thriving arts venue that hosts ‘A Play, A Pie and A Pint’ lunchtime theatre.

Theatre in the Mill, Bradford

A studio in Bradford situated on the University of Bradford Campus. The theatre supports innovate artists to create new work.

ARC, Stockton on Tees

With over 250 performances each year ARC is a multi platform venue in the heart of Stockton on Tees. It has a programme packed theatre, music, comedy and spoken word as well as regular film nights.

 

Theatre companies to watch

Still House

Dan Canham is making some seriously interesting work through his company Still House, including Of Riders and Running Horses that premiered at Bristol’s Mayfest theatre festival in 2015. It’s since toured the UK and will tour internationally next year. Inspiring outdoor dance work by six female dancers.

You Me Bum Bum Train

This company makes large-scale theatre for an audience of one. Each audience member is taken through a rapid fire series of rooms, including a rock concert, a press conference, a court room etc etc. Everyone’s hyping them at the moment…

Selina Thompson

Brilliant young black theatre maker, who has just toured a work called Dark and Lovely, and is currently making a new show called salt that explores the history of slavery and afro-carribean heritage.

Scottee

Amazing performance artist who makes theatre work and hosts a cabaret called CAMP, that is a blast. 

Sleepdogs

Duo that makes brilliant sound-theatre work, and are currently making a new sci-fi horror for the stage called Dark Land Light House.

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Recipe: Buddha bowls

Lottie Storey December 16, 2015

Cold January days call for a hot bowl of nourishment, something that will liven up your tastebuds and pack a punch of nutrients to help ward off all those bugs that are flying around. This curry will warm you from the inside out. 

Buddha bowls

SERVES 4

For the paste

½ teaspoon fennel seeds
½ teaspoon coriander seeds
seeds from 6 cardamom pods
½ tsp black peppercorns
½ tsp ground cloves
½ tsp ground turmeric
½ tsp ground cinnamon
½ tsp dried chilli flakes
1 thumb-size piece of fresh ginger
1 shallot
1 stalk of lemongrass
1 large bunch of fresh coriander
2 cloves garlic
coconut oil

For the curry

500g new potatoes
150g unsalted peanuts*
1 × 400g tin of coconut milk
2 tbsp tamarind paste
1 tbsp runny honey
sea salt
200g green beans, trimmed
200g firm tofu
2 slices fresh pineapple

The rest

150g brown basmati rice
coconut oil
2 medium carrots
1 lime
a squeeze of runny honey
a splash of rice wine vinegar
150g kale
50g mixed toasted seeds (I use a mixture of poppy, sesame and pumpkin)

 

1. Fill and boil a kettle and get all your ingredients and equipment together. You’ll need a small food processor or blender for the paste, a couple of large saucepans and a frying pan.

2. Keeping the skin on, chop the potatoes into 1–2cm chunks. Put them into a pan, cover with boiling water, add some salt, then bring to the boil and cook until tender – this should take about 5 mins.

3. Put the brown rice into another pan with twice its volume of cold water, some salt and a knob of coconut oil and put on a high heat to boil for 20–25 mins. Keep an eye on the rice while you do the other jobs, making sure it doesn’t boil dry.

4. Next, make the paste. Toast the fennel, coriander and cardamom seeds and the peppercorns in a dry pan for a couple of mins, then put into a food processor with all the other ground spices and the chilli flakes. Peel and roughly chop the ginger and shallot, discard the tough outer layer of the lemongrass and chop the inner stalk, then add it all to the processor. Cut the stalks off the coriander and add these with the garlic. Add a couple of tablespoons of coconut oil and blend on high until you have a paste.

5. Heat a large pan on a high heat, then add the peanuts and stir for a minute before adding the paste. Fry for a couple of mins more, then add the coconut milk, tamarind, honey and a good pinch of salt. Drain the potatoes, add them to the sauce and cook for 5–10 mins until it’s a good consistency.

6. To make the quick pickle, grate the carrots into a bowl and add the zest and juice of a lime, a squeeze of honey, a splash of vinegar and a pinch of salt. Finely chop the coriander leaves and add to the bowl, then put to one side.

7. Use the pan you toasted the spices in to pan-fry the kale on a medium heat in a little coconut oil, adding some salt and freshly ground black pepper, until wilted but starting to crisp.

