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Recipe: Gooseberry & Pineapple Weed Muffins

July 21, 2022 Tia Tamblyn

Gooseberries - quintessential summertime fruits - and although I love the slightly eye-watering ‘pop’ as the tartness of a fresh fruit is released in your mouth, I also love to have a few cooked gooseberry recipes up my sleeve to use up the abundance as they ripen!

Pineapple weed flowers at the same time as gooseberries ripen here in the UK, and I think they make a great pairing. Neither feature on the ‘most loved’ ingredient lists, but compliment each other well. The recipe below is gluten and processed sugar free, and is easily adaptable if you wish to change up the type of flours used, or in add say some extra chopped dried fruit or nuts.

I cooked these muffins for breakfast with Dean Harvey and Catherine Collin in Episode 15 of my podcast, Breakfast & Beyond, as we discussed the theme of mental health within Cornwall. Do take a listen .. and I very much hope you enjoy cooking and eating these muffins!

Recipe: Gooseberry & Pineapple Weed Muffins

Makes approx 12 muffins

Ingredients:

  • 150g gooseberries, tops and tails nipped off and cut in half

  • 20g pineapple weed (wild chamomile) flowers and leaves, roughly chopped (see foraging guidelines below for identifying and sustainably harvesting)

  • 200g ground almonds

  • 125g self-raising flour (I used gluten free)

  • 1 1/2 tsp baking powder (I used gluten free)

  • 1/2 tsp salt

  • 1/2 tsp cinnamon

  • 1 egg, beaten

  • 2 tbsp maple syrup (or melted honey)

  • 150g yoghurt (cow’s milk or coconut)

  • 1 tbsp sunflower oil (or alternative oil) plus extra for greasing muffin tin

  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

  • Splash of milk (cow’s or dairy free)

Method:

  1. Heat oven to 180°C. Grease a 12 hole muffin tin using oil.

  2. In a large bowl combine the dry ingredients: ground almonds, flour, baking powder, salt and cinnamon, mix well.

  3. Add the wet ingredients except the splash of milk: beaten egg, maple syrup, yoghurt, oil and vanilla extract.

  4. Fold in the halved blueberries and chopped pineapple weed, mix until combined but don’t over-mix.

  5. Check the consistency of the batter, add a splash of milk if needed.

  6. Distribute the mixture amongst the 12 muffin tins and place in oven.

  7. Cook for approx 35 minutes, until the muffins are golden brown. Remove onto a wire rack and eat either warm or when cooled.

Foraging for pineapple weed (otherwise known as wild chamomile):

For information on identification and culinary uses of pineapple weed, see this article: https://britishlocalfood.com/pineapple-weed/ Note that pineapple weed is good for digestion, and the leaves and flowers can also be used in other ways such as making teas and syrups.

The Woodland Trust has useful foraging guidelines to keep you safe and ensure that edible foods are harvested sustainably.

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In Botelet, Botelet Breakfast Club, Breakfast & Beyond, Cornwall, Recipe, Seasonal eating, Sustainable living Tags Breakfast, Breakfast and Beyond, Pineapple weed, Gooseberry, Gooseberry muffins, Gluten free, Breakfast muffins, Summer recipe, Botelet, Summary 1
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Recipe: Zero Waste Courgette Pancakes

August 25, 2021 Tia Tamblyn
Tia Tamblyn Zero Waste Courgette Pancakes

This breakfast recipe was cooked in tandem with eco-chef James Strawbridge during our conversation on sustainable living over breakfast for Episode 7 of my podcast, Breakfast & Beyond. James’s latest book, The Complete Vegetable Cookbook is a celebration of the vegetables he uses and loves the most, packed with information and recipes with an emphasis on zero waste cooking - learning about and celebrating the less-used parts of the vegetables that we can enjoy as part of our meals and in so doing, create less food waste.

When planning our late-summer breakfast menu I was keen to make courgette pancakes as we had a good supply of courgettes growing in the garden here at Botelet; however I was keen to explore with James whether there was more of the courgette plant that could be included than I would normally use - the main part of the vegetable, and possibly the flower. Turns out there’s lots more! We incorporated both rather gnarly ends of the courgette along with some of the leaf stem, grating them into the pancake batter. We also finely chopped young leaves and added these to the maple drizzle along with the flower.

The pancakes turned out to be delicious - fresh, zingy, sweet and sour all wrapped up in one - and I love that it represents zero-waste principles in action through this one simple recipe.

I hope you enjoy cooking this - as ever, feel free to amend, adapt and change according to preferences and food that you have available and needs using up - and I’d love to know any recipes you use that celebrate the lesser-known parts of our humble veg!

Recipe: Zero Waste Courgette Pancakes

Serves 2

Ingredients:

For the pancakes

  • 1 courgette (use all, including hard ends), approx 120g

  • Young part of 1 courgette leaf stalk

  • 50g Self-raising flour (I used gluten free)

  • 1 tsp baking powder (I used gluten free)

  • 1 tsp ground coriander

  • 2 tsp rose harissa

  • 1 egg

  • 50g ricotta

  • Zest of 1 lemon

  • Salt & pepper

For the pancake topping

  • 2 courgette flowers

  • 1 medium sized courgette leaf (size is flexible)

  • Small sprig fresh mint (optional)

  • 1 cardamom pod

  • 200ml maple syrup

  • 1 chilli

  • Olive oil

Method:

  1. Place two plates in the oven to warm.

  2. Begin by grating the courgette, including both hard ends. Place the grated courgette in a sieve. Sprinkle salt over grated courgette, mix in with a spoon and leave to sit over a bowl while preparing the rest of the pancake batter.

  3. In a medium sized bowl place the flour, baking powder, ground coriander and 1/2 tsp salt, mix well.

  4. Beat the egg in a small bowl, mix in the ricotta and harissa, then combine with the dry ingredients.

  5. Chop the courgette leaf stalk and add to the mixture.

  6. Press the grated courgette firmly into the sieve to squeeze out excess moisture, then add courgette to the bowl and mix together well.

  7. Season with salt & pepper.

  8. Prepare the pancake topping: finely chop the courgette leaf and mint. Place in a bowl, pour boiled water on top to blanch then drain through a sieve and run cold water over them to stop them cooking. Set aside.

  9. Remove the cardamom seed from the pod and grind in a pestle and mortar.

  10. Measure out the maple syrup into a jug, add the ground cardamom and stir.

  11. Chop the chilli and set aside.

  12. To make the pancakes: in a non-stick frying pan drizzle olive oil and warm over a medium heat. Once warm, use approx 1 tbsp of pancake batter for each pancake, place into hot oil and shape, should make 4 pancakes. Cook for 2-3 mins until golden brown, then flip over and repeat on the other side. Remove from heat when ready.

  13. While pancakes are cooking: warm a splash of olive oil in a second, small frying pan over a low heat. When warm, add the courgette flowers. Cook over a gentle heat for a couple of mins until flowers just start to wilt then add maple syrup with ground cardamom. Once the maple syrup is sizzling, add the blanched courgette and mint leaves, simmer for 30 seconds then remove from heat.

  14. Remove plates from oven, arrange pancakes on each plate then place one courgette flower on top of pancakes on each plate, drizzle half the maple syrup over pancakes on each plate, and divide chopped chilli and scatter on top. Serve and enjoy!

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In Botelet, Botelet Breakfast Club, Breakfast & Beyond, Cornwall, Food, Recipe, Seasonal eating, Sustainable living Tags Courgette, Pancakes, Zero Waste, Breakfast & Beyond, James Strawbridge, Breakfast recipe, Sustainable living, Sustainable eating, Summary 1
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Recipe: Marinated Spring Veg on Magnolia Petals

May 27, 2021 Tia Tamblyn
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This dainty recipe embodies the lightness of spring, inspired by the shapes, colours and textures of magnolia petals which serve as beautiful ‘boats’ for the marinated vegetables. I served these for breakfast in Episode 4 of my podcast Breakfast & Beyond, accompanied by an Asparagus Dip. I love the pairing with the dip - asparagus being another of my springtime heroes - and the more subtle flavours and softer bite of the dip works well alongside the crunch of the vegetables. As with most of my breakfast recipes, it works equally as well for brunch, lunch, supper .. or a lovely option for canapés with an al fresco evening drink.

I made this recipe just as the St Enodoc Asparagus were appearing here in Cornwall, and simultaneously the magnolia tree in our garden was in full bloom. The marinated vegetables that I used can be substituted for any other spring veg you have available locally or needs using up, that can be eaten raw.

The quantities below may leave you with a little left over veg depending upon the size of your magnolia petals - great to use up in a separate dish.

Check guidelines for safe magnolia petals to eat, and be sure to stick to foraging guidelines.

Recipe: Marinated Spring Veg on Magnolia Petals

Serves 4 - based on 2 filled magnolia petals per person.
I like to double the quantities of the marinated veg and have half left over for another dish!

Ingredients:

For the marinated vegetables - make at least 2 hours in advance, the day before if possible

  • 125g cauliflower, including stalks

  • 80g purple sprouting broccoli, florets and stalks

  • 60g celeriac

  • 1 chilli

  • Small handful wild garlic (or 1 clove garlic)

  • 2 lemons, zest and juice

  • 100ml extra virgin olive oil

  • 1 tsp harissa

  • 1 tbsp capers

  • Sea salt & cracked pepper

For the rest

  • 1 tbsp fresh mint, leaves & stalks, reserving the tops of a few sprigs to garnish

  • 1 desert spoon tahini

  • 1 desert spoon tamari (or soy) sauce

  • 1 desert spoon maple syrup (or local runny honey)

  • 8 large magnolia petals

Method:

  1. Cut the cauliflower and purple sprouting broccoli into small, bite-size pieces, place into a medium sized bowl.

  2. Grate the celeriac and add to the bowl with the cauliflower and broccoli and mix well.

  3. Grate the lemon juice into the bowl then finely chop the chilli and add in, stir well.

  4. Measure the olive oil into a jug, then add the lemon juice, harissa and generous sprinkling of salt along with cracked pepper. Stir, then pour over the vegetables. Add the capers and mix all together well ensure the vegetables are well coated with the sauce. Place a lid or plate on top of the bowl and place in a cool area or fridge for minimum two hours. If leaving for longer than a couple of hours, stir a few times to re-cover the top vegetables with marinade.

  5. To prepare for serving, pick the magnolia petals and ensure they are clean and dry. If the vegetables have been stored in the fridge remove them so they warm a little.

  6. In a cup mix together the tahini, tamari and maple syrup.

  7. Pick the top of the mint sprigs to use as garnish, finely chop the remaining leaves and stalks, add to the bowl of vegetables and stir through, re-coating the vegetables with the marinade.

  8. Use a culinary brush to coat the inside of each magnolia petal with the tahini, tamari and maple syrup mixture.

  9. Spoon the marinated vegetables inside the magnolia petals, top with a sprig of mint and cracked pepper.

Serving suggestions: The petals can be served on individual plates or one large plate, canapé style. They can be eaten with a knife and fork, or by hand. I like to serve these with my Asparagus Dip.

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In Botelet, Botelet Breakfast Club, Breakfast & Beyond, Cornwall, Food, Recipe, Seasonal eating, Sustainable living Tags Spring recipe, Magnolia petals spring veg, magnolia, marinated veg, seasonal eating, sustainable living, botelet, Breakfast, Breakfast and Beyond, Tia Tamblyn, Plant based, Vegan, Summary 1
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Spring recipe: Rhubarb Overnight Oats

May 27, 2021 Tia Tamblyn
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This is one of my favourite spring breakfasts - I adore rhubarb and love the way the flavours come through having been gently baked in apple juice. It’s hearty, full of goodness, and love to serve it with a little crunch on top from toasted seeds, to contrast with the soft textures of the oats that have absorbed the liquids overnight. It’s also incredibly easy, after baking the rhubarb simply place all the ingredients in the bowl, mix together, and pop in the fridge overnight.

I served this for breakfast during Episode 4 of the Breakfast & Beyond podcast with Vicki Jones of Sand & Palm, and Episode 14 with Avril Greenaway of Cleaner Seas Group. Vicki is vegan so I used plant-based milk and maple syrup rather than honey, but you can easily adjust these according to preference. For the Breakfast & Beyond meal, I sprinkled stitchwort flowers on top which I had foraged from our hedgerows here at Botelet - a delicate, dainty edible flower that’s perfect for this dish. Bear in mind foraging guidelines if you choose to use edible flowers.

Recipe: Rhubarb Overnight Oats

Serves 4 - 6

Ingredients:

  • 200g rhubarb (weight of stalks with leaves and hard ends removed)

  • 100ml apple juice

  • 1 tbsp maple syrup (could use honey if not vegan)

  • 180g oats

  • 2 tbsp chia seeds

  • 1 tbsp ground flaxseed

  • Few shavings fresh ginger

  • 1/4 tsp ground nutmeg

  • 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon

  • Seeds from 2 cardamom pods, crushed

  • 2 tbsp maple syrup

  • 500ml plant-based milk (or dairy alternative)

  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

  • Optional serving suggestions: fresh fruit, plant-based yogurt, edible flowers, sprinkling of toasted nuts & seeds .

Method:

  1. Heat oven to 180C.

  2. Begin by roasting the rhubarb: wash the rhubarb stalks and chop into small pieces. Spread out on a baking tray, pour over apple juice and maple syrup, stir so all pieces of rhubarb are covered, place in oven for approx 15 mins, until rhubarb pieces are soft but still holding their shape, then remove and set aside to cool.

