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Saturday 27 June 2015

How to Make Elderflower Mayonnaise

How to Make Elderflower Mayonnaise

maionese - due
This recipe for Elderflower Mayonnaise is by one of our regular contributors Elizabeth McCorquodale.
This mayonnaise is particularly delicious as a dressing for fish. While it does require forward planning in order to steep the flowers in the oil overnight, it is possible to make a batch of elderflower-infused oil in advance and keep it in the larder for whenever it is required.
INGREDIENTS
2 egg yolks plus 1 whole egg
1 tbsp French mustard
The juice of ½ lemon
400ml (14 fl oz) rapeseed or sunflower oil (or a mixture of the two)
10 elderflower heads, trimmed and shaken
½ tsp sugar
Salt and pepper (to taste)
 METHOD
1              Stir the elderflowers into the oil and leave to infuse overnight, then strain and discard the flowers.
2              Combine the remaining ingredients and mix vigorously, then add the oil very slowly while continuing to beat the mixture. A food processor or electric mixer is very handy for this stage.
Source: https://homefarmer.co.uk/how-to-make-elderflower-mayonnaise/?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=New+Issue+26th+June&utm_content=New+Issue+26th+June+CID_a951944f3c7024c4411c1f71b934dd17&utm_source=Goodcall%20email%20marketing%20software&utm_term=Elderflower%20Mayonnaise


Tuesday 23 June 2015

The Smallholder Series
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Sheep on Your Smallholding
   
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June is an amazing month for your vegetable garden. You will be kept busy hoeing, planting, weeding and of course harvesting your early crops such as broad beans, peas, lettuce, radish and early potatoes.

There are still a variety of crops for you to plant, such as French beans and pak choi. Sow extra rows of carrots and beetroot for successional cropping.

Download our useful vegetable planting diary to see what to grow each month.

 Veg planting diary 
   
   
 

Tamworth pig

 5 things to remember
...pig breeds
for smallholders

1British Lop - docile and easily managed, an excellent mother. Provides a high quality product
1Middle White - good mother, quiet nature, early maturing, smaller size
1Tamworth - excellent mother, hardy, great in cold climates, stunning colour
1Large Black - very docile, wonderful temperament, hardy and prolific
1Berkshire - docile, smaller breed, economical and early maturing
For more information, see the list of pig breeds on our website
 
   
   
 

things to do on your smallholding this month

June is another busy month, but the long daylight hours gives you plenty of extra time in the evening to get all your jobs done. Here are some top tips from our 'Things to Do' pages - available on our website.

  • Sheep - consider using moveable electric fencing to manage the ewes' grass intake and ensure they always have a fresh bite ahead of them
  • Chickens - try to rest part of their run for a few weeks on a rotation basis - this will help break the parasite lifecycle
  • Pigs - your pigs will enjoy a daily grooming session with a stiff brush - it will keep their skin in good condition
  • Vegetable garden - use the extra daylight hours to weed regularly, and make sure you catch weeds before they have time to set seed or you'll have a summer of weeds despite your best efforts
  • Horses - a source of fresh, clean water is essential at all times; in hot weather a 16hh can drink between 20-40 litres a day, depending on its level of activity

Keep up with all your smallholding tasks with our comprehensive guides tosheepchickenspigs, the vegetable garden and equines. Just click on an image below.

 
    
Things to do This Month
    
The Smallholder Series DVDs
 
 

WEBISTE HIGHLIGHTS

Farm Diary
An abundance of grass & tackling internal parasites

Article of the Month
Homemade plant fertilisers

Moredun Health Bulletin
Malignant Catarrhal Fever (MCF)

NADIS Health Alert
Nematodirus forecast & how best to control footrot in sheep.

Farming in the News
Destroy noxious weeds now

Recipe of the Month
Lamb Steaks with Houmous
New Potatoes

 

Article of the month

recipe of the month

 
     
leeks
     
 

seasonal recipes

Summer Salads
You should have plenty of lettuce, radish and other salad crops ready for picking for our tasty salad recipes.

Broad Bean & Spanish Ham Salad

 

Salad of Shaved Radish, Apple & Fennel

Spicy Oriental Lamb Salad

Crispy New Potato Bake

Warm Chard Salad with Bacon Dressing & Roasted Chicken

 
    
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Feedback
We really appreciate getting feedback from our customers - your views on our DVDs, suggestions for articles you'd find useful / helpful, and how you initially heard of us.
You can leave feedback by emailing us - see the feedback page on our website.

Weekly Bulletins
Follow us on Facebook and Twitter for weekly smallholding news.

 
 
Social network links
www.smallholderseries.co.uk




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Friday 19 June 2015

Life in Mud Spattered Boots

ELDERFLOWER POWER

Around here, the elder is in full flower and looking across the fields, it’s easy to spot the cream coloured blobs of saucer shaped flowers. The flowers need to be picked when they’re still creamy coloured; you should leave them once they’ve turned white or started to brown. I once read that they harbour fewer insects if picked early in the day, but I’m not sure if that’s true.
If you have an elder growing near you, arm yourself with a pair of scissors and cut some before it disappears. You need to deal with the flowers as soon as you get home as they don’t keep well and even left overnight will take on a decidedly unappealing smell.
Here’s some ideas for using your freshly cut elderflowers.

