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journal sparks 2.jpg

Journal sparks

Lottie Storey December 27, 2017

Longitudinal journal challenge

‘Longitudinal’ means you will make it a habit to look at the same thing every so often over a long time. The key is to find something that changes in some way – whether very gradually, daily, or weekly. You don’t have to track it every

day or even particularly regularly. Just be sure to continue to observe it, and try to remember to record your observations in the same journal or section of a journal. This way you can see how the thing is changing and how your observations evolve.

Things you could observe:

A tree
Your desk
Someone’s shoes
A lake or river
A chalkboard
A bookshelf
A storefront window
A garden
A street bench
The dinner table
The sky at night
An anthill

 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the January issue:

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In Think Tags journal sparks, diary, drawing, creativity, issue 67, january
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66 back cover.png

Growing old is inevitable but growing up is optional

Lottie Storey December 24, 2017

More from the December issue:

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  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here.

In Magazine, Christmas Tags back cover, issue 66, december, christmas
Comment
Photography: Ali Allen

Photography: Ali Allen

Seasonal tonic

Lottie Storey December 22, 2017

Make a batch of these immune-boosting shots to prevent a cold from ruining your Christmas

Opt for fresh, organic produce to maximise benefits – and if one ingredient is unavailable, just double up one of the others.

Makes 6 x 50ml shots
2 tbsp chopped garlic
2 tbsp chopped onion
2 tbsp grated fresh ginger
2 tbsp grated horseradish root
2 tbsp chopped cayenne pepper (or any other chilli)
350ml raw apple cider vinegar

1 Pile the garlic, onion, ginger, horseradish and pepper into a 350ml lidded sterilised jar. (To sterilise, wash it in hot soapy water, dry with a clean cloth, then place in a 200C/Fan 180C/ 400F oven for 10 mins.)
Fill the jar with raw apple cider vinegar, close the lid tightly and shake.
2 Store in a cool, dark place, shaking at least once a day for two weeks.
3 Filter the tonic through a clean piece of muslin, pour into a sterilised bottle. Take a 50ml shot three times a day (on an empty stomach) as soon as you feel the symptoms of a cold. It will keep at room temperature for up to six months.


Recipe from Tonics & Teas by Rachel de Thample (Kyle Books)

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here.

 

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In Making, Christmas Tags cold, winter, illness, cough drops, natural skincare, home remedies, issue 66, december, christmas
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2PedralvaNow8.png

Travel | The other Algarve

Lottie Storey December 21, 2017

Explore the quiet side of south-west Portugal with Inntravel

The Algarve’s more obvious attractions are well known: sun, sea and sandcastles, villas with pools and water parks galore. And while there’s nothing wrong with these, Inntravel, the Slow Holiday people, take a different approach to this beguiling corner of southwesternmost Europe. They get well off the beaten track, and use footpaths – and some wonderful places to stay – to help you discover some of Portugal’s lesser-spotted delights.

COAST OF MANY COLOURS

Inntravel are the UK’s leading provider of self-guided walking holidays. Their hotel-to-hotel route, A Coast of Many Colours, takes you across the Algarve - from its honeyed, southern coast through an agricultural heartland to the wilder, western shores - and is one of the most enticing in their entire collection.

A world away from the region’s busy resorts, you can discover for yourself the unspoiled landscapes of the Costa Vicentina Natural Park, characterised by dramatic cliffs, pristine coves and quiet, rolling pastures. The colours are many and varied: long stretches of golden sand give way to grey-and-red jagged rocks before softening to a paler orange and rose as the coastal edge turns northwards.

Inland, the green hills are home to drifts of winter blossom, plantations of quince and oranges, and flower meadows carpeted with citrus-yellow Bermuda buttercups. It all feels delightfully remote.

FROM RUINS TO RETREAT

When he first set eyes on the village of Aldeia da Pedralva, visionary developer António Ferreira saw past the deserted houses, decaying walls and neglected streets... “I discovered Aldeia da Pedralva when I was looking for a holiday house. I worked in advertising, which was very stressful. I felt tired and my health wasn’t brilliant, so I thought that renovating a holiday home would be a good project to distract me. A colleague told me to go and see Aldeia da Pedralva, an oldrural village in ruins, where he had already bought a house to rebuild.

