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Taking Time to Live Well

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Photography: LINDSAY ZIER-VOGEL

Photography: LINDSAY ZIER-VOGEL

Make | I love my city tote bag

Lottie Storey August 15, 2017

Make and decorate totes that celebrate what you love about where you live

You will need

For the bag:
38 x 46cm cotton twill (outer fabric) 
38 x 46cm cotton fabric (liner fabric)
1 spool thread, to match twill
2 pieces of cotton webbing (50 x 4cm), for tote handles
OR, a ready-made blank tote bag

For the decoration:
2 skeins embroidery floss
Size 4 embroidery needle
18cm wooden embroidery hoop (or smaller)
Scissors
Pencil and white eraser
Ruler and straight pins
Iron

Embroider your love letter:
1 Think of something that you love about where you live. Maybe it’s a flower seller or the view from the waterfront, a skyline, or a certain stretch of road.
2 Pre-wash and dry fabric.
3 In pencil, write the letter in the centre of the twill fabric, leaving at least 6cm at the top and at least 10cm at the bottom. If using an existing tote bag, centre text.
4 Using all six strands of embroidery floss, chain stitch around pencilled text. To chain stitch: make a small stitch on your fabric. Bring the needle back up through the fabric a short distance below your stitch. Loop your thread through the first stitch, pull through before re-inserting your needle into the same hole you came up through. Repeat, by passing the needle through the last loop you made.
5 Trim loose threads and iron out any crease marks from the hoop. If you’re using an existing tote, you’re done! If sewing your own tote bag, proceed to the next step.

Make your bag:
1 Start by making the lining: pin together two pieces of liner material with right sides facing. Using a sewing machine with a 1cm seam allowance, stitch along one side, turn onto bag bottom, and turn again, sewing up the other side.
2 Pinch corner and line up the side seams so that corner fabric makes a triangle. Measure 7.5cm from corner and draw a perpendicular line with pencil. Sew along that line, keeping side seams open. Complete both liner corners and cut off extra fabric. Keep tote inside out and pin 4cm seam from open edge of bag.
3 Then make the outer bag: pin together two pieces of twill with right sides facing. Using a sewing machine with a 1cm seam allowance, stitch both sides of the bag and the bottom.
4 Pinch corner and line up side seams so that the corner fabric makes a triangle. Measure 8cm from the corner and draw a perpendicular line with pencil. Sew along that line, keeping the side seams open. Complete both corners and cut off any extra fabric.
5 Flip fabric right-side out and pin a 4cm seam from the open edge of bag.
6 Slide lining inside outer shell and pin corners together. Pin handle fabric to twill 10cm from the edge of the bag, with 10cm between each end of the handles. Pin outer fabric to inner fabric. Be careful to tuck handle tops down into bag. Sew through all layers at the top of the bag, keeping the handles sandwiched between the lining and the outside twill. Trim any loose threads to neaten it up.

Project by Lindsay Zier-Vogel, reprinted with permission from Strange Material: Storytelling through Textiles edited by Leanne Prain (Arsenal Pulp Press).

 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

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In Making Tags make, issue 62, august, weekend project, Make project, tote bag, sewing
Comment

Nasturtiums

Lottie Storey August 14, 2017

Nasturtiums are plants that just keep giving

From the moment they are planted in spring, they respond to the smallest amount of care (a bit of earth, occasional watering) with vigorous growth, lily-pad-shaped leaves and then, around about now, cheery and abundant blooms. Not only do the flowers look good in the garden as they scramble and tumble about, but they make a pretty, peppery addition to salads, and they can be brought indoors for an instant bit of summery colour. 

 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

More floral inspiration:

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Feb 8, 2018
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Aug 14, 2017
Nasturtiums
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May 5, 2017
Nest: Lilac
May 5, 2017
May 5, 2017
In Nest, Growing Tags floral, issue 62, august, flowers, nest, nasturtiums, edible flowers
Comment
Photo by Alice Achterhof on Unsplash

Photo by Alice Achterhof on Unsplash

Play time

Lottie Storey August 12, 2017

There’s fun to be found in the everyday if you look for it

Listen to a funny podcast on your commute or play your favourite music while washing up

Be open to meeting new people. We tend to stick close to those we know, which is often to our disadvantage

Be curious – take up drawing, dancing, growing, anything that expresses your curiosity in a way that’s fun

Mix with happy people and benefit from what experts call ‘emotional contagion’

Act spontaneously - take a day off, do something unexpected, surprise yourself…

 

What would you add? And have you seen our could-do lists?

