Featured
Final thought | May
Am I overthinking this?
Our May issue is almost at an end now. We’ve loved this very special issue, which was put together slightly on the hoof, from our homes and gardens and using old ideas, and new, and a lot of imagination. It was certainly unlike any issue we’ve made before and is one we’ll all remember. We hope you enjoyed it, too.
Here’s something from our May issue to make you smile, reprinted from Am I Overthinking This? by Michelle Rial (Chronicle Books).
The May Inspire issue is still in the shops for a few more days but you can continue to order it from our online store, of course, if you missed it.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
More from our May issue…
A few more of our final thoughts…
Sponsored post | Don't forget to smile
Look after your pearly whites the natural way
This month sees the Oral Health Foundation’s National Smile Month (18 May-18 June), which for almost 50 years has championed the benefits of having good oral health and promoting the value of a healthy smile. It’s more important than ever for us to practise good oral hygiene, as it may be some time before we are able to access our dentist for a routine checkup.
Brushing our teeth is an important part of the daily regimen, and as such should be done twice daily - once in the morning and once in the evening. In the morning, always wait half an hour after eating as otherwise the acids left in the mouth from eating coupled with the brushing action can damage the tooth enamel and cause erosion. At night, the best time to brush your teeth is immediately before going to bed. Regular use of mouthwash and flossing can also help you maintain good oral hygiene.
When choosing products to use for your oral care routine, it’s important to think about your oral health needs. Leading botanical brand JASON offers a range of oral care, featuring toothpastes (with or without fluoride) and mouthwashes with something for every dental concern. Choose from:
Healthy Mouth range to fight tartar build-up plus antimicrobial and antiseptic tea tree oil to fight bacteria.
PowerSmile range for whiter, brighter smiles with natural teeth whiteners and super-fresh pepperminty breath.
Sea Fresh range formulated with blue-green algae for strengthening tooth enamel.
Simply Coconut Chamomile Soothing Toothpaste for sensitive gums and mouth made with 99% earth-sourced ingredients.
Kids Only Strawberry Toothpaste for fun fruity freshness in an easy-to-squeeze tube that encourages independent brushing.
All products are vegan-friendly, cruelty-free and free from SLS, parabens, preservatives, artificial colours, artificial sweeteners, saccharin and propylene glycol.
See the whole range and shop at jasonnaturalcare.co.uk/dental.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
From our May issue…
Photography: Catherine Frawley
Learn | to play a little sunshine on the ukulele
Gain a new skill and spread a little sunshine along the way
We hope you liked our ‘sunshine’ chalkboard*, that we featured in our May issue. We’ve been humming ‘You Are My Sunshine’ all month.
If, like us, you’ve been trying your hand at a new skill or using lockdown as time to improve on a skill you already have, you might have dusted off an old instrument or two. We know lots of people have dug out their ukuleles or bought one online recently. They’re a really easy instrument to learn. If you fancy having a go, we’ve started you off here with the chords for You Are My Sunshine. It’s the song most uke players start off with because it only uses three really simple chords.
Here are the chords you need to know to play You Are My Sunshine. (The left hand side is the top of the fret board, so with C you would place your ring finger on the bottom string on the third fret).
You Are My Sunshine (Jimmie Davis, Charles Mitchell, 1939)
You Are My [C] Sunshine
My only sunshine.
You make me [F] happy
When skies are [C] grey.
You'll never know, [F] dear,
How much I [C] love you.
Please don't take my [G7] sunshine a-[C] -way
The other night, dear,
As I lay sleeping
I dreamed I [F] held you in my [C] arms.
When I a-[F]-woke, dear,
I was mis-[C]-taken
And I hung my [G7] head and [C] cried.
You Are My [C] Sunshine
My only sunshine.
You make me [F] happy
When skies are [C] grey.
You'll never know, [F] dear,
How much I [C] love you.
Please don't take my [G7] sunshine a-[C] -way
Please don't take my [G7] sunshine a-[C] -way
*You can buy a selection of our chalkboard pictures as postcards from our online store.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
Three more new things to learn about…
Photogrphy: Kirstie Young
Food matching | Rosemary
A list of things to put with rosemary that aren’t lamb
If you have a rosemary bush going wild right now you won’t want to miss our Herbery feature in our May issue, by Lia Leendertz, in which she shares three very different recipes with rosemary and gives advice on which herbs to plant in your garden.
We were pleased to see lots of ideas we hadn’t thought of for rosemary recipes - it’s too good a herb to wait in the wings to be shown the occasional leg of lamb, after all. So here’s a list of a few more foods that love rosemary. Mix and match them as you wish:
Almonds
Anchovy
Apricot
Aubergines
Bacon
Brussels sprouts
Butter
Butternut squash
Chestnuts
Chicken
Chocolate
Citrus fruits
Courgettes
Gin
Goat’s cheese
Honey
Mushrooms
Oily fish
Olives
Onions
Parmesan
Parsnips
Peas
Potatoes
Prawns
Rhubarb
Strawberries
Sweet potato
Watermelon
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
More from our May issue…
More from our Herbery features…
Illustration: Georgina Luck
Make | a candle from crayons
Because you can never have too much emergency lighting or fun with crayons
Perhaps there’s been a power cut and your home has been plunged into darkness? Or maybe you just want a project that puts to use of all those broken Crayolas lying around (that’s enough to make any healthy and safety inspector grind their teeth to dust). Here’s the hack for you.