  3. Place the oats, chia seeds, flaxseed, nutmeg, cinnamon, ginger and crushed cardamom seeds in a large bowl, mix well then add the milk, maple syrup, vanilla extract and the rhubarb, once it has cooled, along with any juice from the baking tray. Stir well so thoroughly combined.

  4. Place a lid or plate on top of the bowl and place it in the fridge overnight or for at least six hours, until the liquid has been absorbed by the oats.

  5. I like to serve overnight oats at room temperature, so remove from the fridge approx half an hour before serving, add your favourite toppings (or none) and enjoy!

In Botelet, Botelet Breakfast Club, Breakfast & Beyond, Cornwall, Food, Recipe, Seasonal eating, Sustainable living Tags Rhubarb recipe, Rhubarb overnight oats, Spring recipe, Rhubarb, Cornwall, Spring, Breakfast and Beyond, Tia Tamblyn, Botelet, Plant based, Vegan, Stitchwort, Summary 1
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Recipe: Spring Smoothie #2

April 13, 2021 Tia Tamblyn
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There are endless iterations of seasonal smoothies - packed with fresh veggies and fruits that are available locally according to the time of year. In early spring there are few fresh fruits available in the UK, so I use frozen berries as a base, then add in fresh veg along with a range of other ingredients to provide a balanced, nutritional breakfast.

Use this recipe as a guide - the quantities of veg can easily be adapted, these are just the ratios that I used - and swap in fresh or store cupboard items that you have available or need using up. I love to top my smoothies with muesli or granola for a bit of extra crunch. Enjoy!

Recipe: Spring Smoothie #2

Serves 2

Ingredients:

  • 100g frozen berries (I use UK grown, organic if possible)

  • 100ml water

  • 30g (approx 1 small stalk) rhubarb, washed & chopped

  • 40g beetroot, washed & chopped

  • 20g cabbage, chopped

  • 20g kale (including stalks), chopped

  • 20g purple sprouting broccoli (including leaves & stalks), chopped

  • 20g oats

  • 100g yogurt (or dairy-free alternative)

  • 200ml almond milk (or dairy milk)

  • Small nub fresh ginger

  • 40g nuts - any single type, or mixed

  • 20g seeds - any single type, or mixed. I used pumpkin, sunflower & linseed

  • 10g (small handful) raisins or other dried fruit

  • 1 tbsp ground flaxseed

  • 1 tbsp tahini

  • Optional, to serve: handful of edible spring flowers eg gorse, forget-me-knot, chickweed; fresh fruit; muesli or granola to top

Method:

  1. Prepare the vegetables by washing and cutting into small pieces

  2. Place all ingredients in a blender and whizz up until smooth

  3. Serve with optional toppings such as muesli, fresh fruits and edible flowers

In Botelet, Botelet Breakfast Club, Breakfast & Beyond, Cornwall, Food, Recipe, Seasonal eating, Sustainable living Tags Breakfast, Breakfast & Beyond, Smoothie bowl, Spring recipe, Botelet, Seasonal eating, Sustainable living, Recipe, Plant based
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Recipe: Classic Porridge

March 17, 2021 Tia Tamblyn
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Does porridge even need a recipe? I’m not sure! But I’m often asked how I make mine, so here’s a very short recipe below. The basic principle I use is that I begin by filling a cup with porridge oats, then fill the same cup firstly with water, then again with milk (or dairy free version) so there ends up being twice the quantity of liquid to oats.

Recipe - Simple Porridge

Serves 2

Ingredients:

  • 110g porridge oats

  • 250ml water

  • 250ml milk (or dairy free alternative)

Optional toppings: drizzle of honey (or maple syrup), scatter of toasted seeds, compote, yogurt, edible flower

Method:

1. Place the oats, water and milk in a saucepan over a low heat.

2. Cook for approx 6 minutes, stirring regularly, until liquid has been absorbed and oats have softened.

3. Serve in bowls with your favourite seasonal toppings.

In Botelet, Botelet Breakfast Club, Breakfast & Beyond, Cornwall, Food, Recipe Tags Porridge, Recipe, Botelet, Breakfast, Breakfast & Beyond, Simple living, Summary 1
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Spring Recipe: Beetroot Baked Beans with Wild Garlic

March 17, 2021 Tia Tamblyn
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This Springtime version of baked beans uses beetroot to add flavour, texture and a vibrant pop of colour, which is set against the green hues of the wild garlic. We love to eat this on toast as well as topping pasta or rice, it’s incredibly versatile. You can swap in the beans to use up what you have in your store cupboard, or use dried beans soaked overnight before cooking.

Recipe: Beetroot Baked Beans with Wild Garlic

Serves 6 - 8

Ingredients:

  • 2 tbsp rapeseed (or alternative) oil

  • 1 onions, peeled and finely chopped

  • 1 leek, washed and finely chopped, including leaves

  • 1 carrot, washed and finely chopped

  • 250g (approx 2) beetroot, washed

  • 200ml reserved beetroot water after beets have cooked (or top up with boiled water if you don’t have 200ml left over)

  • 1 vegetable stock cube

  • Large handful wild garlic, washed

  • 1 tin chopped tomatoes

  • 1 tbsp tamari (or soy) sauce

  • 1/2 tbsp balsamic vinegar

  • 2 bay leaves

  • 1 tsp sweet smoked paprika

  • 3 cloves

  • 1 tbsp local honey (or maple syrup for vegan version)

  • 2 x 400g tins beans (I used a combination of black and cannelloni beans)

  • Sea salt & cracked pepper

  • (Optional) Bread to serve, I used toasted rye bread from Baker Tom’s

Method:

  1. Finely chop the onion, leek and carrot.

  2. Wash and remove the hard ends of the beetroot then chop into small bite-size pieces.

  3. Heat the oil in a large saucepan, add the chopped onion, leek and carrot and cook for approx 10 minutes until softening and turning golden in colour.

  4. Place the beetroot pieces in a separate saucepan, cover generously with water, bring to the boil and simmer for approx 20 - 25 minutes until beginning to soften but still with some shape and bite to them. When finished cooking, drain into a bowl, reserving the liquid, then set aside.

  5. When the onion, leek and carrot have finished sautéing, add the tinned tomatoes, 200ml of reserved beetroot water from cooking (top up to 200ml using boiled water if you don’t have enough), tamari , balsamic, bay leaves, paprika, honey and season with salt and pepper.

  6. Roughly chop half of the wild garlic (reserve the rest for garnish) and add in, stir well to combine.

  7. Bring the mixture in the saucepan to the boil then reduce heat and simmer without a lid on for approx 20 minutes until thickened and reduced down a little.

  8. Take the pan off the heat, remove the bay leaves and use a stick blender to whizz up the mixture until it achieves a thick soupy texture.

  9. Taste a little, and adjust seasoning if required.

  10. Return the pan to a slow heat, drain the beans and add them in along with the beetroot pieces. Simmer for 10 minutes until everything is warm and well combined.

  11. If serving on toast, pop the toast in just before the beans have finished cooking.

  12. Serve topped with the remaining leaves of wild garlic along with a drizzle of olive oil and cracked pepper.

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In Botelet, Botelet Breakfast Club, Breakfast & Beyond, Cornwall, Food, Recipe, Seasonal eating Tags Breakfast, Breakfast & Beyond, Spring recipe, beetroot baked beans, wild garlic, Botelet, Summary 1
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Recipe: Lemon & Lime Marmalade (Sugar Free)

March 17, 2021 Tia Tamblyn
Lemon Lime Marmalade Tia Tamblyn

I love the tangy flavours of marmalade, but don’t eat it as often as I might as I end up feel a bit sugared-out - and I tend to get a bit militant about how much the kids consume. However the arrival of some beautiful Cornish-grown lemons and limes via our Fruutbox delivery got me thinking about how to create a version that not only doesn’t use refined sugar, but replaces the sweetener with locally-sourced honey, and at a much reduced ratio that the traditional 50 / 50 fruit / sugar weight. So here’s the recipe, I hope you enjoy it. So far we’ve spread it on toast, used it as the filling for an almond flour-based tart and as a compote alongside yoghurt. It keeps in the fridge for about a week .. I’d love to know your thoughts.

Recipe: Lemon & Lime Marmalade (refined sugar free)

Makes 2 medium size jars

Ingredients:

  • 500g lemons & limes (in whatever ratio you like, or just use lemons or limes)

  • 300ml water

  • 150g local honey

  • 1 tsp ground ginger

  • 2 tbsp chia seeds

Method:

Note - prepare the marmalade by cutting the fruit and soaking overnight, then finish the recipe the next day.

  1. Wash and dry the lemons and limes. Remove the hard ends, then slice into thin circles, removing pips and reserving juice as you cut them. Cut any larger slices into halves or quarters. Finely chop the rind at each end into small pieces. Place sliced lemons and limes along with any juice from cutting into a large bowl. Add the water, pop a lid or plate on top of the bowl and place in the fridge or a cool area overnight.

  2. The following day, transfer the lemon and lime slices along with the water to a saucepan along with 1 tsp ground ginger. Bring to the boil then simmer for 30 minutes until the fruit has softened.

  3. While the fruit is simmering, sterilise your jars.

  4. After 30 minutes of simmering, add the honey to the pan, stir until melted and well combined then remove from heat.

  5. Add the chia seeds and stir well then leave to cool, during this time the chia seeds will absorb the moisture and the marmalade will thicken.

  6. When cool, pour into jars. Store in the fridge.

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In Botelet, Seasonal eating, Recipe, Cornwall, Breakfast & Beyond, Botelet Breakfast Club Tags breakfast, Breakfast & Beyond, Botelet, Tia Tamblyn, Podcast, Cornwall, Lemon Marmalade, Marmalade, Sugar free, Summary 1
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Recipe: Classic Granola

February 25, 2021 Tia Tamblyn

Tia’s granola, image by Ali Green

Granola is a staple at Botelet breakfast tables - always one of the options on the Breakfast Club menu, and every Sunday it’s our special family breakfast; the children take it in turns each week to make granola with me on Saturday, ready to enjoy the next morning.

This recipe is an adaptation of my mother-in-law Barbara’s recipe that used to be served to B&B guests. Each week when I make it with the children we change things up a bit - add a few spices such as cinnamon or ginger; swap in nuts and seeds according to what’s in the larder and the kids’ personal favourites; grate in some orange peel before cooking for a winter citrus flavour. Feel free to adapt according to your own preferences and store cupboard availability - I love the concept of recipes that grow and evolve as they are shared.

Recipe: Tia’s Granola

Makes approx 10 servings

Ingredients:

  • 450g rolled oats

  • 200g almonds, roughly chopped (or alternative nut)

  • 200g cashews, left whole (or alternative nut)

  • 100g flaked coconut

  • 120g seeds eg sunflower, pumpkin, sesame

  • 100ml rapeseed oil (or alternative oil eg sunflower or olive)

  • 300g local clear honey

  • 1 tbsp coconut oil

  • 180g raisins

Method:

1. Heat oven to 120C.

2. In a large bowl combine the oats, nuts, seeds and flaked coconut.

3. Warm the honey, rapeseed oil and coconut oil in a saucepan until melted together.

4. Pour the saucepan of honey and oil into the bowl of dry ingredients. Mix together well.

5. Spoon the mixture into two baking trays, spreading out across the trays. Place trays in the oven.

6. Cook for approx 1 hour 15 minutes, taking the trays out of the oven every 15 minutes to give them a good stir around. Remove from oven when colour turns golden - be careful to remove before burning.

7. Distribute the raisins evenly between both trays, stir to combine and leave to cool.

In Botelet, Botelet Breakfast Club, Breakfast & Beyond, Food, Recipe, Seasonal eating Tags Recipe, granola, breakfast, Breakfast & Beyond, Botelet Breakfast Club, Summary 1
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Autumn Recipe: Beetroot & Apple Overnight Oats

November 12, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Beetroot & Apple Overnight Oats Tia Tamblyn

This breakfast recipe celebrates fresh autumn ingredients - apples and beetroot - that can be found in abundance during autumn in Cornwall, and it packs it’s plant-powered punch offering a vibrant, nutritious start to the day. Prepare this simple recipe the evening before then pop in the fridge overnight. Delicious served on its own or with a dollop of yogurt and a sprinkling of granola.

Beetroot & Apple Overnight Oats

Serves 2

Ingredients:

  • 80g oats

  • 1 tbsp chia seeds

  • 1/2 tbsp flaxseed

  • 1 tbsp sunflower seeds

  • 1 small apple (approx 60g when peeled and cored)

  • 1 small beetroot (approx 60g)

  • A few shavings fresh ginger

  • 250ml almond milk (or alternative milk)

  • 1 tbsp maple syrup

  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

  • Optional – granola and yogurt to serve

Method:

1. Place the oats, chia seeds, flaxseeds, sunflower seeds and grated ginger in a mixing bowl

2. Peel and core then apple, then grate and add to the mixing bowl

3. Wash, top and tail the beetroot then grate and add to the bowl, mix well

4. Add the almond milk, maple syrup and vanilla extract to the bowl, mix well.

5. Place a lid or plate on top of the bowl and place in the fridge overnight.

6. Take out of the fridge approx 10 minutes before eating to warm slightly, give a good stir before serving

7. Optional - add toppings of your choice such as a dollop of yogurt (plant or milk based), and a sprinkling of granola

As shared via the Muddy Stilettos Cornwall blog

In Botelet, Botelet Breakfast Club, Recipe, Seasonal eating, Food, Sustainable living Tags Recipe, breakfast, Vegan, plant based, autumn recipe, Cornwall, Summary 2
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Autumn Recipe: Windfall Slaw

September 4, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Windfall slaw recipe Tia Tamblyn Botelet

The orchard here at Botelet is teeming with apples - somewhat earlier than normal this year after the unseasonably hot spring - and I’ve been loving playing around with recipes with the kids. So far we’ve made a few variations of apple cakes and muffins, and I’ve been trying to coax them towards the windfalls first and foremost (especially for cooking with) to leave those that are still growing for harvest in the coming weeks .. with mixed success!