8. Once the potatoes have had 5 mins in the sauce, add the green beans. Cut the tofu into 1cm lengths, then cut the pineapple into pieces about the same size, discarding the skin. Add both to the curry and simmer for a few mins, topping up with hot water if the curry is getting dry.

9. Once the rice and curry are ready, ladle the rice into bowls and top generously with the curry. Finish off with a pinch of carrot pickle, some greens and a sprinkling of seeds.

Recipe from A Modern Way to Cook by Anna Jones, photography Matt Russell (Fourth Estate).
First published in The Simple Things, January 2016 - still available on special order

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

View the sampler here.

 

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Sushi identifier

Lottie Storey December 14, 2015

Know your sashimi from your sabazushi? It’ll be all rice on the night with our handy guide 

 

Dragon roll 

A western style of sushi, so called because of its ‘scales’ of avocado topping, rather than its (mild) flavour, which is unlikely to make you breathe fire. 

 

Uramaki 

Inside-out rolls, with nori on the inside. These were supposedly devised to get Americans to eat their seaweed, making them the courgetti of their day. 

 

Sabazushi 

Traditional to Kyoto, salt-cured mackerel with pressed rice – use your knowledge of this lesser- known sushi to impress maki-guzzling friends. 

 
tuna_sashimi.png

Sashimi 

Something fishy about this item and that’s because it’s not actually sushi at all. The two are frequently mistaken, sashimi is raw fish, served without rice. 

 

Inarizushi 

Named after the Shinto god of fertility, rice, agriculture and foxes (his favourite food). No foxes are harmed in the making of these tofu pouches. 

 

Hosomaki 

Small but perfectly formed sushi rolls with nori on the outside. Originally using only one filling, this example is spruced up with caviar. 

 

 

Futomaki 

The fat boy of the sushi roll world. Big is beautiful in this case - they’re prized for their attractive combination of fillings. 

 

Gunkanmaki 

The ‘warship’ roll means you can go into battle with softer toppings, such as roe, oysters and scallops. A strip of nori puts up the defence. 

 

Nigri 

Raw fish served over a rice ball. Soy sauce etiquette agrees that only the fish side should get a dip. 

 

 

 

Find out more about sushi and see the full Sushi Rolls menu at sushirolls.co.uk/2016

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Wisdom: Allegra McEvedy

Lottie Storey December 14, 2015

Allegra McVedy talks about why the kitchen table is such a special part of home in an interview with her in January issue. Best known for her egalitarian restaurants and ‘economy gastronomy’, here she offers some thoughts on Christmas cooking and how to use those leftovers.

“I generally over-cater; I can’t help it,  I just do.” Her Christmas cooking, she cheerfully admits, is “quite trad. It’s the time of year where you do a goose and a turkey and a ham.  The ham just keeps on giving; I like to send people away with big chunks of it.”

For festive day side-dishes she usually does “a daugh of sort some – turnip, kohlarabiand mooli last year, which had a crunch to it.” She also “loves” Brussels sprouts. “I don’t know what the fuss is about; they’re just baby cabbages, delicious. I do think Ottolenghi did a great job of Brussels PR a few years ago when he said just halve and sauté them.” 

Christmas cooking, of course, results in Christmas leftovers and here Allegra, as befits the author of the Economy Gastronomy cookbook, is clear. “If you do have a turkey, then make stock with it. I think turkey makes the best stock in the world.  Use your freezer and freeze the stock. Use leftovers and stock to make pies – don’t make a curry! - and lots of soup. If you have a ham, use the ham stock to make pea and ham soup.”

Her enthusiasm is infectious and her down-to-earth approach makes total sense. “Basically, it’s a bloody big cook Christmas, so don’t waste anything that comes out of it.”

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Competition: Win a week in the Swiss Alps! (closed 31 January 2016)

Lottie Storey December 13, 2015

The prize includes seven nights’ B&B (for two people sharing a room), three dinners, British Airways or Swiss flights from London Heathrow to Zürich and connecting transfers (as detailed on The Glacier Express in Winter holiday on Inntravel’s website). 

The prize must be taken between February 2016 and March 2017 within the given season dates (excluding Bank Holidays) and subject to availability. Inntravel’s normal Booking Conditions apply. The prize winner and companion are responsible for all incidental expenses, for obtaining travel insurance and having a valid passport. The prize is non-exchangeable and not redeemable for cash or any other prize. 