Pick up three of those surplus colouring devices, all roughly equal in size, and remove their labels (soaking them in cold water makes this easier).
Now bunch them together, with a string of natural fibre (think a length of wool, or a strand from an old-fashioned mop) running up through the centre as your wick.
Bind the lot with a couple of straightened out paperclips and secure its base carefully. Make sure you keep a close eye on it, but your makeshift candle should burn for about an hour.
OK, you won’t be giving Diptyque any sleepless nights, but you’ve certainly acquired some valuable survivalist skills.
This was just one of the miscellaneous makes from our bumper Miscellany pages in our May issue, where you can also learn skills including getting rid of slugs, telling apart all the different pasta shapes in the shops, recalling Romeo and Juliet accurately, and listing the component parts of a flower, among other things. There’s also a wordsearch, a spot the difference and a game of Eye Spy to keep you busy.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
More from our May issue…
More fun from our Miscellany pages…
Competition | Win £100 to shop ethically
Win £100 to treat yourself and the planet with Inclusive Trade
Founded in 2017, inclusivetrade.com was created to make ethical shopping easy. You’ll discover products that are stylish, rare and beautiful – but have all been created to have a positive impact. To introduce you to its fantastic makers and one-of-a-kind products, Inclusive Trade is giving away a £100 voucher to one lucky reader. Here are a few ideas on how you could spend it… Paradise Fashion hand-weave beautifully soft cotton scarves in Ethiopia, naturally dyed with the likes of turmeric and coffee grounds – ideal for wearing all year round, meanwhile you can take pleasure wearing the delicate jewellery from Eden, comforted by the knowledge that their innovative programme helps to support girls and women who have been trafficked. And for sporty types, Yogacycled produces uniquely illustrated activewear made from recycled plastics.
WIN PRODUCTS WITH PURPOSE
Inclusive Trade is giving away a £100 voucher for one lucky reader. In addition to one main winner, two lucky runners up will each receive a block-printed tote bag by Aarohan, handmade in India. Closing date 6 December 2019. To enter click the button below and answer the following question:
Q. In what year was Inclusive Trade founded?
Terms and conditions:
A winner will be selected at random from all correct entries received and notified soon after. The voucher is valid for 12 months until 6 May 2021. The voucher applies to products from the following brands only: Seblewongel Gelan, By Karin, Antonio Prahl, Aarohan, B Frog, Eden, Jaspe Maya Moderno, Khit Sun Yin, The Kat & Monocle, Mrs Waller’s Tribe, Muya, Paradise Fashion, Sucremor, Yogacycled. Competition closes 11 June 2020. The winner cannot transfer the prize or swap it for cash. You’ll find our full terms and conditions at icebergpress.co.uk/comprules
More ways to live better…
From our May issue…
Illustration: Zuza Misko
Wildlife | make a hedgehog hotel
Reach out to a spiky friend and invite them to stay in your outdoor space
Having a hedgehog visiting your garden is pretty special. In our May Inspire issue (in shops and available to buy from our online shop now), our Magical Creatures slot celebrates the hedgehog. Turn to page 64 to read all about our favourite hedge-dwelling hogs.
At this time of year, hedgehogs are putting the finishing touches to their homes and getting ready for mating season. So what better time to build a hedgehog hotel? If you want to provide a dedicated boutique bolthole or a simple bothy for hedgehogs, hedgehogstreet.org has some good ideas, whatever your budget or DIY expertise.
Self-catering hedgehog hostel
One of the best habitats you can provide is actually just to leave an area of your garden be. A compost or a wood pile that hasn’t been disturbed for a while is a favourite place for hedgehogs to lay their heads. And because insects will also make these areas their homes, your hedgehogs will never go hungry… there’s a full room service menu of grubs and bugs for them to choose from!
Simple hedgehog B&B
Use an upside-down crate or plastic storage box (add a few air holes) and cut an entrance into the front 13cm square. Cover the box with plastic sheeting and cover that with twigs and leaves. Finally, add a comfy bed (some pet straw or dry leaves).
Five-star hedgehog hotel
Using untreated wood, nail together a box. Leave the ‘roof’ loose so you can get in to clean it out when it’s uninhabited. Add batons underneath to lift it off the ground slightly and stop it getting too damp. Add a narrow tunnel at the front to prevent predators getting their noses in. You can find an easy to follow plan on the RSPB’s website.
Whatever type of dwelling you go for, remember not to put food in it. Hedgehogs like their food a little way away from their beds. And it’s best to locate it at the boundary of your garden, within five metres of the house. If you also ensure that there are some gaps under your walls or fences, you’ll make it easier for hedgehogs to find you.
If you like the spiky little chap illustrated above by Zuza Misko, you might like to know that you can buy a print of him for £15 from our online shop. It’s one of four of our Magical Creatures that is available as a print.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
More from our May issue…
More creatures we find a bit magical…
Photography: Kirstie Young
Cook | hazelnut pesto and gnocchi with fennel
Deeply nutty toasted hazelnuts make a brilliant alternative to pine nuts in pesto. Delicious dolloped over your own homemade gnocchi
In our May issue (in shops and available to order online now), we have a feature by Lisa Leendertz from our series Today, Tomorrow, To Keep, with recipes for a tart for today, a bhaji for tomorrow and a kimchi to keep. So we thought we’d dig another out of our archives. This recipe is from our ‘Hazelnuts’ Today, Tomorrow, To Keep from issue 76. We hope you enjoy it again.
