from £20.00
Potash farm is now offering cracked kentish cobnuts in a number of different packs and sizes.
View
from £13.00
Zesty lime, with powdery basil and sweet mandarin give this fragrance a lively, fresh aroma. A perfect scent for livening up a room, or invigorating linens.
View
£125.00
This traditional hamper basket is handmade with leather straps using willow grown and woven between Norwich and Cromer in Norfolk. It measures 36cm (14 inches) long X 24cm (9.5 inches) wide X 16 cm (6.25 inches) depth.
View
from £6.50
This is the first of the Potash Farm nut mustards. It has a great colour with a little chilli and a good crunch. It is excellent with all cold meats and cheeses.
View
£30.00
These salad servers are made from Kentish hazel trees, which are hand harvested on a coppice cycle. Coppiced hazel is very fast growing and is a strong and light wood as well as being a renewable resource that promotes woodland wildlife.
View
£40.00
This hamper basket is handmade with leather straps, using cane from overseas and measures 30cm (12 inches) long x 21cm (8.5 inches) wide x 12 cm (4.75 inches) depth. If looked after it will last for years and they are excellent for use as a small hamper/picnic basket, a work basket for sewing / crochet, or for display purposes in the traditional farm house kitchen.
View
from £25.00
This bowl is made from Kentish coppiced hazel. It is hand turned and is designed to hold a small quantity of cobnut oil, ideal for dipping bread into.
View
from £20.00
A Cobnut is a type of hazelnut traditionally grown in Kent. They are
harvested in their green state from mid August and with brown shells and
husks by mid October. All the Cobnuts are sold dehusked from mid October onward.
View
from £25.00
Sweet warm woody cobnut fragrance with strong roast coffee notes.
View
from £7.00
"If you have a sweet tooth, Potash Farm Cobnut Fudge is truly one of the
best we've tried. Exceptionally creamy and divinely decadent, it's
studded with Cobnuts harvested from a century-old plantation, lovingly
toasted and stirred into a fudge made with single cream from a nearby
dairy." Good Housekeeping Magazine
View