I suspect that the Martin Lewises of the future will be the ones telling people how to make, mend and grow their own stuff and how to get by on twenty quid a week. They will publish books with tips such as scrape mould off the top of jam so you can eat the rest of it and 7,000 exciting recipes involving potato.
So do I. Alas one jar from last year got mould on top.
Now I am just back from the school run with a punnet overflowing with blackberries. Guess what is coming next…
Yep I’ll be picking blackberries as soon as the time is right, but they’ll go into a crumble. My next jam will be apricot and jalapeño chili with the chilis I grew on my windowsill. Might also try something with rosehips as they’re going free from Mother Nature but I just don’t know how to deal with them yet.
Very popular here in Denmark still. If you find valdemarsro dot dk, search for ‘hyben marmalade’ then google translate, you’ll be able to make it danish-style. Best rosehip jam I’ve had was when they’re picked just before being ripe.
Thank-you so much! I will take a look. Am slightly anxious about getting something wrong and giving myself toxin on toast but it’s not too hard to identify them correctly.
…and ‘take a look’ quickly before the internet becomes unaffordable, or the electricity to run your broadband does. Maybe we’ll all have to buy ‘books’ again….
Wow, rosehip jam, that takes me back to the 70’s, picking them as a kid with my parents.
We had a spoonful in our breakfast porridge to sweeten.
I believe they also made wine out of them too.
Thanks for triggering the memory.
Rosehips, blackberries et cetera are food for birds and other nonhuman animal species. They are already struggling to find sufficient food thanks to humans destroying their habitats.
Bad news. Jam making is about to become a lot more expensive… The push for more bioethanol in fuel is diverting even more cane sugar production from the food supply chain, a trend worsened by high oil prices. The EU / UK governments’ ongoing payments to take arable land out of production and the soaring cost of phosphorous fertiliser is reducing sugar beet production. Refined sugar prices have doubled in the last 12 months and will only rise more when Brazil’s millers decide to send a higher proportion of product to bioethonal production in 2023.
It’s is going to be difficult for anyone to offer any advice on avoiding excruciating cost of living increases when it is the supply of basic commodities like sugar and energy that are being squeezed.
If you like top grade marmalade chop 2:1 lemons:oranges finely: add half a cup of water and a tbs or two of honey. Bring to the boil: simmer for 15 mins.. 3 x 1 lb pots of 95% fruit marmalade. If you fill hot mix into hot jars they’ll form a vacuum when cold (no mold). £6 worth for £2 cost max.
Something taught to me by my parents when I was growing up. Sadly, they didn’t get a publishing deal because that was what all parents of that era were teaching their kids.
Very easy to self-publish nowadays. Seriously, stick these ideas in a book and I’ll help you with uploading it to Amazon. Drop me an email at [email protected]
Forgive me for sounding cynical, but age (I’m 74) does bring privileges, cynicism being one of them. I survived the shortages of the 1950s, the power cuts of the early 1970s, the three-day week. I paid 14% interest on my first mortgage and I’m still here. I’ve survived oil crises and terrorism on the streets. This, too, will pass.
I do think he really cares. I’ve got lots of strategies for living on the cheap but I’m not telling anyone as if THEY hear it they’ll do something to cut me off at the pass. All those books people publish about I fed my family healthy meals for a year when I was on benefits and I only spent £5 a week. Don’t tell them. They’ll cut everybody’s money. It’s like if a paraplegic climbs Everest,its a wonderful achievement but another wheelchair bound benefit recipient is told,you can work,you’ve got arms.
Ian Stewart
1 year ago
He’s getting more hysterical with time. I quite liked him before, but his catastrophism is becoming tedious, and now he’s leaning on politicians – who let the ego out?
Milton Gibbon
1 year ago
I hadn’t really listened to him until this week when I was driving around in a van and he was on for a few hours. I expected measured and calm analysis with helpful tips. Instead it was just sympathising with people who weren’t able to go abroad on holiday and shouting (literally raising his voice over people) to say that the government had to pay people’s bills. He sounded deranged and completely unaware of the complexity of the issue of high energy prices – not what I expected at all as I thought he would be pretty well informed about finance.