“I went there with my wife and we instantly fell in love with the place, so much so that we actually bought three houses. It made me look at the village from a different perspective and made me realise that there must be other workaholic people like me who need to disconnect from the real world. Pedralva (pictured above) was the perfect place to make this happen – a tourist project based around nature, detoxing – and surfing. Pedralva lies in the ‘other’ Algarve, part of a Natural Park with amazing wildlife, landscapes and wild beaches. It’s a place where you really feel that time has stopped.”

Today, António’s dream has become a reality, though it remains fundamentally a traditional place at heart – the houses are simply furnished in keeping with the spirit of the original village. Thanks to the vision, passion and tireless work of one man, Aldeia da Pedralva is alive once more...

SEE FOR YOURSELF...

Choose Inntravel’s walking holiday, A Coast of Many Colours (including a night in Pedralva), to discover the Algarve’s ‘quiet side’. From £670pp, inc 7 nights’ B&B,

4 dinners, 3 picnics & detailed route notes. Until 31 May 2018. Visit inntravel.co.uk or call 01653 617000; visitalgarve.pt.

 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here.

 

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Illustration: Holly Walsh

Illustration: Holly Walsh

Christmas hacks | Style up shop-bought stuffing

Lottie Storey December 21, 2017

Style up shop-bought stuffing for an extra special side dish this Christmas

1. Heat a couple of tablespoons olive oil in a frying pan.
2. Add a chopped onion and stir until softened.
3. Add stock and bring to the boil (you’ll need roughly three-quarters stock to stuffing mix quantity).
4. Take off heat and add to stuffing mix.
5. Stir in a few tablespoons of herbs of your choice, such as parsley or rosemary.
6. Spoon out the mixture into a shallow tin and cook for 20 mins with foil on, and another 10 without it.

 

The December issue features a cracker of a Miscellany Christmas special (page 99), packed with puzzles, games, stocking fillers, bad jokes, amazing facts and forgotten wisdom, including:

  • Mix a great martini 

  • Secret Santa gifts

  • Make sweet frumenty 

  • Christmas i-spy

  • How to carve turkey 

  • Fizzy amaretto sours 

  • Make invisible ink

  • Froebel stars

  • Wrapping awkward gifts 

  • Beat the family at games

  • The Simple Things’ sprouts & crackers board game

  • Identifier: Bestseller toys 

  • Bah humbug word search

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

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adam-jaime-119551.jpg

Sponsored | Christmas cocktail recipe ideas

Lottie Storey December 20, 2017

The weekend before Christmas is classic party season. If you're hosting friends over Christmas and New Year, stock up the drinks trolley and get those cocktail shakers pumping. Try one of these recipes to really get your party going with a bang.

Cherry Spritz
Cherry Spritz

50ml English Rose Gin
150ml Fever Tree Naturally Light Tonic Water
15ml (approx 2 bar spoons) Maraschino Cherry Syrup

Build and stir over ice in a tall glass. Twist of lime peel and one maraschino cherry dropped in.

Whitley Neill Christmas Crumble Collins
Whitley Neill Christmas Crumble Collins

50ml Whitley Neill Rhubarb & Ginger
50ml Cloudy apple Juice
10ml Fresh Lemon Juice
10ml Cinnamon Syrup
50ml Ginger Beer

Add all ingredients to a long glass along with cubed ice. Stir and garnish with a cinnamon stick and lemon wheel

Espresso Martini
Espresso Martini

50ml FAIR Vodka
35ml FAIR Cafe
One shot of espresso

Pour ingredients into a cocktail shaker. Top up with ice and shake. Pour directly into a chilled martini glass.