Competition ends 31 January 2016

The prize includes seven nights’ B&B (for two people sharing a room), three dinners, British Airways or Swiss flights from London Heathrow to Zürich and connecting transfers (as detailed on The Glacier Express in Winter holiday on Inntravel’s website). 

The prize must be taken between February 2016 and March 2017 within the given season dates (excluding Bank Holidays) and subject to availability. Inntravel’s normal Booking Conditions apply. The prize winner and companion are responsible for all incidental expenses, for obtaining travel insurance and having a valid passport. The prize is non-exchangeable and not redeemable for cash or any other prize. 

 

In Competition Tags issue 43, january, competition
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Photography: Mowie Kay

Photography: Mowie Kay

Food from round here: Plum pudding

Lottie Storey December 11, 2015

MRS CRATCHIT set the bar rather high when she appeared from the kitchen bearing a home- made plum pudding in Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol (1843). So wondrous was the ‘speckled cannon ball’ blazing in ‘ignited brandy... with Christmas holly stuck into the top’, that Bob Cratchit regarded it as his wife’s ‘greatest success . . . since their marriage’.

It is often asserted that Dickens and his Victorian contemporaries ‘invented’ Christmas. Yet the plum pudding may have its origins in the 16th-century plum pottage, a peasants’ meat soup thickened with breadcrumbs and flavoured with spices and prunes. Mercifully, the meat has disappeared, but the spices (nutmeg, allspice, cloves, cinnamon) and plums (usually in the form of raisins – ‘plum’ was a catch-all word for dried fruits) remain.

Modern hosts hoping to elicit such ardent sighs of admiration as those enjoyed by Mrs Cratchit shouldn’t panic if they missed ‘Stir-up Sunday’ – the traditional day to make the Christmas pudding on the last Sunday before advent. This tradition has more to do with the words of a 16th-century prayer than the myth that a steamed suet pudding tastes better if you let it ‘mature’ for five weeks. Although if you’ve ever cooked a Christmas dinner, you’ll agree that advance preparation is the key to avoiding a festive meltdown.

You don’t need to stir it from east to west, either (in honour of the three wise men). But do insist, as custom dictates, that every member of the family takes their turn to stir the mixture while making a secret wish*. It will save you considerable arm ache.

TUCK IN: Jo and Richie Evans hand-make plum puddings in Devon, using local ingredients and their grandmothers’ recipes (figgys.co.uk).

* If following the tradition of dropping charms into the batter – a sixpence for riches, a ring for marriage – be sure to warn your dinner guests. 

 

Words: Rachael Oakden

 

Read more:

From the December issue

Christmas posts

Food from afar

December's The Simple Things is full of festive makes and bakes, wreaths of hawthorn and bay, and twinkly lights a-plenty. Buy, download or subscribe now.



In Christmas Tags food from afar, christmas, issue 42, december, plum pudding, tradition
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Prune and Armagnac soufflé recipe by Lizzie Kamenetzky. Photography by Nassima Rothacker

Prune and Armagnac soufflé recipe by Lizzie Kamenetzky. Photography by Nassima Rothacker

Recipe: Boozy prune souffles

Lottie Storey December 9, 2015


Delve into the soft gooey centre of these little beauties and you’ll get a hit of Christmassy flavours from the sweet prunes and Armagnac. You mustn’t fear the soufflé, they are actually far more robust than people make out. You can even take it from the oven, dig in a spoon to see if it’s ready and pop it back in if it isn’t and it will be none the worse for wear. Turn to page 126 for the recipe.

Recipe: Boozy prune soufflés

SERVES 6
200g pitted prunes
50ml Armagnac
1 tsp pure vanilla extract
1 tsp fennel seeds, wrapped in a piece of muslin and tied into a bag
20g plain flour
20g butter, plus melted butter, to brush
75g caster sugar, plus extra for dusting
200ml whole milk
2 egg yolks and 3 whites
6 small scoops vanilla ice cream
6 x 175ml ramekins