Serves 4
For the pesto
1 large bunch of parsley, leaves only
60g blanched and toasted hazelnuts
60g hard goats’ cheese, finely grated
150ml cold-pressed extra virgin rapeseed oil
Juice of ¼ lemon
For the gnocchi
500g potatoes, peeled and boiled
1 egg, beaten
125g plain flour, plus extra for dusting
Olive oil and butter, for frying and drizzling
For the fennel
50g butter
2 large fennel bulbs, each cut into eight wedges to serve
A few toasted hazelnuts
Hard goats’ cheese, for grating
1 If you have a food processor, put all the pesto ingredients into it and blitz together. If you’re using a pestle and mortar, crush the nuts first, then finely chop the herbs, add these and the rest of the ingredients, and pound to a paste. Whichever method you use, taste and add salt and pepper as necessary. Add a little more oil if you prefer a looser consistency.
2 To make the gnocchi, push the potatoes through a ricer, or mash them (riced potatoes make lighter, fluffier gnocchi). Roughly mix in the egg with a fork, then sieve over the flour, season with salt and work into a dough, kneading a few times. Dust a work surface with flour and roll out the mixture to 2-3cm thick. Cut into short lengths and mark with a fork.
3 Bring a pan of salted water to the boil and drop in the gnocchi in batches. Lift out with a slotted spoon when they bob to the surface after a minute or so. Drain on kitchen paper.
4 For the fennel, melt the butter in a frying pan and gently fry the fennel until caramelised (at least 10 mins). Turn and caramelise the other side.
5 If you like, you can brown the gnocchi. In another frying pan, melt a knob of butter with a little olive oil and fry the gnocchi until golden. Divide the gnocchi and fennel between four plates and top each with a spoonful or two of pesto, some toasted nuts and a little extra grated goats’ cheese.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
More from our May issue…
More things to make today, tomorrow and to keep…
Playlist Extravaganza
Some of our favourite The Simple Things playlists from over the years
For our special May ‘scrapbook’ edition, rather than creating a new playlist as we do every month, we thought we’d gather together a few of our favourites from past issues. We hope you enjoy them. You can listen to them all here:
A bounce in your step
Songs to make you smile
Morning songs
Songs to help you slow down
Songs of faraway places
Music that makes us dance
Spring cleaning songs
Songs from the movies
Flower songs
Tea and coffee songs
Sunshine and showers
Music to soak to
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
More from our May issue…
More of our playlists…
Nostalgia | Weird but wonderful childhood hobbies
Were you the proud owner of a rubber collection or a keen creator of garden homes for clay dragons? You’ve found your people. Read on…
We’re celebrating the art of being bored in our May issue, something we’ve all got a little more time to dedicate to at the moment. And we’ve been remembering the ways we used to spend long days with not much to do when we were children, when hobbies mainly took place in our bedrooms and craft equipment might extend only to a tin of paints, some polymer clay and a scrapbook, but were no less absorbing for it. If anything we were more obsessed then than we have been since.
We asked The Simple Things staff what their favourite strange hobbies were as children and have made a list of the most popular here, along with ideas for how you could ‘grown-up-ify’ them to enjoy them again. (Though don’t let us stop you if you still want to build a matchbox house for a woodlouse. Life’s rich tapestry and all that…)
Building tiny things
Wasn’t Fimo and the like an absolute dream for creative types? Several of us spent most of our formative years making entire tiny villages and peoples from polymer clay, painstakingly cutting out tiny eyes, ears, dresses and dragons. One TST staff member (who should remain nameless to save her blushes) then photographed them and stuck all the photographs into notebooks, cataloguing each character and their backstory in tiny, tedious detail. Oh the excitement of being able to create your very own world exactly as wanted it (skill permitting) and then the delicious anticipation of it coming out of the oven, stuck fast to an old baking tray and hotter than the sun for the next 20 minutes, meaning you could only stand and stare on tenterhooks until it was cool enough to handle.
If you’re a pre-Fimo child perhaps you did the same with plasticine, salt dough or something else sticky that dried to a fine, unremovable patina on your sweaty hands, and adhered itself with vigour to your bedroom carpet (sorry, Mum).
Grown-up tiny building: If you still harbour a love of building tiny things deep down, try making walnut shell dioramas. Delightfully bonkers and madly charming. Look them up on Pinterest or Etsy for ideas.
Spotting and jotting
Were you a keen train spotter? Or, possibly even a car number plate spotter? It’s ok. You’re among friends. A frighteningly large number of us remember standing at the living room window making notes of car number plates as they passed and keeping log books of them. Riveting. But there’s a certain delight in looking out for things to ‘spot’ and keeping records of when and where they were recorded. It’s kept Eye Spy books in business for years, after all! What satisfaction there once was in seeing an engine never before glimpsed in our part of the country, or passing a rare Edward VIII post box.
Grown-up spotting and jotting: One word: birds. Shake off your ideas of twitchers being, erm, men of a certain age. Birdwatching is the ultimate cool hobby for those who love spotting things and keeping notes about it. Try How to be a Bad Birdwatcher (Short Books) by Simon Barnes to get you started.
Studying the Argos catalogue to degree level
They didn’t call it the Book of Dreams for nothing. We all remember endless afternoons spent poring over the Argos catalogue, first choosing something from each page we would buy if it was a ‘buy something from each page or face certain death’ situation (obviously). Then we made fantasy wedding lists. Eternal Bow crockery featured quite heavily. Then, when the new catalogue arrived, the best part of all… being allowed to cut up the old Argos catalogue and create room sets for our dream homes, with polished teak dining tables stuck down next to chintzy curtains and garish lampshades. Bliss.
