BREAD MAKING COURSES

Places now available on our Start It Up sourdough course on February 3rd 2024 and our next on April 6th. Make four sourdough loaves to take home. £100 for a 1-6pm day. Vouchers available. info@littleeye.org.uk

Monday 28 November 2022

Bread-making last weekend

We held a workshop for 8. It was a relaxing and also fun day, with lots to learn and take away.

Thursday 24 November 2022

LITTLE EYE CELEBRATES 10 YEARS AS CO-FOUNDER AND -ORGANISER OF WEST KIRBY FARMERS MARKET

I wrote an article about the market for local magazine The Lake:
10th birthday of West Kirby Farmers Market – a tale of DIY There really is something for everyone at our market – whether it’s the ever-popular Funky Flapjack cakes, or the newer Fermentation Station kimchi and kombuchka About eleven years ago, a few local growers, local food enthusiasts, a food writer and producers formed a food group. We were keen to explore ideas for improving production of fresh, local foods and enabling and encouraging people to shop locally. We’d heard about the Incredible Edible projects, allotment schemes and Wirral Farmers Market in Birkenhead – and in the end we decided the best way forward was a DIY West Kirby Farmers’ Market. With organizational support from Transition Town West Kirby to get us going, we set up our voluntary community organization, with an Organisers group, and a supporting Volunteers group, and started the endless search for local producers within 30 miles, or occasionally a little further, growing or making good quality food. We discovered a whole new world of hard-working, co-operatively-minded independents – chutney and jam makers in their kitchen, fruit-growers and juicers, to small-scale farmers such as Dolwen selling meats and others making cheeses and yoghurt. Markets aren’t just about buying food, but an exchange of ideas and good practice for growing, cooking and the enjoyment of eating and drinking We set up the first Hoylake Food Fair in 2011, and then West Kirby Farmers’ Market in 2012. We launched ourselves on BBC Radio Merseyside with a Market Special Sandwich, made with Little Eye sourdough bread, Dean’s ham (from Roberts the butchers) and fresh salad from John Jones stall. These days, you can have Pen-Y-Lan bacon in your hot buttie at the market, or take-away veggie samosas. Over the years, producers have come and gone: currently over 20 producers bring their fresh and local foods to market. Many of them do markets each weekend, travelling as far as Macclesfield or Mold. Customers come specially from Liverpool, across the Wirral and even North Wales to buy speciality sourdough breads, charcuterie and freshly roasted coffee beans – and you can get a fresh cuppa whilst you shop. Good local food for a sustainable future – it might be jargon but it tastes great and we need all the traditional techniques and varieties we can keep alive! Farmers’ Markets are part of a great tradition of local, small-scale production, and keep alive cooking skills – two of our newest stalls are award winners Fermentation Station and North by Sud-Ouest charcuterie, both making newly popular foods, but also reviving and developing very traditional artisan skills. Alongside John Jones fruit and veg stall, you can find Mrs Bourne’s popular Cheshire cheeses, and Larkton Hall’s alpine-style cheeses: and producers do many more things to keep local food culture alive – from bread-making and chocolate-making classes, to hog-roasts, to start-up businesses making bottle-conditioned beer in Hoylake. Come and join us – there is something for everyone Covid set us back a bit. Now we are picking up speed again, though some people are feeling the pinch – but there is no better value for money, or for health, than buying and eating traditional, small-scale local foods – and having a good chat with producers, and maybe friends in the caff. I haven’t been able to mention all our traders in this article – but have a quick look at our producer list online ( www.westkirbyfarmersmarket.co.uk/producers.html ) , and you’ll see the great choice – and you can make up your own version of Farmers’ Market Sandwich or, these days, a fantastic Platter. Next markets are from 9-12 on November 26 and December 17, at St Andrews’ Church on Meols Drive Malcolm Williams, Little Eye Sourdough