sale £18.00
A gift bag selection of our specialist sauces including our Cranberry, Cobnut, Orange and Port Sauce, and the Handmade Smokey Roasted Pepper Sauce with Kentish Cobnuts, and finally the Handmade Thai Chilli Sauce with Kentish Cobnuts.
View
from £89.50
These products are handmade from Kentish hazel and English sweet chestnut 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
from £20.00
An Almond is an edible nut encased in shell with a downy outer grey / green coat. They are mainly grown in California, Spain, Italy, Australia and Turkey. These Almonds have been specially selected by Potash Farm for quality size and good flavour.
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
from £25.00
Rich woody fragrance with fresh lemon notes, and a light nutty heart of cobnut and amber.
View
from £6.50
This luxury handmade marmalade is made with the finest of
ingredients and is a real treat to have with croissants or toast. It makes an ideal gift for Valentines Day, Mothering Sunday, Easter or at Christmas.
View
£55.50
These are a speciality of the Potash Farm range of gifts.
Attractively presented within the trug are Dehusked Kentish Cobnuts, Christmas balls, ribbon and chrome nut crackers. These make an excellent Christmas table decoration or gift.
View
£10.00
Plattinums Kentish Cobnuts are lightly caramalised and enrobed in a 45% Belgian milk chocolate or 70% Belgian dark chocolate, they are a unique product world
wide and as a result of the small area of crops still grown are limited
in supply.
View
from £25.00
Sweet warm woody cobnut fragrance with strong roast coffee notes.
View
from £5.75
"Cobnuts are a type of hazelnut that, once dried, have a lovely sweet
flavour - and they taste superb in this lovely, buttery Handmade Kentish
Cobnut Shortbread from Potash Farm in Kent" Gregg Wallace, Telegraph Magazine
View