Archive for the ‘Eco Living’ Category

Seasonal Recipes

Friday, January 21st, 2011

This time of the year, it seems that ‘going out’ is the last thing on our minds.

Following the excesses of Christmas and the dark, cold evenings all I feel like doing is drawing the curtains, pulling my big woollen throw over my legs, watching a DVD and staying inside where it’s warm & cosy! Or maybe I am just growing old!

Another of my favourite current ‘cold season’ pastimes is cooking. I have many cook books but also love trawling the internet for some great culinary inspiration.

figporridge

I always try and use only seasonal products, ideally organic too, so it’s an extra challenge picking out only seasonal and healthy recipes (although a couple of the great websites below are actually seasonally based).

I have picked some of my favourite websites below, hope you enjoy reading through and attempting the recipes as much as I do!

http://www.mostlyeating.com - One of my personal favourites, offering lovely sustainable, seasonal and nutritionally balanced meals

http://seasonalfoodrecipes.co.uk/

http://www.jamieoliver.com/recipes

http://www.supernaturalrecipes.com/

Happy cooking! xx

Help! No tea!

Friday, October 15th, 2010

Our Tefal Quick Cup, after 2 solid years finally gave its last chug, splutter and cough today. It’s been a great kettle and I am contemplating buying another. I loved the fact I just had to press one button and hey presto, my tea was ready in a matter of seconds (ok apart from the milk and sugar bit)! It has been so quick and efficient making my beloved cups of Yorkshire & green tea that I feel I have lost a friend!

tea revives you

However, my friends and family hated it! They complained it was “tricky” (you only have to press one button!) “noisy” (this I can’t really argue with) and down right “annoying” (hmm).

So I am now in a dilemma – do I buy another and further annoy my acquaintances or look out for a new (preferably energy saving) alternative?

Do you use an eco kettle, if so which one and would you recommend it? Any help soon would be appreciated, after all boiling a small pan of water on the hob every time we want a cuppa is not the best for the environment or my patience!

Oh the dilemma!

Nature’s most surprising plant

Friday, August 20th, 2010

Bamboo is surely uniquely versatile.

bamboo_thicket

It’s the only plant providing sources of food, building materials and woven fabrics. One of Edison’s early light bulbs had a carbonised bamboo filament. Its strength, resilience and cheapness make it a widely used scaffolding material throughout Asia. The fibres of bamboo poles have high strength both in tension and compression. Indeed, its compressive strength is roughly twice that of concrete and weight for weight bamboo has roughly the same tensile strength as steel.

Largest members of the grasses family, some bamboos are said to be the world’s fastest growing plants. Given the right growing conditions there are claims that bamboo can grow 24 inches (60 centimetres) in a single day.

Bamboo ticks lots of boxes for anyone buying eco gifts, or eco-friendly items for the home. For a start, it’s a highly sustainable raw material. Its fast growth means that local people can cut down as much as they need for carving, weaving, sawing or splitting and still have as big a forest at the end of the year as they had at the start. On the global warming question, since it comes from a plant source, any bamboo product contains a significant part of its weight in atmospheric carbon. Any plastic equivalent has already added to the atmosphere’s carbon level!

Another point; because it’s natural, bamboo has variations in quality and appearance that make it difficult to use in most mass production processes. You can be pretty sure that a craftsman has literally had a hand in any bamboo item you buy. If you go to an ethical store you’ll also know that the craftsman got a fair wage for his or her work, and that no one living in the third world was exploited by western buying power. Finally you’ll be sure that the product you buy hasn’t accumulated air miles in its journey from craftsman to your home.

With eco credentials as strong as these, it’s wonderful that bamboo products can also be very good-looking. But then again, it’s not surprising that a handmade product can be made to look great by a skilled craftsman! How about using the natural “tubular” nature of bamboo to produce useful, chic storage jars? Then have a look to see how the craftsman can take the natural shape and “stretch it” into a salad bowl that’s truly modern.

And finally, in the opening paragraph of this short piece in praise of bamboo, I mentioned woven fabrics. Sceptical? Then check out this bamboo bathrobe! It’s soft, absorbent, and amazing! Bamboo really is a unique resource for us all.

bamboo round coasters

Made in Britain

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Over the past twenty years the industrial landscape of Britain has changed dramatically. Actually it’s worse than that- it has largely gone away.

