One of the first new things to appear in the deli as the result of the speciality food fair I attended last month is Rod & Ben’s Organic Fresh Soup. Rod and Ben make the soup on their organic farm in Devon. After meeting them at the show, they sent me a pot to try, which I warmed, popped into a thermos and took on a walk a few weeks ago. I’m sure enjoying hearty piping hot soup watching the boats go by on a cool autumn day may have biased my judgement, but it really was very good soup. Thick and full of flavour. At the moment we’re trying four flavours, in 600g tubs (enough for two bowls):
Beetroot & Cumin
Leek & Potato
Soup of the Month, which is Mushroom & Tarragon
Plus a Vegetable Broth with Pesto (which is the only one to contain wheat/gluten).
This week’s fresh veg is the same as last week, the only exception being there are a lot more pumpkins and they are a lot bigger!
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Holy Cheese, Batman!
Last week I was lucky enough to spend a day with the people from Emmi learning all about Swiss cheese. It was a fascinating day, though I have to admit the lunch was the best bit. Obviously heavy on the cheese we had a delicious raqulette, and cheesey fillo pastry pies. But it was also very interesting.
The things which stick in my mind was the video showing the cheese being made in small village dairies with local farmers bringing in little vans of milk to be made into cheese. And the origin of the holes in Swiss cheese. Wheels of Swiss cheese are wider and thinner than the truckles of English cheese like cheddar and Stilton and the texture much more springy and not crumbly. The reason being, these cheeses were produced up in the mountains in a time long before vans and motor cars. The only way to get them down the hill was to roll them. A few bumps and most cheeses would start to fall apart, but not the Swiss cheese with its internal suspension system. Clever? And tasty.
The things which stick in my mind was the video showing the cheese being made in small village dairies with local farmers bringing in little vans of milk to be made into cheese. And the origin of the holes in Swiss cheese. Wheels of Swiss cheese are wider and thinner than the truckles of English cheese like cheddar and Stilton and the texture much more springy and not crumbly. The reason being, these cheeses were produced up in the mountains in a time long before vans and motor cars. The only way to get them down the hill was to roll them. A few bumps and most cheeses would start to fall apart, but not the Swiss cheese with its internal suspension system. Clever? And tasty.
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Fruit & Veg Update
This week we have:
Lots of Apples
Cox
Jonagold Red
Royal Gala
Russet
Broccoli
Carrots
Onions
Parsnips
Pears (Conference)
Potatoes
Pumpkins (Little Bear for eating and the huge halloween ones, all grown in Dorney)
Tomatoes
Lots of Apples
Cox
Jonagold Red
Royal Gala
Russet
Broccoli
Carrots
Onions
Parsnips
Pears (Conference)
Potatoes
Pumpkins (Little Bear for eating and the huge halloween ones, all grown in Dorney)
Tomatoes
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
This week’s Fruit and Veg
Thinking about the return of the pickled onions got me thinking about our wonderful seasonal fruit and vegetables*. The range changes quicker than I really expected it would. Spring was so exciting with all sorts of new things arriving every couple of weeks. We had English lettuces, tomatoes, cucumbers, spring onions, asparagus, raspberries, celery, broad beans, strawberries, courgettes, sweetcorn, plums, cherries, runner beans... And, even though we're well into autumn now, there are still new bits and pieces coming into season. This week it is the English broccoli. I'm going to try to list which vegetables we have available whenever something new arrives over the next few weeks.
This week we have:
Lots of Apples
Bramley
Cox
Jonagold Red
Royal Gala
Russet
Broccoli
Onions
Pears (Conference)
Potatoes
Pumpkins (Little Bear grown in Dorney)
Tomatoes
And a quick browse on our nearest supermarket's web site revealed all our prices are lower than theirs where I could find a comparable product! I couldn't find any fresh pumpkins or vine tomatoes sold by the weight rather than by the number of tomatoes. But where I could compare we are cheaper which I'm really pleased about.
* Though we started off selling just seasonal English fruit and veg (local where possible) we now also have imported bananas and citrus fruit.