We’re slightly apple-caked-out at the moment so this recipe has been a great savoury addition to the lunch table, also using up some seasonal offerings from this week’s Real Food Garden veg box. I’ve been using it as a side dish, and heaped on toast as a fresh, tangy topping.

Enjoy - and I’d love to know your favourite windfall recipes!


Recipe: Windfall Slaw

Makes approx six servings

Ingredients:

  • 3 good-sized apples peeled, cored and grated (I used windfalls)

  • 2 carrots, grated - and finely chop some of the leaves, if you have them

  • 1 stalk celery, finely chopped, including leaves - reserving some leaves for garnish

  • 50ml oil, I used olive oil

  • 100ml vinegar, I used cider vinegar

  • 1 desert spoon honey - I used local runny honey, for a vegan version you could use maple or agave syrup

  • 1 tsp wholegrain mustard

  • 1 desert spoon tahini

  • Few shavings of grated ginger

  • Sea salt & pepper

Method:

  • Grate the apples and carrots, finely chop the celery and a small handful carrot leaves and place all in a mixing bowl.

  • Measure the oil and vinegar into a jug, add in the mustard, tahini, grated ginger and salt and pepper, mix well.

  • Pour liquids over vegetables and mix well.

  • Optional - garnish with celery leaves


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In Botelet, Recipe, Food, Botelet Breakfast Club Tags recipe, windfall slaw, apples, autumn recipe, zero waste, Summary 3
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Autumn Recipe: Blackberry Jam, Sugar Free

August 22, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Blackberry jam sugar free Tia Tamblyn breakfast and beyond

Blackberry season is well and truly here - the time of year when there’s a role reversal and the kids are pressuring me to head out for a walk for some hedgerow snacks!

Blackberry jam is a seasonal staple in our household, but this year I wanted to try a sugar free version. I normally try to cook processed sugar free, and jam is one of the exceptions I make, mainly for the preservative qualities. But with the kids (and me) not having consumed much processed sugar during lockdown - eating almost exclusively from home - I was reluctant to start feeding them 50/50 fruit/sugar jam - not least because the rest of the sugar free cooking we do will suddenly seem less tasty!

This simple recipe is a variation of my blackberry compote, just simmered a little longer and with more chia seeds added at the end to absorb the liquid and create the ‘jam’ texture. The same recipe makes a beautiful compote with a little less cooking and half the amount of chia seeds. So far we’re our family are loving it spread thick on toast, or paired with yogurt as a pudding.

I may well still make some jam with sugar to see us through the winter, but for now this recipe is proving popular for breakfast ad beyond. I’d love to know your thoughts - I hope you enjoy!


Recipe: Blackberry Jam, Sugar Free

Makes 2 small/medium size jars of jam

Ingredients:

  • 600g blackberries, washed

  • 4 tbsp honey (local if possible)

  • 1 tsp cinnamon

  • Few gratings fresh ginger (or 1tsp dried ginger)

  • 3 tsp chia seeds

  • 1tsp vanilla extract

Method:

  • Begin by preparing your glass jars, washing and sterilising.

  • Place blackberries, honey, cinnamon and ginger in a pan and add a splash of water.

  • Simmer for approximately 20 minutes, checking and stirring regularly, until there is just a small amount of liquid left around in the pan.

  • Remove from heat, add chia seeds and vanilla extract. Stir well and leave to cool.

  • When cool place in glass jars.

Keeps for approximately one week in the fridge.

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In Botelet, Recipe, Botelet Breakfast Club Tags recipe, botelet, botelet breakfast club, breakfast, autumn, seasonal eating, seasonal cooking, cornwall, Summary 3
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July Botelet Breakfast Club Conversations: Kris Hallenga, Nell Smirthwaite & Richard Tamblyn

July 24, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Garden Gate Flower Co floral arrangement at Botelet, image credit Allen Tsai

High summer this year brings that perfect combination of drizzly days and dazzling heat that keeps alive our appreciation for summer sunshine. As lockdown continues to ease it’s been a joy to welcome back visitors to Botelet, all in need of open spaces, fresh air and down-time after the intensity of city life over the past few months.

Whilst we still aren’t yet ready to re-open Botelet Breakfast Club due to the intimate nature of the setting, it has been wonderful to again reach out to members of the Breakfast Club community to hear more about their experiences of the past few months, united as we have been by the pandemic yet totally unique in how it has played out for each and every one of us. Hearing these voices - shared in the conversations below - has reminded us of the importance of holding onto those reflections and learnings from lockdown so that even as we feel the pull back to ‘normality’ we try to play an active role in consciously re-creating what that will mean for us.

We are so thrilled to share conversations with three more brilliant Breakfast Clubbers this month: Kris Hallenga who discusses the experience of quarantining as someone who is not new to enforced isolation, and sheds light on the impact of C-19 on cancer care; Nell Smirthwaite who reflects on the possibilities for a more sustainable future post C-19; and our very own Richard Tamblyn who shares, amongst other things, the joys of eating home-made cream that comes from the family’s house cow. A huge, huge thanks to Kris, Nell (and Richard!) for taking the time to share their thoughts with us, so grab a cuppa - we’re sure you’ll love reading these breakfast conversations as much as we have.

For our July Breakfast Club recipe, we have for you a gooseberry and mint compote - making the most of the summer bounty and delicious served for breakfast (or pudding) with granola and yogurt. This recipe takes ‘simple’ to a new level - we hope you enjoy.

Stay well, sending love from us all here at Botelet x

Botelet Breakfast Club recipe: Gooseberry & mint compote

Botelet Breakfast Club recipe: Gooseberry & mint compote


Introducing Botelet Breakfast Clubber Kris Hallenga …

Kris (right) with twin sister Maren (left)

Kris (right) with twin sister Maren (left)

I met Kris - rather fittingly - at Botelet Breakfast Club a few years ago. She came along with her lovely mother and twin sister, Maren. I loved chatting, especially (as a mother of twins) talking with Kris and Maren about their experience of growing up with a buddy-from-birth, but it wasn’t until they had left that I came to realise Kris’s story. And my, what a story. But before I get to that … by bringing her story into the public eye through her campaigning work, a lot has already been written about Kris and the insanely inspiring, dedicated, fun and creative person that she is. She has won multiple award, scrolls through numerous A-listers in her contacts, and is in hot demand as a guest célèbre. But through the huge privilege I’ve had of getting to know Kris since we first met at Breakfast Club, what I find most powerful is her humble charm, her witty words, her grounded, toes-in-the-sand vibe and her willingness to be open and share her vulnerability in a way that catches your breath and makes you confront very directly what is - and is not - important in life; how to look past the heavy stuff and focus on the light. Or, as Kris so eloquently puts it: how to glitter a turd.

And so to Kris’s story. Kris has Stage 4 breast cancer. She was diagnosed age 23 after finding a lump, visiting her doctor three times then finally being diagnosed with incurable breast cancer. Kris was unaware that breast cancer could affect people in their twenties and knew very little about the disease, finding that there was little information to support young people with diagnoses of breast cancer, which led to Kris along with twin sister Maren founding the charity Coppafeel! in 2009 to address this gap - sharing information to support young people with catching cancer early in order to improve survival and recovery rates.  Since 2009 both Kris and Maren have dedicated so much of their energy to raising awareness and funds to increase understanding of the symptoms of breast cancer and support early diagnoses, having a phenomenal impact upon the health of so many people, and being open about their experiences in a bid to inform and empower others. For more about Kris’s story, the charity Coppafeel! and to watch the BBC documentary ‘Dying to Live’ that was made about Kris in 2014 see https://coppafeel.org/our-charity/kris-story/.

As well as relishing the opportunity to catch up with Kris during our conversation for this blog, I was really keen to hear about Kris’s experience of lockdown as someone who relies on regular access to healthcare, and who understands from the inside through her work with Coppafeel! how Covid has impacted upon the charities that support cancer care.

We are so grateful to Kris for taking the time to contribute to this month’s Breakfast Club blog - in amongst, as well as many other things, writing her first book (which I for one am ridiculously excited to read, see Unbound for details) - and for sharing her story so that countless of us along with those we hold dear are educated about breast cancer and supported in the journey through diagnosis and beyond. And more than that - for breaking down taboos, opening up conversations, and creating a friendly, fun and welcoming platform for us to engage and learn, and from which so many draw hope and positivity. You see what I mean - pretty hard to sum up a human like this one! Basically Kris, thanks for bringing a sparkle into our lives as you do for so many millions of others. We’re so glad you came for breakfast. And that you have written a book. Oh, and guys and girls - check your boobs.

Our conversation with Kris …

Where do you call home? 
Right now it’s in my little pink semi-detached cottage in Newquay. I rent but I have a great landlord who basically lets me feel like/believe the house is my own. During lockdown I decided I wanted to live in a pink house so it got painted and now I do. I’d like more landlords to be as open minded as mine and allow for some autonomy, they would probably find that their tenants would look after the property much better too. I moved to Cornwall from London four years ago and it was the best decision ever.  

What’s your occupation? 
WELL. I’m the founder of a charity called CoppaFeel! that I now work part time for as an ambassador and celebrity liaison (although currently furloughed). The rest of my time is filled working with my twin sister Maren in our vintage cake and coffee truck, called Beyonce, serving up delicious freshly ground coffees and our home baked German style mini bundt cakes. Right now you can find us in the Harbour in Newquay every weekend but we can also be found at events around the county - the van is over 50 years old so she’s pretty slow and doesn’t like to leave Cornwall if she can help it. Oh and I’ve just written a book abut my life.

What do you love to eat for breakfast?  
I don’t have much of a breakfast routine as I pretty much fancy something different for breakfast every day. On the first day of me quarantining (before the official lockdown) I decided to eat rhubarb crumble and clotted cream at around 8.30am because it seemed nothing was normal anymore so why should breakfast be? My ideal breakfast is a brunch, with favourite people, involving a fresh pastry starter, followed by a savoury dish that involves eggs followed by something sweet like waffles and a huge coffee - ok that sounds like a lot but this whole scenario might be stretched across the entire day!

How would you describe your lockdown experience - what have you found most challenging, and are there positive takeaways for you?
I think on the whole it’s hard to complain about my situation. Living on my own anyway it didn’t feel like a big shift and because I have cancer I already know ALL about quarantining and being socially distant and dealing with cancelled social events and missing people! If anything it was fascinating to see people around me dealing with stuff that I had already experienced many times over and in a way it was reassuring that I wasn’t the only one going through it, that we were ALL facing the same problems. I have been on the official “shielding” list as I have active cancer in my bones and liver and have ongoing oral chemotherapy making me more susceptible to horrible viruses. I’ve had an army of people helping with shopping and I get weekly meal deliveries. I am walking distance from the beach which I think is the main reason I haven’t gone completely mad. I also had to focus on getting my book written. When I first got my book commission I didn’t in a million years expect to be writing it during a global pandemic but in a way it’s forced me to spend a lot more time in my head and in my home. It’s not been easy by any stretch as I was still so massively distracted by global pains - from the daily death tolls and the Black Lives Matter movement. It often felt so selfish and self serving to be writing a book about me. But alas I did. 

Your work is dedicated to raising awareness of health issues, specifically around young people and breast cancer.  In your experience, how has Covid has impacted on this work which helps lead to earlier diagnoses and therefore improved prognoses, and what has the impact been in terms of accessing healthcare during lockdown - and as lockdown begins to ease?  
Covid-19 has impacted charities so much more than I think we’ve heard about on the news. The fact that our biggest cancer research charity in the UK has had to let a quarter of its workforce go is pretty horrific and has set us back in terms of drug developments and treatments hugely. It’s quite frightening that a lot of cancer research labs were taken over for Covid testing and that thousands of cancer patients have had to delay curative operations and treatments. This year alone we will see an increase of around 8,000 cancer related deaths. On top of that we will see a spike in late diagnoses. My charity CoppaFeel! tries to ensure breast cancers are diagnosed at the earliest stage possible, when treatments are more effective and survival rates are higher. This is only possible if people speak to their doctors. Sadly people are delaying GP appointments and therefore referrals are at an all time low. It will be charities like CoppaFeel! who will be picking up the pieces of this pandemic long after all industries and everyone’s beloved Nandos has reopened. It’s a scary time. Please know that GPs have not stopped cancer referrals and will listen to anyone with any suspected cancer symptoms. If this is you, give them a call NOW. 

How do you feel about moving forwards as lockdown eases?
I feel nervous to be honest, not helped by the hoards of people who are now in Newquay. I am of course glad because our local economy relies so heavily on visitors but we’re not out of the woods yet. I feel nervous about CoppaFeel!’s financial future and I feel nervous about the state of event fundraising for the charity sector as a whole. HOWEVER we are adaptable creatures and one of the things we as a charity are good at is adapting and innovating very quickly. At the start of lockdown we hosted a months worth of online events called the Sofa Series that included quizzes, game shows, breathing sessions and film screenings. In total we raised over £30k which helped plug a hole that cancelled events caused. Going forward we will continue to find work-arounds which I actually find quite exciting. I have learned SO much about online streaming and have immersed myself in tiktok - still deciding if that latter is a good thing or not, it’s made me laugh during some of the lowest times if nothing else. 