Whitley Neill Clementine Negroni
Whitley Neill Clementine Negroni

25ml Whitley Neill Gin
25ml Campari
25ml Italian Vermouth
25ml Fresh clementine juice

Add all ingredients to a rocks glass, along with cubed ice, and stir well. Garnish with a slice of fresh clementine

Aviation
Aviation

40ml Silent Pool Gin
20ml Maraschino Liqueur
20ml Freshly squeezed Lemon Juice
2.5ml Crème De violette

Shake and Strain into a chilled cocktail glass

Cherry Spritz Whitley Neill Christmas Crumble Collins Espresso Martini Whitley Neill Clementine Negroni Aviation

Recipes courtesy of:

FAIR 

Whitley Neill

Silent Pool

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

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In Christmas Tags sponsored, cocktails, Cocktail recipes, cocktail recipes, christmas, christmas drinks
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joanna-kosinska-255355.jpg

Christmas | How to be grateful

Lottie Storey December 20, 2017

Being grateful is about more than the occasional thanks. It’s an attitude that helps you feel contented in even the most challenging of times 

As gratitude has become more mainstream, the ways to practise it have become more varied. Writing down gratitudes is crucial, as the act of putting pen to paper fixes the gratitude more firmly in your long-term memory rather than simply thinking or saying it, and regular practice is where the benefits lie.

TOOLS FOR THE JOB

Write in a journal
If you like any excuse for new stationery there are a several gratitude journals. Try the Year Long Gratitude Journal (thegreengables.co.uk), The Daily Greatness Journal (dailygreatness.co.uk), a planner that helps you to organise your entire life and features gratitude prompts. Or Be Great Be Grateful, by Anna Murray and Grace Winteringham of design studio, Patternity, is a journal which encourages you to see the unseen in everyday life.

Send a letter
Robert Emmons found that writing letters expressing how thankful you are had a strong positive impact not only on the writer but also the person receiving the letter.
The Personalised Letters of Gratitude to Mum envelope book (andsotheymade.co.uk) makes a great gift. Little Notes of Gratitude Notecard Set (wearebreadandjam.co.uk) contains appreciative messages as well as space to add your own.

Do it digitally
What’s Good is a daily gratitude app that tracks your happiness over time and has a calming breath animation. Then there’s the Happijar app, a virtual jar where you store happy memories, ready to shake up, tip out and revisit on your phone, whenever you need a lift.

Take a snap
If writing it down doesn’t appeal, take pictures of things you’re grateful for. If you’d like to share, there are several gratitude hashtags #capturinggratitude #thisjoyfulmoment, #thehappynow and #savouringhappiness.

Turn to page 86 of December's The Simple Things for more on why saying thank you matters.

 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

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Christmas | Give a little back

Lottie Storey December 19, 2017

Charitable acts at Christmas not only help people but make you appreciate what you have

Beth Johnson has been involved with the charity Cry in the Dark (cryinthedark.org) for 13 years,
and is about to make her seventh Christmas trip to Romania to distribute 1,500 gift-filled shoe boxes collected over the past three months.

“To me, this is what Christmas is all about,” says Beth. “We take 18 volunteers and distribute the boxes personally to the children. To be around people who see the value in the gifts they’re receiving is quite incredible.”

Volunteer opportunities for the trip to Romania in 2018 will be allocated in January, and there are other initiatives throughout the year.

It might be too late to send a Christmas box abroad this year but there’s plenty you can do here. The homeless charity Crisis (crisis.org.uk) relies on volunteers to cook and serve meals, share skills or simply to spend time with guests over the festive period.

FareShare is having its annual Christmas food collection in Tesco stores from 30 November to 2 December (fareshare.org.uk), and don’t forget to donate to your local food bank this month and in January, when stocks run thin as people are feeling more frugal.

Get the kids involved by making a reverse Advent calendar: every day starting on 1 December, put
a nice food product in a box, then deliver the hamper of goodies to your local food bank on Christmas Eve (visit trusselltrust.org to find your nearest).

 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the December issue:

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Illustration: Holly Walsh

Illustration: Holly Walsh

Christmas | How to make a great martini

Lottie Storey December 16, 2017

Glamour distilled. Best served with the inevitable Bond on the telly

1 Add a measure of dry vermouth into a martini glass, swooshing it around so the glass is coated. Then pour into a cocktail shaker, swirl before chucking out anything remaining.
2 Add a measure of gin into the shaker along with a couple of ice cubes.
3 Shake gently, before popping it into the freezer.
4 Prep your glass, by wiping the rim with lemon zest. Then it goes in the freezer too.
5 Patiently wait for 30 minutes, then strain into a glass.
6 Garnish with an olive.