This week we have:
Lots of Apples
Bramley
Cox
Jonagold Red
Royal Gala
Russet
Broccoli
Onions
Pears (Conference)
Potatoes
Pumpkins (Little Bear grown in Dorney)
Tomatoes
And a quick browse on our nearest supermarket's web site revealed all our prices are lower than theirs where I could find a comparable product! I couldn't find any fresh pumpkins or vine tomatoes sold by the weight rather than by the number of tomatoes. But where I could compare we are cheaper which I'm really pleased about.
* Though we started off selling just seasonal English fruit and veg (local where possible) we now also have imported bananas and citrus fruit.
Tuesday, October 07, 2008
British Cheese Awards 2008
Last week saw the announcement of the winners of the British Cheese Awards 2008. It has been a mixed blessing. The wonderful (and local to us) Barkham Blue, made by Sandy and Andy Rose near Wokingham, won no less than three major awards:
Best Blue Cheese
Best English Cheese
Supreme Champion
No mean feet as it was up against over 900 cheeses from all around the British Isles. We knew it was a wonderful cheese. A sweet, spicy blue, deliciously creamy and moreish. The trouble is that now everyone else knows how great it is and we can't get hold of any!
Another of our local specials, the Wigmore, made by Sandy Rose's cousin Anne, at Village Maid Dairies won best soft white. A good day for Berkshire cheese makers! Not such a good day for Berkshire delicatessens now facing a shortage of their favourites!
A full list of the winners can be found at:
http://www.thecheeseweb.com/contentok.php?id=278
and an article on the BBC web site:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/berkshire/7649621.stm
Best Blue Cheese
Best English Cheese
Supreme Champion
No mean feet as it was up against over 900 cheeses from all around the British Isles. We knew it was a wonderful cheese. A sweet, spicy blue, deliciously creamy and moreish. The trouble is that now everyone else knows how great it is and we can't get hold of any!
Another of our local specials, the Wigmore, made by Sandy Rose's cousin Anne, at Village Maid Dairies won best soft white. A good day for Berkshire cheese makers! Not such a good day for Berkshire delicatessens now facing a shortage of their favourites!
A full list of the winners can be found at:
http://www.thecheeseweb.com/contentok.php?id=278
and an article on the BBC web site:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/berkshire/7649621.stm
Friday, October 03, 2008
They're Back!
Susie's Honeyed Pickled Onions have returned. Susie only makes them at this time of year when the onions are just right, and they only keep until spring so we’ve been without them for a few months. They were missed.
We had a bit of a run on these just before Christmas last year after lots of people who bought early for Christmas found they had accidentally eaten them all before Father Christmas had finished packing his sleigh. So this year we have the first batch Susie has made (which will be better if eaten from November onwards) and lots of them; giving everyone the chance to get some now and more in December!
I do like it when things like this come and go. I miss them when they're gone, but it is so exciting when they come back. Or is that just me?
We had a bit of a run on these just before Christmas last year after lots of people who bought early for Christmas found they had accidentally eaten them all before Father Christmas had finished packing his sleigh. So this year we have the first batch Susie has made (which will be better if eaten from November onwards) and lots of them; giving everyone the chance to get some now and more in December!
I do like it when things like this come and go. I miss them when they're gone, but it is so exciting when they come back. Or is that just me?
Thursday, October 02, 2008
Return of the Blog
This blog has been rather neglected recently. It wasn't intentional. It just didn't get written and once you miss a couple of weeks it is much harder to pick it up again. Where is a good place to resume?
The summer has been good for us (not the weather mind you). The shop was busy, brave people still went on picnics (though probably not as many as if we'd had some sun), visitors still came to see the college and castle and business was good. New products have arrived, a couple of slow sellers have ceased and the range looks pretty good at the moment (even if I do say so myself). There will be some exciting new products appearing over the next couple of months along with the return of some favourites from last winter. I will try harder with the blog.
The summer has been good for us (not the weather mind you). The shop was busy, brave people still went on picnics (though probably not as many as if we'd had some sun), visitors still came to see the college and castle and business was good. New products have arrived, a couple of slow sellers have ceased and the range looks pretty good at the moment (even if I do say so myself). There will be some exciting new products appearing over the next couple of months along with the return of some favourites from last winter. I will try harder with the blog.
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