Arkadian X
1 year ago
I feel that Martin was wrong when he advised not to fix, or at least he was (very) wrong in my case. After much deliberation, soul searching and calculations – after all Martin said not to fix… – I accepted the fix my provider offered me and, assuming they won’t go bust, I’ll be ok this winter and the next.
We knew gas prices were still going up and unless what their provider suggested was something like over 2x the previous cap, then it should have been seriously considered by all before rejecting it.
Don’t know what you saw from Martin Lewis, but in his defence I can say that I received a notification from his website before the recent rises strongly advising taking a fix, one of which I secured (for three years). So I, at least, am grateful for his advice.
He advised people not to fix their energy rate. As usual I ignored him and did my own thing. I fixed my octopus go plan for a other year. Their price went up just days later. Martin is a one trick pony. Problem he has now is that his pony is lame. Time to put him out of his misery.
I mostly followed his advice, buy not in this instance.
Dougie Undersub
1 year ago
Lewis’s catastrophism doesn’t help anyone and just makes the anxious more anxious.
Mark Nattrass
1 year ago
Slightly misleading for the writer to suggest the PM was talking about kettles in relation to the cost of living crisis. If you watch the speech, he was using the investment-in-new-kettle as an analogy for the perils of short-termism in relation to major infrastructure investments (specifically, in nuclear power plants). But hey, why let that get in the way of one more ad-hominem dig.
..another important point: the heat ‘wasted’ using an old kettle ends up heating your home (the space exactly where you are btw): ergo it’s not wasted. Any ‘saving’ achieved using a modern kettle will mean a slight increase in your gas bill to compensate! These things must be thought through!
Rob Britton
1 year ago
Martin Lewis is a bit like Uswitch. Since the price cap on gas came into place Uswitch have been effectively made redundant. All Martin Lewis can do is implore the government to spend more money – as every good socialist should.
Or you could say that he champions the genuinely poor, unlike the Labour Party. They need a champion for God’s sake!
Meanwhile, an allegedly Tory government threw money indiscriminately and wastefully at the general population over the last two and a half years like no government in modern history…
You’ll find the bulk if it was thrown in the direction of their rich mates!
Andrew Holland
1 year ago
My suspicion is Lewis is a consumer affairs expert, but knows very little about economics. Never heard him warn about the dangers of money printing, for example.
Su Mac
1 year ago
Wealth preservation micro view = Martin Lewis
Wealth preservation macro view = buy gold, a water filter and a generator
Adam Bacon
1 year ago
Martin Lewis is adapting to a radically changing economic environment. I only occasionally refer to him, but may possibly do so more in times of economic hardship.
polidori redux
1 year ago
J.G. Ballard – Eerily prescient.
Read his works and see your future.
Douglas H
1 year ago
Dude, we never left the Age of Scarcity!
jane baker
1 year ago
Back in the 1970s,1980s,even the 1990s we had l a plethora of consumer advice shows,on evening prime time to,we were consumers we had rights. We don’t have those shows now,not mainstream and they don’t have the clout that Esther Rantzen exercised. That’s because they no longer need us en masse to be consumers and we don’t have rights. I was never into the ideology of “consumerism” or “retail therapy”,what’s therapeutic about the equivalent of throwing your money down the toilet,or rather transferring it into someone else’s bank account. But I did and do buy things for the practical reason I can’t make most of the things I need in everyday life and it takes months to grow veg for food.
So I already know what it’s like to “own nothing and be happy! – they,THEY,are fixing the system so there is no smart way round it. I think we should all create small,best keep then small,chains of people we know with whom we trade and barter informally. Of course there is risks with that. A lifelong friend might rip you off or you are doing all the giving and they are doing all the taking. Like bookies we’d have no legal right of enforcement so choose your friends well.
Here’s a simple fact re bartering (or using local ‘scrip’ ie cash accepted only in your locality).. if everyone spent all their money in their own community, all the money will still be in that community. Then go and spend it again ‘normally’ outside the community. Everyone in that community is twice as well off, overnight! QED. ‘bet Martin Lewis never thought of that!
I suspect that the Martin Lewises of the future will be the ones telling people how to make, mend and grow their own stuff and how to get by on twenty quid a week. They will publish books with tips such as scrape mould off the top of jam so you can eat the rest of it and 7,000 exciting recipes involving potato.