Try an experiment; go into your local toyshop and look at the labels to see where the various things come from. Take something quintessentially English, like a Winnie the Pooh stuffed toy.  I bet you’ll find it was made in China. I recently tried to find anything not made in China as a present for an Asian child, and it was nigh on impossible.

So China, with its cheap labour and under-valued currency, has become the workshop of the world. Unfortunately it has also become the fastest-growing polluter in the world, and the biggest exploiter of people.

Now I am not arguing that the Chinese people don’t deserve a chance to work their way out of poverty. Just as I don’t begrudge the French their government-assisted industry, or the Germans their hugely efficient car industry. I just wish that there were positive industrial news from nearer home. Something made here, that works well, looks good, and is competitively priced.

Well actually there is! You have to look hard, but there are businesses and people in these islands busily making things that are well worth a look. All these products are supporting British jobs, which makes them excellent eco gifts, or you can even buy them for yourself!

For example, are you looking for an occasional mattress, maybe for unexpected guests, or for a camping trip?  This one’s really comfortable, looks great, and is made in Birmingham by a mental health charity. Good product, good cause!

roll up bed - blue and green

Or how about some wonderful stoneware mugs and pots, made by a craftsman in Scotland? Tough, authentic, and each one subtly different from its neighbour, because it’s hand made from abundant local raw materials!

IMG_5139

And finally, if you’d like some light shed on another industry, try this aluminium café-style ceiling lamp. Made in Wales, in the shadow of the Brecon Beacons, by a family business, which used to specialise in miners’ safety lamps. It’s stylish, recyclable, and demonstrates that not every British business just gave up and went away when their core market went into decline.

silver harbour light

So you can still buy British, and support craftsmen, family businesses, and charities. Now that’s good news, isn’t it?

EKOsense

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

I love it when I come across a like minded, ethical company selling great products! Yesterday I was contacted by EKOsense, who sell some wonderful organic clothing.

I am very tempted by their lovely yoga trousers (may spur me into going to my classes more too!) as well as their twisted wrap. Their website says “EKO Sense is a new organic clothing company, creating truly ethical and luxurious clothing that reflects the laid-back beauty that Cornwall is famous for, by producing casual essentials in the kindest of fabrics.”

yoga trousers

Sounds and looks good to me!

Home grown gifts

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

As we head into BBQ & summer party season, it can sometimes be hard (and expensive!) to constantly think of gifts to bring. There’s always the traditional bottle of wine or champagne, which will be added to the stash in the kitchen!

However, if you would like to offer a more thoughtful present, then why why not bring a gift from your own garden? Perhaps a bunch of freshly picked flowers, or even better a small basket of home grown veggies, a hand tied bunch of fresh herbs or even lavender? A lovely, thoughtful and of course useful gift for anyone!herb-bundle

But if your friends like a tipple, then a bottle of wine is always a welcome addition too!

Campaign against clutter!

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

I hate clutter. In fact, I drive my dear husband mad as I am constantly de-cluttering his life from important letters, documents and old t-shirts he’s attached to. I think I am helping him, he is not convinced…

However, as the years go by and as much as I try to regularly de-clutter by giving to charity shops or just ‘donating’ to our obliging neighbours (also known as leaving on our wall outside, with a post-it saying please take me!), we still seem to be gathering more possessions and running out of space…

Therefore, a happy compromise for us both, Mr Hoarder and Mrs De-Clutter, is a combination of great storage systems and nifty furniture ideas.

Biome will soon be introducing more storage solutions after the fantastic success of our bamboo and seagrass baskets. I particularly love these little storage pots which are great for keeping by your front door and filling with your keys, pocket change, postcards etc. website pictures 241I have also just come across this lovely origami style folding stool. Perfect for a home which is short on space.

danese-kada-stool_rect540

This weeks stories

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Here are my favourite ethical & lifestyle stories of the week…

joelI was reading about Joel Henriques this week. Joel is an artist in Portland, Oregon who creates many different things from mobiles to paintings. All his products are carefully and skilfully made by hand – you can even watch his YouTube videos that show his work up close and personal, with some videos even show him making it. Fantastic!