 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
In Living Tags issue 62, august, play
Comment

Wisdom: Nell Gifford of Gifford's Circus

David Parker August 11, 2017

Meet Nell Gifford, founder of Gifford's Circus - the nation's most glamorous troupe. Nell's lifetime of learning - from recruiting clowns to dog training to facefuls of custard - has built the travelling show of her dreams

In the fifteen years since Nell Gifford and her husband Toti launched their travelling show out of a bevy of painted vintage wagons that tour the south west each summer, Nell has dazzled in scarlet and gold Ring Master's garb; set hearts racing astride rearing ponies; and left children crying with laughter as another custard pie splats in her face. 

Their new permanent base at Fennels Farm where Nell and Toti live with their seven-year-old twins, son Cecil and daughter Red, is being refurbished to accommodate their burgeoning troupe of 50 clowns, jugglers, acrobats, contortionists and musicians, not to mention the 100 animals already in situ, which include horses, ponies, dogs, chickens, doves and a goose called Brian. 

'Every year feels like the last,' she says, after describing the 16-hour days, non-stop questions and continual trouble-shooting that tis the pre-season lot of a circus boss. 'It's a nightmare, but once you get the bug, you can't live without it.'

Image: Lottie Storey

Image: Lottie Storey

Nell is not what you might expect from someone who runs a circus. Her voice is low and measured, and she has an air of self-containment that seems at odds with the abundance and jollity of her chosen career. As a girl, she never dreamed of running a circus, or even running away to one, although in her 'threadbare and bohemian' childhood, she did once want to be a monkey trainer, and her favourite game involved gypsies and pretending to live in a caravan. 'Be careful what you wish for,' she says. But this isn't a story of the girl who never grew up. Perhaps rather the girl who was forced to grow up too quickly, when in 1991 catastrophe struck, and a riding accident left her mother Charlotte severely brain damaged. 'When your mum is put in to hospital for life, your home life is over in a day,' says Nell, who has a sister Clover, two years her junior, and two older siblings from her mother's previous marriage, Tom and Emma Bridgewater, the ceramics designer. 'I was 18, not 12, but it was abrupt. The house was sold, I packed up our home, put away my childhood; everything was dissipated.'

So Nell ran away with the circus. Or rather she was offered the chance to spend a year working at a circus in America that was owned by Tom's wife's family. 'I fell in love with the whole way of life,' she says, 'with the animals and the children, and the multilingual travelling village feel. I was more helped than helpful, but i knew that this was what I wanted to do with my life, nothing else was a possibility.'

Image: Lottie Storey

Image: Lottie Storey

Back in the UK, she took up a place at New College Oxford to read English, and on graduating, started her career selling ice cream for the Chinese State Circus. Over the next few years she worked her way around the industry, putting up tents and driving lorries, donning fishnets and riding elephants. In 1998, Nell met Toti who ran his own landscape contracting business in Cheltenham, they became engaged, and he followed her to Germany for a season at Circus Roncalli, where Nell worked as an assistant horse trainer and groom. It was here that their eyes were opened to what a circus could really be. 'All the English circuses were very unloved,' says Nell. 'Circus Roncalli was like a fantasy baroque travelling circus. It was absolutely beautiful, with twinkling lights, cinnamon cakes, beer and champagne. There was such a sense of occasion when it arrived in town. It showed me how culturally relevant circuses could be.'

In 1999, Nell and Toti, by now married, bought a second-hand tent through a newspaper and an old showman's wagon from a farmer, and began building their vision of the perfect circus, nail by nail. 'We wanted to create a jewel of a show on a village green, that was rowdy and handmade, with horses and a gas-lit feel,' says Nell. 'My mum's old curtains got cut up and made into costumes, we sewed sequins on to old riding clothes.' They held auditions at the Playhouse Theatre in Cheltenham, and hired 20 artists including a local juggler and a contortionist from Birmingham. Money from Toti's landscaping business was ploughed into the circus, they very nearly went bankrupt, and were forced to move into the old showman's wagon, in which they lived until 2005. 'It wasn't the easiest way to start a marriage, without a loo or a shower. It was non-stop hard work and it still is. But we never doubted it would be a success.' When Gifford's Circus launched at the Hay Festival in 2000, their faith and hard work was rewarded with a clamour of positive media coverage, and a sell-out first season.