1 Put the prunes in a small pan with the Armagnac, vanilla and fennel, and heat gently until steaming. Remove from the heat and leave to stand overnight.
Discard the fennel seeds in the bag, then remove 6 prunes. Purée the other prunes with the juices in a food processor or blender until smooth. Set aside.
2 Put the flour, butter and 2 tbsp of the sugar in a bowl and rub with your fingertips to resemble breadcrumbs. Bring the milk to just below the boil then whisk in the flour and butter mixture. Cook, stirring constantly, over a low heat until you have a thick sauce. Remove from the heat and beat in the 2 egg yolks. Spoon into a bowl and set aside to cool completely, placing a layer of clingfilm on the surface to stop a skin forming.
3 Brush the ramekins with
melted butter, then dust the insides with sugar. Put on a baking sheet. Heat oven to 200C/Fan 180/400F.
4 Once cooled, fold the prune purée through the custard. Whisk the egg whites to stiff peaks, then gradually whisk in the rest of the sugar until you have a glossy meringue mixture. Mix a spoonful of this into the prune custard to loosen it, then carefully fold in the rest. Spoon into ramekins so they are just over three- quarters full. Bake for 12–15 mins until risen and firm with a slight wobble. 
5 Cut a slit in the top of each, push in a soaked prune and top with a scoop of the ice cream, then serve.


Prune and Armagnac soufflé recipe taken from Winter Cabin Cooking by Lizzie Kamenetzky. Photography by Nassima Rothacker

 

Read more:

From the December issue

Christmas posts

Dessert recipes



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Photography and project: Catherine Frawley, Styling: Michael Frawley

Photography and project: Catherine Frawley, Styling: Michael Frawley

Christmas gifts: Homemade tea bags

Lottie Storey December 8, 2015

Gather together friends for a ‘crafternoon’ of festive food while you create bespoke handmade gifts

A truly personalised gift, you can make these rustic bags with your friend’s name on and their favourite tea.

Handmade tea bags

Makes 18–24 tea bags – six per gift

unbleached cheesecloth
fabric for the label, string, twine, linen ribbon, silver ribbon
a needle and thread
loose leaf tea
small brown Kraft bags seasonal foliage
black ink stamp
alphabet stamps

1 Cut the cheesecloth into 13 x 13cm squares.
2 Cut the string (that attaches the tea bag to the tag) into 15cm lengths.
3 Cut your fabric into a long 2.5cm strip and then cut that into 6cm pieces.
4 Fold down one short end of a fabric piece with the right side of the fabric facing away from you, then place one end of the string in the centre and sew into place.
5 Fold the fabric in half so the ends meet, and sew the sides together. Repeat until your required amount of tags are done.
6 Place around 2 tbsp of tea into the centre of the cheesecloth square. Gather the corners to make a pouch.
7 Tie the string from your tag to the pouch very securely, sealing the tea within.
8 Trim the excess cheesecloth and any excess string. Repeat.
9 Add 6 tea bags to each brown bag. Fold down the top twice, make a hole centrally with a hole punch and thread through and wrap around string, twine or ribbon. Add some seasonal foliage.
10 To create the name tag, cut a strip of wide linen ribbon, use a hole punch to create a hole at the top end, and use an ink pad and stamp kit to stamp the name. Attach to your bag with the ribbon.

 

Turn to page 30 of December's The Simple Things for three more makes - Stollen muffins, Peppermint creams, and Lemon, olive oil & rosemary body scrub - plus a menu fit for a crafternoon, including Chicken & bacon pie, and Eggnog with cognac.

 

Read more:

From the December issue

Christmas posts

Homemade gifts

December's The Simple Things is full of festive makes and bakes, wreaths of hawthorn and bay, and twinkly lights a-plenty. Buy, download or subscribe now.

In Christmas, Making Tags tea, handmade, gift idea, christmas, issue 42, gathering
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Recipe: Edible baubles

David Parker December 3, 2015

Giving the odd couples on Strictly Come Dancing’s Christmas special a run for their money is this recipe’s unlikely pairing: fruit cakes and Polo mints. 

These mini mincemeat-laced sponges are marzipaned and iced to rival the classiest of tree decorations. But will they hang? The real question is whether anything this tasty will even make it onto the tree... 

