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Winter Wellbeing: Seeking Nourishment Within Nature

January 11, 2021 Tia Tamblyn
Tia Tamblyn Harriet Coleman Winter Wellbeing Drift

This article is published in Drift Magazine Volume No 9

Words by Tia Tamblyn I Images by John Hersey

New year; fresh beginnings.  I’ve never before witnessed such an eagerly anticipated chapter change as last year invoked, and we welcome 2021 with collective hope for a time of less turbulence, more security and connection with loved ones.  If there’s one thing 2020 has taught us it’s that life can be truly unpredictable, and however much we plan for the future those plans can be uprooted, shaken about and discarded in a mere moment.  Where does that leave us as we enter the new year, at a time of reflecting back alongside considering the shape of the year that lies ahead?

Making sense of 2020 is going to be a long-haul project, as the political, social and economic implications are picked apart.  Many of us have experienced major shifts in our personal and work lives - some welcomed, others less so - and embracing these changes has itself called for significant reflection.  Although our lived experiences of Covid-19 are unique to us, one unifying shift is the gravitation towards nature as a source of healing - for fresh air, exercise, the opportunity to meet loved ones outdoors; and for the sense of grounding that the natural landscape invokes through its startling beauty and seasonal rhythms, offering a sense of security and reliability during an era of such unexpected change.

How lucky those of us living in (or able to visit) Cornwall have been, with a playground of opportunities for natural therapy - in the sea, on craggy moorlands, or simply drinking in expansive, green-hued vistas.  We have been drawn to nature and have realised the potency it holds for healing both body and mind.  Social media has been awash with joyous celebrations of sea swimmers, vegetable growers and hikers in remote terrain.  As we find ourselves mid-winter, a point in the season when we tend to close-in and hunker down, what can nature offer us to boost our wellbeing through to Spring?

I’m a natural-food fanatic, but I’m aware that there is a vast amount of nourishment held within nature that has passed me by; an intricate knowledge of plants and their ability to support and heal us that has been handed down through generations, yet many of us have lost touch with today.  Winter feels like an opportune time to learn more about the plants on our doorstep and how we can harness them to enhance wellbeing at a time when our immunity is often low, we become more susceptible to colds, many of us struggle with mental health, and the shorter days mean less opportunities for getting active outdoors.

To learn more about the nourishment held within nature and try my hand at making a plant-based winter remedy, I head out for a foraging walk with Harriet Coleman, herbalist and founder of West Apothecary based near Gwithian.  Harriet trained in Herbal Medicine in 2017 following a twelve-year modelling career during which she travelled the world but became disillusioned by the industry when she realised the impact the pressure to conform to a certain look was having on her wellbeing. Harriet shares, “My health became challenged - the need to look a certain way led to yo-yo dieting which hammered my gut health and immune system.  It wasn’t a sustainable way to live, and when I realised that work was also chipping away at my mental health, I knew it was time to stop”.  Harriet’s upbringing had been immersed in nature, her mother’s medicine cabinet was full of herbal tinctures, and it was to this way of living that Harriet returned when she took the decision to step away from modelling.   

From a fast-paced career based in London, Harriet moved to Cornwall and spent the first few months diffusing from the intensity of her experience.  Inspired by the landscape and the more laid-back lifestyle, Harriet found nature a great healer and wanted to further her knowledge of herbalism, the ancient form of medicine, in order to continue her own journey of wellbeing and be able to offer this to others.   

For Harriet, embracing difficult life experiences and learning from them is part of the process of becoming a herbalist, and she looks back now with gratitude for the chapters of her life that led to her work today.  Harriet describes herbal medicine as “being in service to others through plants; understanding the language of nature and helping to translate this for others to empower their own healing”.

What does this mean in practice?  Harriet offers one-to-one consultations with clients, creates herbal-infused skincare products, and runs workshops in which she teaches about utilising the power of local plants within remedies and elixirs, to support wellbeing.  I ask Harriet how Covid-19 has affected her work, and whether attitudes towards herbalism have changed during her years of practice.  “People want to be more self-sufficient and connected to nature.  In the West we have a habit of looking outside of what we have to find solutions to the issues we are facing.  We are waking up to the local and indigenous offerings that the land around us can provide.” 

Harriet believes that it’s important to view ourselves as part of nature rather than separate from it, and this understanding invokes a compassionate approach to the environment, as well as enabling us to respectfully harness nature’s offerings to support our wellbeing. She explains that her work as a herbalist isn’t just about finding solutions to ailments, it starts with taking a preventative approach, looking at lifestyle changes we can make to improve our health, then supporting these with medicinal remedies where appropriate.  Fundamentally it’s about “tuning in to nature’s calendar and the rhythm of the season” Harriet reflects. 