Image: Lottie Storey

Image: Lottie Storey

The circus may be a success, but there is a difference between successful and financially stable, says Nell: 'It's taken a long time to make it even slightly secure. It's not the cleverest thing to make something successful but not well off, because you are constantly trying to make things the best without a lot of money.' But year after year Gifford's Circus's old-fashioned and topsy turvy charm has continued to delight thousands of guests, with the help some of the best names in theatre creation including Angela de Castro and River Dance's Molly Molloy. IN 2002, good food was added to the line up with the opening of their mobile restaurant Circus Sauce, which offers a local and sometimes foraged menu, served at candlelit oak tables on Emma Bridgewater Pottery - Nell's sister also designs a range for the Gifford's Circus shop. 

Today the constant challenge of balancing work and private life has been eased by the ability to hire more staff and delegate. If Nell is able to do a spot of gardening during rehearsals, she feels that she has cracked the system. The arrival of Red and Cecil in 2010 saw the twins seamlessly immersed in circus life. 'They just know the world of shows. It's a family business,' says Nell, who nevertheless only wants her children to continue with the circus if it is something they feel passionate about and can do well. But the twins certainly like to perform, and appear in the ring for finales whenever they feel like it, sometimes, Nell suspects, simply as an excuse to get out of bedtime.

'I think Red thinks she is in charge of the circus, whereas Cecil thinks mending lorries is more his department,' she smiles. This arrangement is not dissimilar from her own and Toti's division of labour; Nell is in charge of the overall steering of the business, the scheduling and the press, as well as turning her hand to a bit of animal training, most recently dogs; while Toti is in charge of logistics, the tent and the lorry.

Image: Lottie Storey

Image: Lottie Storey

Winters are spent at the farm planning the next season, but there is little time off - work on next year starts the moment the tent comes down. But once spring arrives and the weather turns, they are keen to get back on the road. Nell describes the beginning of the season as a bit like a family wedding, 'There are lots of hellos and excitement at who's new and what's happening, but then it settles down and by the end everyone's quite pleased it's over. Some people are sick of each other, some are in love - we've had quite a few people meet and have children over the years.'

While Nell thrives on those days when a performance is 'packed and safe and rocking', it's an exhausting and stressful time, when she's constantly in uncomfortable costumes, and on high alert, unable to unwind. So when the road isn't calling, quiet time at home with Toti and the twins, playing puzzles, is how she switches off. Nell also finds time to learn something new each week, and at the moment takes sewing, fitness and riding lessons. 'I think it's really important to be taught something. It changes the dynamic from always telling people what to do, otherwise my automatic response is to become bossy, and I hate that.'

Setting up a circus may seem an improbably dream to most, but for Nell it has restored her faith in life: 'I think life is a question of what you want to do, not what you can do,' she says. 'Things just went so wrong with mum, that it's only in the last year with the move to this area and the farm that I definitely...' she tails off. 'It's like riches to rags to riches again,' she says. 'I just wake up every morning and think, 'what went right?'

This year's Any Port in a Storm runs until 24 September 2017. For tickets and venue information go to giffordscircus.com.

Not heard of Gifford's Circus? Allow us to introduce you...

Giffords Circus By Ellen Von Unwerth from nathan guillaumey on Vimeo.