What, you don’t scrape mould of jam???
I make my own jam and it is so good that it’s gone before mould gets a look in 🙂
So do I. Alas one jar from last year got mould on top.
Now I am just back from the school run with a punnet overflowing with blackberries. Guess what is coming next…
Yep I’ll be picking blackberries as soon as the time is right, but they’ll go into a crumble. My next jam will be apricot and jalapeño chili with the chilis I grew on my windowsill. Might also try something with rosehips as they’re going free from Mother Nature but I just don’t know how to deal with them yet.
Very popular here in Denmark still. If you find valdemarsro dot dk, search for ‘hyben marmalade’ then google translate, you’ll be able to make it danish-style. Best rosehip jam I’ve had was when they’re picked just before being ripe.
Thank-you so much! I will take a look. Am slightly anxious about getting something wrong and giving myself toxin on toast but it’s not too hard to identify them correctly.
…and ‘take a look’ quickly before the internet becomes unaffordable, or the electricity to run your broadband does. Maybe we’ll all have to buy ‘books’ again….
Wow, rosehip jam, that takes me back to the 70’s, picking them as a kid with my parents.
We had a spoonful in our breakfast porridge to sweeten.
I believe they also made wine out of them too.
Thanks for triggering the memory.
They’re also packed with vitamin C…probably another reason why your parents were anxious to get a few of them down you!
Rosehips, blackberries et cetera are food for birds and other nonhuman animal species. They are already struggling to find sufficient food thanks to humans destroying their habitats.
Jam tomorrow?
Bad news. Jam making is about to become a lot more expensive… The push for more bioethanol in fuel is diverting even more cane sugar production from the food supply chain, a trend worsened by high oil prices. The EU / UK governments’ ongoing payments to take arable land out of production and the soaring cost of phosphorous fertiliser is reducing sugar beet production. Refined sugar prices have doubled in the last 12 months and will only rise more when Brazil’s millers decide to send a higher proportion of product to bioethonal production in 2023.
It’s is going to be difficult for anyone to offer any advice on avoiding excruciating cost of living increases when it is the supply of basic commodities like sugar and energy that are being squeezed.
The good news is that you can make jam without sugar
Really? Do you mean without ADDED sugar? Or have you discovered a sugar-free fruit?
You mean you haven’t tried tomato jam? Yes, I meant added sugar (in reply to a point about sugar cane production)
I don’t think it would be possible. At most you get a compote.
Smartass!
If you like top grade marmalade chop 2:1 lemons:oranges finely: add half a cup of water and a tbs or two of honey. Bring to the boil: simmer for 15 mins.. 3 x 1 lb pots of 95% fruit marmalade. If you fill hot mix into hot jars they’ll form a vacuum when cold (no mold). £6 worth for £2 cost max.
Something taught to me by my parents when I was growing up. Sadly, they didn’t get a publishing deal because that was what all parents of that era were teaching their kids.
Very easy to self-publish nowadays. Seriously, stick these ideas in a book and I’ll help you with uploading it to Amazon. Drop me an email at [email protected]
Aris Roussinos leaps to mind.
I love potato recipes.
Forgive me for sounding cynical, but age (I’m 74) does bring privileges, cynicism being one of them. I survived the shortages of the 1950s, the power cuts of the early 1970s, the three-day week. I paid 14% interest on my first mortgage and I’m still here. I’ve survived oil crises and terrorism on the streets. This, too, will pass.
I remeber the same being the same age,we need far more optimism from our leaders and the MSM and far less negativity!
Lewis is in a panic because he’s just lost his means of making money.
What’s that got to do with jam?
I do think he really cares. I’ve got lots of strategies for living on the cheap but I’m not telling anyone as if THEY hear it they’ll do something to cut me off at the pass. All those books people publish about I fed my family healthy meals for a year when I was on benefits and I only spent £5 a week. Don’t tell them. They’ll cut everybody’s money. It’s like if a paraplegic climbs Everest,its a wonderful achievement but another wheelchair bound benefit recipient is told,you can work,you’ve got arms.
He’s getting more hysterical with time. I quite liked him before, but his catastrophism is becoming tedious, and now he’s leaning on politicians – who let the ego out?