 01-gold-bar

Announced today, Gold will be the new commodity to be eligible for a Fairtrade certification. Fairtrade Labelling Organisations International (FLO) and the Alliance for Responsible Mining (ARM) launch the first ever third party independent certification for gold, opening up market opportunities for millions of impoverished small-scale miners and their families. When questioned, customers buying jewellery claimed that, partly because it is an expensive and often significant item, it would hold more value to them if it was also fairly traded.

Talking of jewellery… I have also read about (via Daisy Green) the beautiful new collection necklaces, earrings, bangles and rings made from 100% recycled silver. The range melds the best Nepalese cultural forms with contemporary style and the best traditional craftsmanship. Part of the Yamuna Collection by Annabel Panes, it combines CRED’s excellence in design and ethics with Nepali artisanal craftsmanship, as each piece is handmade by our friends the Harigni Cooperative.

This beautiful range of 100% recycled silver jewellery includes the first ever Oro Verde Fair Trade gold plate, resulting in a stunning combination of colours and finishes. It is my birthday coming up soon so I now know what will be on my list!

silver_large

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle – eco Christmas cracker options

Monday, November 16th, 2009

It’s Christmas day and after nearly falling off your chair in your desire to win, the cracker rips open; the terrible joke is read and the whole family laugh regardless, and the gift is marvelled at for a matter of seconds… then the cracker is discarded and the gift stuffed into a drawer or even thrown away with the remnants of lunch… Sounds familiar? I am sure this happens in households around the country as the nation sits down for our annual Christmas Day lunch… What a waste. How can we avoid such unnecessary expense and waste without forgetting about the tradition and the joy that crackers bring?

One option is to make your own crackers; the crackers can be made using toilet roll, wrapping paper or even magazine pages. This way you can carefully choose how they look as well as what gifts go inside – possibly a home baked cookie or chocolate.  This is a great acivity to keep the kids busy for an hour or two! To make your own ‘eco’ crackers, just follow the step-by-step process below (don’t hold me responsible for the outcome ;-) :

  1. Centre a toilet roll lengthwise along the 10″ side of the 8 x 10″ piece of a recycled or recyclable paper. Wrap the paper around the roll, securing it with 1 or 2 pieces of transparent tape. (The tape can be attached to the underside of the crepe paper so that it does not show.)
  2. Insert snapper (these can be purchased from most craft shops) and gift into the roll. The ends of the snapper should extend beyond the ends of the cracker.  Tie each end of cracker with string.
  3. To make fringe, take an 8 x 5″ piece of paper and fold in half lengthwise. Cut 1″ deep slashes about _” apart along unfolded edges. Repeat with second piece of 8 x 5″ crepe paper.  
  4. Take about 12″ of decorative string (gold, silver, etc.) and place along inside fold of fringe. Gather and tie around end of cracker, over first tie. Repeat with other end, using second fringe. Ends of fringes may be curled gently.  
  5. Decorative trims, lace, ribbons, etc. may be used to decorate the body of the cracker.  

Alternatively, if you don’t have the time, but still want to use the “here’s one I made earlier” line with your expecting family, Biome have 2 eco cracker options firmly supporting the ‘reduce, reuse, recycle’ mantra.

First is Biome Lifestyle’s eco seed crackers –the cracker paper is seed paper; once the cracker is ‘pulled’, plant the paper in your garden and the following summer you will find a beautiful array of wild flowers! Additionally, the gift inside is handmade by a small co-operative of women in Nepal. Each cracker purchased ensures improved economic prospects for these disadvantaged women.

cracker box

Second is Biome’s eco play cracker. These crackers are carefully assembled in the UK and are guaranteed to encourage some healthy competition amongst the family as each has its own parlour game. At the bottom of the box there is also an eco alternative to the old favourite, Snakes & Ladders, to help you and your family learn more about some key eco issues. If you find you’re green you’ll go up the ladders to success; if you’re not so green then you’ll go down the snakes and risk losing the eco title.

s&l_game_artwork

And if all this talk is sending you crackers (sorry!) then watch out for my next post- I am running a competition to find the best Christmas cracker joke ever. The winner will be chosen by the Biome Lifestyle team and will receive 2 boxes of eco play crackers.

New throw colours now in!

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Coco just loves our new range of Reclaimed Throws! Here is a photo of her snuggled up in one of the red throws… coco blanket

The throws are spun together from waste yarn at a small traditional factory in the Scottish Highlands. Very cosy indeed!