This interview was first published in the April 2015 issue of The Simple Things - shop back issues

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

From the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
In Living Tags circus, wisdom, nell gifford, gifford's circus
Comment
Photography: Susanna Blävarg

Photography: Susanna Blävarg

Recipe | Lavender and honey cakes

Lottie Storey August 10, 2017

August is a quiet season for baking... Let these light and pretty lavender numbers tempt you back into the kitchen

LAVENDER AND HONEY CAKES
Makes 12

40g salted butter (room temperature) 
120g plain flour
140g caster sugar
11⁄2 tsp baking powder
120ml milk
1 egg
1 tsp lavender essence

for the icing
80g unsalted butter (room temperature)
160g icing sugar
1 tbsp honey
1 tsp lavender essence
Purple food colouring
Dried lavender to decorate (optional) 

you will need
12-hole cupcake or muffin tin lined with 12 paper cases

1 Preheat oven to 170C/Fan 150C/325F. Measure the butter, flour, caster sugar and baking powder into a bowl and use an electric whisk to beat until the butter is incorporated and you have a sand-like texture.

2 In a separate bowl, mix the milk, egg and lavender essence and add slowly to the dry mixture, mixing to form a batter.

3 Pour the batter into the cupcake cases, about a heaped tablespoon in each, and bake in the centre of the oven for 15 mins or until lightly golden and springy to touch. Remove from the oven and allow to rest for 5 mins, then turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely.

4 To make the icing, whisk together the butter, icing sugar, honey and lavender essence for a couple of mins until smooth. Add as much purple food colouring as you like, then put in the fridge for 15–20 mins until firm.

5 Ice the cakes using the back of a spoon and garnish with a sprig of dried lavender.

Recipe from Milly’s Real Food by Nicola Millbank (HarperCollins).

Cake in the House is our monthly recipe feature - get a cake recipe every month in The Simple Things!

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

 

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In Eating Tags issue 62, august, cake in the house, cake, cake recipe, lavender, honey
Comment

Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam

Lottie Storey August 8, 2017

See, do, stay, love the UK. This month: Nina Nixon heads to Wales for a weekend retreat 

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Our regular travel 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 76 of the August issue for more of this outdoors adventure – and plenty of others at thisisyourkingdom.co.uk.

Nina Nixon is a contributor to thisisyourkingdom.co.uk. She has a passion for photography, capturing moods and making memories. More of Nina’s work can be found on her blog ninanixon.co.uk and on Instagram @nina_nixon

 
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

More This is Your Kingdom inspiration:

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In Escape Tags travel, this is your kingdom, issue 62, august, wales
Comment
Illustration: Joe Snow

Illustration: Joe Snow

How to build a swing

Lottie Storey August 7, 2017

Branch out with this playful addition to a garden

You will need:
Wood that’s at least 2.5cm thick, avoid pine and damaged wood
Poly twist rope
Handsaw
Sandpaper
Drill

1 Find a thick, living branch, parallel to the ground.
2 Cut your board to measure 45 x 25cm and sandpaper it.
3 Drill four holes a little bigger than your rope width in each corner of the wood, 2.5cm in.
4 Cut rope into two lengths twice the height of the swing plus 3.5 m.
5 Take a piece of rope and double it over so cut ends are together.
6 Holding the looped end, place rope over branch and then thread the two cut ends to secure the loop against the tree branch. Repeat with the second bit of rope – the same distance apart as the holes on the seat.
7 Thread lengths through the four holes and adjust for height.
8 Tie each length in a figure eight stopper knot under the swing.

 

More practical and playful suggestions in Miscellany, every month in The Simple Things!

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

 

More How to ideas:

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In Miscellany Tags How to, how to, issue 62, august, summer, school holiday ideas
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A smooth sea never made a skilful sailor

Lottie Storey August 6, 2017

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

More back covers:

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  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here.

In Magazine Tags back cover, issue 62, august
Comment

Living | How to camp well

Lottie Storey August 4, 2017

Swap bricks for canvas, early mornings, outdoor life. Body clock reset

Jonathan Cherry shares the details that take camping trips from good to great

FLOWERS FOR THE TABLE
One of the first things Gemma does on arrival at any campsite is set off with the kids to forage wild blooms for the table – picked responsibly, of course – leaving the adults to pitch the tents in peace. Display in a recently finished beverage bottle of your choice.

KUBB (VIKING CHESS)
With a handy carry bag, this game travels everywhere with us from the garden to the beach. Great as a family game with the kids but even better played late in the evening with a beer in hand. Just mind your shins!

