Allotment Heaven easy recipes

Now got such a collection of easy recipes, thought it might be a good idea to gather links to them all in one page. So here they all are...

Alcoholic easy recipes

Apple wine
Blackberry vodka
Dandelion wine
Plum wine
Raspberry vodka
Sloe gin or vodka

Jam easy recipes
Blackberry jam
Plum jam
Rhubarb jam

Blackberry vodka easy recipe

There's such an abundance of free blackberries in late summer, and you can only make so much blackberry jam. So how about this delicious recipe for blackberry vodka, courtesy of Leigh Chaplin. 

There's hardly any set up costs and the preparation time is at a minimum. And it's perfectly timed to be ready for drinking at Christmas. Just follow the simple instructions below.

Have a look at some of the other Allotment Heaven easy recipes.

Equipment needed
Two old vodka or similar spirits 70cl bottles with tops
Funnel

Ingredients needed
320g blackberries
160g sugar
70cl bottle of vodka

Method
1. Halve all the ingredients.
2. Use the funnel to carefully add the half ingredients amounts to each of the two empty spirits bottles.
3. Dry the rims of the bottles and seal shut.
4. Give each bottle a good shake for a few minutes.
5. Thereafter, shake the bottles once a day until all the sugar is dissolved.
6. Store in a dark cupboard.
7. After three months strain out the vodka using the muslin bag to catch all the fruit. The blackberry vodka is now ready to drink.
8. Use the fruit for a luxurious ice cream topping or to make jam.

Raspberry vodka easy recipe

Don't know what to do with all those raspberries? How about this delicious recipe for raspberry vodka, courtesy of Leigh Chaplin. There are hardly any set up costs and the preparation time is at a minimum. And it's perfectly timed to be ready for drinking at Christmas. Just follow the simple instructions below. 

Have a look at some of the other Allotment Heaven easy recipes.

Equipment needed
Two old vodka or similar spirits 70cl bottles with tops
Funnel

Ingredients needed
250g raspberries
250g sugar
70cl bottle of vodka

Method
1. Halve all the ingredients.
2. Use the funnel to carefully add the half ingredients amounts to each of the two empty spirits bottles.
3. Dry the rims of the bottles and seal shut.
4. Give each bottle a good shake for a few minutes.
5. Thereafter, shake the bottles once a day until all the sugar is dissolved.
6. Store in a dark cupboard.
7. After three months strain out the vodka using the muslin bag to catch all the fruit. The raspberry vodka is now ready to drink.
8. Use the fruit for a luxurious ice cream topping or to make jam.

Allotments are not just for fruit and vegetables

What would visitors to the Allotment Heaven plot notice first as they approached? Flowers. Lots of flowers. In fact the allotment is just bursting with blooms. Here's just small selection.

Great scabiosa

Sunflower

Cosmos

Marigold

Peas

Leek

Hollyhock

Sweetpeas

Lavatera

Californian poppy

Verbena

Poppy

Water lily

Nasturtiums. Oh, and my feet.
Hard at work as usual!

1914 : Was this the last St Ives Flower Show?

We're gearing up for another St Ives Flower & Produce Show in the Corn Exchange on Saturday 30 August. In fact we've been working on this year's show since last October.

Last year there was great enthusiasm from visitors for the posters we displayed showing the history of the show. One explained the beginnings in 1876, the other what was happening one hundred years ago. The 1913 poster was quite poignant, explaining how World War 1 affected the families and exhibitors who took part in the show. Here are links to those posters.



Researching the poster for 1914, I expected residents of the town to be in a turmoil over the war. Not a bit of it. Considered to be the major trigger of the war, the assignation of Archduke Ferdinand of Austria took place just over a fortnight before the 1914 show. Yet there was little understanding of what was to come. Even European leaders didn't realise the seriousness of the situation. Yet just three weeks after the 1914 show, Britain had declared war on Germany.

It's left me wondering if the 40th show took place in 1915. One in four of the male population were involved in the war, and St Ives residents must have had much more important things on their minds than a flower show. Will have to find out when we're preparing for next year's show.

Below you'll find a link to the poster about 1914. There's also a link to the show website, where you can read transcripts of the newspaper articles from past shows right back to 1876.



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