Price Points: English bluebells

English bluebells

English bluebells or Hyacinthoides non-scripta are something we’ve realised – after a full year of being in our cottage – don’t currently grow in our garden. So, as well as the wildflower seeds we featured a few days ago, we’ll be planting some English bluebells this autumn.

There are three methods of planting:

Dry bulbs
Dry bulbs can be sown from the beginning of September through to early November and will flower the following April.

Seeds
This is the most economical way to buy English bluebells. Like dry bulbs, seeds also need to be planted in the autumn. Bluebell seeds require a long period of cold for stratification to occur. Seeds will take many years to flower for the first time.

In the green
Plant these in spring (January to April) as soon as they’ve been ordered and delivered. Bulbs ‘in the green’ may take a few years to flower for the first time.

Bluebells prefer a slightly acidic, well-draining soil in a semi-shaded position (such as beneath deciduous trees).

You want your bluebells to look natural when they appear out of the ground. The best way to ensure this happens is to ‘cast’ the bulbs and plant the bulbs where they fall. The worst thing you can do is to plant them in straight rows. Bluebells begin to flower around April and May. They are perennial and self-seed, so will come back better & better each year.

A word of warning, though – make sure you purchase cultivated bulbs and not ones that may have been taken, unlawfully, from the wild.

  1. 500 English bluebell seeds: £3.99, Etsy
  2. 30 English bluebell bulbs, in the green: £9.98, Crocus
  3. 30 English bluebell bulbs, dry: £11.99 Thompson & Morgan

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30 English bluebell bulbs, dry
30 English bluebell bulbs, dry
£11.99
30 English bluebell bulbs, in the green
30 English bluebell bulbs, in the green
£9.98
500 English bluebell seeds
500 English bluebell seeds
£3.99
30 English bluebell bulbs, dry
30 English bluebell bulbs, dry
£11.99
30 English bluebell bulbs, in the green
30 English bluebell bulbs, in the green
£9.98
500 English bluebell seeds
500 English bluebell seeds
£3.99
30 English bluebell bulbs, dry
30 English bluebell bulbs, dry
£11.99
30 English bluebell bulbs, in the green
30 English bluebell bulbs, in the green
£9.98
500 English bluebell seeds
500 English bluebell seeds
£3.99
30 English bluebell bulbs, dry
30 English bluebell bulbs, dry
£11.99
30 English bluebell bulbs, in the green
30 English bluebell bulbs, in the green
£9.98
500 English bluebell seeds
500 English bluebell seeds
£3.99
30 English bluebell bulbs, dry
30 English bluebell bulbs, dry
£11.99
30 English bluebell bulbs, in the green
30 English bluebell bulbs, in the green
£9.98
500 English bluebell seeds
500 English bluebell seeds
£3.99

Elderflower champagne

Glasses of home-made elderflower champagne | H is for Home

One of the things that I look forward to every summer is going foraging for wild fruit and flowers; blackberries, wild raspberries – it’s food for free! Right now – mid-June – we’re coming to the end of the elderflower season. I’m making something that I’ve only made once before… elderflower champagne.

Picking wild elderflowers

Because we’ve been living in rural Wales for less than a year, we’ve not yet got to know all the best local foraging spots. We set out on a walk last week to go in search of elder shrubs. It took us about half an hour to come across the first one… but where there’s one, there are always more! It’s always best to not completely strip a shrub of its flowers, take a few sprigs from a number of them – leave some behind for the insects and to allow the flowers to develop into elderberries for the birds… and to use in elderberry recipes!

Sprig of elderflowers

Once you have your flowers, all you need is a few lemons, white sugar and yeast. Wine and champagne yeast as easy to get hold of online or at some hardware stores. Wine yeast differs from the type that you use to make bread in that it can withstand higher levels of alcohol.

Some other recipes I looked at recommend adding yeast nutrient which nourishes the yeast and aids in the fermentation process.