HERBS & SPICES
Bex advises taking a ‘store cupboard’ supply of your most used herbs and spices – it’ll save your kitchen being overrun with duplicates on your return and means campfire dishes can be as flavourful away as they would be at home. Her favourites are ground cumin, ground coriander, smoked paprika, herbes de Provence and baharat.

FIREWOK
Matt couldn’t survive a camping trip without the Firewok. Hand crafted by a small business in Bristol, this is our favourite portable fire pit and comes with great cooking accessories (firewok.co.uk).

TINDER
Logs and kindling are readily available at most campsites but we always take our own tinder to ensure dinner happens! For every camping trip, Matt brings a mason jar of cotton wool balls and tumble dryer lint which he collects over the winter – free and a great fire starter.

SWEDISH LOG CANDLE
This is a self-feeding camp fire made from one log. Cross-cut 3⁄4 of the way down and stuff the top 15–20cm with tinder and kindling. Set a small fire on top of the log. Thin sections of the log at the top will start burning, sucking air down and drawing fire into the heart of the log. At this stage, it is possible to boil a kettle or cook on top of the candle.

SOUVENIR HAIKUS
You don’t need to write a diary of your trip in haikus to camp well, but if you fancy writing one or two like Matt’s on these pages (@Matt_633)... A traditional Japanese haiku is a three-line poem of 17 syllables, broken up into 5/7/5. They often focus on nature, and in character are simple and direct.

For example...
How to write haiku:
Count syllables, be direct
Focus on nature

Turn to page 38 of August's The Simple Things for more of our camping special.

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

Camping recipes:

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In Living Tags issue 62, august, camping
Comment
Photography: Tom Regester

Photography: Tom Regester

Recipe | Tropical lime granita

Lottie Storey August 2, 2017

The sharpness of the lime granita is a treat when balanced with lovely sweet fruit. Tastes of tropical beaches

Makes 700ml (6–8 servings)

180ml caster sugar
A pinch of coarse sea salt
4 kaffir lime leaves, torn to release their flavour
1 stick of lemongrass, bruised
150ml soda water
350ml lime juice (1 lime usually yields 20–25ml)
1⁄2 small pineapple (about 150g), peeled and roughly diced*
100ml coconut cream, to serve

1 In a large saucepan, heat 180ml water, the caster sugar, a pinch of salt, the lime leaves and lemongrass until the sugar has dissolved and the flavours have fused together; this should take 8–10 mins on a medium heat. Discard the lime leaves and lemongrass.

2 Add the soda water and lime juice to the pan and stir gently (try not to stir all the bubbles out of the soda water). Pour into a freezer-proof container with a lid and freeze. Take out every hour and, using a fork, scrape the granita so that you end up with fluffy ice, rather than one big block. It should take about four hours to freeze.

3 To serve, put a generous portion of pineapple in a bowl, top with a scoop of granita and pour over a little coconut cream. Sprinkle with a small pinch of sea salt.

* This works well with any fresh fruit but if you find yourself near an Asian supermarket, stock up on rambutan, lychee or mangoes.

Recipe from Cook Thai by Sebby Holmes (Kyle Books). 

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View the sampler here.

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

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In Eating Tags issue 62, august, ice lollies, ice cream, citrus, summer
Comment
Photo by Priscilla Du Preez/Unsplash

Photo by Priscilla Du Preez/Unsplash

A could-do list for August

Lottie Storey August 1, 2017

Things you might want to do this month (no pressure!)

  • Get up early and embrace the quiet
  • Paint your toenails pink
  • Paddle in a stream
  • Read a book in a hammock
  • Cook and eat outside as often as you can
  • Leave the housework for another day
  • Remember the times you laughed so much your belly hurt and to do those things more often

What would you add? Come over and tell us on Facebook or Twitter. 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here.

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

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Comment
Photography: Nassima Rothacker

Photography: Nassima Rothacker

Make | Natural food colouring

Lottie Storey July 31, 2017

There’s no need to rely on artificial food colourings when most colours can be created with natural ingredients found in your kitchen. Add a teaspoon at a time, increasing gradually for a more intense colour

Pink
125g pack of cooked beetroot
2 tsp juice from the pack
Blitz the beetroot and juice in a food processor until smooth. Strain if desired. Store in an airtight contained for up to two weeks in the fridge.

