Welcome to grow, cook, eat, arrange, the weekly podcast from gardener, writer, teacher,and cook, Sar
Every change of season brings with it an opportunity to renew your garden’s beauty for the year ahea
The classic Sunday roast is wonderful as is, but with a simple, effective seasoning using the best t
September has brought us a perfect storm of hot weather, warm ground, and cool enough nights for dew
Kale is among the top of the superfoods, and combined with a rich dressing it makes an unbeatable, n
There’s almost no more intoxicating feeling in the floral world than catching eyes with a showstoppi
In the next of our cookalong episodes of the podcast, Sarah turns her attention to a fabulous, versa
Tom Stimpson is our Head of Horticulture, and with a fairly compact urban garden of his own he’s got
Welcome to the first episode of our brand new cookalong podcast series! We’ll be bringing 5 fantasti
Blanche Vaughan’s stellar journey through cookery at top restaurants and becoming a literary authori
While our gaze often falls to flower beds for our appreciation of nature, when we set our sights to
Since we’ve recently shone a spotlight on the year’s most exciting edibles for food, it’s only fitti
Kitchen gardens needn’t be acres and acres - there’ll be many urban gardeners turning window boxes a
For those taking pride in their thriving kitchen garden, the biggest threat comes from the blight of
As ideas continue to spring forward for your compact, crop-packed kitchen garden, our podcast mini-s
At the halfway point in our Beginner’s Kitchen Garden Mini-series there are likely to be an abundanc
Whether you’ve space in abundance, or a small garden with little time to maintain it, there’s no rea
The plant world is awash with floral terminology that might seem baffling at first, but once underst
Welcome to our ‘Kitchen Garden Mini-series” focusing on the very best kitchen garden plants for thos
Sarah Raven and Gary Newell share a mutual passion for shrubbery, putting more thought into the orna
With every exciting summer holiday comes the dread of returning to your garden having suffered under