from £7.50
Due to popular customer demand these Almonds are another
specialty of the Potash Farm range of gifts. Attractively presented
within the bag are the Almonds. These make a traditional and
excellent Christmas, Easter, or one off gift and are available in two
sizes.
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from £15.00
A Chestnut is an edible nut often encased in a prickly husk and mainly grown in Spain, Italy and France. These Chestnuts have been specially selected by Potash Farm for quality size and good flavour.
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from £6.95
This sauce is an excellent colour and can be served either hot or cold with turkey, chicken, duck, pheasant or partridge. It is also very good in sandwiches or with Camembert and Brie.
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from £14.00
The Sea Salt and Nut Wood is a fresh fragrance of clean sea salt and woody sage.
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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
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from £13.50
The Green / Golden Cobnuts are available now, and I advise all my potential customers to place early orders to avoid disappointment.
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from £6.50
This chutney is an excellent alternative to the potash farm handmade rhubarb and ginger chutney with Kentish cobnuts. It goes very well with all cold meats and cheeses.
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from £39.50
This comprises an attractive pack containing our three cosmetics products including the Kentish Cobnut Soap, the Kentish Cobnut Skin Repair Balm and the new Kentish Cobnut Five Oils Facial Skin Care oil.
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£9.50
These decorative Walnuts can be placed in a bowl arranged on
their own or incorporated into flower arrangements, pot plants,
Christmas Stockings or sprinkled over a fruit or nut bowl, greatly
enhancing the contents.
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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
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