Purple
70g blueberries
4tsp water
Blitz the berries and water in a food processor until smooth. Strain through a superfine mesh sieve to separate solids. Store in a jar for up to a month.

Green
60g spinach
Enough water to cover it
Cover spinach in water and boil for 5 mins. Strain and discard liquid. Blitz spinach and6tbsp water in a food processor. Add more water if needed. Strain through a fine sieve, cool and store in a jar for up to a month.

Yellow
120ml water
1⁄2 tsp turmeric
Put water and turmeric in a small pan and heat for 5 mins. Allow to cool and store in an jar in the fridge up to a month.

Red
80g raspberries
4 tsp water
Blitz berries and water in a food processor until smooth. Strain to remove seeds. Store in a jar for up to two weeks in the fridge.

From The Art of the Natural Home by Rebecca Sullivan (Kyle Books).

 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

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Mindfulness | Colour therapy

Lottie Storey July 27, 2017

There could be thousands more colours than your standard rainbow seven, if you take a moment to consider how you might name them.

Anyone who’s ever had to choose a paint for a wall or a piece of furniture will have found themselves immersed in colour charts and sampler pots where there’s more to colour than their product codes or Pantone reference. Every shade, tone, and hue comes with its own name– chocolate comtesse, mineral grey, crushed oregano, millennial pink. In a description of just two or three words, a whole world can be conjured up or reimagined.

But what about all those colours yet to be given names? What would you call the blue the sky turns 20 minutes after a summer sunset, for example? Or the particular grey the clouds look when half the sky’s about to storm and the rest is brilliant sunshine? How should you describe the colour of your mother’s eyes, or define the shade you like your tea? Don’t let the paint companies have all the fun. It’s a mindful practice to look carefully at the colours around you and really see them.

ART PROJECT

Start a colour experiment to recreate colours you love in paint in a journal, logging what you mixed and in what proportions, and then name your colours however you like – striplight yellow, garden shed brick, bank holiday traffic. Baby’s comfort blanket, granny’s dining table, mum’s golden flecks. Colour can capture moments, memories and places as well as words or pictures.

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

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In Magazine, Think Tags issue 62, colour, paint, august, mindfulness
Comment

How to improve your frisbee

Lottie Storey July 27, 2017

Give these techniques a spin to improve your summer sporting chances

There are more than 100 possible frisbee throws (see YouTube to learn a few more), so a few sessions in the park will not a pro make. These tips, however, will teach old dogs and humans alike a few new tricks.

Master your spins

Bend your wrist, then snap it quickly to give lots of spin. The more spin, the more stable it will be and the more control you’ll have on its flight.

Elbows out

Bend your elbow during your throw to add power and increase accuracy.

Do the twist

When throwing, step towards where you’re aiming, or try moving your weight from your back foot on to your front. Twist your shoulder, hips and legs through to the point of release.

Strong and stable

Stable throws are more accurate throws. Aim to keep the frisbee level and throw from just above your belly button for optimum stability.

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

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Play | August cover reveal

Lottie Storey July 26, 2017

Remember the excitement of the summer holidays when you were a child? It wasn’t so much where you were going but the fun you were anticipating having. That ‘school’s out’ urge is too feelgood to be just for kids. And the beauty is that you can capture it anywhere; a backyard party, ball games in the park, silly stories around the campfire, enjoying a poptail or making something funny. There’s a creativity that springs from messy play; think of it as your sunshine time. 

