Showing posts with label giving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label giving. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 March 2018

The Mother Load

If there was a mother of invention, it was mine. There was little she wouldn't make for us. Occasionally we wished it was chocolate and not carob cake in our lunch box, but mostly it made us feel special, treasured and nurtured. She's moved on from the Good Life phase and into the age of Prosecco (the Elderflower wine never was the best), although it's still usually served up with a home made meal for the ever increasing family she's now grand matriarch of. These are a few of our favourite finds for Mums this mother's day.


The Moth


Mums like to listen, right? This collection of true stories from The Moth is like a nourishing soup for the brain cooked up in the melting pot which is New York. People from all over the world tell their life stories at the Moth and this is a collection of some of the best. Find it here.






Øy Hand Cream


They perform some magic each and every day, Mum’s hands. Mums are a well of creativity - always able to turn their hands to a new project, fixing everything from bikes and grazed knees to broken hearts. They need their hands and we need them. Find it here.



Salted Caramel Truffles


More than worth the calories, these hand-crafted and gorgeously boxed truffles from Somerset’s James Chocolates make a stunning gift. They’ll be a memorable moment on the lips. Find it here.




Prosecco Bath Soak


A soak in the bath with a glass of the good stuff? Light and bubbly with a floral bouquet - just don’t get carried away and tip Aperol in the bath too. Made in Cumbria but inspired by Italy’s favourite way to kick back and relax, it’s one effervescent way to treat your Mum. Find it here.




Champagne Glass


These classic beauties are the perfect way to raise a glass to Mum and celebrate how she makes life awesome. Paired with a bottle and a card it's the party she deserves nearly as instantly as she made you feel better last time you needed her. Find it here.





White Tea and Ginger Candle



Mums help light the way through life but when mine does finally sit down with that glass of bubbly she loves some gentle candle light. This white tea and ginger candle from Meraki sets the mood for some well earned rest and relaxation. Probably best if you do the washing up too, though. Find it here.




Bird Candle Holder


What is life if, full of care, we have no time to stand and stare? Not a sentiment my Mum would hold much truck with - she’s always way too busy doing something - but on the rare occasion she does stand still she likes looking at the garden birds. These beauties on fine ceramic dance in the candle light. Find it here.





Wow Factor Scarves


Always making a difference in the background these scarves are a great way to bring out the leading lady in any Mum. Designed by Copenhagen design duo Beck Sondergaard, their scarves and accessories have playful character to match Mum’s joie de vivre. Find them here.



Hepworth Necklace


Ready for a chain of inspiration? Barbara Hepworth, the sculptor, was fascinated by finding symbols of motherhood in the Cornish landscape. It inspired her work and that work inspired this necklace, by East End jewellery designers Wolf and Moon. Your Mum might like it too. Find it here.





Clematis Lights


And if all else fails say it with flowers. Hand crafted metal decorations make these lights more artwork than ornament. Find it here.

Wednesday, 28 November 2012

Fig1: the Party Season

Christmas is coming so naturally our thoughts at Fig1 are turning to the party season ahead. We get really busy at this time of year, but Christmas has always been the high point of the calendar in my family and I fully intend not to miss out, which means getting organised early.

When we were growing up my family owned busy restaurant businesses, but Mum would always insist on closing Christmas Day. Despite the heavy workload she never lost her enthusiasm for Christmas and all my 3 siblings have inherited the Christmas bug. Presents in our family are carefully chosen and beautifully presented, given with love and often homemade. Everyone takes part in preparing the Christmas meal - we have also all inherited a passion for good food from Mum - and this year I am officially putting myself in charge of cocktails.

I wanted a little bit of winter sun for Christmas day, so have made up an Orange and Rosemary syrup recipe to use as the basis for 2 different cocktails. It also has the advantage that rosemary sprigs used as decoration, plus a couple of frozen raspberries in the champagne version, make them look very festive too.

Orange and Rosemary Syrup

Ingredients:
Zest of 2 oranges
1 pint Orange Juice
60g Rosemary
1/2 pint sugar

I remove the zest from the oranges in strips using a peeler for ease. You can use the juice of the oranges as part of the pint of orange juice, or eat them and use it all from a carton, but I usually use a good quality fresh orange juice.