Being at the point of midwinter, I ask Harriet her recommendations for staying healthy during the darker, colder months.  “Winter is a time to go within, a time for stillness and hibernation” she says.  Bringing this into contemporary living might mean freeing up time for rest and space within our winter-time lives.  “Taking 10 minutes each day for quietness, to consciously slow down.  Making sure we get plenty of sleep and eating seasonal food” are foundational to winter wellbeing.  

Seeing ourselves as within nature makes sense when considering how we eat through the cycle of the year, as Harriet explains, “winter foods grown locally offer us the nutrients we need at this time of year.  During the autumnal season of abundance, we are designed to stock up to see us through the sparser months.  Root vegetables, available throughout winter, are grounding, heavy foods that invite you to rest, contrasting with summer foods that hold a lighter, crisper energy.”  

This understanding, viewing ourselves as part of nature, designed to eat as our locality offers through the seasons, feels compelling.  I realise that although I’ve been drawn to seasonal eating, the motivation has been environmental and economic concerns such as reducing food miles and supporting local growers.  Clearly these are important aspects of our eating choices; but positing ourselves as part of nature gives us additional insight into the benefits that eating local plant-based produce offers, nourishing us with the nutrients that we need to support our health through nature’s cycles. 

As well as boosting our health, synchronising with the seasons can enable us to become “sustainably productive” Harriet explains, more attuned to our wellbeing and mindful of drawing too heavily on our energy reserves.  Again, considering the sustainability of our own wellbeing, as well as our impact on the planet and other people, feels like an important - yet easy to overlook - facet living sustainably. 

I ask what our local landscape offers us during winter.  “Cornwall is abundant year-round” Harriet says.  “In winter, herbs such as rosemary, thyme and sage provide nutrition and strength for our bodies.”  Harriet uses plants from her medicinal garden along with foraging walks to create the products that she creates.  “Scots pine needles have antiviral properties and are rich in vitamins C and E” and feature regularly within Harriet’s winter remedies.  “Nature offers us what we need.  Eat plenty of locally grown vegetables during winter, grow herbs, look at the indigenous species growing in the hedgerows.  The activity of walking, foraging, learning and collecting in itself connects us to nature, and to those we share the experience with.”   

As we head back to the farmhouse here at Botelet to warm up and use our foraged finds to create Harriet’s Winter Evergreen Respiratory Rub (see recipe below), my mind turns to the year ahead and what I have learnt that can feed through.  I’m cautious about setting specific new year goals given the uncertainty of the era; yet perhaps the intention to embrace a mindset that places me squarely within nature is a great starting point.  Undefined, woolly and difficult to measure?  Absolutely.  But also full of opportunities to learn and explore in the beautiful Cornish landscape.  

If 2020 was the year when we turned to nature, can 2021 be the year when we deepen our connection, and begin to re-learn the language that our ancestors knew so well?  If we see ourselves are part of the natural world, our lifestyle choices must surely become more sustainable, more compassionate towards our environment and our fellow species.  Which leaves me full of hope for the year ahead.

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In Botelet, Cornwall, Drift, Sustainable living, Wellbeing, Mindful living Tags Summary 1, Drift, West Apothecary, Winter Wellbeing, cornwall, Nourishment within nature, Winter recipe, Botelet
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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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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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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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Recipe: Wild Watercress Soup

April 11, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Wild watercress soup

Is anyone else feeling acutely aware of the value of our food right now, as we continue with ‘lockdown living’?

As we struggle to book slots for food deliveries with many items not currently available, and going shopping means queueing for hours (and is only an option for those who aren’t self-isolating), it somehow feels like there’s a more urgent need to connect with and appreciate each item of food and each part of each item of food that we are lucky enough to have access to right now, along with the people who sow, grow, harvest, package, supply, sell and deliver.

With this vulnerability we are living with comes opportunity, especially with the time that some of us are lucky enough to have on our hands right now. What changes can we start making - however small - with the way we eat whilst we have more time at home to cook, that might last beyond the lockdown? 

Whether using up leftovers (even if it means eating the same thing for three or four nights in a row, albeit in a slightly different guise), considering parts of a plant that we can cook rather than throw away, considering how we can support our local growers and farmers at this time?

Our lovely neighbours dropped a box of watercress on our doorstep that they had foraged from the woods. I made it into soup, then tonight the soup became a sauce with a Buddha Bowl supper that included chopped-up & baked Colwith Farm potatoes, leftover quinoa and seasonal veg that I re-fried & topped with roasted crunchy leek leaves from the veg patch - these have become a new favourite of the kids’! 