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

View the sampler here, buy back issues or try our sister mag, Oh Comely

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 17, 2017
Camping recipe | Smoky Boston beans & armadillo potatoes
Aug 17, 2017
Aug 17, 2017
Aug 15, 2017
Make | I love my city tote bag
Aug 15, 2017
Aug 15, 2017
Aug 14, 2017
Nasturtiums
Aug 14, 2017
Aug 14, 2017
Aug 12, 2017
Play time
Aug 12, 2017
Aug 12, 2017
Aug 10, 2017
Recipe | Lavender and honey cakes
Aug 10, 2017
Aug 10, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 7, 2017
How to build a swing
Aug 7, 2017
Aug 7, 2017
Aug 6, 2017
A smooth sea never made a skilful sailor
Aug 6, 2017
Aug 6, 2017
Aug 4, 2017
Living | How to camp well
Aug 4, 2017
Aug 4, 2017
Aug 2, 2017
Recipe | Tropical lime granita
Aug 2, 2017
Aug 2, 2017
Aug 1, 2017
A could-do list for August
Aug 1, 2017
Aug 1, 2017
Jul 31, 2017
Make | Natural food colouring
Jul 31, 2017
Jul 31, 2017
Jul 27, 2017
Mindfulness | Colour therapy
Jul 27, 2017
Jul 27, 2017
Jul 27, 2017
How to improve your frisbee
Jul 27, 2017
Jul 27, 2017
Jul 26, 2017
Play | August cover reveal
Jul 26, 2017
Jul 26, 2017
Jul 19, 2017
Competition | Win a year’s worth of cheese
Jul 19, 2017
Jul 19, 2017
Jul 19, 2017
Listen | Latin fever
Jul 19, 2017
Jul 19, 2017
Jul 19, 2017
Recipe | Campari orange poptails
Jul 19, 2017
Jul 19, 2017
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

In Magazine Tags issue 62, august, cover reveal
Comment

July issue: One day left to buy!

Lottie Storey July 24, 2017

Yes, there's just one day left to buy the July issue of The Simple Things! And it's a cracker.

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

View the sampler here or head out to get your copy TODAY!

 

Want a look at what you're missing? Here's some of what you can expect to find inside the pages of our WANDER issue:

Featured
Jul 24, 2017
July issue: One day left to buy!
Jul 24, 2017
Jul 24, 2017
Jul 18, 2017
Miscellany | Jane Austen special
Jul 18, 2017
Jul 18, 2017
Jul 13, 2017
Escape | Outing to the sea
Jul 13, 2017
Jul 13, 2017
Jul 13, 2017
Recipe | Halloumi fries
Jul 13, 2017
Jul 13, 2017
Jul 11, 2017
Escape | How to be a fearless traveller
Jul 11, 2017
Jul 11, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Escape | A rustic hideaway in Cornwall
Jul 10, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Jul 9, 2017
A friend may be waiting behind a stranger's face
Jul 9, 2017
Jul 9, 2017
Jul 8, 2017
Pomegranate cake
Jul 8, 2017
Jul 8, 2017
Jul 6, 2017
Recipe | Ciabatta bun camembert burgers
Jul 6, 2017
Jul 6, 2017
Jul 5, 2017
Make your own simple face serum
Jul 5, 2017
Jul 5, 2017
Jul 1, 2017
A could-do list for July
Jul 1, 2017
Jul 1, 2017
Jun 29, 2017
Simple style | Sunglasses
Jun 29, 2017
Jun 29, 2017
Jun 28, 2017
Wander | July cover reveal
Jun 28, 2017
Jun 28, 2017
Jun 28, 2017
Recipe | Strawberry and pesto pasta salad
Jun 28, 2017
Jun 28, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Listen | Songs for wandering
Jun 21, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Competition | Win a stay at Bude Hideaways in Cornwall with i-escape
Jun 21, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
In Magazine Tags issue 61, july, last chance
Comment

Competition | Win a year’s worth of cheese

Lottie Storey July 19, 2017

To celebrate their new range of clothbound cheeses made with Cornish sea salt, Quicke’s have come up with an irresistible prize

Calling all curd nerds! This summer, Quicke’s are excited to announce a new partnership with Cornish Sea Salt. With only four ingredients involved in cheese making, Quicke’s believe each one should be the very best. Cornish Sea Salt is both low in sodium and rich in natural sea minerals. Its purity adds a rounded brightness to the complex flavours of Quicke’s award-winning clothbound cheddars.

Enter our competition for a year’s supply from their artisanal range and see for yourself. The winner will receive a box of cheesy goodies monthly for a year. You’ll be spoilt with a selection of award-winning Quicke’s clothbound cheddars, as well as accompaniments such as delicious crackers and handmade chutneys, all delivered directly to your door.

