from £7.50
These bars are a good alternative to the popular Plattinums chocolate coated roasted cobnuts. The same high quality dark and milk chocolate is used for the bars as well as the chocolates. The chocolate bars make interesting gifts and go very well with a good cup of coffee after a meal. (min 110g)
View
£7.50
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 £20.00
Potash farm is now offering cracked kentish cobnuts in a number of different packs and sizes.
View
from £7.00
"Potash Farm makes lots of lovely things from Kentish Cobnuts - we can't get enough of its, buttery, sweet and salty Cobnut Brittle."
BBC Olive Magazine
View
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.
View
from £14.00
The Sea Salt and Nut Wood is a fresh fragrance of clean sea salt and woody sage.
View
from £40.00
This bowl is made from English sycamore, grown in Sussex from sustainably managed mixed forests. It is hand turned and will comfortably hold a 454g bag of cobnuts.
View
from £7.00
"Potash Farm makes lots of lovely things from Kentish Cobnuts - we can't get enough of its, buttery, sweet and salty Cobnut Brittle."
BBC Olive Magazine
View
£4.95
The Kentish Cobnut Recipe Cards collection is unique. It provides another
excellent one off gift and comprises a fine range of recipes using
cobnuts in first courses, main courses, deserts and with cheese.
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