ELDERFLOWER FIZZ

Drink this fresh as a cordial or leave it for two or three weeks for the wild yeasts to gently ferment in the bottle giving you a fizzy drink. The longer it’s kept, the drier and more alcoholic (though it never gets too strong) it becomes so that by October it’s usually too dry for me. That said, I once found a bottle in the spring time that we drank. Fearing it might be a bit lively, we took it outside to open and two thirds of the bottle sprayed across the grass.

elderflower and rose

ELDERFLOWER & ROSE CORDIAL

I’m not a great fan of the colour pink but in summer there’s something very seductive about a pale pink drink, particularly with bubbles gently rising to the top. An elder bush has insinuated itself amongst the roses, making a pretty combination of creamy white elder flowers, pink roses and green foliage and while I was picking elderflowers, it struck me that not only would a combination of elderflower and rose make a pretty pink drink, but it would taste good too.

ROSE AND ELDERFLOWER CORDIAL

rose and elderflower cordial
25 elder flower heads
4 rose heads – choose a fragrant deep coloured variety
2 lemons
750g granulated sugar
25g citric acid
1 litre cold water
When you’re picking elder flowers, choose the creamy pollen laden ones rather than any that are turning brown. Don’t wash them but shake off any insects and then cut off the big stems, letting the florets fall into a large bowl. Snip off the white part of the rose petals as it’s supposed to be bitter and add the shredded rose petals to the bowl. I find it easiest to hold the rose by the stem and just snip the petals into strips, working my way around the edge until I reach the middle. Much easier than trying to snip individual petals.
Remove the lemon peel with a potato peeler and add to the bowl, together with the juice of the lemons.
Now tip in the sugar, citric acid and cold water and give it a good stir to dissolve the sugar. You might need to come back after half an hour and give it another stir.
Cover and leave for 24 hours in the cool. You can leave it for another day, but don’t be tempted to leave it too long as mould will start to grow on the elderflowers. I speak from experience.
Strain and bottle. Dilute with still or sparkling water.

ELDERFLOWER CREAMS

A richer version of Elderflower Milk Jelly. Recently I made these in small metal pudding tins and unmoulded them to serve (as you would with panna cotta). Unfortunately, I hadn’t been very diligent removing all the tiny insects so it looked as though I’d flavoured the creams with a vanilla pod and scraped out the seeds. They tasted fine.

ELDERFLOWER CREAMS

300ml whole milk
300ml double cream
6 heads elderflowers snipped from the main stem
Leaf gelatine – enough to set 600ml
45g caster sugar
Pour about 6 tablespoons of milk into a bowl, snip the gelatine into pieces and add to the milk and leave to soak.
Put the remaining milk into a saucepan with the cream and elderflower heads and heat gently. When the cream and milk reach simmering point, remove the pan from the heat and place the bowl containing the gelatine on top of the saucepan for five minutes. The elderflowers will continue to infuse the creamy milk with their flavour and the heat will dissolve the gelatine in the bowl above.
After five minutes, strain the creamy milk into a jug, discard the elderflowers and stir in the sugar. Stir the gelatine and milk mixture into the elderflower infused cream and and pour into six small ramekins.
Leave to set in the fridge for at least three hours.

elderflower

GOOSEBERRY AND ELDERFLOWER FOOL

Simmer 500g gooseberries with 5 large heads of elder flowers 4 tablespoons of sugar and a spoonful of water for ten minutes until the gooseberries start to burst. Leave until cold and then pick out the elderflowers. Lightly mash the gooseberries with a fork, fold in 300ml of softly whipped cream and serve.

ELDERFLOWER INFUSED WATER

Delightful as cordials are, I can’t drink them all day. In summer I like to keep a jug of water in the fridge because otherwise I waste too much water waiting for the tap to run cold and these Infused Waters are really just a step up from a slice of lemon floating in the jug. Certainly if you’re the driver for the evening, they beat the gloom of glass after glass of plain water or worse still, sweet gloopy UHT orange juice.
Just add a couple of elderflower heads with a slice or two of lemon to a jug of water and chill. Elderflower, Rose & Lime also works well. I keep the jug in the fridge and top up with water as I use it during the day.

Have a good weekend.
PS Have you seen The Dinner Party Collective ? The summer menu is now up and it looks delicious.

Source: http://annewheaton.co.uk/2015/06/19/rose-and-elderflower-cordial/


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Thursday 11 June 2015

 
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Let's start a gooseberry revival!
 
We don't hear much about gooseberries these days.  My gran had a whole ‘hedge' of gooseberry bushes in her garden when I was a child.  If they were raspberries bushes, I'm sure my cousins and I wouldn't have been able to resist stuffing raspberries in our cheeks during hide-and-seek, but gooseberries didn't really tempt us so we left them well alone.  (We didn't reject her lovely gooseberry crumbles though, drizzled with golden syrup in a lake of custard and cream!)  

Gooseberries weren't always so undervalued.  In the nineteenth century there were over 170 amateur gooseberry clubs in Britain which competed to grow the largest, heaviest gooseberry – some of which were the size of plums.

We're pushing for a gooseberry revival, so to start your mouth watering, we've got a lovely recipe for Gooseberry & Elderflower Cordial for you to try using the Mehu Liisa Fruit & Vegetable Steamer.   It's easy because the juice is extracted by steam and there's no need to top or tail the gooseberries!

If you don't grow your own gooseberries, why not head down to your local farm shop or find a pick-your-own farm and treat yourself?  In an age where varieties of fruit and veg seems to be available all year round, it's lovely to be able to look forward to the season of these forgotten little green juicy treasures!
 
Or, if you are a craft beer lover who is fond of gooseberries and you are over 18, you might like to try Wild Beer's innovativeWild Goose Chase beer made with gooseberries!
 
To contribute to our gooseberry revival, please share your gooseberry memories and recipes with us on Facebook orTwitter.
 
 
 
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