Elderflowers soaking, white wine yeast and straining elderflower liquid with muslin

The recipe makes 8 litres of champagne, so you’ll need a large pan or bucket that can hold that amount of liquid – I used my jam-making pan (that was just about big enough) but a spotlessly clean plastic bucket would be a good option too. You’ll also need enough sterilised bottles to store it all.

Bottled elderflower champagne

Although the recipe I used recommends using 2-litre plastic bottles (for safety reasons), I used glass bottles with swing-top corks. There’s a danger of bottles exploding if excess carbon dioxide builds up, so I carefully released the gas every day during the fermentation process.

Two glasses of home-made elderflower champagne

Serve it ice-cold – this also helps to avoid the contents frothing over on opening the bottle. A lovely, floral alternative to sparkling wine or spritzer.

Click here or on the image below to save this elderflower champagne recipe to Pinterest

Home-made elderflower champagne | H is for Home #elderflower #recipe #alcohol #homebrew #elderflowerchampagne #elderflowers #forage #foraging #sparkling wine #wildflowers #wine

Glasses of home-made elderflower champagne | H is for Home

Elderflower champagne

Great British Chefs
Course Drinks
Cuisine British

Ingredients
  

  • 15 sprigs fresh elderflowers
  • 2 litres boiling water
  • 6 litres water
  • 1 kg sugar
  • 3 lemons peel sliced off in strips
  • 5 g white wine or champagne yeast

Instructions
 

  • Clean the elderflower heads, removing any dead flowers, cobwebs and insects
  • Dissolve the sugar in 2 litres of boiling water, then cover and set aside until cool
  • Once the sugar syrup has cooled to room temperature, pour it into a large, clean 10 litre container. Add the rest of the water, the lemon peel, the juice from 1 of the lemons, the elderflowers and the champagne yeast. Give the mixture a good stir, cover with a muslin cloth and leave to ferment at room temperature for 3-4 days. Give it a little stir every day – you'll notice it starting to fizz and bubble as the fermentation process begins
  • For this next stage, you'll need 4 - 2-litre plastic screw top bottles and a funnel. It's recommended to use plastic bottles as the fermentation process produces carbon dioxide, which is what makes your 'champagne' sparkling but can also make bottles explode. The plastic bottles (as opposed to glass ones) have a little give so can expand a little, plus the screw-top lid isn't as airtight as a cork
  • Pass the champagne through a muslin cloth, then decant into the bottles using a funnel. Tightly screw on the lids. The second stage of fermentation occurs in the sealed bottles and is what gives your champagne its fizz; carbon dioxide builds up and has nowhere to go, so it lies in wait for when the bottle is opened, causing that rush of bubbles. As mentioned, this can cause bottles to explode, so even though using plastic bottles minimises the risk, it's still safe to store them in a cool dry place like an outdoor shed or garage. Placing something over the bottles such as a cardboard box is a good idea to reduce the sticky mess if one does burst
  • Leave the bottles for another few days, checking each day and carefully opening each lid to let some of the gas escape if needed. After a couple of days, the second fermentation should have finished, but storing them in a cold room or the fridge will stop the fermentation completely
Elderflower champagne ingredients
Keyword elderflower, elderflowers, forage

Charity Vintage: Pelican Books | British birds, wild plants & flowers

'Charity Vintage' blog post banner

Vintage Collection of Pelican Books on bird watching and wild plants & flowers for sale by & in support of Dorothy House Foundation(ends 24 May, 2015 16:32:25 BST)

Yesterday we highlighted a range of bird-watching handbooks to help you identify some of our avian friends. Lo & behold we found this great lot available on eBay for Charity. We love vintage Penguin and Pelican Books anyway, but this lot covers everything you need for doing a bit of nature-spotting!

There are four books on bird identification, and the other four classify wild flowers, herbs and grasses. The set is for sale by Dorothy House Foundation*. The opening bid is £5 with £3 on top for postage and packaging. That’s a pound a book – bargain!

*Dorothy House Foundation aims to work with their community to develop, influence and provide palliative and end of life care that meets the needs of all people with a life-limiting illness. Their purpose is to ensure that the very best care is provided to those in need.