from £40.00
This bowl is made from English sweet chestnut, grown in Sussex from sustainably managed mixed forests. It is hand turned and will comfortably hold a 454g bag of cobnuts.
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£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.
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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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£45.00
Made with a selection of four woods, namely cherry, hawthorn, oak and walnut. Easy to use with one hand and easily adjustable.
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from £15.95
This exclusive Walnut Oil is grown, pressed and packaged by one of Potash Farm’s neighbours. It is an ideal alternative to the Kentish Cobnut oil and is good for drizzling over salads, grilling fish or meat and suitable for flash frying or woking. It makes an ideal gift and comes in a 250ml bottle.
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from £20.00
The fresh green walnuts from Potash farm are available during a short seasonal window from July 1st 2026 until July 31st 2026.
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from £14.00
The Sicilian Nut Grove is a hypnotic fragrance of lime and basil with sparkling mandarin top-notes.
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from £15.95
This exclusive Kentish Cobnut Oil is grown, pressed and packaged by one of Potash Farm’s neighbours. It is ideal for drizzling over salads, grilling fish or meat and suitable for flash-frying or woking. Featured on ITV Ade In Britain, BBC The Hairy Bikers, and ITV The Hungry Sailors.
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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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