Note - I hadn’t cooked with wild watercress before. Tasting it raw it was pretty peppery so at first I didn’t add too much to the soup, knowing that the children wouldn’t eat it if it was too hot. However the watercress really wilt down and the flavour mellows a lot with cooking, so don’t hold back too much with the amount you use, if you have plenty.

I’ve popped the recipe below but feel free to add or replace items depending upon the vegetables that you have available that need to be used up.

Wild Watercress Soup

Serves 6

Ingredients

  • Olive oil

  • 2 onions, chopped

  • 4 leeks, washed, the stalks chopped and the leaves chopped into approx 5cm lengths and set aside

  • 6 potatoes, washed and chopped

  • 2 handfuls wild garlic, washed and chopped

  • 1.5 litres veg stock

  • 6 large handfuls watercress, washed and chopped leaving a few pieces whole to decorate with.

  • Dried herbs such as thyme (or use fresh herbs)

  • Salt & pepper

  • 1 chilli pepper (optional)

Method

  • If you have access to the countryside for foraging in early spring, begin with a walk with the intention of picking watercress and wild garlic (and any other goodies you may find!) head out on a walk to bring back your foraged finds then wash them. Wild Food UK has a great online foraging guide.

  • In a large pan gently cook the onions and chopped leeks for approx 10 mins until softened.

  • Add the potatoes and cook for a further 10 mins.

  • Add the wild garlic, herbs, salt and pepper along with the vegetable stock. Simmer for 15 mins.

  • Add the watercress and cook for a further five minutes.

  • If you like a smoother soup, whizz with a hand-held blender. Check seasoning again.

  • Serve in warm bowls with a sprig of watercress, drizzle of olive oil and sprinkling of ground pepper on top. We added some chilli to ours but left it off the kids’ bowls.

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In Recipe Tags watercress soup, foraging, foraged foods, wild garlic, vegetarian, vegan, spring recipe, cornwall, Summary 3
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Recipe: Nettle & Gorse Syrup Cake

March 26, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Nettle & Gorse syrup cake

With lockdown and home schooling in full flow, we’re spending the afternoons gardening, foraging and cooking, making the most of the beautiful weather with bucketloads of gratitude that we live in place where we step out across fields in isolation. For anyone else with access to the countryside at this time, we hope you might enjoy this recipe. We adapted it from a recipe we found online, making it gluten free and using up a couple of different flours we have in the cupboard, plus adding some gorse syrup into the recipe and and using this in combination with oil as a replacement for butter, as well as drizzling some of our syrup on top once the cake was baked.

We hope you enjoy the recipe, Cyra was in charge of writing out the ingredients and process while the twins helped me make a big gooey mess. Interestingly, no-one was keen to lick the cake batter and it was met with “ooooh this is going to be GROSS Mummy!", but it’s turned out to be a true family favourite!

For anyone having to isolate indoors, you are in our thoughts and we very much hope it won’t be long before you too can be foraging outside. Gorse is used as a remedy for regaining hope. Sending hope and love from us all,

Tia, Cyra, Otto & Nell x


Nettle & Gorse Syrup Cake

Ingredients

  • 40g nettle leaves

  • 3 eggs

  • 250g honey

  • 100ml vegetable oil

  • 100ml gorse syrup (for recipe, see below)

  • 250g gluten self-raising free flour

  • 100g ground almonds

  • 2 tsp baking powder

  • 1 tsp cinnamon

  • 1 tsp ground ginger


Method

  • Heat oven to 180 C. Grease a cake tin approx 20cm diameter.

  • Steam the nettles for 5 minutes then set aside to cool. When a little cooler and easier to handle, chop into small pieces.

  • Put the honey, vegetable oil and gorse syrup into a pan and heat gently for 5 minutes so they combine together

  • In a medium sized bowl, crack the eggs and stir with a fork. Add the nettle and mix together.

  • In a large mixing bowl combine the flours, baking powder and spices. Add the egg and nettle along with the honey, oil and gorse syrup, and mix well.

  • Pour into cake tin and bake in oven for approx 40 minutes - insert skewer to check, when the cake is ready it should be golden on top and the skewer come out clean.

  • When cake is ready leave to cool a little before removing it from the tin.

  • We decorated our cake by pouring over a little gorse syrup to help the flowers stick, sifting some icing sugar on top then laying primroses and gorse flowers (both of which are edible - see foraging guidelines below) onto the cake.