I hadn’t really listened to him until this week when I was driving around in a van and he was on for a few hours. I expected measured and calm analysis with helpful tips. Instead it was just sympathising with people who weren’t able to go abroad on holiday and shouting (literally raising his voice over people) to say that the government had to pay people’s bills. He sounded deranged and completely unaware of the complexity of the issue of high energy prices – not what I expected at all as I thought he would be pretty well informed about finance.
I feel that Martin was wrong when he advised not to fix, or at least he was (very) wrong in my case. After much deliberation, soul searching and calculations – after all Martin said not to fix… – I accepted the fix my provider offered me and, assuming they won’t go bust, I’ll be ok this winter and the next.
We knew gas prices were still going up and unless what their provider suggested was something like over 2x the previous cap, then it should have been seriously considered by all before rejecting it.
Don’t know what you saw from Martin Lewis, but in his defence I can say that I received a notification from his website before the recent rises strongly advising taking a fix, one of which I secured (for three years). So I, at least, am grateful for his advice.
He advised people not to fix their energy rate. As usual I ignored him and did my own thing. I fixed my octopus go plan for a other year. Their price went up just days later. Martin is a one trick pony. Problem he has now is that his pony is lame. Time to put him out of his misery.
I mostly followed his advice, buy not in this instance.
Lewis’s catastrophism doesn’t help anyone and just makes the anxious more anxious.
Slightly misleading for the writer to suggest the PM was talking about kettles in relation to the cost of living crisis. If you watch the speech, he was using the investment-in-new-kettle as an analogy for the perils of short-termism in relation to major infrastructure investments (specifically, in nuclear power plants). But hey, why let that get in the way of one more ad-hominem dig.
..another important point: the heat ‘wasted’ using an old kettle ends up heating your home (the space exactly where you are btw): ergo it’s not wasted. Any ‘saving’ achieved using a modern kettle will mean a slight increase in your gas bill to compensate! These things must be thought through!
Martin Lewis is a bit like Uswitch. Since the price cap on gas came into place Uswitch have been effectively made redundant. All Martin Lewis can do is implore the government to spend more money – as every good socialist should.
Or you could say that he champions the genuinely poor, unlike the Labour Party. They need a champion for God’s sake!
Meanwhile, an allegedly Tory government threw money indiscriminately and wastefully at the general population over the last two and a half years like no government in modern history…
But the Tory government is a bunch of closet socialists.
You’ll find the bulk if it was thrown in the direction of their rich mates!
My suspicion is Lewis is a consumer affairs expert, but knows very little about economics. Never heard him warn about the dangers of money printing, for example.
Wealth preservation micro view = Martin Lewis
Wealth preservation macro view = buy gold, a water filter and a generator
Martin Lewis is adapting to a radically changing economic environment. I only occasionally refer to him, but may possibly do so more in times of economic hardship.
J.G. Ballard – Eerily prescient.
Read his works and see your future.
Dude, we never left the Age of Scarcity!
Back in the 1970s,1980s,even the 1990s we had l a plethora of consumer advice shows,on evening prime time to,we were consumers we had rights. We don’t have those shows now,not mainstream and they don’t have the clout that Esther Rantzen exercised. That’s because they no longer need us en masse to be consumers and we don’t have rights. I was never into the ideology of “consumerism” or “retail therapy”,what’s therapeutic about the equivalent of throwing your money down the toilet,or rather transferring it into someone else’s bank account. But I did and do buy things for the practical reason I can’t make most of the things I need in everyday life and it takes months to grow veg for food.
So I already know what it’s like to “own nothing and be happy! – they,THEY,are fixing the system so there is no smart way round it. I think we should all create small,best keep then small,chains of people we know with whom we trade and barter informally. Of course there is risks with that. A lifelong friend might rip you off or you are doing all the giving and they are doing all the taking. Like bookies we’d have no legal right of enforcement so choose your friends well.
Here’s a simple fact re bartering (or using local ‘scrip’ ie cash accepted only in your locality).. if everyone spent all their money in their own community, all the money will still be in that community. Then go and spend it again ‘normally’ outside the community. Everyone in that community is twice as well off, overnight! QED. ‘bet Martin Lewis never thought of that!