Edible baubles

Makes 24

For the fairy cakes:

140g self-raising flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp mixed spice
1/2 tsp salt
175g unsalted butter, soft, diced
175g muscavado sugar
3 eggs, lightly beaten
60g ground almonds
150g mincemeat

To ice and decorate: 

4 tbsp apricot jam
500g marzipan
Icing sugar, to dust
1 tbsp sherry or cooled, boiled water
750g white sugarpaste
Packet of Polo mints
60g bag white royal icing, no.1 nozzle
30-50g red sugarpaste
60g bag red royal icing, no.1 nozzle

You will need:

24 red paper cases
6.5cm round cutter
7cm round cutter
Selection of tiny cutters
Lengths of 5mm-wide ribbon

1. Preheat the oven to 180C/Fan 160C/ 350F. Line two fairy cake tins with paper cases. Sift first 5 ingredients into a bowl; add butter, sugar, eggs and nuts. Beat with an electric whisk. Fold in mincemeat. Divide batter between cases and bake for 15–18 mins, or until springy. Leave cakes tins for 2 mins, then cool on a rack. 
2. Warm the jam slightly, push it through a sieve, then brush it lightly over each cake. 
3. Roll marzipan out to 4–5mm thick on a worktop dusted with icing sugar. Using the smaller cutter, stamp out discs of marzipan to top each cake. Brush lightly with sherry or water. Use larger cutter to create white sugarpaste discs (the same size as the top of the cases) and smooth over the cake edges. Press a mint into each to make a ring, attaching with royal icing if needed. Leave overnight.
4. To decorate, roll out to 2–3mm thick on a board dusted with icing sugar. To make buttons, cut out tiny rounds, indent the edge with a smaller cutter and make two holes with a cocktail stick. Attach all the sugarpaste decorations with royal icing. Pipe details with the white and red royal icing. Thread the mints with ribbon.

Tip: Sugarpaste decorations can be made in advance and stored in a box (not in an airtight container or the fridge).

RECIPE AND IMAGE TAKEN FROM SEASONAL BAKING BY FIONA CAIRNS (WEIDENFELD & NICOLSON, £25). PHOTOGRAPHY DAN JONES

December's The Simple Things is on sale. Buy, download or subscribe now.

In Fresh, Eating Tags christmas, issue 30, december, christmas decorations, christmas tree
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Recipe by Lia Leendertz, photography by Kirstie Young 

Recipe by Lia Leendertz, photography by Kirstie Young

 

Growing: Fruit and nut trees

Lottie Storey December 1, 2015

In December's The Simple Things, Cinead McTernan explores the world of fruit and nut trees and selects the species most suitable for a domestic garden. Here, we pick out some of our favourite fruit and nut recipes from previous issues.

Spiced pickled quince

Looks stunning in the jar and goes well with soft goats’ cheese or cold meat.

400g granulated sugar
700ml cider vinegar
1 tsp black peppercorns
1 tsp coriander leaves
1 bay leaf
4 quinces

1. Put sugar, vinegar, peppercorns and herbs into a large saucepan and bring slowly to the boil.

2. Peel, core and quarter the quinces; cut each quarter into three and place in the liquid. Bring back to the boil and then turn the heat down and simmer for 40 mins. The quince will soften and turn a rich pink colour.

3. Allow to cool slightly and then spoon into sterilised jars before pouring the liquor over and sealing. They’ll keep for a couple of months.

 

Recipe by Lia Leendertz, taken from issue 29 (November 2014 - buy back issue now)

 

Quick walnut tart

This is very fine if you make your own pastry, but once in a while shop-bought pastry can make the difference between making something and not.

240g sugar
180ml double cream
2 tbsp good honey
1 tsp fennel seed, ground
1 tsp cinnamon, ground
200g walnuts
500g sweet pastry
1 egg, lightly beaten

 

 

 

1 Preheat oven to 180C/Fan 160/350F. 

2 Add sugar to a pan on a moderate heat. Stir as it starts to turn to caramel, and once or twice more until all the sugar turns.

3 With the pan still on the heat, slowly pour in the cream, stirring as you do – it will form ribbons but keep going and it will become smooth. Stir in the honey, fennel, cinnamon and nuts. Leave to cool while you prepare the pastry case.

4 Butter and flour a 22-24cm tart tin.

5 On a floured surface, roll out the pastry to 5mm thick and line the tin.

6 Spike the pastry using a fork and bake for 10 mins. Brush pastry with beaten egg, and bake another 7 mins.

7 Spoon the nut mixture evenly into the tart and bake for about 30 mins in the centre of the oven. Let cool for 10 mins, before removing the side of the tin and leaving to cool on a rack.