Do you have any top seasonal tips to share with the Botelet community?  
SEA SWIMMING! It’s the best cure for just about anything. Also stand up paddle boarding down the Gannel estuary with a beer during sunset is the best tonic too. 


Introducing Botelet Breakfast Clubber Nell Smirthwaite …

Nell Smirthwaite

Nell Smirthwaite

Since my first conversations with Nell at playgroup sessions in a loud and brightly lit community hall with babies and toddlers crawling all over us, I have been captivated by Nell’s interest in sustainability. In her understated way, Nell has dedicated the past few years (alongside bringing up her two adorable girls) to harnessing her interest in sustainable living and sharing this informally within her friend and community groups, along with supporting local businesses through workshops and written materials - and she is now taking this a step further in her Masters studies. What for me makes Nell’s approach as an advocate for sustainable living so persuasive is that she meets people - and businesses - where they are at, acknowledging rather than playing down the complexities of taking a more ‘sustainable’ approach, and offering solutions that are both practical as well as compassionate.

As a Breakfast Clubber who has broken bread round the table with others as well as hosted various sustainability workshops with us here at Botelet, I was fascinated to hear more about Nell’s experience of lockdown, and her thoughts on the possibilities that the Covid era might hold for a more sustainable future.

Our conversation with Nell …

Where do you call home? 
Home is Cornwall. I grew up in St Austell and spent my teenage years aching to get away, but I didn’t realise how lucky I was. My husband and I lived in various places during our twenties, but after our first daughter was born, we made the decision to come ‘home’. My Mum grew up in Hong Kong and I always assumed that I would settle in a different area to the place I grew up; I loved the sense of adventure that idea would bring, but after a year’s travelling with a one way ticket I yearned for home, and what I have learned is that bringing your children up in the place you grew up is incredibly grounding and gives you a deep sense of having roots. One of my favourite things to do is show them where I went to school and where we used to go as children. Not sure if they enjoy the stories as much as me but they endure them with good humour! 

What’s your occupation? 
I’m currently studying for an MSc in Sustainable Development and was very fortunate to secure a three-month contract as a Research Assistant in a partnership project between Cornwall Council and Exeter University. Cornwall Council has recently committed to implementing Kate Raworth’s Doughnut Economics model, which places social and environmental goals at the centre of policy making. Kate Raworth is my absolute hero and her book was my main inspiration to undertake the course, so this opportunity has been truly incredible! 

What do you love to eat for breakfast?  
I have to say I’m a marmite on toast girl! A freshly baked farmhouse loaf, lightly toasted with real butter and smidge of marmite will always make me smile! 

How would you describe your lockdown experience - what have you found most challenging, and are there positive takeaways for you?
From a personal perspective our lock down experience was positive. We spent a lot of time in the garden and I felt like I learned a lot about new ways to enjoy spending time with the girls. I have always been an advocate for slow living but the reality is life throws so many pressures your way - not just for work but also wanting to give your children a broad range of experiences and memories, which for us normally means getting in the van and heading to the coast, or racing around to various ballet, swimming and drama groups, but we found genuine contentment in staying home. Our challenge is one that is shared by many; finding a way to make our business survive in the new world. My husband is a dentist and dentistry has been hugely impacted by Covid. However, our saving grace is that people will always need a dentist, so we will find a way to make it work one way or another! 

As someone working in the sustainability sector, what are your thoughts on whether the impact of Covid is likely to shift us forwards in terms of sustainability? 
Well I actually wrote my last assignment on just this! We are living through a global paradigm shift and if ever there was a time to break from the old and start anew, now is it. There are huge opportunities for our leaders to kick start the economy in a way that lays the foundations for a more sustainable future, from withdrawing subsidising the fossil fuel sector and reinvesting those funds into renewable technology, to carefully selecting which sectors to financially support going forward. There are lessons to learn about the way we practice agriculture, the way we travel, the way we trade and what we value in society; and models are emerging that provide a framework for governments to implement change by prioritising social values and the environment in policy making. Scotland, New Zealand and Iceland are leading the way in this area; so is Amsterdam, and I’m very proud to say, Cornwall too! 

From an individual perspective I think the biggest shift is people’s ability to work and carry out meetings from their home, making huge savings in time, money and of course impacting positively on the environment. There are also huge opportunities for schools to adapt and embrace a more outdoors-based learning style in response to Covid; rather than plastic shielding screens and isolated work spaces, those that are able to could build outdoor classrooms, reducing the Covid risk at the same time as making nature more integral to learning. This would bring great benefits to both the children and, I believe, teachers too. 

Do you have any top seasonal living tips to share with the Botelet community?  
Always keep some grapes in your freezer to drop in your drink on those long hot sunny days - a great way to cool your drink without diluting it!


Introducing Botelet Breakfast Clubber Richard Tamblyn ….

Richard Tamblyn

Richard Tamblyn

Curator of spaces and chief barista at Botelet Breakfast Club yet mostly to be found behind-the-scenes, I thought the Breakfast Club blog might prove to be a chance to share Richard’s thoughts on lockdown living and beyond.

Some who visit Botelet will have met Richard, if his head isn’t in a plumbing or fencing project; but all who visit will have stepped into his hand-crafted spaces - from barns to boiler rooms - that represent a lifetime’s work of restoration underpinned with a timeless, functional aesthetic.

Often heard saying “Mind the paint!” as the kids tear through the house dragging a trail of toys behind them, the most reliable time to catch Richard is 10.30am - crib time at Botelet - as he powers up the coffee machine…

Where do you call home?
No surprise, 57 years on it’s right here at Botelet, though I have a little way to go to catch my father’s 93 years or my grandfather’s 102 years living in the same farmhouse.

What’s your occupation?
Farmer - with all its diversifications … sometimes architect, plumber, stonemason, light maker, decorator, barista, and ultimate catch-all.  I have spent many years focusing on repairing the old, with a little injection of modern design.  Creating spaces, working with timeless materials and nurturing the landscape for future generations makes me tick.

What do you love to eat for breakfast?
Sugar puffs with mother’s scalded cream, though I haven’t tried this since 1985.  My father milked a house cow and mum would spend two days separating the cream from the milk.  The milk ended up so thin that the only thing to do was add the cream back on top.

How would you describe your lockdown experience - what have you found the most challenging, and are there positive takeaways for you?
It felt like heaven for a tiny period, like rewinding the clocks to a slower and more caring society, when the summers were always sunny.

Mentally doom was never far away but it became a rewarding challenge to live more raw, eating what was left on the shelves or growing nearby, making do and repairing, forming routines with the family and exploring what is right outside the door rather than driving around in circles in search of something new.

I have found the easing of lockdown challenging, especially thinking of those that may be suffering or just forgotten in the rush back to a faster, digital spin and consumer-based lifestyle.  Many other toxic global issues seem to be raising their head under the smoke screen of Covid.  I worry we’re not going to hold on to many of the lessons learnt living through that strange, unique and borrowed time.

Do you have any top seasonal tips to share with the Botelet community?
Get outside and get going with one of the trickier tasks on your list, often the best ideas come with doing rather than whilst planning, my father used to say “a job started is a job half done”.

In Botelet Breakfast Club, Recipe, Botelet Tags Botelet breakfast club, Community, Conversations, Summer, Cornwall, Tia Tamblyn, Seasonal living, Seasonal eating, Summer flowers, Summary 3
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Summer Recipe: Gooseberry & mint compote

July 24, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Gooseberry and mint compote

Gooseberries and mint: both in their prime in high summer and a heavenly match on the palette. We are lucky enough to have both gooseberries and mint growing in abundance right now at Botelet, and I managed to find a moment when the gooseberry bush hadn’t just been stripped by hungry children to harvest some for breakfast!

I toyed with whether or not to share this recipe as it is so ridiculously simple; the recipes I love all have simplicity in common but this particular one takes it to a new level. And yet I know that the recipes I love to make - for their taste and for process - are the most simple. So here goes. I have called this recipe a ‘compote’ but it’s my take on it - I’ve tasted a number of gooseberry compotes that I’ve found disappointing as the gooseberries end up in a gloop that disguises the joy of their plumpness and texture. In this recipe they are softened in a frying pan along with honey, oil and mint - but be careful to cook only for a couple of minutes to retain their shape and a certain amount of ‘bite’.

As ever with my recipes this one is processed sugar free, and you can adjust the levels of honey for a sweeter tooth or if you wish to create more of the syrup.

I have used this as a compote to top breakfast pots with granola and yogurt (as pictured above), to accompany a light supper of roasted summer vegetables, as well as providing flavour and moisture within breakfast muffins - so do play around with how to use it, and I hope you enjoy.


Recipe: Gooseberry & mint compote

Serves 4 as a topping for breakfast pots

Ingredients:

  • 200g gooseberries topped and tailed, and cut in half

  • 1 desert spoon honey (local if possible)

  • 8 mint leaves, torn into small pieces

  • Drizzle of oil eg sunflower

  • Optional serving suggestion: yogurt, muesli or granola & mint sprigs

Method:

  • Wash, top and tail the gooseberries then cut them in half.

  • Place a drizzle of oil in a frying pan, add the honey and warm at a low to medium heat so that the honey and oil spread over the base of the pan and are just beginning to sizzle.

  • Add the gooseberries, cook for about one minute until the fruit turns from translucent to a white-ish colour. Stir gently to keep the shape of the gooseberries.

  • Add the mint leaves and cook for a further one minute.

  • Remove from heat.

  • Serve warm, or cool then store in fridge.

It really is as simple as that!

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In Recipe, Botelet Breakfast Club, Food Tags gooseberry, mint, compote, Summer compote, Gooseberry and mint, breakfast, Botelet, Botelet breakfast club, recipe, cornwall, Summer recipe, Summary 3
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June Botelet Breakfast Club Conversations: Becca Stuart, Dom Bond and Julia Bird

June 12, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Garden Gate Flower Co floral arrangement at Botelet, image credit Allen Tsai

Garden Gate Flower Co floral arrangement at Botelet, image credit Allen Tsai

Summer arrives: here at Botelet wind ripples through fields of long grasses which this year are already tinged with yellow following the warmth of spring; a full compliment of leaves adorn the trees, now deep green and heavy-set; sweet notes of elderflower and wild rose from the hedgerows stop you in your tracks to breathe deeply as you walk.

Such a sweet season, June being a month so full of hope for the summer that will unfold, revelling in the light evenings and long days. Yet this year also carries such a different tone and hue, with all of our lives still affected by COVID-19 in some way - and an acute awareness that for some this is still with huge challenges carrying grief, extreme workloads or anxiety from the weeks and months that have passed. As nature settles into summer, there is also a sense of deeper appreciation: that first trip to the beach, wild swim or meander through woodlands that we might perhaps have taken for granted in years gone by, but now notice, value, lean into more. What an opportunity this summer presents - to experience the season with a sense of joy that we are finally able to access it, touch it, play in and explore it.

As the continuation of lockdown means that we are sadly not yet able to welcome guests to Botelet Breakfast Club, we relish the opportunity to connect with the community through this monthly space sharing conversations on lockdown life and seasonal living with three lovely Breakfast Clubbers. This month we hear from Becca Stuart of The Garden Gate Flower Co who so kindly shares techniques for creating a stunning floral arrangement as well as her musings on lockdown life; Dom Bond who is fully embracing the principles of simple, seasonal living that many of us have been drawn to connect with more deeply during lockdown; and Julia Bird for who the quiet coves of Cornwall provide solace for the soul, but also inspiration for the beautiful art she creates, see Molesworth & Bird. The greatest thanks to Becca, Dom and Julia for taking the time to share their thoughts with us.

Just before we share the words and insights from our friends, this month’s Breakfast Club recipe is for a simple, seasonal drink - elderflower and rhubarb cordial - a gentle, sugar-free version that can be enjoyed with a splash of sparkling water on a warm summer evening, but also as a morning cleanser topped with warm water a spring of mint to energise. I hope you enjoy this recipe, along with the conversations with Becca, Dom and Julia, and Becca’s beautiful floral demonstration which I absolutely cannot to have a go at myself!

Sending much love for a joyful June from us all here at Botelet x

Botelet Breakfast Club Recipe: Rhubarb & Elderflower Cordial

Botelet Breakfast Club Recipe: Rhubarb & Elderflower Cordial


Introducing Botelet Breakfast Clubber Becca Stuart …

Becca Stuart, image credit Holes in the World Studio

Becca Stuart, image credit Holes in the World Studio

We first met Becca at a summer garden party; Becca is the kind of person who you remember meeting, bubbling with creative ideas, fizzing with a warmth and energy that soaks you up and leaves you tingling with inspiration, yet utterly grounded in her work and family life.

Right from that first conversation I’m sure we had planned numerous creative collaborations, and it has been a joy to get to know Becca and a privilege to work with her over the past few years. Becca doesn’t do things by half, her floral design company The Garden Gate Flower Co is top of its game offering arrangements that echo the seasons using British flowers including those grown in her garden at the Duchy Nursery in Lostwithiel, and Becca is always in high demand to to teach floral design and business skills.

