from £6.50
This award-winning Kentish Lavender Jelly is exceptional and it is being
marketed by Potash Farm. It has a unique Kentish Lavender flavour and
is an ideal accompaniment to cheeses, cold meats, turkey, game and duck.
It can also be enjoyed with roast lamb or just eaten on toast.
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£55.00
The Hobart Nutcracker is an original Robert Welch design from 1964. Made from solid cast iron with a steel spindle.
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£34.95
Three wick orchard pear and fresia luxury candle.
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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 £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 £19.99
Mixed Bag Of Nuts - Dehusked Kentish Cobnuts, English Walnuts, And Almonds.
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from £6.50
This luxury handmade marmalade is made with the finest of
ingredients and is a real treat to have with croissants or toast. It makes an ideal gift for Valentines Day, Mothering Sunday, Easter or at Christmas.
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from £4.80
Alexander Hunt from the Walnut Tree Company has developed in conjunction with a sustainable innovation farm these easy-to-use natural tree feed pellets.
They are a nutrient rich bio fertiliser pellet made from agricultural crops and residues that have already been used for green power generation.
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from £27.50
A Pecan nut is an edible nut encased in a brown shell with a tough outer green coat. They are mainly grown in Georgia, Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma. Outside the United States Pecan Nuts are grown in Australia, Brazil, China, Israel, Mexico, Peru and South Africa. These Pecans have been specially selected by Potash Farm for quality, size and good flavour.
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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
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