Recipe by Mark Diacono, taken from issue 40 (October 2015 - buy back issue now)

 

 

Recipe by Lia Leendertz, photography by Kirstie Young

Recipe by Lia Leendertz, photography by Kirstie Young

Gianduja liqueur

This chocolate and hazelnut liqueur is definitely worth the effort of spending a little time with the nutcracker. Gianduja is the forerunner of nutella, a chocolate and hazelnut paste created in Turin during the Napoleonic era, when a resourceful chocolatier mixed his limited supply of cacao with hazelnuts to make it stretch further. This is adapted from a recipe in Andrew Schloss’s Homemade Liqueurs and Infused Spirits. Siphoned off into pretty little bottles, it makes wonderful Christmas presents.

450g hazelnuts
200g cacao nibs
750ml vodka (40% proof)
300ml simple syrup* (you can buy this but it’s easy to make, see below)

1 In a large, dry frying pan, toast the hazelnuts until they start to take colour, then tip them into a cloth and rub off as many of the skins as you can easily get to come off.

2 Pour the cacao nibs into the frying pan and toast briefly, until the aroma hits your nose. Tip out into a cool bowl.

3 In batches, grind hazelnuts and cacao nibs in a food processor until they are the texture of coarse sand (you could use a pestle and mortar instead, but this will obviously take some time). Tip everything into a large, sealable jar and pour on the vodka. Stir well.

4 After around ten days, strain the mixture into a sterilised and cooled jar. Use a colander lined with muslin, and when the bulk of the liquid has passed through, suspend the muslin above the jar and let it drip through for an hour or so. Don’t squeeze or press on the mixture to extract more liquid, as this will cloud the liqueur.

5 Stir in the cooled simple syrup and it is then ready to drink, or to store for up to a year.

*To make the simple syrup
1 I always use American ‘cups’ measurements for making syrup, because you need an equal volume of water and sugar and this is the most straightforward way to measure them. You will need around 1¼ cups each of sugar and water. But if you prefer, this equates to around 300ml water and about 200g sugar.
2 Put the sugar and water into a saucepan and warm through gently until the sugar has dissolved, then turn up the heat and simmer for a minute. Take off the heat and allow to cool.

Recipe by Lia Leendertz, taken from issue 39 (September 2015 - buy back issue now)

 

Medlar jelly

Little accompanies rich meats and cheese as well as a good jelly. This deep amber preserve has just the right mix of sharp and sweet, with a fruity edge

1kg medlars, quartered (ideally around half bletted, half not)
juice of half–1 lemon
around 500g caster sugar
1 vanilla pod (optional)

 

 

 

 

1. Put the medlars in a large pan and pour in just enough water to cover. Add the juice of half a lemon, more if you fancy a sharper flavour. Bring to the boil, lower the temperature and simmer for an hour.

2. Leave to strain overnight through a jelly bag or muslin into a bowl.

3. Put a small plate into the fridge to chill. Measure the juice and pour it into a clean pan. For each 500ml of juice, add 375g of caster sugar.

4. Split the vanilla pod along its length and add to the liquid. Warm gently, stirring as the sugar dissolves. Increase the heat to a rolling boil, then boil unstirred, for 5 mins.

5. Turn off the heat and test for the setting point by spooning a few drops onto the cold plate, leaving it for a minute then pushing it with your finger. It should wrinkle. If not, test again in 5 mins.

6. Pour the jelly into warm, sterilised jars and seal. It will keep in a cool, dark place for at least a year, often much longer. Once open, store in fridge - it should last months.

 

Recipe by Mark Diacono, taken from issue 41 (November 2015 - buy back issue now) 

 

Almond butter

If you want to make homemade almond butter, you just need almonds and a food processor. Head over to digital editor Lottie Storey's blog - Oyster & Pearl - for a very easy recipe.

 

December's The Simple Things is full of festive makes and bakes, wreaths of hawthorn and bay, and twinkly lights a-plenty. Buy, download or subscribe now.


In Christmas, Growing, Eating Tags growing, nut, walnut tree, fruit, fruit recipe, christmas, issue 42, december
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Merry: December cover reveal

Lottie Storey November 25, 2015

You’ll know its here when you can smell the scent of cinnamon, cloves, spruce and pine. The lights too are a clue, twinkling on the tree or glowing brightly outside. Embrace the preparations and nod to festive times past; string a wreath of hawthorn or bay, burn a Yule log and sing carols. Make a party out of making presents, then cross your fingers for snow. Come the day itself there’ll be plum pudding and a jolly table to share your crackers. May your December be merry and your Christmas full of The Simple Things.