The December issue features a cracker of a Miscellany Christmas special (page 99), packed with puzzles, games, stocking fillers, bad jokes, amazing facts and forgotten wisdom, including:

  • Mix a great martini 

  • Secret Santa gifts

  • Make sweet frumenty 

  • Christmas i-spy

  • How to carve turkey 

  • Fizzy amaretto sours 

  • Make invisible ink

  • Froebel stars

  • Wrapping awkward gifts 

  • Beat the family at games

  • The Simple Things’ sprouts & crackers board game

  • Identifier: Bestseller toys 

  • Bah humbug word search

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the December issue:

Featured
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Dec 31, 2024
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Dec 31, 2024
Dec 31, 2024
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Dec 24, 2023
Dec 24, 2023
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In Christmas, Miscellany Tags christmas, issue 66, december, christmas miscellany, martini, cocktail recipes, cocktail
Comment
win meat boxes for a year competition.png

Competition | Win meat boxes for a year with Coombe Farm Organic

Lottie Storey December 14, 2017

 

WE’VE TEAMED UP WITH COOMBE FARM ORGANIC TO OFFER ONE LUCKY READER MONTHLY DELIVERIES OF ORGANIC MEAT AND MORE 

 

Enter our competition for your chance to win a year’s worth of organic meat. The winner will receive one delivery a month for 12 months, on the day of their choosing, of award-winning organic goodies – a great prize, worth more than £400.

How to enter

For a chance to win a year’s supply of organic meat, enter below before the closing date of 11.59pm on 14 February 2018. The winner will be chosen at random from all correct entries after this date and notified soon afterwards. The prize is a monthly delivery of Coombe Farm Organic goodies for 12 months.

You can’t swap it for cash but you can choose the day for delivery.
Find out more at coombefarmorganic.co.uk

Find full terms and conditions on page 129 of the January issue and at icebergpress.co.uk/comprules.

Enter now
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the January issue:

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Listen | Stormy weather songs

Lottie Storey December 14, 2017

Hold onto your headphones, there’s a storm acomin’. 

Listen to our stormy weather playlist now.

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

Listen to more playlists:

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May 21, 2025
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Apr 16, 2025
Playlist | The long weekend
Apr 16, 2025
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More from the January issue:

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Sep 18, 2021
Sep 18, 2021
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In Think Tags listen, playlist, spotify, issue 67, january
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SIM66.LOOKINGBACK_0026593.png

Three of the best modern carols

Lottie Storey December 12, 2017

Hark the herald angels (and all the rest of us) sing. As we tra-la-la-la-la our way through the season, we take a look at the stories behind our favourite carols

ARVO PÄRT: ‘BOGORÓDITSE DJÉVO’ 

With his native Estonia folded into the Soviet Union, it took a 1981 move to Berlin for the world’s most performed living composer to freely express his Christianity. This beauteous choral piece, drawing deeply on his love of medieval music and Gregorian chant, was commissioned in 1990 by King’s College Choir, Cambridge.

JOHN TAVENER: ‘EX MARIA VIRGINE’

A gift for good friend Charles’ wedding to Camilla in 2005, the man once signed to The Beatles’ Apple label references everything from ancient Islamic text to ‘Ding Dong Merrily On High’ in his altogether heavenly, typically universalist Christmas-themed song cycle.

BOB CHILCOTT: ‘THE SHEPHERD’S CAROL’

A singer with King’s College Choir as man and boy, in 2000 Chilcott was commissioned to write a piece for their annual Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols and offered up this sublime evocation of nativity. No less an arbiter than ‘Mr Christmas’ himself, composer John Rutter, reckons it “the most beautiful modern carol there is”.

Turn to page 92 of December's The Simple Things for more on the stories behind our favourite carols

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the December issue:

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Dec 24, 2023
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Comment
Illustration: Holly Walsh

Illustration: Holly Walsh

Christmas | How to wrap awkward presents

Lottie Storey December 10, 2017

This nifty gift wrap bag trick can be scaled up or down to fit your gift

1 Place the pressie in the middle of the paper, making sure you have enough paper to go around it.
2 Pop your present aside. Fold the paper edges to meet and overlap in the centre (ideally hiding ‘raw’ edges) and tape down the overlap.
3 Fold up the bottom of the paper. This will be your base, so make the fold at least as wide as your pressie.
4 Unfold and bring each open ‘side’ towards the centre: you’re creating two triangles that touch to create a diamond shape. Tape.
5 Take the top and bottom points of the diamond and fold them onto each other and tape into place to make a secure base.
6 The pressie goes inside the newly formed bag. Fold the top over to hide raw edges for a pro finish.