Grown-up catalogue crafting: If you still love a bit of interior design dreaming, get on Pinterest and start creating moodboards for all your rooms. It’ll give you a good starting place next time you have a home decorating project on your hands and is still a surprisingly relaxing way to spend an afternoon with a cup of tea. And best of all, money is no object when you’re window shopping.
Rose petal perfume
Be honest, did anyone NOT at some point strip their parents’ rose bushes of petals, collect them all in a bucket, fill it with water and stir it daily in certainty it would eventually smell like Chanel No 5? And, then, in spite of the disappointment of having created nothing but a bucket of filthy, stagnant water, did any of us NOT do it all again the following week, certain that if we could just tweak the recipe correctly we’d get there? We thought not. It was good fun though wasn’t it?
Grown-up rose petal perfume: Make real beauty products and experiment with essential oils at home. We have a few ideas in our May issue in our feature, Natural Selection. We recommend the skin-boosting body butter in particular.
Building your own zoo
Before we begin, we’d like to apologise to all the woodlice that went home from school in our pockets to the Woodlouse Zoo and ants that probably didn’t enjoy Ant Castle as much as we had hoped, and every poor beetle that spent 20 terrified minutes in our matchboxes. At least our pets had some peace while we were hunting ladybirds. We know now that it wasn’t right, but it’s hard to absorb that message when you’re a three-foot naturalist. Insects are fascinating as well as being an essential part of our environment. Perhaps you need to be nearer the ground to appreciate them fully, and forget about them as you grow and they become further away, but we spent many a happy hour creating habitats for unwilling wildlife and studying tiny thoraxes, little legs and amazing antennae.
Grown-up entomology: If you still have a yearning to build a B&B for bugs, you’re in luck. There are endless habitats on the market for everything from ladybirds to butterflies, and you can always build your own, too, with a few bricks, palettes, sticks and stones and the odd bit of cardboard and cotton wool to create cosy holes for insects looking for somewhere to lay their heads. And you’ll be doing the earth a favour at the same time.
Read our feature The Lost Art of Boredom on p90 of the May issue.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
More from our May issue…
More things that make us feel nostalgic…
Photography and project by Nat Mady/Hackney Herbal
Make | proudly homemade teabags
Make a brew your own by creating your own teabags, filled with fresh herbs and flowers from your garden or whichever dried things you fancy
Our special May ‘scrapbook’ issue has the title ‘Inspire’ and you’ll find hundreds of things in it that we hope will inspire you. Among them is our Crafternoons feature showcasing lots of lovely projects skills you might not have tried before but can easily be achieved or learned in an afternoon.
The homemade teabags pictured above are by Hackney Herbal, and they tell you all about how to make your own in a crafternoon in the issue. Theirs are made using dried herbs but we’re going to have a go at making them with fresh things from our gardens. You might try lavender, mint, lemon balm or rosemary. See what’s looking perky and might perk up a brew in your kitchen.
Here are some simple instructions from Hackney Herbal on how to get started. You can read the rest of the feature in our scrapbook-style Inspire issue in shops now - or buy it direct from us.
You will need
Unbleached muslin fabric (try souschef.co.uk or johnlewis.com), or you could buy readymade self-fill tea bags from dotboutique.co.uk Cotton thread 1 tsp of dried herbs
1 Cut unbleached muslin fabric into squares roughly measuring 10x10cm.
2 Choose between 2 to 4 dried herbs to mix and place in the middle of the square. You will need about a teaspoon of dried herbs in total.
3 Gather the corners of the square together and tie the teabag up using cotton thread.
4 Infuse in hot water for five minutes and drink. You can empty out the spent herbs and re-use the muslin again after rinsing it.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
More from our May issue…
More things to make at home…
Sponsored post | Avalon handcare
Treat dry hands to a little natural pampering
Guided by the infinite wisdom of nature and the knowledge that all beauty begins with the Earth, Avalon Organics® harnesses the pure benefits within botanicals to create nourishing products that contribute to a holistic lifestyle of health, wellness and sustainability.
Avalon Organics offers a range of botanically infused products to give a helping hand to both your skin’s health and happiness, seeking out plant-based organic ingredients from trusted sources. This process results in products that are safe to use, and safe for the Earth. As well as being vegan-friendly and certified by Cruelty Free International, all of the formulas are biodegradable and certified to the NSF/ANSI 305 Standard for Personal Care Products Containing Organic Ingredients or USDA Organic.
Searching out the beautifying benefits hidden within each plant, Avalon Organics develops formulas to not only nourish the body, but also to nourish the mind and soul for an uplifting experience with every use. Avalon Organics Glycerin Hand Soaps are designed to purify yet comfort skin without causing dryness or irritation, even with frequent washings. Generously enriched with vegetable glycerin to help lock in moisture and formulated with a hydrating aloe barbadensis leaf juice base, organic essential oils and vitamin E, to indulge and cleanse with every wash.
For the ultimate soothing combination, pair with a Hand & Body Lotion from Avalon Organics, featuring aloe barbadensis leaf juice, a healthy triple dose of plant lipids from shea butter, safflower and coconut oils to intensely moisturise, as well as beta glucans and oat bran extract to soothe any irritation and alleviate dryness. Choose from Nourishing Lavender for extra dry hands, Rejuvenating Rosemary for skin renewal, and Refreshing Lemon, which has a natural antibacterial blend of botanicals. Avalon Organics’ range of products is available at kijaniliving.com, ocado. com, waitrose.com and in store at Whole Foods Market.