How to enter

For your chance to win a year’s supply of Quicke’s cheese, enter below before the closing date, 13 September 2017. The winner will be chosen at random and notified after this date. The prize will be cheese-based and delivered monthly, but subject to change, as stock allows. You can’t swap it for cash either. You can find full terms and conditions on page 129 of August’s The Simple Things and at icebergpress.co.uk/comprules.

Enter now
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

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In Competition Tags issue 62, august, competition, cheese
2 Comments

Listen | Latin fever

Lottie Storey July 19, 2017

Tunes to make your hips swing and your summer sizzle.

Listen to our latin playlist now

 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

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More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
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In Think Tags listen, playlist, spotify, august, issue 62
Comment
Photography: Louise Hagger

Photography: Louise Hagger

Recipe | Campari orange poptails

Lottie Storey July 19, 2017

There’s something a little mischievous about turning a childhood treat into something strictly for grown-ups. Poptails – or alcoholic lollies – are summer cocktails, only cooler; delicious, playful and quirky. 

Makes 8–10
60ml water
110g granulated sugar
600ml freshly squeezed orange juice (from 6 or 7 oranges)
80ml freshly squeezed lime juice (from 3 or 4 limes)
90ml (6 tbsp) Campari
Sliver of orange, to garnish (optional)

1 Heat water and sugar in a pan until sugar has dissolved. Mix with the orange and lime juice and Campari. 
2 Fill the moulds, leaving a little space at the top. If you like, put a sliver of orange into the top of each. 
3 Freeze until slushy (60–90 mins), then insert the sticks and freeze until solid, at least five hours.

Note: the alcohol content makes poptails more fragile than their booze-free cousins. For best results:
* Leave a 5mm gap at the top of the mould for expansion.
* Poptails take longer to freeze because of their alcohol content – about 5–8 hours or overnight.
* Metal or rubbery silicone moulds work best. Leave sitting at room temperature for a while before unmoulding (unless using silicone when you can just push them out) and take care – they’re more delicate than lollies.
* Serve as soon as possible after unmoulding, but if you need to store them, wrap in cling film and store in the freezer in an airtight bag. Best eaten within a week of making.
* Make bite-sized poptails in silicone ice cube trays, skewered with cocktail sticks.

Recipe from Ice Kitchen: Poptails by Cesar and Nadia Roden (Quadrille).

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 28, 2017
Recipe | Vegetable crisps
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 28, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Britain's outdoor games
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 26, 2017
Aug 20, 2017
Garden hacks | Reuse cooking water on your plants
Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017

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In Eating Tags issue 62, ice lollies, cocktails, august, poptails, orange, oranges
Comment
Illustrations: Joe Snow

Illustrations: Joe Snow

Miscellany | Jane Austen special

Lottie Storey July 18, 2017

Today marks the bicentenary of Jane Austen's death (18 July 1817). In the July issue, The Simple Things presents Miscellany: a curious combination of the practical and the playful, circa 1817. Buy July here.

Learn how to make small talk at a ball, make us giggle with a caption for wet-shirted Colin Firth as Darcy, and learn an Austen word for a noble or young gentleman. 

Discover a fab gadget (Austen was reportedly a dab hand at this cup and ball game), cast aside your cocoa in favour of a much nicer nightcap, and take a household hint from Northanger Abbey. 

Shop three beautiful editions of Austen's classics, learn a classic 18th century card game as played in Emma and Pride and Prejudice, and discover how hard it can be to be an accomplished lady. 

Finally, get to grips with Austen's homes in our identifier and learn how to improve your garden, Austen style. 

Find out more about talks, walks, exhibitions and performances at janeausten200.co.uk. 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the July issue:

Featured
Jul 24, 2017
July issue: One day left to buy!
Jul 24, 2017
Jul 24, 2017
Jul 18, 2017
Miscellany | Jane Austen special
Jul 18, 2017
Jul 18, 2017
Jul 13, 2017
Escape | Outing to the sea
Jul 13, 2017
Jul 13, 2017

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In Interview, Miscellany Tags issue 61, july, jane austen, miscellany
Comment
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  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Order  our new Celebrations Anthology   Pre-order a copy of  Flourish 4 , our new wellbeing bookazine   Listen to  our podcast  – Small Ways to Live Well
Aug 29, 2025
Aug 29, 2025

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See the sample of our latest issue here

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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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