The December issue features a cracker of a Miscellany Christmas special (page 99), packed with puzzles, games, stocking fillers, bad jokes, amazing facts and forgotten wisdom, including:

  • Mix a great martini 

  • Secret Santa gifts

  • Make sweet frumenty 

  • Christmas i-spy

  • How to carve turkey 

  • Fizzy amaretto sours 

  • Make invisible ink

  • Froebel stars

  • Wrapping awkward gifts 

  • Beat the family at games

  • The Simple Things’ sprouts & crackers board game

  • Identifier: Bestseller toys 

  • Bah humbug word search

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the December issue:

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In Christmas, Miscellany Tags christmas, issue 66, december, christmas miscellany, gifts, wrapping, christmas present
Comment
invisable ink.png

Childhood craft | Make invisible ink

Lottie Storey December 9, 2017

Snaffle an onion from the stuffing for TOP SECRET purposes

You will need:
1 onion
Bowl
Small, empty jar
Old-fashioned (empty) ink pen
Writing paper

1 Cut your onion in half and shed a few tears for your lost youth as you squeeze its juice into the bowl.
2 Pour this watery liquid into the jar.
3 Then decant this liquid into your pen, as if it’s ink.
4 Write your TOP SECRET message onto the paper and leave it to dry.
5 When the time comes to reveal your secret to the world, hold it up to heat and your message should magically appear.

*The Simple Things bears no responsibility for any secrets revealed and reputations ruined during this process (IDST – if destroyed still true).*

The December issue features a cracker of a Miscellany Christmas special (page 99), packed with puzzles, games, stocking fillers, bad jokes, amazing facts and forgotten wisdom, including:

  • Mix a great martini 

  • Secret Santa gifts

  • Make sweet frumenty 

  • Christmas i-spy

  • How to carve turkey 

  • Fizzy amaretto sours 

  • Make invisible ink

  • Froebel stars

  • Wrapping awkward gifts 

  • Beat the family at games

  • The Simple Things’ sprouts & crackers board game

  • Identifier: Bestseller toys 

  • Bah humbug word search

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the December issue:

Featured
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How to | Make a Could-Do List Happen
Dec 31, 2024
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Dec 24, 2023
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Comment
SIM66.COMFORT_Remote control tree lights cox&cox.png

Christmas | Know your festive lights

Lottie Storey December 8, 2017

There are certain things in your home that are like good friends: they always cheer you up. This month we feel the love for festive lights 

The advent of LED bulbs has meant that fairy lights now come in various permutations, last for ages and are low voltage. Powered by transformers, they can connect up to 1,280 bulbs. Most can twinkle, flash, fade, chase or just be still.

String: a single length of cable, usually clear or green, with a variety of uses, from tree
decoration to trailing along mantelpieces and scattering among trees.
Most are 8m in length with about 80 LEDs. Cost: £19.99.

Icicle: a fringe of different lengths of lights best positioned over windows or from eaves. Most come in 2m lengths but each set is connectable and can be extended to a total length of 20m.
Cost: £17.99 for 2m.

Curtain: a 2m line of vertical strands, each 1m long, that look good hanging from a banister or lining a wall for a full-on twinkly grotto effect. Low voltage, so they don’t get warm and can safely hang alongside fabric. Indoors only. Cost: £27 for 2x1m curtain.

Net: a mesh of fairy lights that can be draped or hung, or used to net furniture or foliage. Cost: £34.99 for a 2x2m net.

All from lights4fun.co.uk    

Turn to page 140 of December's The Simple Things for more from The Comfort of Things festive feature.

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the December issue:

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Dec-17-Subs-page-image3_jwretA.png

Christmas | LAST ORDERS for giftwrapped subscriptions to The Simple Things

Lottie Storey December 7, 2017

Make someone’s Christmas. A gift wrapped subscription is the gift that keeps on giving.