We were due to be hosting a floral retreat with Becca here at Botelet in September, this has been cancelled due to COVID as guests were due to attend from across the globe. Lockdown has been tough for Becca’s business, with the wedding industry coming to a complete standstill and by then her garden was already bursting with flowers and foliage that had been invested in and needed to continue being nurtured. However as ever Becca is full of innovation and in these challenging times has created a new venture, Friday Flower Club, for which she has set up an online shop and sells seasonal bouquets locally. Becca’s Friday Flower Club is sold out each week ahead of time, and she has recently partnered with Relish in Wadebridge and Appletons in Fowey in addition to Watt’s Trading in Lostwithiel, to expand pick-up points for her beautiful bouquets. Such a lovely way of keeping the business ticking over, sharing the extraordinary flowers she is growing, and spreading sentiments of love during lockdown.

As well as sharing her thoughts on seasonal living during lockdown (see below) we are thrilled that Becca has also created a video demonstrating how to put together a stunning summer floral arrangement using garden flowers and foliage such as roses, foxgloves, snapdragons and pea leaves. Watching the way Becca gradually evolves the arrangement is like visual therapy as the feast of colours and textures takes shape. Such a fascinating insight into floral design techniques - so much thanks to Becca for sharing the beauty of her summer garden with us all in this way.

Click here to see Becca’s summer floral arrangement video

Click here to see Becca’s summer floral arrangement video

Our conversation with Becca …

Where do you call home? 
Home is right where I am now - I'm a Cornish girl and whilst I wandered for a while I always knew I wanted to return home to bring my family up by the sea! 

What’s your occupation? 
I never really have come up with the right 'snappy' term for what I do - I'm not a conventional florist and I'm not a farmer.  I find the title of what I do hard when I fill in important paperwork and do normally just say florist!  However, I grow flowers for my floral design work.  My business (pre COVID) has been predominately weddings and events in Cornwall and teaching floral design but now with a quick pivot I have set up an online Flower Shop and created a 'Friday Flower Club'.

What do you love to eat for breakfast?  
Well since the lockdown the family made the decision to invest in a waffle maker - we are a huge fans of weekend breakfasts in our family and would normally have French crepes.  However with the arrival of the waffle maker this has quickly become the 'special' weekend breakfast.  Whilst the children opt for chocolate and strawberries I've chosen to have mine with roasted peaches and a generous pour of maple syrup!

What have you found most challenging about the COVID-19 lockdown?
For me COVID really brought my entire business model to a standstill as weddings were no longer allowed - it has been quite a shock and there has been a lot of anger and tears.  However, I like to think, I've got an entrepreneurial head on my shoulders so I quickly set about planning an alternative client for my flowers.  It also goes without saying if you have children at home and a business, generally trying to do anything suddenly becomes a challenge - the house is permanently a tip and I regularly fail at homeschooling....oh and I'm now wondering why I spent so much money on what I thought was a 'pretty / on trend' paper diary.....! 

Do you feel as though there are positive takeaways for you as a consequence of lockdown living?
Ok, so I really would give different answers based on what day I'm having in lockdown - I feel my mood, on many of the days gone by is like 'four seasons in one day'!!  There have been days where I suddenly realise my 14yr old and I have spent way more time together and this wouldn't have happened with the temptation of friends always ringing to 'go out'!  So family times for the most part have been really nice.  However, I think living in the super community of Lostwithiel I realise how sociable we all are and how used to seeing our friends we have been.  It's been hard to adjust to this.  I would say though one of the biggest things I have found as a positive takeaway is the kindness of the community and other local businesses to support one another.  Emma from Bellamama helped me to set up Friday Flower Club initially from Bellamama Deli, I am now working alongside Denise and Tom at Watt’s Trading in Lostwithiel along with Hugo from Relish in Wadebridge and Andy and Lyndsey from Appletons in Fowey doing this same.  It's these acts of kindness from local businesses to support each other that I find reassuring in what has been a really tough time.  

Do you have any top seasonal tips to share with the Botelet community?  
Yes!  Now is the time to get your bi-annual seeds ready for mid to late June sowing.  Bi-annuals are a huge boost to a cottage garden and whilst it feels like a long term investment, i.e. sow now for flowering next spring, they are a really good at filling in gaps in the flowering season.  My advice is to go with things like foxgloves to add height to your garden, Hesperis (sweet rocket) for scent and Daucus Carota which gives you buckets of flowers from only a couple of plants. 


Introducing Botelet Breakfast Clubber Dominic Bond …

Dominic Bond

Dominic Bond

Dom and wife Sophie moved to Cornwall seven years ago, and we are extremely lucky that they chose our local town Lostwithiel to land in as their family base, so that our children have grown up together. Dom and Sophie’s life stories are remarkable and even after many years I’m still always struck by new stories and insights that are gleaned from humbling conversations with them.

Dom helped establish Sabre Education in 2004 and has since been at the helm of this early years education charity, supporting the Ghanaian government in building sustainable kindergarten schools and developing innovative child-centred teacher training programmes.

Back at home, Dom and Sophie’s family life has taken them on a journey that has involved paring back, simplifying and becoming immersed in seasonal living. Last August Sophie and Dom’s dream of settling in their own wild piece of land was realised and they spent a pretty gruelling (in my mind!) wet and chilly winter living as a family of five in a yurt, as they finalised plans and waited for clement weather to arrive to begin renovating their stone barn. Winter saw meals huddled together round a small table by candlelight, showers underneath the outside tap, and the first autumn storms brought rainwater rushing down the inside of the newly erected yurt roof. Yet always a smile, a sense of excitement around the latest modification (“We have a woodburner!” half way through winter) and a baffling ability to make small spaces utterly charming, uncluttered and truly welcoming.

I can’t think of anyone else for whom the arrival of summer must have been felt so significantly: warming the bones, witnessing nature wake up in their wild orchard for the first time, and the relative ease of living with three children when you can all spill outside, leave doors open wide open, climb trees and run through the fields, dig the soil and tend to your first crop of vegetables - as well as finally begin roofing the barn that will become their family home.

Thank you Dom for your thoughtful words below, and to you and Sophie for the ongoing inspiration on simple, sustainable living.

Our conversation with Dom …

Where do you call home? 
Home is a mature apple orchard in south east Cornwall just a few fields away from beautiful Botelet. We recently began converting the 200 year old stone barn we bought with the orchard, and in the meantime home is a yurt and an old tractor shed we have made into our kitchen, bathroom, living space. It’s not the most conventional temporary accommodation and means we can really enjoy the journey of our barn conversion project.

What’s your occupation? 
For the last twelve years I have worked for Sabre Education, an early years education charity working in Ghana. We work in close partnership with the government education service to train teachers in an active and play-based approach with child-friendly classroom management skills that remove fear and physical punishment from their classrooms and provide four and five year old children with the best possible start to their education. As well as working on the quality of teaching we also help to improve school facilities, from classroom renovations and playgrounds right through to full kindergarten school construction.

In July I will hand on to Sabre’s new CEO and plan to focus on matters closer to home, hopefully working with a principle called The Children’s Fire, which is a pledge to work to the benefit of the children of all living things, placing their wellbeing ahead of profit and growth. It is early days, and I am feeling very excited about where this new path might take me…

What do you love to eat for breakfast?  
I lived in Spain as a student and discovered a breakfast that has become a bit of a morning ritual for me these days. It’s called ‘tostada con tomate’ – literally tomato on toast, and is incredibly simple to make and so delicious. My perfect version would involve homemade sourdough and homegrown tomatoes … the tomatoes are blended with olive oil, salt and pepper then generously spread on a piece of toast that’s been drizzled with yet more olive oil, and perhaps rubbed with garlic for a bit of a kick. Pair it with a strong black coffee straight from the espresso pot and I’m in heaven!

What have you found most challenging about the COVID-19 lockdown?
To be honest lockdown itself hasn’t been such a challenge in the physical and literal sense – we feel very blessed to be in this beautiful Cornish valley, we had previous experience of home education, and the weather has been sensational so we have spent a lot of time outdoors doing projects with the kids.

What has been most challenging for me has been trying to navigate the various claims and counterclaims about COVID-19 and sift fact from fiction. Clearly the virus wreaks a terrible toll on the most vulnerable, but I can’t help feeling that lockdown itself is causing an equivalent or even greater economic, emotional and social hardship for so many people, that will continue to be felt for years and years to come. It feels like a set of scales where everyone loses no matter how you balance them.

Do you feel as though there are positive takeaways for you as a consequence of lockdown living?
Definitely! I have really appreciated the stillness that has settled around us, and which seems to have allowed nature a period of respite and perhaps even recovery. 

The concept you recently shared about reframing self-isolation as a period of ‘cocooning’ really emphasised the positives we can take from this time, and in that vein I’ve been mulling over the word ‘community’ and its implications for ‘co-immunity’. I have been inspired by the many acts of local kindness and community spirit that have emerged over the last two and a bit months and I feel optimistic that one of the positive takeaways might be a greater sense of community and a more local focus, which will in turn improve our resilience to future shocks and crises. For someone who has spent the last twenty years with a very global outlook, this more localised worldview has been quite a radical shift in perspective!

Your work connects you with Ghana in West Africa.  What is your experience of how COVID-19 is impacting upon communities in Ghana?
In general terms, Ghana seems to be coping remarkably well with the pandemic, with strong containment measures swiftly introduced by the Government, and lessons from the recent Ebola pandemic in West Africa very fresh in the region’s mind. Our Ghana team at Sabre has had to make a rapid adjustment to remote working, which was completely unchartered territory for most of them, and we have pivoted our education work to support families through the ongoing schools closure with radio broadcast sessions for children and guidance for parents. 

Community structures are much stronger in Ghana than the UK, and I am sure there is much we could learn from the importance of these in providing a localised network for co-support and response. For now, it seems that Ghana’s outbreak has been contained and after a brief period of lockdown in the major cities, life is gradually opening up again.

Do you have any top seasonal living tips to share with the Botelet community?  
We were already striving to eat more seasonally and shop more locally before COVID-19 struck, and as we come into summer the eating seasonably part becomes much more viable. We are very lucky to share a vegetable patch and polytunnel with our neighbours which is now brimming with promise of the bounty to come. We also have a weekly organic fruit and vegetable box from the Keveral Community of Growers, and our local Spar in Pelynt has a really wonderful variety of goods which means we can be much less reliant on the big supermarkets. I’d encourage everyone to try and shop more locally and enjoy the abundance of local seasonal produce over the coming summer months.


Introducing Botelet Breakfast Clubber Julia Bird ….

Julia Bird

Julia Bird

Julia was one of the original Breakfast Club crew, taking the plunge to reserve a place at the table of this unknown and pretty quirky pop-up cafe in the backwaters of rural Cornwall! It has been a true delight to welcome her back many times since.

Connecting with the landscape in which she lives is at the heart of Julia’s work, foraging for seaweed and creating stunning hand-pressed designs that are made into art prints and homewares. It’s always fascinating to hear of Julia’s latest explorations and findings and - when we’re really lucky - bumping into her at a quiet Cornish cove and sharing a wild swim, which is a fundamental part of Julia’s seaweed-gathering ritual.

It’s always a treat to spend time with Julia chatting over a cuppa at the breakfast table, the charm and humility that you feel in her company resonate through the words that she shares below - thank you so much Julia and we can’t wait to welcome you back to the breakfast table - and join you for a wild swim - soon.

Our conversation with Julia …

Where do you call home?
I am currently in between homes … so these last few months have been a challenging time. I truly feel my home is where my heart is and at the moment that is on my allotment or anywhere on the nearby stretch of coastline of Lantivet Bay … that is where I am happiest!

What’s your occupation?
I am co-owner (together with my dear friend Melanie Molesworth) of the design company Molesworth & Bird. We collect and press seaweeds from along the Dorset & Cornish coasts, which we then use to create distinctive art works and homeware.

What do you love to eat for breakfast?
A good breakfast sets the tone of the day and I can’t do without it! My favourite thing is to make wholemeal spelt scones with walnuts and finely chopped rosemary. Eaten hot, straight from the oven, smothered in butter and a drizzle of honey together with my favourite French bowl of really good coffee.  Simple and delicious!

A really special treat is to go out for breakfast where I will delight in indulging in something completely different … Botelet Breakfast Club springs to mind!!

What have you found most challenging  about the COVID-19 lockdown?
Missing friendly hugs and spontaneity … particularly the freedom to go where I please.  In the early days I found it hard witnessing my life grind to a halt … I was so used to being really busy all the time. It was my default setting.  I decided to volunteer to make Scrubs for NHS workers, which allowed me to maintain some structure and sense of purpose in the early days of lockdown whilst also refreshing my long-dormant sewing skills.  It was very satisfying and I loved being part of a team of makers … helping preserve my sanity!

Do you feel as though there are positive takeaways for you as a consequence of lockdown living?
Most certainly ... I am relishing a new slower pace of life – I feel rested and I fully intend to keep it this way! I feel so blessed to live in one of the most beautiful parts of the world. During my less hurried daily walks with my dog it has been wonderful to witness Spring’s seasonal journey down to the finest details. I have loved extending my knowledge of the wild flowers, trees, ferns and birds around me … finding time to look up new species. Stopping a while, listening - seeing. 