From our May issue…
Illustration: Jennie Maizels
Friday Sketchbook Club | Botanicals
A pretty project that looks great framed in a kitchen or simply makes a beautiful page in your sketchbook
Welcome again to Friday Sketchbook Club! We’ve teamed up with illustrator Jennie Maizels to bring you a sketchbook project to do every Friday in April. We hope you enjoy them. Today we’re drawing botanicals.
Jennie started Sketchbook Club because she believes that anyone can draw. Her principle is that if we treat art like any other creative pastime and follow simple instructions, just like a recipe, we would all be drawing as much as we are baking, sewing and knitting.
Each module comes with instructions, a ‘How to’ video, reference material and often, templates which you can ‘transfer’. They have been carefully designed to suit all ages and abilities. A note on materials: the projects were originally designed to introduce a plethora of different paints, collage and methods but all can be altered to use what you have available. Just substitute as you like or need.
Ready to draw the Botanicals ? Then we’ll begin. You can watch the Botanicals video tutorial here and find the references for leeks, passion fruit, and tomatoes here as well as the transfers you might need. Alternatively, you can just follow the instructions below, using the picture above as inspiration,
You will need
A sheet of A4 black paper or card
HB pencil
Set of gouache paints
One thin and one larger paintbrush (Jennie used a size 1 and a size 6)
Colouring pencils
How to draw your Botanicals
Have a good look at the reference sheets and choose a fruit or vegetable to paint.
2. Start by drawing out your composition. Feel free to transfer any of the images rather than copying them if you would prefer. To transfer onto your black paper, turn the chosen image over (it might help to cut them out first) and, using the side of your chalk, rub evenly over the whole of the back of your image, then turning the page over so the plant/flowers are on top, hold your transfer page firmly so it doesn’t move around at all, on top of your black paper. Then, using a Biro, draw over the whole of the plant or flower image.Carefully take the transfer sheet off to reveal the chalky template on your black paper.
3. Work on your composition, making sure all the chosen illustrations are evenly spaced out, maybe filling any big spaces with some seeds or petal details.
4. Next,start to paint the botanical illustrations. look at the reference, you may want to use a white pen once the base layers of paint has dried,for some of the detail (or your size 1 paint brush). Adding a little white to colour, especially the reds, yellows and oranges,will make them really jump out. For flowers or seed heads, you could use a sponge, working in darker then lighter colours, dabbing on lightly.
5. For the lettering, first of all write it in pencil in ‘best’ italics, then paint over with cream or white paint using a fine brush, paint as thin as you can,adding depth to the lettering afterwards. You could write over the pencil using a white gel pen if you are nervous about painting lettering,it looks just as good.
6. When the page is dry, add detail to the illustrations using coloured pencils. Try white pencil for very thin root strands and dark green for leaf lines.You might prefer to draw in the majority of details in pencil rather than in paint, for example, just painting a green circle for the top of the leek and once the paint is dry, drawing in all the little circles in a dark green pencil and a white gel pen or pencil.
There are many more modules available on Jennie’s website, Sketchbook Club (only £4 each.), where you can also buy art kits and supplies. For more inspiration, you can follow Jennie on Instagram @jenniemaizels or visit the website jenniemaizels.com. Look out for another Friday Sketchbook Club project with Jennie here next week.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
More meetings of Sketchbook Club…
From our April issue…
Long weekend compendium
Photography: Kirstie Young
Projects, Pastimes and Proper Jobs to throw yourself into at home this month
There’s such joy in spending spring days at home when, as well as hunkering indoors, there is pottering in the garden, sewing that can be done into light evenings and the chance to really enjoy your home at its best.
With two long weekends to get stuck into this month (as well as, let’s face it, plenty of time at home), now is the ideal opportunity to do all those jobs and projects you never have time for and enjoy a bit of being busy doing nothing, too. And it’s a prospect to relish so take it slow and plan this well.
In our May issue, we have a special feature on Crafternoons, with delightful projects that will absorb you for just a few hours, but if an afternoon pleasantly whiled away isn’t enough for you, here are our ideas for whiling away an entire day or weekend productively.
Here’s our Simple Things Compendium of projects, pastimes and Proper Jobs that will make you wish long weekends could last all week.
Projects
Long weekends are made for good projects. The best sorts are fun to plan, absorb you completely and leave you with a glow of satisfaction. It’s a good idea to practise in advance your expression of nonchalance and an airy “oh it’s just something I knocked up at home” for when friends comment admiringly.
A simple project you can do in an afternoon is always satisfying and paper crafts are ideal for this timescale. An origami corner bookmark, homemade notebook, or dip-dyed stationery are good for paper craft beginners. For semi pros there is a plethora of paper ideas on the internet. We are coveting the paper sea scene under a little glass dome from Etsy maker My Papercut Forest. If you can repurpose some old paper for a project, award yourself an additional grown-up gold star - old maps, dressmaking patterns and tatty books or old newspapers can all look beautiful used to cover books, lampshades or even the walls of your loo.
