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Thousands of backyard poultry keepers are signing up all over the
country, experiencing afresh the joys of their first hen, their
first egg, their happy chuckle in the morning garden. Keeping
poultry in the city brings with it not only joys but
responsibilities. "The Urban Hen" is the perfect companion for the
city poultry keeper and shows you how to maintain a happy, healthy
garden or backyard flock in towns and cities everywhere. In this
book you'll discover how to: find the best poultry for the small
garden - and how to house them properly; feed your birds, tune in
to their daily needs and enjoy your own eggs; avoid annoying the
neighbours by showing that it is possible to keep poultry without
attracting unwelcome pests; recognise healthy happy birds and learn
their daily routine; recognise poorly hens; treat them or get help;
and, incubate and care for fertilised eggs and raise chicks.
Beginning with the history, the significance and the flavours of
the great British Banger this book goes on to explain how to make
sausages at home, with step-by-step instructions and mouthwatering
recipes from all over the UK. It is ideal for those beginners who
just want to make a couple of pounds for the family freezer, but it
also assumes that readers will want to progress and so the
necessary equipment and materials are explained, from how to buy
them, to how to maintain them.
From clamping to dark room storage, drying to bottling, shelving to
curing, discover how to keep as much of your crop as you want If
you grow your own food you will be aware that the job's not done
when the harvest is gathered in. You have to make this bounty last
all year through - until next year's crop replaces it. This book
explains how to store food in the traditional way, and then goes
one step further and shows how you can grow your food in a way that
will ensure it is in the best state for storing - an art that is
lost to many of today's gardeners and growers. The author focuses
on methods by which the grower can keep vegetables and fruit for
long periods without altering their fundamental form or flavour.
Contents: Introduction; 1. Extending the Growing Season; 2. How to
Harvest; 3. Stopping Your Harvest from Spoiling; 4. Techniques:
Clamps, Cellars and Sheds; 5. Techniques and Recipes for Preserving
Food; 6. A-Z of Growing, Storing and Preserving Vegetables; 7. A-Z
of Growing, Storing and Preserving Fruit; 9. Growing and Preserving
Herbs for the Kitchen; Index.
This book is aimed at the majority of us who live in terraced
houses, high rise flats, town houses and semi-detached properties
with a small garden and often nowhere to grow but the patio. It
shows how to make the most of pots and planters; how to plan for a
reasonable yield; and how never to run out of at least something to
special eat. You might not have all the space in the world, but you
can enjoy all the flavour in the world. With the step-by-step
instructions in this book you will be able to grow, nurture and
harvest your own fruit, vegetables and herbs in a range of pots and
containers, including recycled ones such as plastic milk bottles,
and kitchen sinks.
'Not everyone can keep a cow, but everyone can make cheese.' This
book shows you the very basic equipment needed to make your own
cheese: the ingredients, including different milks, herbs and
flavours; how to make a simple cheese; and how to produce some of
the worlds speciality cheeses such as Roquefort, Brie and Edam. You
will find recipes for making many cheeses at home. Whether you are
making a cheese cake, a ricotta-based pudding or a stonking salty
blue, this book is a cheese lover's guide to making their own
favourite food - and there are some recipes for the biscuits to go
with it, too. Contents: Cheese: The Miracle Food; How Cheese is
Made; Milk, Starters and Other Ingredients; Cheese-making
Equipment; Basic Cheese-Making; Hard Cheeses; Soft Cheeses;
Cheddar; Blue Cheese; Goats Cheese; European Cheeses; British
Cheeses; Manufactured Cheeses; Cooking with Cheese; Cheese for
Sweets; Common Cheese-making Problems; Index.
There is a huge social change with more and more people wanting to
live a simple, more self-sufficient, make it yourself life. With
lawns and flower gardens being turned over to vegetable production
and keeping chickens being adopted by suburbia with the more
adventurous looking to keeping other livestock such as pigs, sheep,
bees and goats urban farming is becoming less of a dream and more
of a reality for many. The Urban Farmer's Handbook is the bible for
all those wanting to grab a slice of the good life without having
to move to the country. Paul Peacock, joint editor of Home Farmer
magazine and self-proclaimed 'self-sufficient in a semi enthusiast,
examines all angles of urban farming from how beekeeping without
unsettling the neighbours to keeping pigs on a small acreage.
Packed with practical advice including the legal and welfare
implications, the potential problems and the joys The Urban
Farmer's Handbook gives good, solid advice on animal husbandry,
allotments and making the most of your produce to improve the
quality of your life. In short, says the author "if you can eat it,
ou can grow it and cook it."
This book will give you the knowledge and confidence to choose,
prepare, cook and enjoy fresh food and seafood. It explains simply
how to gut, clean and fillet fish and how to deal with shellfish
and crustaceans such as crab and lobster, and what knives and tools
you'll need for the job. The numerous recipes take into
consideration sustainable fishing and advise on which fish can be
used instead of those at risk. The book also encourages the use of
locally caught produce rather than those shipped around the world.
As well as recipes for cooking sea and river fish, shellfish,
crustaceans you'll discover how to preserve fish.
Less than 200 years ago, beers, ciders and a myriad collection of
country wines were generally brewed at home. Beer, whether it was
'best' or 'small' was drunk by everyone in preference to water.
Beer and cider nourished, as well as slaked thirst. With just a few
utensils you can make your own tax-free beer, cider and country
wine. Inside this book you will find recipes ancient and modern,
some as simple as dissolving malt extract in sugary water and
adding yeast. You can also read the best ways to get really
professional results from kits. More than anything you will find
really tasty, excellent beers and ciders and home-made wines to
quench your thirst for a decade to come. There are recipes for
stouts, ales, beers (and the difference between them explained);
and for lagers, fruit beers, and ciders of many kinds including
rough, orange, scrumpy, perry, natural and yeasted. Also included
are the fundamentals of tasty home-made wine-making showing you how
to make amazing wine from the contents of your fruit and vegetable
garden. Contents: 1. Drinking responsibly; 2. Basics of brewing; 3.
That magic touch; 4. Beer - the basics; 5. Beers from the UK; 6.
Beers from Belgium; 7. Beers from Europe; 8. Ales; 9. Ales ancient
and modern; 10. Ciders peeled to the bone; 11. Apple types and
their traditional drinks; 12. Scrumpy; 13. Fine ciders; 14. Apple
wine.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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