Put all the ingredients in a pan and bring to the boil. Simmer for 15 minute and then allow to cool. If you have time leave overnight, covered, in the pan to infuse the rosemary flavour further. Strain.

The syrup will keep for a  couple of weeks in a clean jar in the fridge.

Below are two recipes that use the syrup. You can also drizzle it over vanilla ice cream, add fizzy water for a non-alcoholic festive drink or ... think of something else entirely.  It's Yummy!

Orange and Rosemary MargaritaOrange and Rosemary Margarita

Prepare your glasses and decoration first. I put half and half fine sea salt and caster sugar mixed on a saucer so there is a fine covering. For each cocktail I choose a sprig of rosemary long enough to stick out of the top of the glass you are using, in my case these funky martini glasses by Sagaform. I use a wedge of lime to rub a little juice round the rim of the glass and on the end of the rosemary sprigs. I then dip the glass in the salt / sugar mix and do the same with the end of the rosemary twig, making it look like a snowed-on Christmas tree.

Mix in a cocktail shaker with ice, per person:
1 shot / 25ml syrup
1 shot tequila
1 shot lime juice
1 shot triple sec

Serve in the glass over crushed ice

Champagne, Orange and Rosemary Cocktail

Prepare the rosemary twig as above. I also like to add 2 or three frozen raspberries to the cocktail at the end as the red and green give it a really Christmasy look. Use a champagne flute.

In the base of your glass tip 1 measure (25ml) or syrup and 1 measure brandy. Top up with a dry Champagne, Cava or Proseco. Give it a stir, gently or it will loose all its lovely fizz. Decorate the glass and serve.

Wednesday, 7 November 2012

The Blog Launch

The Blog Launch

We love what we do at fig1.co.uk and we do what we love. As a small business engaged with finding the best designed unusual and quirky lifestyle goodies we come across all sorts of creative ideas. We have a diverse and raggle taggle bunch of creatives linked to the business, from illustrators to jewellery makers, gardners to cabinet makers, cooks, graphics experts, computer geeks, musicians ... oh, and sometimes we run a shop and internet business.

The shop was always set up to support a local creative community in Bristol, but as the business has grown we have developed links with all sorts of people and want to share some of the best ideas we have come across along the way.

We want this blog to be more than just a list of products we have discovered - we want it to be a collection of ideas.

-Mark Fletcher, Director fig1.co.uk

Roast Winter Squash Salad

At this time of year with the nights drawing rapidly in I find my thoughts turning more and more to comfort food, luckily comfort food for me doesn't need to be unhealthy. I grew up in a family that owned local restaurants and, Mum in particular, was always great at working with whatever was seasonal to create meals and menus. With any meal I always start with the vegetables. Since I work from home a lot of the time, doing marketing for fig1.co.uk, I find recipes like this winter squash one really good: it is the sort of thing which doesn't take too long to prepare (approx 15mins) and which will happily cook itself in the oven while I work.

Ingredients

Roast Butternut Squash Salad Ingredients1 large winter squash
1 bag of shallots
Sprigs of winter herbs such as rosemary and thyme
1 lemon
A handful of pumpkin seeds
Half a pack of feta

Preheat your oven to 180 centigrade / gas mark 4

Cut the squash into 1-2 centimetre thick slices.  Pop in a roasting dish with the lemon cut in half, the shallots peeled and halved if they are large or left whole if not, the olive oil and the herbs, plus a little salt and pepper to season. Toss the ingredients together so the seasoning and oil is on all the vegetables.

Roast for an hour or until the squash is soft. Next pop some pumpkin seeds on top of the dish and up the temperature to 220c or gas mark 6 for 10 minutes  to brown the squash and the seeds.  Once it is out of the oven leave to cool for 10 minutes, then squeeze the lemon over the squash and discard the shells and pull out the biggest lumps of rosemary / thyme stalks.

Crumble over half a pack of feta and serve with some crusty bread.

Vary the recipe as you like - carrots with cumin and feta work well as an alternative. Or mix into cous cous with olives for a salad for your lunch box.