We are Tracy & Steven and along with our 2 children we moved to the countryside in the North East of England in 2016. On our smallholding we strive for a more self reliant life by growing our own food, raising our own meat, cooking, preserving & foraging all whilst working full time.
Thursday, 7 May 2020
Nourishing Nettle & Lemon cake - recipe - foraging
Tuesday, 15 August 2017
Day 4 - Christmas potato seed planting and rumtopf
I've still been getting the kids up at a decent time as mine seem to suffer if they have late mornings and inevitably later nights as they can't sleep. The kids helped me by feeding and watering the chickens and then collecting the eggs. What a haul from the last couple of days!
I was supposed to make a crumble at the same time but the clock was ticking and I was itching to get out in the veg plot so I left that for later and put the brambles back in the fridge to keep a few more hours.
The bed I'd tasked myself with today was the fire pit bed. The previous owner had burnt allsorts in it and I'm forever finding nail, hinges and the like. I added manure to the soil along with blood, fish and bone and hoped for the best. Well the cabbages did marvellously and I'd put off harvesting them until my 2 weeks break.
It was a mammoth task.
I tested out a panoramic view, so this photo is slightly distorted but you get the idea.
Thursday, 20 October 2016
Elderberry wine
A big part of what I wanted to achieve and sustain when we moved here was to start to incorporate living off the land into our lives. Steven has been busy pressing apples for cider and I'll update on that shortly, however the other day I finally got round to getting the Elderberry wine ready. By ready I mean sat in a demi John fermenting. So after gathering the elderberries last week, I weighed 2 kilo and gave them a bit of a press with a masher then popped them in a sterilised bucket with some water as per Hugh FW's recipe and left them a few days. Then I made a sugar syrup and added orange and lemon juice and zest, yeast and got it all ready for the demi John. So now it is busy fermenting away making us the most glorious (I'm keeping positive) wine. Apparently if you can, you should wait 5 years. Can't see that happening. We'll make it each year and then there will be a continuous supply. Having said that I rarely drink lately, so it'll probably come out at Christmas etc. Not this one though! Happy Friday everyone.