** Last order date: 17 December **

Who’s the special person in your life who would love recipes for slow food shared with friends, inspiration for home and garden, and learning new skills?

ALL WRAPPED UP

  • They’ll enjoy 12 months of The Simple Things delivered to their door.
  • We’ll giftwrap the first issue of their subscription in brown paper and string and send it (just in time for Christmas) along with a Christmas card on your behalf. Want to hand over the first issue yourself? That’s fine, too – just let us know in the box on the order form.
  • Just £44 – saving 26% on the usual cover price.

To order this brilliant Christmas present, use code GIFTWRAP17. Visit ICEBERGPRESS.CO.UK/CHRISTMAS or call 020 7415 7238

We are a small team so at busy times we may be an answerphone – leave us a message and we’ll call you back.

Terms and conditions: Saving compares to buying 12 full priced issues from the UK newsstand. This o er is for UK subscriptions only – if you’d like a giftwrapped subscription and live overseas, then please contact us. Giftwrapped issues will be the January 2018 issue and will be delivered in time for Christmas. Last order date: 17 December 2017. Prices correct at point of print and are subject to change. For full terms and conditions please visit icebergpress.co.uk/tandc.

 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

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Photography by Anne Deppe.

Photography by Anne Deppe.

Make | Marbled tree baubles

Lottie Storey December 6, 2017

Give baubles a quick marble makeover courtesy of bright nail varnish 

You will need:
Colourful thread or string
Scissors
White Christmas tree baubles in various sizes (try hobbycraft.co.uk)
Large bowl
Nail varnish in two colours, here orange and lilac

1 Attach a piece of string to a Christmas tree bauble. Fill a large bowl with enough lukewarm water to completely submerge the bauble (leaving room for displacement).
2 Add a few drops from each of the bottles of nail varnish to the water. The nail varnish will form a thin, colourful film on the surface.
3 Now immerse the bauble completely in the bowl, holding the cap and ring to push it underwater.
4 A thin layer of nail varnish will coat the bauble. Hang it up to dry for a couple of hours.

Taken from Supercraft Christmas by Sophie Pester and Catharina Bruns, (Dorling Kindersley).

Turn to page 38 of December's The Simple Things where we celebrate the role of the bauble in Christmases past, present and many more into the future.

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the December issue:

Featured
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Dec 31, 2024
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Dec 24, 2023
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Dec 29, 2022
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In Making, Christmas Tags make, weekend project, Make project, christmas, issue 66, december
Comment
catherine-zaidova-58075.jpg

A could-do list for December

Lottie Storey November 30, 2017

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

  • Take a night-time walk to see the Christmas lights
  • Remember your time is as valuable as any present
  • Aim to do one small act of kindness every day
  • Do things one at a time rather than multi-tasking
  • Replace perfect with good enough
  • Sing, dance, play and smile...!
  • Write down what you really want this Christmas to be like and start from there

    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   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here.

 

More from the December issue:

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Dec 31, 2024
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In Magazine Tags could do, december, christmas, issue 66
1 Comment
Dec-17-Subs-page-image3_jwretA.png

Christmas | Giftwrapped subscriptions to The Simple Things

Lottie Storey November 29, 2017

Make someone’s Christmas. A gift wrapped subscription is the gift that keeps on giving.

As with our regular weekend projects, preparation is key when it comes to Christmas. Which is why we don’t think it’s too early to consider our lovely giftwrapped subscription. Who’s the special person in your life who would love recipes for slow food shared with friends, inspiration for home and garden, and learning new skills?

ALL WRAPPED UP

  • They’ll enjoy 12 months of The Simple Things delivered to their door.
  • We’ll giftwrap the first issue of their subscription in brown paper and string and send it (just in time for Christmas) along with a Christmas card on your behalf. Want to hand over the first issue yourself? That’s fine, too – just let us know in the box on the order form.
  • Just £44 – saving 26% on the usual cover price.

To order this brilliant Christmas present, use code GIFTWRAP17. Visit ICEBERGPRESS.CO.UK/CHRISTMAS or call 020 7415 7238

We are a small team so at busy times we may be an answerphone – leave us a message and we’ll call you back.

