Tater Trap – Summer

£7.00

The second in our four part series of beautifully designed 52 page zines helping you to explore, forage and cook free edibles around Lowestoft.

Availability: 62 in stock

This is the second issue of Tater Trap, the seasonal zine series revolving around foraging edible plants, fungi and algae from within the Lowestoft area. 

In this summer issue we focus our attention on thirteen (we’re not superstitious) of the bountiful species available during this season of plenty.

The A5 zine contains the usual mix of essential botanical and visual information to help you find and identify the edibles, combined with stories of folklore, history, legends and superstitions relating to each of the species. The featured items also contain instructions on how to make delicious contemporary plant-based recipes that have been specifically curated for Tater Trap.

All of this taste-tingling content is presented utilising the beautiful illustrations and cutting-edge design of Mickey G.

Tater Trap was printed by the Leiston Press. The cover is printed on 135gsm G.F. Smith Colorplan ‘Factory Yellow’ paper, with the forty-eight inner pages on recycled ‘Evolution’ 80gsm paper.

The book is packaged for delivery using only recycled material and paper. The only plastic being used in the packaging of this product is sellotape.

Weight 0.5 kg
Dimensions 21 × 15 × 0.5 cm

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Herringfleet Mill

Back when I was a kid before I discovered punk rock, the family drove to this wonderful place a lot. I would chase grasshoppers and throw flea darts at my brother, dad birdwatched across the wetlands through his U-boat binoculars and mum would sit down and rest after carrying the picnic all the way from the car through the woods, over stiles and down to the riverside on her own. There was usually a whole roast chicken on a plate wrapped in tin foil and we all had our own plates and cutlery too.

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Snape Maltings

The fact that a world famous homosexual composer of opera came from my home town frequently gives me pleasure and optimism. Like The Borough’s Aldeburgh fisherman Peter Grimes, Benjamin Britten also sought solace from all the wagging tongues and pointed fingers.
In 1966 he found it just up the river Alde at Snape in a disused maltings complex that within a year he had expensively converted into a purpose-built concert hall in which he and his lover, singer Peter Peers, could hang out in privacy whilst rehearsing, developing and performing new works. The hugely popular Aldeburgh festival has been held here since its completion in 1967.

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