My life has become infinitely more wholesome and balanced – I am finding time to read books, make garments, have conversations with old friends afar, listening to music, growing vegetables … slowly finding my creative self, which I had kind of lost these past years. It has in turn led me to make a fundamental change to the way I was planning to run our business in Cornwall, instead adopting a simpler approach hopefully allowing me more time for life and creativity.  It feels that through what has been a year of tumultuous change I have found a clear new direction and that feels really exciting.

Opting for a more nurturing, mindful lifestyle feels vital for us all.

Do you have any top seasonal living tips to share with the Botelet community?
I am going to make sure I am ready for a spontaneous wild camping trip - as soon as we are able and the weather is willing! Sharing with someone special, living simply under canvas and immersed in nature ideally beside the sea for wild swims, conversation and cooking over a campfire.  That is my recommendation for restoring heart and soul.

… and there is a really special, wise and wonderful book that is beautiful to dip into – it is called Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer … indigenous wisdom intertwined with scientific knowledge and the teaching of plants. It was the perfect lockdown read and will remain with me for life.  

In Botelet Breakfast Club, Recipe, Botelet Tags Botelet breakfast club, Community, Conversations, Summer, Cornwall, Elderflower, The Garden Gate Flower Co, Molesworth & Bird, Dominic Bond, Tia Tamblyn, Elderflower & Rhubarb Cordial, Floral design, Seasonal living, Seasonal eating, Summer flowers, Breakfast, Tia Tambly, Summary 3
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Recipe: Elderflower & Rhubarb Cordial

June 11, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Recipe+elderflower+and+rhubarb+cordial+tia+tamblyn

The arrival of summer is always met with great excitement in our household as the first elderflowers emerge from the hedgerows. Elderflower cordial is a seasonal family ritual, but this year I wanted to try out some new ideas. Firstly, in my exploration of seasonal eating I wanted to pair elderflower with an alternative to lemons, something grown here in Cornwall that could be used to enhance and ground the heady notes of the flowers. My trusty friend rhubarb is still growing in the garden so I had a play, and have loved matching these two home-grown ingredients within the recipe.

I also wanted to try alternatives to using processed sugar within the cordial as I find the recipe I normally use - a family heirloom passed down from my mother - is utterly delicious yet somewhat overwhelming as someone with a savoury palette. So instead I’ve used local honey to soften the flavours and help to cook down the rhubarb initially before leaving the mixture to steep. I love the versatility of this cordial recipe, which we are using three ways:

  1. Lollies - my kids expect that the first jug of cordial will be poured into lolly moulds ready for the next hot day. I find it’s great to have home-made, sugar free treats at the ready.

  2. Morning cleanser - I begin each day right now with a warming drink of 1/3 of a cup of cordial, 2/3 cup boiled water then top with a mint leaf to energise.

  3. Aperitif - add sparkling water and a small handful of wild strawberries as an early evening spritzer.

This year the elderflowers arrived early due to the unseasonably warm spring. They are still available right now however if you’re struggling to find flowers that are still light coloured without browning, look on the north side of hedges or wooded areas where the elderflowers don’t receive as much early light, and are more protected.

I hope you enjoy this version of a quintessential summer drink!


Recipe: Elderflower & Rhubarb Cordial

Note that the recipe is made over a couple of days - on the first day you gather the ingredients and begin the process of steeping. Two days later you strain the mixture then pour into lolly moulds (if using) and bottles - so make sure you have bottles ready and sterilised for two days after steeping.

Equipment

  • Large metal pan

  • Sieve

  • Large jug

  • Lolly moulds (optional - if you wish to make lollies using some of the cordial)

  • Sterilised bottles - after filling lolly moulds I made 1 x litre bottle with this recipe, if not using lolly moulds perhaps use 2 x 1 litre bottles or 1 x 1 litre and 2 x 500ml bottles, I always like to sterilise more than I’m likely to use rather than find myself with excess cordial.

Ingredients:

  • 6 elderflower heads

  • 4 rhubarb stalks

  • 6 tbsp honey

  • 2 litres water

  • 1 tbsp white wine vinegar

  • Serving suggestions: sparkling water, sprig of mint, handful of wild strawberries or boiled water for a warm drink

Method:

  • Pick the elderflower heads, choose ones that are bright white with open flowers. Give a shake to remove any insects from the flower heads.

  • Wash the rhubarb and chop into small pieces

  • In a large pan, place the honey in the bottom and slowly melt then add a splash of water and the rhubarb. Gently warm the rhubarb for approx 8 minutes until the shape has softened, releasing the flavours.

  • Add the water and continue to gently heat for a couple of minutes until the honey has dissolved.

  • Add the white wine vinegar and mix well.

  • Remove from heat and allow to cool then add the elderflower heads, place the lid on top of the saucepan and leave to steep for 48 hours, stirring a couple of times a day.

  • The following day when you are ready to bottle give a good mix again then strain into a jug - place a sieve over a wide-topped jug and ladle in spoonfuls of the cordial. Pour from the jug into your lolly moulds and/or sterilised bottles.

Keeps for approx 2 weeks in the fridge

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In Recipe, Food, Botelet Breakfast Club, Botelet Tags Recipe, Summer recipe, Summer, Breakfast, Drink, Botelet Breakfast Club, Elderflower, Rhubarb, Tia Tamblyn, Summary 3
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May Botelet Breakfast Club Conversations: Joey Hulin, Hugo Hercod and Sophie Farrah

May 15, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
May Cornwall Botelet

May: the sweetest month in Cornwall? Hedgerows bursting with a riot of colour - bluebells, campion, cow parsley, buttercups - a potent freshness and vibrancy that melts the heart and lifts the soul; how lucky we are to be in Cornwall right now during lockdown and as ever, our love goes out to those friends of Botelet both near and far.

Despite the ongoing restrictions we are all facing in our lives, we continue to delight in being able to share with you conversations from the Botelet Breakfast Club table each month, on the date our Breakfast Club would have been held. A common theme right now seems to be that physical distance doesn’t have to mean social separation and I’m sure that like us, you’ve found some elements of your life all the richer for the lockdown era - whether it’s keeping in touch with relatives on the other side of the world via zoom, or reaching out to neighbours that in the past you were somehow to busy to stop for.

For our May offering we welcome three fabulous Breakfast Clubbers who have shared thoughts, insights and above all messages of seasonal joy and hope for this era we are living through: Joey Hulin, Hugo Hercod and Sophie Farrah. The lovely Joey also shares a scrumptious breakfast recipe of sweetcorn fritters with poached eggs, avocado and cherry tomatoes - yum! So much thanks to Joey, Hugo and Sophie for taking the time to be part of our May conversations, we have loved connecting with your varied stories - which is, in essence, what Botelet Breakfast Club is all about.

Oh and we have another Botelet Breakfast Club recipe for you to try this month - our Seasonal Smoothie Bowl (pictured below) which is so versatile according to what you have available, and our go-to daily breakfast.

So get your cuppa brewing then settle in to share delicious conversations with these three gorgeous people.

We can’t wait to be welcoming you in person back to the Breakfast Club table, but for now - sending love from us all here at Botelet x

Seasonal Smoothie Bowl recipe by Tia Tamblyn from Botelet Breakfast Club

Seasonal Smoothie Bowl recipe by Tia Tamblyn from Botelet Breakfast Club


Botelet Breakfast Club Guest Contributor Joey Hulin …

Joey Hulin

Joey Hulin

Our first guest Breakfast Clubber this month barely needs an introduction; she is part of the family and fabric here at Botelet. Anyone who has spent time with us over the past few years will likely have been touched by Joey’s magic. Joey founded her retreat and meditation company Horizon Inspired four years ago and we were lucky enough to host one of her first meditation classes. Since then I can’t think of a week when we haven’t worked, played, eaten or simply just laughed together. Joey’s work with us here at Botelet has grown into hosting retreats throughout the year, Soul Suppers, Joey has also led beautiful soulful Breakfast Clubs (we have another coming up in December for anyone who’s keen!) … and not to forget being the celebrant at our children’s naming ceremony last summer! It’s fair to say we all simply adore Joey - and the generous, curious, playful sense of calm that imbues her life and all who are lucky enough to be touched by it.

Joey is currently living in lockdown in one of the Botelet cottages, so we are lucky enough to have regular smiles, waves and chats over the fence; and if you haven’t already tuned in, Joey is currently offering a free short morning meditations live on Instagram at 7.30am BST Monday to Friday - such a nourishing way to get going each morning, it’s the daily ritual that starts our day.

Hugest thanks Joey - for your beautiful words and recipe that you share with us below, but ultimately for your love and friendship - and we can’t wait until we’re allowed to extend those arms through the gateway and give you a great big hug!

Where do you call home?
I have bit of a gypsy spirit which means I move around a lot. I moved from London to Cornwall just over five years ago now and can definitely say I've found home here in this beautiful county.

What’s your occupation?
I am a writer, meditation facilitator and retreat host. I run a company called Horizon Inspired which offers meditation support, written inspiraton and wellbeing retreats. I try to create and offer down to earth, kind and non-judgemtnal experiences and words to help people to pause and come home to their hearts. I have just finished writing my first commissioned book which was a big dream come true. I loved every single step of the process and hope it's the first of many more to come.

What do you love to eat for breakfast?
As long as coffee is served, I am happy! I tend to go through phases, largely depending on the seasons, when it comes to making breakfast at home. In the Spring and Summer months I love to make light, fresh fruit smoothie bowls, overnight oats or a simple banana, cinnamon and honey toast. Then at other times I am all in for a hearty savoury breakfast of baked eggs with goats cheese toast, sweetcorn fritters smothered in sweet chilli sauce or a full on Sri Lankan breakfast (yum!).

What do you love most about spring?
The relief of colour. Witnessing the hedgerows burst into delicate bloom and colour with wildflowers and weeds, and the trees' winter bare branches filled with vibrant green leaves. I also love the long, light evenings that turn into star littered skies in Spring.

What positives are you hoping to take from the current global health situation?
I do truly believe the potential for positive change is exponential. We're all remembering what is really important and realising what is not. We are more engaged with our communities; be that caring for our neighbours, checking in with our parents more or being part of a community online. It seems most people are thinking and engaging more with 'we' than just 'me', which is a massive shift in our culture. And, most importantly, the positive effects we've seen for the breathing, healing planet. I wrote myself a list of 'things I promise to remember' the other day, when reflecting on how I personally would like to move forward from this time. It was a list of the simplest of things; driving less, calling my mum more, not rushing around like I would. But the most important thing for me will be to ensure I take responsibility and make conscious choices for the planet and stay connected to the collective 'we'. It would be only too easy to say now how wonderful I think it is that the planet is breathing and then to return to flying, driving, frequent supermarket shopping trips, consuming what I don't really need to consume once life returns to 'normal'. The positives are real, I think it's just about making sure we each take responsibility to live and embody them.

Do you have any top seasonal tips to share with the Botelet community, as we all spend a lot more time at home?
Dance! In your living room, out in your garden, on your own, with your family, with friends viz Zoom, whatever! Just put on your favourite song and dance so hard you get sweaty! Then see how you feel :)


Joey’s Sweetcorn Fritters with Poached Eggs, Avocado and Cherry Tomatoes

Joey’s Sweetcorn Fritters with Poached Eggs, Avocado and Cherry Tomatoes

Recipe: Joey’s Sweetcorn Fritters with Poached Eggs, Avocado & Cherry Tomatoes

Serves 4 as a light breakfast dish (makes approx 8 fritters)

Ingredients:

  • 1 large tin of sweetcorn (340g) - drained

  • 6 eggs (2 for fritters, 4 for poaching)

  • 70g flour (GF or plain)

  • 1 tsp baking powder

  • 2 spring onion, roughly chopped

  • 1 red chilli, finely chopped

  • Handful coriander, roughly chopped

  • 1 tsp paprika 

  • Salt and pepper to season 

  • Coconut oil 

  • Approx 12 cherry tomatoes

  • 1 an acovado, sliced

  • Sweet chilli sauce

  • Salt & pepper

 Method:

  • Heat oven to 180C

  • Prepare cherry tomatoes: place on a roasting tray, drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper.

  • Beat the eggs in a large bowl

  • Add flour, baking powder, sweetcorn, chopped spring onion and paprika and mix through

  • Transfer roughly half of the mixture to a food processor and blitz before adding it back to the bowl of un-blitzed mixture – again, stir though

  • Add the chopped chilli, coriander and season with salt and pepper

  • Heat the coconut oil in a frying pan

  • Spoon even amounts of batter into the hot oil (this mix should make 8-10 fritters depending on how big or small you want to make them)

  • Cook for 3-4 minutes on each side until crispy 

  • Place the cherry tomatoes in the oven for 10 mins

  • Slice the avocado

  • Poach the eggs - fill a saucepan with boiling water, turn down to simmer, drop the egg in really close to the water so it doesn’t disperse too much. After a couple of minutes once the egg white is hardening, turn up the heat for a minute, then remove the egg from the boiling water with a spoon and set aside.

  • When fritters are ready, place one or two on plate with sliced avocado, a poached egg and cherry tomatoes, drizzle sweet chilli sauce on top and season with salt and pepper


Botelet Breakfast Club Guest Contributor Hugo Hercod …

Hugo Hercod, image credit Sean Gee

Hugo Hercod, image credit Sean Gee

Our second May Breakfast Clubber is Hugo Hercod: family friend along with his wife Sarah, all round lovely bloke and barista extraordinaire. Any coffee drinkers who have sat around the Breakfast Club table will have sampled Hugo’s delicious Rising Ground coffee beans, roasted in Cornwall.