December's The Simple Things is out today - buy, download or subscribe now.

In Christmas, Magazine Tags issue 42, december, cover reveal, christmas
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Competition: Win a feel good wardrobe from EKO (closed 31 Jan 2015)

Lottie Storey November 24, 2015

Chase away your winter blues with luxury organic clothing inspired by the simplicity and natural beauty of the Cornish coast.

EKO has designed a range of luxury basics and day-to-evening dresses made from the kindest of eco fabrics. As the evenings draw in, relax and unwind in EKO’s super-soft loungewear or layer up with its casual day dresses and tunics, to create simple and elegant feel-good style.

We have a £250 voucher to give away. The winner will be selected at random from all completed entries. An e-voucher will be emailed to the winner, which can be redeemed online and spent on the entire collection. Enter below before 31 December 2015 and view full terms and conditions at icebergpress.co.uk/comprules 

In Competition Tags issue 42, december, competition
9 Comments
Image: Getty Images

Image: Getty Images

Music: A festive drinks party

Lottie Storey November 24, 2015

Create the right mood for your festive drinks party!

We're with Russ Abbot on this one: we love a party with a happy atmosphere. And the best way to get one going is with a few mood-setting strategies.

❊ Make the house smell festive with mulled wine, scented spicy candles, and warming pastries. See December's Miscellany, page 121, for ideas.

❊ Create an inviting glow by illuminating the path or front door with garden torch candles, and by placing candles strategically around the house (in front of mirrors on mantelpieces, for example).

❊ Decorate generously with boughs of ivy, Christmas baubles and vases filled with flowers.

❊ Play mood-setting music. Get the soundtrack right for your drinks party and you’re halfway there. Nothing too obtrusive, just a selection of easy-listening, recognisable tunes playing at low volume in the background. For the full-on Abigail’s Party effect, you could choose Demis Roussos and José Feliciano, but we suggest playing our Spotify lounge music playlist instead. 

Listen to our Loungemusic playlist now.

Tags christmas playlist
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Image: Getty Images

Image: Getty Images

Starlight Express

Lottie Storey November 24, 2015

We may be cloaked in darkness, but on longer nights there's more opportunity to enjoy a sky full of stars. Taking a moment to look up and discover something bigger and brighter than us can be humbling. And what better time than Christmas to contemplate our place in the universe?

There are plenty of apps designed to help you get more out of your stargazing experience.

Night Sky Tools

The winning feature of this app is that it’s almost self-contained, most of its functions don’t need an internet connection. Perfect for when you’re venturing into the wilderness.

 

Sky map

Day or night, just point your phone at the sky and this clever app will reveal the location of constellations and planets, even those you won’t be able to see over the horizon.

 

The Night Sky Lite

As the name implies, this is a more basic app, perfect for beginners.

 

Star Chart

With more than 13 million users, this is one of the best apps for identifying stars.

 

Moon Atlas

You can always see the moon, so this app will make sure you can still learn, even on an overcast night in the city. Mars, Mercury, Venus and Saturn atlases are also available.

 

Brian Cox’s Wonders of the Universe

Professor Brian Cox continues his quest to bring astronomy to the masses with this fascinating app.

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A party without cake is just a meeting

Lottie Storey November 22, 2015
In Magazine Tags back cover, issue 41, november
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Mugs: Where to buy similar to those on November's The Simple Things

Lottie Storey November 21, 2015

We didn't source the mugs on the cover of the November issue, but since we've had so many queries about them, Louise (our wonderful Stuff of Life Shopkeeper) has found some great alternatives. 

Check out www.nativeandco.com, www.maudandmabel.com and www.nomliving.com for their ceramic mugs - sea salt hot chocolate at the ready!

And you lot over on Facebook have been sharing your suggestions too. Try the following:

Julia Smith Ceramics

Seasalt Cornwall

Pyaar

Carmel Eskell Ceramics

Leach Pottery

Charlotte Storrs Stoneware

Paul Mossman Pottery

 

Let us know if you find any others!

 


In Shop, Living Tags the stuff of life, mugs, ceramics, issue 41, november, hot chocolate
4 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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