To make gorse syrup
We used 1 litre water and 400g granulated sugar, combined them in a saucepan and simmered for 10 minutes then removed from heat and added 5 large handfuls of gorse flowers. We left it overnight then simmered for another 10 minutes in the morning before straining through muslin, bottling and popping in the fridge. This makes lots of syrup - enough for a good few cakes, drinks, salad dressings and anything else you care to make with it - and we’d love to know if you have any good ideas!

Foraging guidelines
Do remember to follow responsible foraging guidelines, ensuring you only take plants when there is a plentiful supply, just picking what you need, and never taking the roots.  Seek permission before foraging on private land.  Here at Botelet Farm there the hedgerows are teeming with primroses, however be aware that in some areas these primroses can be scarce and are therefore not suitable for picking.  It’s a good idea to check foraging guidelines before setting out, see for example Wild Food UK’s Foraging Code.

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In Food, Recipe Tags Recipe, Gorse flower, gorse syrup, spring recipe, cornwall, nettle, gluten free, plant based, foraging, cooking with kids, Summary 3
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Recipe: Oat Slices with Sea Buckthorn

March 7, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Sea buckthorn berries Cornwall

Sea buckthorn: my latest foodie obsession. I was introduced to these golden gems a few weeks ago when I met Seth of Cornish Seaberry who is growing a few acres of the beautiful berries at a site just down the lanes from us. Seth came across sea buckthorn when he was travelling in the Himalayas, where they were used as a tonic for altitude sickness. Intrigued by the superfood, he discovered they also grow wild within Cornwall, and over the past couple of years he has been juggling his day job as an agronomist and family life with a young daughter alongside growing, harvesting and gradually building his seaberry business.

Tart and tangy, these berries pack their punch not only on the flavour front, but their status as a superfood is assured when you examine their credentials: each berry contains 190 different nutrients including ‘vitamins (A, B, C, E); essential fatty acids ( omega 3,6,9 ) along with omega 7, which as a plant only appears in sea buckthorn and macadamia’ (The British Sea Buckthorn Co).

I’ve started to play around with the berries, using them in smoothies, making compote, I have flash fried them from frozen with oils and spices and served them with vegetables such as cauliflower, and this morning I made some oat slices to serve to guests at one of my massage courses. This recipe is very versatile, you can easily swap the dried and fresh fruit for alternatives - and it happens to be vegan, sugar free and can be gluten free if you opt for GF oats. I am always inclined towards the savoury, but if you have a sweeter tooth a drizzle of honey could be added to the top before serving, or mixed into the recipe before cooking.

A tasty, family-friendly snack that celebrates these local gems? I’d love to know your thoughts …
Tia x

Sea buckthorn oat slices

Makes 16 - 20 squares

Ingredients

  • 200g oats

  • 180g dried fruits, chopped small (I used a combination of dates and raisins)

  • 100g sea buckthorn berries (I used them from frozen)

  • 200g apple purée (see recipe from Deliciously Ella at the bottom of the page - I made then batch froze this in autumn using apples from the orchard)

  • Handful of flaked coconut

  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

  • 100ml sunflower oil

  • 1 tbsp melted coconut oil

  • 1 tsp ground ginger

Method:

  • Heat oven to 180 C.

  • If using apple purée from the freezer, take it out the night before to defrost.

  • Place all ingredients in a large bowl and mix together. Leave for 20 minutes to allow berries to defrost and the wet ingredients to soak into the dry.

  • Press into a greased baking tray, approx 22cm square

  • Bake in oven for approx 50 minutes until becoming golden. Check while cooking to ensure they don’t burn.

  • After removing the tray from the oven, place a knife around the outside to prevent sticking to the sides, then leave to cool before cutting into squares and removing from the tray. By leaving to cool the slices will keep their shape rather than falling apart while still hot.

Notes:

  • This is a very flexible recipe - play around with the dried fruits (I used a combination of dates and raisins as that’s what I had in the store cupboard) and fresh fruits such as blueberries in summer work well too.

  • If you prefer a sweeter flavour, you could drizzle the slices with honey or melted dark chocolate.

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Apple purée recipe (from Deliciously Ella)

The quantities below will make you a stock of apple purée that you can use in multiple meals or save in the fridge or freezer.

Ingredients

  • 10 apples, peeled and chopped into bite-size pieces

  • 1 tablespoon maple syrup

  • 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon

Method

  • Place the apple pieces in a large saucepan and cover the bottom with a couple of centimetres water.

  • Cook the apples for about 40 minutes, until they’re very soft.

  • Drain any remaining water and place in blender or food processor with maple syrup and cinnamon. Blend until smooth and creamy, then put into storage pots and place in fridge (for up to five days) or freezer.

Tags Recipe, sea buckthorn, cornwall, oats, oat slice, vegan, sugar free, plant based, snack, seaberry, Summary 3
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