Hugo established Relish Cafe & Deli in Wadebridge 14 years ago, a great little place to visit for local produce and good coffee. Seriously good coffee. Hugo was UK Barista Champion in 2008 .. and has also been crowned 10th best barista in the world (sorry Hugo, I feel you blush!) and Rising Ground, created along with business partner Sean Gee, was a natural next step. They are well, well worth checking out.

A few years ago, Hugo and I bartered some coffee workshops for Richard in exchange for therapeutic massage sessions for Sarah - and I don’t think I’ve ever seen Richard happier than spending hours learning, tasting, drinking and exploring all things coffee. And I mean, all things. What Hugo doesn’t know isn’t worth … and all that.

Thanks Hugo for keeping Richard and the whole Botelet Breakfast Club community - saturated with just the right level of tip-top coffee; for your endless hand-delivered beans which are still, every time, a joy to receive; and for your beautiful contribution below to the Breakfast Club conversation. Oh, and how exactly did you manage to hold your breath for five minutes??! Definitely want to hear more about that …

Where do you call home?
A little house on Summers Street, the best street in Lostwithiel.

What’s your occupation?
Broadly I’m in hospitality, I have a cafe and delicatessen in Wadebridge called Relish Food & Drink and a coffee roasting business called Rising Ground.

What do you love to eat for breakfast?
Until a couple of years ago breakfast hardly featured, at weekends I’d brunch on eggs, scrambled really slowly with ridiculous quantities of butter.

Health issues changed all that, I now start every day with a glass of homemade kefir followed by a litre of smoothie and a hand full of supplements. It’s like a nutrition sledge hammer and I’m addicted.

What do you love most about spring?
The end of winter? I spent most of my youth abroad living in the sun and I've never loved the UK's cold, dark, wet weather. 

Whilst I’m off exercise it’s the arrival of longer days, a warm sun, the explosion of colour in the landscape, the promise of fruit from the garden.

In better days spring would signal a return to the water… I scull on the River Fowey, there’s nothing like a solitary paddle at dawn on mirror flat, crystal clear water on one of the most beautiful rivers in England. 

As the sea calms and clears I would also freedive around the Gribbin Head. Freediving is an incredibly calm, meditative way to enjoy the wonderland off our coast. The calmer you are the longer you get to hang out with the fish, I learnt to hold my breath for over five minutes though I’d struggle to get past three these days.

What positives are you hoping to take from the current global health situation?
Personally, lockdown has forced me to stop, a much needed break to reassess what life’s all about. Globally, I hope this signals a change in course for the human race, to something less self destructive.

Do you have any top seasonal tips to share with the Botelet community, as we all spend a lot more time at home?
Get the sun on your skin and in your eyes, drink less, sleep more and eat fermented stuff. Your body will thank you for it.


Botelet Breakfast Club Guest Contributor Sophie Farrah …

Sophie Farrah

Sophie Farrah

Our third Breakfast Clubber to join the conversation this month is Sophie Farrah whom we have been lucky enough to get to know along with her husband Tom as they holiday in Cornwall a few times a year with our friends along the lanes at Hideaway Huts. Sophie and Tom are regulars at the Botelet Breakfast Club table and were already booked in for a couple of dates this year before lockdown commenced.

Sophie and Tom are the perfect Breakfast Club guests - charming, interesting and interested, the kind of people that create a sparkle round the table and you know will be engrossed in conversation wherever they are seated. As a food writer, Sophie’s visits to Cornwall are punctuated with sampling the best local produce the county has on offer, and each time we are lucky enough to welcome Sophie to Botelet I am delighted to receive the low-down on the best new places to eat.

Thank you Sophie for taking the time to contribute to this month’s Breakfast Club blog, and we very much hope it won’t be too long before we can welcome you both back to the table.

Where do you call home?
Home for me is Barnes – a lovely, leafy ‘village’ in South West London. I grew up here and it has a real sense of community – I know lots of people who live locally, including my mum, so it very much feels like home. I feel very lucky to live here, and to have that sense of home. 

Having said that, I also love to spend as much time as possible down in Cornwall! It’s definitely my happy place. The coast, the abundant nature, the amazing food and all the lovely friends we’ve made down there. We love it and I pine for it regularly! 

What’s your occupation?
I am a writer / journalist by trade – I predominately write about food and drink, but also travel, lifestyle and the arts. 

I write regular features, interviews and reviews for a variety of publications for both print and online. I love meeting and writing about people. People are just totally fascinating. We are all so different. And people who are passionate about things are just brilliant to talk to. I am constantly learning, which I love, and I love to hear people’s enthusiasm for a particular subject or project - it can be contagious. Especially when it’s about food and/or drink, which are probably my greatest passions! It’s also nice to be able to help to support and promote small businesses and individuals. 

In 2017, I co-founded a creative design consultancy called Farrah & Pearce – we specialise in product design, branding, graphics and more, and there’s quite a lot of crossover with my work in the food and drink industry; we’ve designed restaurant branding and menus, kitchenware, websites and more. 

And I am also a part time potter – not so much an occupation but definitely a passion, and a few people have been kind enough to buy my wonky pots in the past!   

What do you love to eat for breakfast?
My day always starts with tea in the biggest mug I can get my mitts on. Pint-sized is ideal! English Breakfast with oat milk and a teaspoon of agave. That hot cup of comfort honestly brings me such much joy every day! In terms of food - midweek I eat a small breakfast - I am usually rushing! So it’s fruit, maybe a spoonful of yoghurt and a sprinkling of nuts, muesli or granola. I also make a very simple rhubarb compote when it’s in season. 

Then at the weekend my husband Tom and I sometimes love to indulge in what we call a ‘hotel breakfast’ – a long, lazy spread of tea, coffee, juice, fruit, pastries, cereal and lots of toast, followed by organic scrambled eggs, roasted tomatoes, veggie sausages and a dollop of the South Devon Chilli Farm’s chilli jam, which I am addicted to! If it’s a special occasion Tom will make his famous brioche French toast – which he studs with blueberries before frying and tops with raspberries and maple syrup! It’s the best. 


What do you love most about spring?
Oh goodness – everything! The colours, the smells, the sounds, the sunshine! It’s such an uplifting, optimistic and beautiful time of year. There is a real energy about it – all the new life pushing its way up through the ground and all the birds busily tending to their nests. Not to mention all the blossom! I just love it. Also, the lighter evenings are a treat, as is that first glass of rosé in the spring sunshine. And of course, wild garlic (pesto), asparagus (grilled with garlic and parsley) and rhubarb (compote) are all completely delicious. 

What positives are you hoping to take from the current global health situation?
On a personal level, this experience has forced the great majority of us to stop and I hope that going forward I can continue to maintain and embrace a slightly slower pace of life. There’s so much pressure to always being doing something, and I want to try and get better at doing nothing from time to time.

I also hope that the situation continues to unite us more as a society, and that the mutual support and kindness that we’ve seen continues, as we hopefully help each other to rebuild. Due to Coronavirus, ministers promised to find all rough sleepers in England a roof over their head within two weeks; it shouldn’t have taken a pandemic for this to have happened, but now that it has, I hope that positive changes like this will remain permanent. 

Also, the natural world has been given a much-needed chance to recover and thrive throughout this terrible period, and I deeply hope that this will continue too. Nature experts in Lebanon have noticed significantly cleaner and clearer air filled with migratory birds, the canals in Venice are running clear and dolphins have been spotted in Italy’s waterways, and dozens of countries are experiencing temporary falls in carbon dioxide and nitrogen dioxide of as much as 40%. This year will almost certainly see a much lower toll for roadkill by cars and trucks, and many councils have delayed cutting the grass on roadside verges, which means that wildflowers will thrive this summer and provide more pollen for bees. I read that with less human movement, the planet has literally calmed: seismologists have reported lower vibrations from ‘cultural noise’ than before the pandemic! We’ve been given an opportunity to reframe the way the world works, and I hope that we seize it and create new norms that benefit and protect the planet, rather than reverting back to our environmentally damaging old ways. 

Do you have any top seasonal tips to share with the Botelet community, as we all spend a lot more time at home?
I know we’ve all heard it many times before, but sitting outside listening to the birdsong, feeling the sun on your face, and looking - actually looking – at all the emerging flora and fauna is just so special, especially at this time of year. I find it has a really calming and joyful effect. 

In terms of seasonal eating - we live in such a time of convenience that the supermarkets are still filled with imported goods that definitely aren’t seasonal (even during lockdown!) – so it can actually be quite tricky to know what is actually in season and what’s not. I have a beautiful book called The Almanac: A Seasonal Guide to 2020 by Lia Leendertz. I keep it by my bed, and it’s divided into 12 months, so at the start of each month I read about what lies ahead. It’s filled with so much wonderful information and inspiration, from tide times, sea temperatures and moon phases, to what’s in season in terms of flowers and food, as well seasonal recipes. There are also features on each month's unique goings-on, like beehive behaviour, meteor showers, folklore, songs and stories, as well my favourite section about what’s happening in the hedgerow! It makes me feel much more connected to the natural world and I find that very comforting. 

I also love to make a few plans for the summer ahead – new things I want to learn, things I want to cook and eat, places I want to visit, people I want to see. I know that’s a bit tricky to do at the moment, as who knows what the future holds, but I like to plan for the best, and it’s nice to have a few things to look forward to.


In Botelet Breakfast Club, Recipe, Botelet Tags zero waste, Breakfast, Botelet breakfast club, recipe, smoothie bowl, Vegetarian, lockdown life, brunch, community, seasonal living, Seasonal eating, Joey Hulin, Horizon Inspired, Tia Tamblyn, Sophie Farrah, Hugo Hercod, Rising Ground, Coffee, Summary 3, Cornwall
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Recipe: Spring Smoothie Bowl

May 14, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Spring smoothie bowl Tia Tamblyn

My all-time favourite breakfast is a bowl full of smoothie - cramming in all the goodies such as seasonal veg or leaves from the garden, fruits - whether picked fresh, delivered or frozen - with plenty of nuts and seeds to boost the density and depth of flavour. Topped with muesli and perhaps some fresh fruits if I have to hand, it is my go-to.

Our smoothie bowl is different every day according to what’s in the larder, fridge, freezer and garden - and the joy of smoothies is that they are so utterly versatile - so mix things up and in so doing use up any leftovers or what you have to hand.

The forget-me-not flowers that add a pop of colour to the bowl grow easily in many of our gardens at this time of year felt like a poignant reminder - let’s not forget this time we’re in right now during lockdown, let’s commit to learn from it and try to hold onto any positive changes it has invoked in our lives.

Spring Smoothie Bowl

Makes approx 2 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 cup (approx 130g) frozen berries

  • 1 stalk rhubarb, chopped into small pieces

  • 2 chard leaves, roughly torn or chopped

  • Handful spinach or other greens

  • Handful flaked coconut

  • 2 tbsp yogurt

  • Small handful raisins

  • Handful nuts - any you have available

  • 1 tbsp seeds - any you have available eg linseed, sunflower, pumpkin, sesame, chia

  • Few shavings fresh ginger

  • Few leaves fresh mint

  • 200ml boiled water (boiled water helps to soften the frozen berries)

  • 100ml almond milk (or other milk of your choice eg cows, coconut)

  • Optional: muesli to sprinkle on top

  • Optional: fresh fruits for on top

  • Optional: edible flowers such as forget-me-nots to decorate your smoothie bowl

Method:

  • Place all ingredients in a blender and whizz up until smooth

  • Serve with optional toppings such as muesli, fresh fruits and edible flowers

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In Botelet Breakfast Club, Recipe Tags recipe, breakfast, smoothie bowl, botelet breakfast club, vegetarian, seasonal eating, seasonal, seasonal cooking, botelet, Summary 3
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Recipe: Granola - via the Comfort Cookbook for Hospitality Action

May 10, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Tia’s granola, image credit Ali Green

Tia’s granola, image credit Ali Green

I was honoured to be asked to share my granola recipe for the Comfort Cookbook - a beautifully curated digital offering featuring seasonal recipes from chefs across the South West. The book has been put together with the simple intention of sharing recipes to nourish us and our creativity during lockdown, whilst raising funds for the charity Hospitality Action. Donations from this cookery book will help Hospitality Action to support families impacted by the COVID19 pandemic who face hardship and an uncertain future.

The granola recipe that features in the Comfort Cookbook, alongside my Rhubarb and Lavender Compote, is a regular on the Botelet Breakfast Club menu. It’s easy to make and incredibly adaptable depending upon what’s available in your store cupboard right now.

If you’d love to give this recipe a go then do visit the Justgiving page where you can make make a pledge on a ‘pay what you can afford’ basis, then download a copy of this beautiful cook book. I’d love to know your thoughts on the recipe! And I cannot wait to be able to serve this again in-person once lockdown ends and we are able to open up the Botelet Breakfast Club table once again.

Take care
Tia x

In Botelet Breakfast Club Tags recipe, breakfast, granola, botelet breakfast club, Comfort Cookbook, Cook book, WorkbyAli, Maverick Guide, Cornwall, Summary 3
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April Botelet Breakfast Club Conversations: Emily Scott, John Hersey & Johanneke Kodde

April 24, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
The Botelet Breakfast Club table set for spring, photo credit Holes in the World Studio

The Botelet Breakfast Club table set for spring, photo credit Holes in the World Studio

Today marks the second of our Botelet Breakfast Clubs that has been postponed due to lockdown. At this time when we are all missing community we wanted to bring you some more voices from the Breakfast Club table, and this month we are so thrilled to be able to share conversations with three of our Breakfast Clubbers: Chef, restauranteur and beautiful soul Emily Scott who also shares one of her delicious breakfast recipes; Photographer, Art Director and all-round Botelet bestie John Hersey; and our dear friend and wild swimming partner Dr Johanneke Kodde.