We do love a kitchen table day. If you have a box of neglected essential oils lurking somewhere (who doesn’t?) you could spend a happy morning experimenting with scents to make room sprays (three parts water to one part witch hazel and your choice of oils), or even a cleaning spray for your yoga mat (a few drops each of tea tree, lavender and peppermint in distilled water). Neal’s Yard sells a range of ‘base’ products called Create Your Own if you want to branch out into lotions and potions.
In fact, how about dedicating a day (or even an entire weekend) to kitchen projects? We spend so much time in the kitchen on everyday food prep. How much lovelier to spend a day pottering in the heart of the home, radio murmuring, creating delicious things to store away for another day. We don’t think you can ever have enough jams and chutneys but if you fancy something different, try pickling vegetables or making green onion kimchi (pictured above) or turmeric pickled cauliflower, and you’ll always have something impressive to fancy up a cheese on toast lunch. A long weekend at home is the ideal time to get out those foodie kits thoughtful souls gave you for Christmas and you never got round to. They’re a fun way to try out a new kitchen project, from making your own cheese to brewing your own beer. Who knows, you could have a cottage industry started by Monday. And if you don’t have one in the back of a cupboard, make it a gift to yourself.
Keen stitchers might enjoy the opportunity to make the most of the light evenings, when fabric fun times need not be curtailed by 40-watt lightbulbs. How about stitching a hammock for the garden, re-covering a deck chair, or digging out your embroidery threads and customising a shopping bag with the name of your hometown? You might try a craft you’ve never tried to make something to you never knew you needed… needle-felted dachshund or macrame market bag, anyone?
Fancy a weekend spent making your garden a little lovelier? You could make a newspaper nursery for seedlings, by planting veg seeds in homemade paper pots, give your herb garden a complete makeover, or create one from scratch, planting them in something quirky, from the ubiquitous pair of old wellies to palettes, an old metal tub, concrete blocks or apple crate. And while you’re outside, if you can source some tins from the recycling turn them into garden tea light holders for the longer evenings: just clean thoroughly, spray-paint, fill with water and freeze and then punch hole patterns in them using a hammer and nails. Projects complete, we suggest you light your tea lights and spend the evening in the garden with something delicious you made earlier.
Pastimes
Is there anything nicer than being in a holiday cottage and having nothing but a pot of tea, and a book you found on the cottage’s bookshelf to occupy you? We think not. You can recreate that holiday cottage feeling by spending a day or two slowing down and whiling away a few hours on completely pointless things you love.
Along with mince pies, jigsaws are a joy we think should be indulged in all year. They’ve enjoyed something of a makeover recently. No more puzzles of Labrador puppies posing with carnations: there are endless ‘cool jigsaws’ to purchase (we love Jiggy Puzzles and Piecework Puzzles), with images beautiful enough to frame afterwards. We’ve even created an online puzzle or two of our own you might enjoy.
If a jigsaw has you in the mood for more puzzles, spend a morning with the crossword. If you’ve done newspaper crosswords regularly in the past you’ll know the joy of getting to know the quirks and in-jokes of the various ‘setters’. If you’re new to them, try The Telegraph for a good cryptic crossword that isn’t completely outfacing, but you’ll find a paper and a setter you get on with. All you need is a decent ballpoint pen and a large cafetiere of coffee.
We all ‘read’ but when was the last down you sat down to do nothing but read for a whole afternoon? (It was in that holiday cottage we mentioned, wasn’t it?) With a whole weekend to waste wonderfully, you could read a book you’ve never got round to, one you read when you were too young to appreciate it fully (we see you, Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca) or finish one you started and then put aside. And on that note, what happened to that novel you once started? Alternatively, get everyone in your house to pen a short story and read them aloud in the evening. You can see others telling stories at The Moth if you need a bit of performative inspiration.
Get out the board games, too, from old favourites like Cluedo and Battleship to the whizzier new board games, such as Sagrada, in which you build stained glass windows, or the spooky Betrayal at House on the Hill. And board games aren’t just for cold winter evenings; take them outside. There’s a plethora of garden games available, from Kubb to Giant Chess and, let’s face it, like tennis, Scrabble is more fun played on grass.
If you’re struggling to think of ways to pass the time on a slow weekend, cast your mind back to childhood. Chances are you’ll enjoy the same things now you loved then. Perhaps you have a neglected musical instrument in the loft you could get down and tune up? And when was the last time you spent an afternoon drawing, painting or doing calligraphy? You probably still had name tapes in your clothes, let’s be honest. Get out your pencils and a sketchbook and give it a go again. If you want a little guidance, try a Sketchbook Club online.
Talking of pastimes from past times, consider photography. Not the snap-happy stuff you do on your phone. Dig out your old camera and give it some love. Whether digital or analogue, the act of considering composition, light and shutter speed bring the skill and the joy back to taking a photograph.
A weekend at home is also a great opportunity to try something new - whether it’s scrapbooking, researching your family history online, or learning to play Mah Jong, whiling away some time never looked so appealing.
Proper jobs
We do like to bask in the glow of a job well done, but the best jobs are those that you can really get absorbed in at the time. How about making this the year you come over all Moley from The Wind in the Willows and do a proper spring clean?
Pop on our Spring Clean playlist and invest in some really lovely cleaning products you want to use then start at the top of the house and work down, dusting first, and doing floors last.
Alternatively, a couple of free days are a good opportunity to give a neglected spot a new lease of life. You could bottom the greenhouse; scrub the empty flower pots, sweep the spiders into a corner (but leave them somewhere to hang out), hang tools on walls so you’ve got some room to work, and voila, you have a sunny room of your own to escape to with a cup of tea and that crossword. Or treat your home’s exterior to a facial - wash down windowsills, scrub your front step (1950s housewife skirt tucked into knickers a plus but not a necessity) and Brasso your door furniture.
