Royal Tea Recipes -article upload to Amazon
I have just about mastered how to up load an article to Amazon for use on a Kindle complete with illustrations. This is not as easy as it is made out to be. I will not use any numbers or spots again to make points in the recipes.
Wanted to make it free but I cannot work out how to do this.
Royal Tea- teatime recipes with royal connections
Wanted to make it free but I cannot work out how to do this.
Royal Tea- teatime recipes with royal connections
Example
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| Edward and Mrs Simpson, introduced the Club Sandwich to England |
Country Gardens
Visited lovely gardens at Bateman's in Kent and Penshurst Place in Sussex.
Bateman's was the home of the author Rudyard Kipling. The house is Jacobean and the interiors left very much as they were in Kipling's lifetime. Now owned by the national Trust the interiors are charming, I could move in tomorrow, .The gardens are as lovely as an English garden can be, kitchen garden orchard, herbaceous borders and a woodland walk.
The tea room is excellent with delicious cakes. The shop has a specialist book area with Kipling's works on sale at a reasonable price.
Penshurst Place
The interior of this castle, once the home of Sir Philip Sydney but now owned by the aristocratic de L'Isle family is dark and dreary. A tedious collection of armour, paintings by unknown artists and the third best porcelain. The restaurant was dismal, the coffee was good but the food poor, heavy use of catering quality margarine in the cakes. Several rooms were closed because of a wedding.Eat at the Porcupine Café before you go in, the light snacks there were better.
The gardens are a different matter. Extensive, formal parterre gardens, orchards, a woodland walk and an adventure playground for children,worth the visit. The shop is full of meritricious rubbish.
Bateman's was the home of the author Rudyard Kipling. The house is Jacobean and the interiors left very much as they were in Kipling's lifetime. Now owned by the national Trust the interiors are charming, I could move in tomorrow, .The gardens are as lovely as an English garden can be, kitchen garden orchard, herbaceous borders and a woodland walk.
The tea room is excellent with delicious cakes. The shop has a specialist book area with Kipling's works on sale at a reasonable price.
Penshurst Place
The interior of this castle, once the home of Sir Philip Sydney but now owned by the aristocratic de L'Isle family is dark and dreary. A tedious collection of armour, paintings by unknown artists and the third best porcelain. The restaurant was dismal, the coffee was good but the food poor, heavy use of catering quality margarine in the cakes. Several rooms were closed because of a wedding.Eat at the Porcupine Café before you go in, the light snacks there were better.
The gardens are a different matter. Extensive, formal parterre gardens, orchards, a woodland walk and an adventure playground for children,worth the visit. The shop is full of meritricious rubbish.
NHS Doctors Too Busy to See Patients
No appointments to see my NHS GP in Cambridge are available for 2 weeks, 28th May the soonest offered.
The surgery and the GPs are too busy with a contract with the military from Wisbech .Now NHS medical practices have control of their budgets they are fixed on money making enterprises and their regular patients can drop dead. Felt sorry for the students trying to get appointments during their very stressful examination period. Doubt many of the GPs have the expertise to become entrepreneurs and the whole thing will be a total mess.
No wonder the Hospital Accident and Emergency Departments cannot cope -- they are stuck with the overflow from this hopeless new system. What do the government think people are going to do if they are ill?
The surgery and the GPs are too busy with a contract with the military from Wisbech .Now NHS medical practices have control of their budgets they are fixed on money making enterprises and their regular patients can drop dead. Felt sorry for the students trying to get appointments during their very stressful examination period. Doubt many of the GPs have the expertise to become entrepreneurs and the whole thing will be a total mess.
No wonder the Hospital Accident and Emergency Departments cannot cope -- they are stuck with the overflow from this hopeless new system. What do the government think people are going to do if they are ill?
Victorian Grandmothers
Fish Wives
Fisher girls had a hard life packing herrings caught off the east coast of England in barrels of salt and brine for curing and delivery inland.They had a reputation for being tough, hard swearing and drinking women.Hardly surprising when you think how cold it must have been by the ocean .Raw hands and the smell of fish hanging around you were an added burden.
Fisher girls had a hard life packing herrings caught off the east coast of England in barrels of salt and brine for curing and delivery inland.They had a reputation for being tough, hard swearing and drinking women.Hardly surprising when you think how cold it must have been by the ocean .Raw hands and the smell of fish hanging around you were an added burden.
Victorian Grandmothers
Rural Occupations
Lace Makers
If you have ancestors from Buckinghamshire, Northamptonshire and Bedfordshire then some of them would probably have been lace makers.These children and women look romantic in their country setting but the interiors of the cottages were damp, dark and overcrowded , many of them died young from tuberculosis.The light was better outside .
They were paid a pittance for the very hard work needed to produce pillow lace but it was the difference between the family having a living wage and extreme poverty, their husbands and fathers were mainly agricultural labourers.At least you were excused chores such as potato picking as your hands had to be kept soft to handle the lace.
Lace Makers
If you have ancestors from Buckinghamshire, Northamptonshire and Bedfordshire then some of them would probably have been lace makers.These children and women look romantic in their country setting but the interiors of the cottages were damp, dark and overcrowded , many of them died young from tuberculosis.The light was better outside .
They were paid a pittance for the very hard work needed to produce pillow lace but it was the difference between the family having a living wage and extreme poverty, their husbands and fathers were mainly agricultural labourers.At least you were excused chores such as potato picking as your hands had to be kept soft to handle the lace.
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