Treat your Mother for Mother's Day!
February 2023

It is Mother’s Day on March 19th and what better way to treat your mother than to spend time with her on a food tour. Imagine her happy face when she opens our Mother’s Day Package of a selection of Yorkshire Produced sweet goodies with a voucher for a food tour for two. The gift that gives twice - More information here
It’s a mere month until Jill and I set off on our French travels, and our guides, Linda and Gill will be looking after the visitors in Harrogate until we return. With a great wealth of experience between them and both locals of the town, you will be in good hands. Get to know them by reading about them on our website .
Mid-February every year in Yorkshire, of course, we celebrate the noble plant of Rhubarb. It’s the first Food and Drink festival in the national calendar and one of the best, even if the weather doesn’t always comply. We all remember the rhubarb plant at the bottom of the garden and the rhubarb crumble served with custard but what do we know about the history and uses of rhubarb?
Wakefield, the third point of the Rhubarb Triangle in West Yorkshire, along with Morley and Rothwell, hosts an annual Rhubarb Festival. The town is full of chefs, cafes and restaurants with rhubarb themed menus, local and national traders showcasing their rhubarb products from gin to fudge, from pork pies to brownies. A veritable extravaganza celebrating our beloved rhubarb.
Early forced rhubarb is sweeter, less stringy, and comes early in the year, when fresh fruit used to be scarce (before the days of all fruits all year round). Rhubarb is grown in the dark and the Yorkshire Rhubarb Triangle was the first place in the world to build special forcing sheds in 1877. The darkness helps the rhubarb retain the sweetness and the area once produced 90% of the world’s forced rhubarb. And yes, you can hear the rhubarb growing if you listen carefully.
A Yorkshireman, Sir Matthew Lister, introduced edible garden rhubarb from Italy in 1620, technically a vegetable but eaten as a fruit. It’s an excellent source of potassium, vitamin C and magnesium and is rich in fibre with the tannins improving digestion.
Here at Yorkshire Appetite, we especially love Slingsbys Rhubarb Gin, Mr Fitzpatrick’s Rhubarb and Rosehip cordial, and rhubarb and custard boiled sweets.