As with every single person around the globe, each of these three special friends of Botelet have been affected by the current COVID crisis in different yet significant ways; and all of them share words of hope in their conversations below, along with top-tips on how to sink into seasonal living during this time of social separation.

We are delighted to feature another of our Breakfast Club recipes - this month it’s Spring Muffin Frittatas that would have appeared on the April Breakfast Club menu. A simple and adaptable recipe depending upon what’s available in your store cupboard, and some recommendations for those who have access to the countryside for foraging.

We do hope you will enjoy sharing in these insights and recipes from our friends as much as we have, and we very much look forward to welcoming Emily, John, Johanneke - and you - back to the Breakfast Club table when we are able to gather together once again.

Sending love from us all here at Botelet,
Tia, Richard and Julie along with Barbara, Cyra, Otto and Nell x


Emily Scott, photo credit Holes in the World Studio

Emily Scott, photo credit Holes in the World Studio

Richard and I first met Emily eight years ago, we were lucky enough that she cooked for our wedding here at Botelet - the most insanely delicious al fresco feast. We’ve stayed in touch, following with interest Emily’s ongoing success not only as a chef and restauranter but as an influential voice within the hospitality industry, we have welcomed Emily and her partner Mark to the Botelet Breakfast Club table, and have loved every moment of visits we’ve made to Emily’s beautiful restaurant on the moor, The St Tudy Inn. It’s on top of list of go-to’s once we’re all allowed out again. We are thrilled that Emily has contributed not only her thoughts on how to make the most of this era of isolation, but also a mouth-watering breakfast recipe - see below. So much thanks and love, Emily x

Where do you call home?
Cornwall is where I found my home and my heart, my soulmate, where my children have been lucky enough to spend carefree days by the sea.  I have over the years developed my passion for simple, seasonal cooking with Cornwall’s beautiful ingredients.

I am passionate about the connection between food, a sense of place and storytelling. I find it infectious, intriguing and comforting all at the same time. My story is one which interweaves the sentimental tales of a childhood also in Provence with my grandfather ‘Papa’ collecting strawberries from the fields to the hum of crickets in the warm sunshine, to the beautiful shores of Cornwall and golden sandy beaches. Experience and memories are translated into ingredients which collectively are heightening into simplistic, rustic dishes which are easily recreated at home.

What’s your occupation?
Restauranteur / Chef

What do you love to eat for breakfast?
In the warmer months fruit is what I crave, cool and gently sweet accompanied by yoghurt, toasted granola and honey. Pancakes are delicious and indulgent, with maple syrup and raspberry butter and I adore simply grilled sourdough bread with slow roasted ripe tomatoes, olive oil and plenty of flaky cornish sea salt.

What do you love most about spring?
I love this season as the earth slowly wakes up from its long Cornish winter. A time for so many wonderful ingredients to fill your kitchen with and be inspired to cook. Windy open moors covered in bright yellow gorse, sea pinks appear on the coast framing the cliff edges, alexanders start reaching for the sky, sea cabbage, wild primroses appear and wild garlic often found on a woodland walk, green vibrant leaves, pretty white flowers with a subtle wonderful fragrance. There is always time for cake.

What positives are you hoping to take from the current global health situation?
Everyone is kinder and more appreciative, perhaps a slower more gentle way of living and we will all become more connected in real life together. Enjoying our days in a whole new way.

Do you have any top seasonal tips to share with the Botelet community, as we all spend a lot more time at home?
Herbs always make me feel happy, their colour, scent and shape, so clever and diverse.  I must always have herbs in my kitchen. I would encourage you to grow herbs in pots on your kitchen windowsill, outside your kitchen door or window boxes, where they are easily at hand to inspire you in your kitchen. 


Emily Scott’s Pancakes with Raspberry Butter & Maple Syrup

Emily Scott’s Pancakes with Raspberry Butter & Maple Syrup

Recipe: Emily Scott’s Pancakes with Raspberry Butter & Maple Syrup

Serves 6

125g/4oz plain flour
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp caster sugar
1 egg
170ml/6fl oz whole milk
Maple syrup

150g/5oz softened butter
1 punnet of raspberries

First, make the raspberry butter. Put the butter into a clean bowl and beat using a wooden spoon until light and slightly paler in colour. Using the back of a fork, slightly mash the raspberries and then stir gently through the butter, then set aside while you make the pancakes.

Sift the flour and baking powder into a bowl. Add the sugar and stir to combine. Make a well in the centre, crack in the egg and pour in the milk and whisk until smooth. Rest for 15 minutes. Now heat a small non-stick frying pan over a medium heat and brush with a little butter (be careful not to let the butter brown). Spoon a ladleful of batter into the centre of the pan, turn down the heat slightly and cook for two minutes. Once bubbles begin to appear on the surface, turn the pancakes and cook for a minute on the other side. Very often the first pancake is less than perfect, but don't be disheartened: this is completely normal.

Serve hot from the pan with a spoonful of raspberry butter and maple syrup.


John Hersey

John Hersey

Next up is John Hersey aka Holes in the World Studio. We met John in the early days of Botelet Breakfast Club, just over two years ago. It seems incredible to think two years have gone by since we began our Breakfast Club, but also that it’s only been two years since we met John - he is one of those friends whom once you’ve met, you can’t imagine life without. From the moment he stepped into our lives at Botelet, John has been part of the journey: he has stayed, eaten, coffee’ed, photographed, laughed and shared in pretty much every space indoor and out, his gentle eye for light drawing him to curious corners, and his kind demeanour meaning that when the kids see his car come in the drive there are shrieks of “Camera John!” as they run off to meet him (and he’ll then spend half an hour patiently being led around their latest projects). Thank you John for sharing your beautiful words here, and for your friendship for which we are all grateful x

Where do you call home?
Pentire Headland in Newquay. 

What’s your occupation?
Photographer & Art Director Holes in the World Studio / Sons of Thunder Agency

What do you love to eat for breakfast?
I’m just the biggest advocate for stuff ‘on toast’ especially mixing sweet and savoury toppings, for example cream cheese, grilled sweet potato and maple syrup, or spinach, toasted nuts and honey. Anything egg related too, I mean, buttery sourdough with sunny side fried eggs, fresh coriander and smokey chilli jam, delicious right? Or eggs baked in vine tomatoes and sweetcorn… on toast. I’m not the biggest fan of eating straight after waking up, I normally take a break for breakfast around half ten in the morning and spend a nice bit of time on it.  Especially now the sun is shining, morning yoga or a cold swim take priority over eating straight away, it’s all about the ‘second breakfast’ to me, not quite brunch, not quite breakfast. Bagels are a common feature and often replace the square or oval ‘toast’. 

What do you love most about spring?
Blossom, swallows, the nibble of a chilly breeze on an otherwise mild day, lighter evenings, softer shadows, enjoyable barefoot walking, jumper and short combos, the slight change in vibration that makes for more common smiling between stranger. Birdsong, the ocean swims that start to feel like freedom. 

What positives are you hoping to take from the current global health situation?
I don’t think I realised that I was making myself ill with my workload pre-lockdown. Even after just a couple of weeks, I can taste food differently, feel my body differently, my movement is free and painless, my concentration is tenfold what it was already. I can sit and read books for hours, whereas before I would often work until sleep and usually not take my eyes off a screen for most of the day. It’s also showed me how far I had gone from my intentions with both my work and my personal pursuits. I’m certainly thinking more now about the quality and integrity of pursuits, time is so precious and time spent with people and work closer to the heart no doubt serves us better as individuals and in our families and extended communities. It’s taught me to embrace my introverted nature, and to stop poisoning my spirit with situations that cause me nothing but anxiety just to further my career. My plan moving forward is to carve out a little bit of lockdown time every day, to plant some veggies, read more paper books, generally take it slower and trust the process of creation.  

Do you have any top seasonal tips to share with the Botelet community, as we all spend a lot more time at home?
If possible, submerging in cold water in natural places has to be the single best thing for your body, mind and spirit, I think this has been the thing that’s made lockdown most barable. Meditate on nature during Spring, seeing how beautiful something is when growing as it’s own pace. Be reactive to light and shadow, and only producing when the conditions allow it to be the purest form of expression. Accepting the shadow, stretch in the light, grow in the dark.
Peace and light to one and all xxx


Johanneke Kodde

Johanneke Kodde

Johanneke (Joh) is one of our local heroes. We came to know Joh through friends within our local Lostwithiel community and life has been that little bit brighter since. Joh is one of those friends who is a constant source of inspiration; she doesn’t do life by half whether it’s training for a triathlon, sea swimming in minus degrees or simply sticking to a prior arrangement to lead a Book Club meet-up (pre COVID!) following an exhausting week at work - Joh always shows up. Fiercely loyal, but also great fun, grounded, thoughtful and empathetic with a refreshing dose of ‘Dutchness’ thrown in for good measure (Joh’s husband Ramon once told me, “Even by Dutch standards, Johanneke’s pretty straightforward!”) you know where you stand with Johanneke and believe me, it’s a true honour to count her as one of your best buddies.

During the past few weeks, Johanneke’s home and family life have been turned upside down by COVID as she and the other partners at the surgery where she works works have had to tirelessly transform the practice to support those in the community with Coronia Virus or suspected symptoms, whilst also still reaching out to those with other ailments, trying to plan for lockdown and beyond with the huge levels of uncertainty the whole country is facing. With three children back at home, and much out-of-hours working and planning, lockdown living has had very different manifestations for Joh as compared with many of us.

Thank you to all you’re giving our community right now Joh, it is so appreciated and we cannot wait to welcome you back to Breakfast Club when lockdown is over - we’re going to arrange another Monday one just for you! x

Where do you call home?
Currently I would say Cornwall certainly feels as my 'home'. I was born in the Netherlands where I grew up on a farm with a small camp site, near the sea. I went to medical school in Belgium, was a junior doctor in Amsterdam and London and eventually settled to have a family in Devon and moved to Lostwithiel in 2010. The last 10 years as a GP in Cornwall have been wonderful and I feel truly at home in this beautiful county. 

What’s your occupation?
As mentioned, I'm a GP. I've always found this an amazing and privileged job, which gives me purpose and fulfillment and I see it as my role to be an advisor and facilitator in people's lives. I am a big believer in helping my patients live happily and healthily and try to really listen to their 'stories' and encourage positive lifestyle choices. Unfortunately under the current circumstances we are minimizing patient contacts and we've had to completely overhaul how we work, with the situation and advice changing on a daily, sometimes hourly basis. When you read this we may be in the peak of the pandemic and who knows what I'll be doing day-to-day. So I can only hope people are finding time to look after themselves with the help of each other, books, social media, music and creativity!

What do you love to eat for breakfast?
My breakfast is usually either porridge or natural yoghurt with granola. Topped with fresh fruit, nuts and seeds and maple syrup or honey with some cinnamon. And a cappuccino.

What do you love most about spring?
I love being in the garden and seeing everything come back to life. I love the magnolia trees and their lush pink blossoms, I love the road sides and hedgerows with the yellows of the primroses, daffodils and buttercups, followed by wild garlic, blue bells and lots of other wild flowers. And I love sowing seeds and seeing the tiny plants come up. I love the days being longer again and warm enough to spend a lot of time outside. What's not to love about spring?

What positives are you hoping to take from the current global health situation?
I can't help but be amazed when watching the world not being so 'busy' - not racing around in cars, from school runs to work to sport classes and meetings and to be forced to slow down. I hope it gives many people time to re-evaluate their priorities. And I hope it gives (particularly low paid) key workers permanently more value in our society. I hope there will be a shift towards a more fair and inclusive attitude and that people won't forget that it wasn't the rich celebrity that held their loved ones' hand in the hospital, but more likely the immigrant care worker or nurse (like our prime minister found out). It has come at a time when no one could really imagine changing their lifestyle for the climate or the greater good, but now we have shown ourselves and the political leaders that it can be done. Let's hope it brings about permanent positive changes, but let's also hope we can go back to more human physical interaction very soon!

Do you have any top seasonal tips to share with the Botelet community, as we all spend a lot more time at home? 
I'm not really spending more time at home and my days off are often still spent catching up on the latest developments, policies, guidelines and making plans for the next phase. However when I am at home there are no school runs, swimming lessons or sadly also no sea swims, rowing, yoga, book club, social events or supper club to go to. I wouldn't have the energy either! You know I'm a bit of a social animal, but all my energy seems consumed with work and all I want to do besides that is looking after my plants, spending time with my family and the occasional run. Very little virtual classes going on for me! 

My top seasonal tip is try out seeding and growing some veg and herbs. Mix it up with flowers and you'll have something to do and look after every day. I made an improvised arch between two raised beds (sticks, old bamboo canes and lots of rope) which I'm hoping will guide courgette and cucumber plants from one bed and sweets peas from the other. The garden certainly helps me switch off my busy mind!

In Botelet Breakfast Club Tags Botelet Breakfast Club, Breakfast, Emily Scott, Recipe, Breakfast recipe, Brunch, Community, cornwall, Seasonal living, Seasonal eating, John Hersey, Holes in the World Studio, Johanneke Kodde, lockdown living, Summary 3
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