There’s something meditative about ‘enjoyable cleaning’. Decluttering your whole house, however, can feel like something of a chore, and we’re here for the fun jobs so we’d suggest choosing a small area to make lovely: sort out your coat cupboard, perhaps. Or what about your books? Would it make you happier to see them arranged by colour, author, subject matter or Dewey Decimal system? Imagine getting completely on top of your pantry… finding all those tins of weird things we all have at the back of the cupboard and actually making something with them, then sorting everything out with beautiful storage so a row of jars and tins greets you pleasingly as you open the door. Aaah… that’s better.
And there are a hundred small but enjoyable jobs to ‘do well’ on a weekend at home, from washing your cushion covers and polishing your cutlery to hanging that framed print that’s been standing in the hall for a year and finally, actually putting all your photographs into albums.
Don’t forget to reward yourself regularly with tea and cake for your efforts. And make it some decent Earl Grey and a proper homemade cake. If a slow weekend is worth doing, it’s worth doing properly, we think.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
More ways to take it slow…
From our May Scrapbook issue…
May Scrapbook Special Edition
We were INSPIRED when it came to making our new May issue. Necessity is the mother of invention and all that. You’ve been telling us (and we love to hear it) that The Simple Things offers some respite from stress, worry and boredom during this difficult time, so we set ourselves the task to fill the magazine with even more comfort, calm and cheer than usual. It’s a homemade scrapbook of our best work and favourite features that we think will help right now. And it is literally homemade, edited and designed by the team from our kitchen tables, sofas and bedrooms.
So what’s inside? Here’s a list that might tick your boxes…
Storecupboard cooking
Garden wildlife
Baking bread
Veg patch advice
Crafternoons
Ways to feel better
Bedtime stories
Plenty of Ideas for slowing down, enjoying what you have and making the most of where you live.
PLUS A 12-page compendium of puzzles, games, amazing facts and forgotten wisdom.
Our May Scrapbook Edition is available now for pre-order to be sent out from Monday 27 April, so you’ll get it delivered to your door before it officially goes on sale. We hope you enjoy it.
Photography: Catherine Frawley
Recipe | a picnic pie for the garden
A delicious picnic pie tastes as good in the garden as it does on a blanket in the woods
This lovely layered veggie pie beats soggy sandwiches hands down. One slice is never enough. You can find the recipe for this and the rest of our outdoor menu in our April issue… Salad jars with peanut butter dressing, tomato, mozzarella and prosciutto skewers, homemade scotch eggs and berry cheesecake.
Serves 6-8
You will need:
400g butternut squash, cubed
1 red onion, sliced
Olive oil
1 tbsp fresh rosemary, finely chopped
1 tbsp fresh sage, finely chopped
50g soft goat’s cheese
2 large peppers
1 courgette, sliced
150g baby spinach
100g ricotta
½ tsp freshly grated nutmeg
500g shortcrust pastry
1 large egg, beaten
How to make:
1 Pre-heat the oven to 200C/ 180C Fan/Gas 6.
2 Peel and deseed the butternut squash and cut it into small cubes. Place on a baking tray with the sliced onion, drizzle with olive oil, season with salt and pepper and roast for 30 mins, or until soft. After 20 mins, add the rosemary and sage.
3 Transfer to a bowl and, when cool, stir in the goat’s cheese and set aside. Place the peppers, whole, on a separate baking sheet and cook for 30 mins or until the skin blackens. Allow to cool before peeling the skin, deseeding and cutting into slices. Allow to drain in a sieve until ready to assemble. Heat a frying pan with a little olive oil and add the sliced courgette. You may need to do this in batches. Cook each side until brown, then transfer to a plate and set aside.
4 In the same pan, add the spinach, allow to wilt in the heat for 2-3 mins, transfer to a colander and, when cool enough to handle, squeeze out the excess moisture. Chop up and place in a large bowl. Add the ricotta, sprinkle in the nutmeg, season with salt and pepper and stir to combine. Set aside.
5 Grease a 20cm spring-form tin. Lightly flour a surface and roll out two thirds of the pastry to cover the base and tin sides. Carefully press into the tin leaving some overhang, then trim the rest. With the remaining pastry, roll out a circle large enough to cover the top of the tin and set aside. Spread the base with the spinach mix, followed by the pepper slices, then a layer of courgettes and finally the butternut squash mix. Add the pastry top, crimp the edges to seal the pie and make a hole in the top for the steam to escape.
6 Brush the top with the beaten egg and bake for 50 mins or until the top is golden brown. Leave to cool completely before removing from the tin. Slice to serve. Cook’s note: This pie is good hot or cold. so, it’s great for a picnic. It can be made the day before, simply keep in the fridge until ready to serve.
You can find the rest of the outdoor recipes in this menu in our April issue, available in shops now or from our online shop.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
More from our April issue…
More outdoor recipes for Spring…
Illustration: Jennie Maizels
Friday Sketchbook Club | Camping
Learn how to create this cheery spring camping scene. Sketchbooks at the ready
It’s Friday Sketchbook Club time. We’ve teamed up with illustrator Jennie Maizels to bring you a sketchbook project to do every Friday for the next few weeks. We hope you enjoy them. Today we’re drawing this very jolly camping scene.