Terms and conditions: Saving compares to buying 12 full priced issues from the UK newsstand. This o er is for UK subscriptions only – if you’d like a giftwrapped subscription and live overseas, then please contact us. Giftwrapped issues will be the January 2018 issue and will be delivered in time for Christmas. Last order date: 17 December 2017. Prices correct at point of print and are subject to change. For full terms and conditions please visit icebergpress.co.uk/tandc.

 

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the December issue:

Featured
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In Christmas, Magazine, Reader offer Tags issue 64, october
Comment
Photography: Peden + Munk.

Photography: Peden + Munk.

Recipe | Soft gingerbread tiles with rum butter glaze

Lottie Storey November 29, 2017

A tin of Ottolenghi’s fabulously festive biscuits will prove invaluable over the coming weeks. Serve to unexpected guests with a pot of coffee, offer to eager little hands searching for something sugary, or simply dip in whenever you need a sweetly spiced pick-me-up.

Makes 12–14 depending on size of stamp and cutter*
85g unsalted butter, at room temperature
90g soft dark brown sugar
100g black treacle (or blackstrap molasses)
1 egg yolk
235g plain flour, plus extra for dusting and printing
1⁄2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
1 tsp ground ginger
1⁄2 tsp ground cinnamon
Pinch ground cloves
1 tbsp Dutch processed cocoa powder (such as Green & Blacks)
For the rum butter glaze:
80g icing sugar
tiny pinch ground cinnamon
15g unsalted butter
1 tbsp dark rum (or lemon juice if you want to keep the glaze booze-free)

1 Place the butter, sugar and treacle in the bowl of an electric mixer with the paddle attachment in place. Beat on medium speed until smooth.
2 Sift all the dry ingredients into a bowl with 1⁄4 tsp each of salt and black pepper. Reduce the speed of the mixer and add the dry ingredients to the butter and treacle. Once the mix comes together, tip the dough onto a lightly floured surface and knead gently.
3 Roll out the dough so it’s about 6mm thick (no need to chill it first, but the dough can be wrapped in cling film and kept in the fridge for up to two days before baking). Preheat oven to 170C/ Fan 150C/325F. Line two baking trays with baking parchment and set aside.
4 Dip the biscuit stamps in a small bowl of flour, shake off any excess and then press them firmly into the dough, one at a time, to create a deep imprint. (Bear in mind the biscuits will rise when cooked so light imprints will disappear.) Using a round biscuit cutter that is slightly larger than the pattern, cut out the pieces of imprinted gingerbread.
5 Transfer the biscuits to the lined baking trays about 2cm apart. Re-roll the dough and continue to stamp and cut until all the dough is used up. Bake for 9-10 mins, rotating the trays halfway through, until firm to the touch. They will continue to firm as they cool.
6 Prepare the glaze while the biscuits are in the oven, as it needs to be brushed on while they are still warm. Sift the icing sugar and cinnamon into a bowl. Add the melted butter, rum (or lemon juice) and 1 tsp of warm water and mix with a spoon until smooth. The glaze will thicken slightly if it sits around, so stir through a little more warm water if you need to – it should be the consistency of runny honey.
7 Remove the biscuits from the oven, leave to rest for 5 mins, then brush or dab the glaze all over with a pastry brush. Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely. Biscuits will keep for up to five days in an airtight container.

Recipe from Sweet by Yotam Ottolenghi and Helen Goh (Ebury).

*Try to get hold of some biscuit stamps if you can – they can easily be bought online. Sold as ‘springerle’, they come in all patterns, shapes and sizes. If you can’t get hold of any, the biscuits can be made using regular round cutters or cut into squares or rectangles with a knife, or try using the ornate base of a cut glass tumbler.

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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

View the sampler here

 

More from the December issue:

Featured
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Dec 31, 2024
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Dec 31, 2024
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In Christmas Tags christmas, issue 66, december, biscuits, christmas baking, ginger, christmas recipes
1 Comment
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  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well
Feb 27, 2025
Feb 27, 2025

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See the sample of our latest issue here

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

Buy a copy of Flourish 2, our wellbeing bookazine

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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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