Jennie started Sketchbook Club because she believes that anyone can draw. Her principle is that if we treat art like any other creative pastime and follow simple instructions, just like a recipe, we would all be drawing as much as we are baking, sewing and knitting.
Each module comes with instructions, a ‘How to’ video, reference material and often, templates which you can ‘transfer’. They have been carefully designed to suit all ages and abilities. A note on materials: the projects were originally designed to introduce a plethora of different paints, collage and methods but all can be altered to use what you have available. Just substitute as you like or need.
Ready to draw the Camping scene? Then we’ll begin. You can watch the Camping video tutorial here and find the river template you’ll need here along with the camping ‘references’. Alternatively, you can just follow the instructions below, using the picture above as inspiration,
You will need
A sheet of A4 green paper or card
Biro
Gluestick
HB pencil
Set of gouache paints
One thin and one larger paintbrush (Jennie used a size 1 and a size 6)Colouring pencils
How to draw your Camping scene
Start by placing the river template over your green card and draw over very firmly with a biro pen, this will leave an indentation of the lines of the river. Next, carefully tear along these lines on the green card. Stick each side down into your sketchbook using a glue stick.
2 .Next, have a good look at the reference and roughly sketch out your first tent, caravan or Teepee. You might like to transfer some of the more difficult items, such as cars and camper-vans.Do this by drawingover the whole of the chosen image with a firm HB pencil. Turn the paper over and position the car/caravan etc.onto your page and scribble over the back with a lead pencil firmly, making sure it doesn’t move around too much.
3. Using Gouache paints and a size one brush, start to add colour. Continue this way until your page is peppered with campers.
4. You can add details with coloured pencils now or later.
5. Add trees as you go, some behind campers and some in front. Really look at the reference and experiment with some of the more stylized shapes, again, adding pencil for detail later if you wish.
6. Finally, add little coloured pencil blue wavy lines in the river.
There are many more modules available on Jennie’s website, Sketchbook Club (only £4 each.), where you can also buy art kits and supplies. For more inspiration, you can follow Jennie on Instagram @jenniemaizels or visit the website jenniemaizels.com. Look out for another Friday Sketchbook Club project with Jennie here next week.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe
From our April issue…
More drawing inspiration….
Sponsored post | Avalon hair care
Look to Avalon Organics® for gentle, safe and effective hair care to restore your hair’s natural beauty after the winter months, without the use of harsh preservatives or hair-stripping cleansers.
For hair that is dried-out post-winter, try Nourishing Lavender Shampoo & Conditioner. Lavender essential oil, quinoa protein, aloe vera, babassu oil and vitamin E work in harmony to cleanse and nourish every strand.
If your hair is dull or weighed down by product buildup, look no further than the latest launch: Smooth Shine Apple Cider Vinegar Shampoo & Conditioner. Raw apple cider vinegar, nettle extract and argan and babassu oils work together to clarify and restore hair to its natural ph balance.
Biotin B-Complex Thickening Shampoo & Conditioner are from the Therapy range, and will be a blessing to those looking to build body in fine, thinning hair. Biotin, saw palmetto, quinoa protein and vitamin E stimulate the scalp to encourage hair growth, and cleanse, strengthen and nourish hair from root to tip for hair for thicker, more voluminous, and softer hair.
Also from the Therapy range, Tea Tree Mint Scalp Normalizing Shampoo & Conditioner will help relieve itchy dry scalps, thanks to a blend of tea tree, mint, eucalyptus and chamomile. With use, hydration levels are restored in the scalp and hair, circulation is energised, and hair is soft, shiny and manageable and the scalp is comfortable and balanced.
All products are NSF/ANSI 305 certified, as well as being EWG VERIFIED™, vegan, cruelty free and biodegradable. All packaging is made from high post-consumer material content and sustainably sourced paperboard, all recyclable after use.
Curated from nature’s resources, Avalon Organics® beauty products are deep-rooted in a profound respect for the earth. Combining modern science with botanical knowledge, Avalon Organics® constantly strives to produce products that are safe to use and safe for the earth, thoughtfully developing formulas to nourish the body, mind and soul.
Avalon Organics® products are available from Waitrose, Ocado.com and www.kijaniliving.com
From our April issue…
Photograph: Kirstie Young
Make | a hand-me-down recipe book
Making a culinary heirloom is so easy and will give you much joy in making it, too
In our April issue, there’s a lovely feature by Lia Leendertz all about a recipe book she inherited from a relative. You can find some of the recipes from ‘Ellen’s Cookbook’ in the feature, including a blancmange with strawberries, egg flip and Abernethy biscuits. If you’re inspired to create a recipe book of your own to one day bequeath to future generations, here’s how.
1. Gather all your favourite recipes and ask members of your family what their favourite ones are too so it’s filled with memories as well as tasty treats.
2. Split them into categories – starters, snacks, mains, pudding etc. If you’ve got far too many , consider a theme, such as Italian dishes or vegetarian cooking, and create a few cookbooks instead.
3. Decide on your layout. What measurements will you use? How many people does it serve? How long does it take to prepare? How long will it keep? How do you store it?
4. Add notes of all the little tricks and tips you use when making them. Add personal memories about the times you served them up and the reactions they received. These little stories and additions are what make the books personal and a real treasure to pass on.
5. Get the picture – Think about adding photos of each dish so you remember how you presented them. It’s also a great excuse to get cooking so you can take a snap and scoff your favourite food.
Buy this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe