A timeless future

Sourdough chocolate, wild cherry spoons and English oak pocket knives: we hope you love this meticulously chosen array of items from The Future Kept as much as Ernest does

Sail Handmade Camera Strap, £35A vegetable tanned leather camera strap, crafted by Sail Handmade in their small workshop.This colour is exclusive to The Future Kept. 

Sail Handmade Camera Strap, £35
A vegetable tanned leather camera strap, crafted by Sail Handmade in their small workshop.This colour is exclusive to The Future Kept. 

Trevor Ablett Pocket Knife, £40Master craftsman Trevor Ablett makes these knives using techniques dating from the mid 1800s. Available in oak, redwood and buffalo. 

Trevor Ablett Pocket Knife, £40
Master craftsman Trevor Ablett makes these knives using techniques dating from the mid 1800s. Available in oak, redwood and buffalo. 

Uashmama Lunch Bag, £42These lunch bags look and feel like leather and are perfect for the lady who lunches or the man unafraid to rock the man bag. 

Uashmama Lunch Bag, £42
These lunch bags look and feel like leather and are perfect for the lady who lunches or the man unafraid to rock the man bag. 

Pump Street Bakery Chocolate, £5.80A combination of three great things: sourdough, sea salt and chocolate make this Pump Street Bakery’s bestselling bar. 

Pump Street Bakery Chocolate, £5.80
A combination of three great things: sourdough, sea salt and chocolate make this Pump Street Bakery’s bestselling bar. 

Wild Cherry Wooden Spoon, £22Hand carved spoon made from sustainably coppiced cherry wood. Can be used in hot or cold dishes and for any use in the kitchen. 

Wild Cherry Wooden Spoon, £22
Hand carved spoon made from sustainably coppiced cherry wood. Can be used in hot or cold dishes and for any use in the kitchen. 

London Fields Cyclist’s Soap, £4This cyclist’s soap will soothe you after a day on the road or trails. Blend of cocoa butter, nutmeg, and spicy essential oils. 

London Fields Cyclist’s Soap, £4
This cyclist’s soap will soothe you after a day on the road or trails. Blend of cocoa butter, nutmeg, and spicy essential oils. 

Amelie Mancini Savanna Tea Towel, £20Brooklyn based artist Amelie Mancini uses lino cuts to print her Savanna pattern onto fabrics with water-based inks.

Amelie Mancini Savanna Tea Towel, £20
Brooklyn based artist Amelie Mancini uses lino cuts to print her Savanna pattern onto fabrics with water-based inks.

Ambre Botanicals Bath Oil, £18This blend of rosemary, thyme and mint essential oil from Ambre Botanicals helps relieve stress, mental and physical tiredness. 

Ambre Botanicals Bath Oil, £18
This blend of rosemary, thyme and mint essential oil from Ambre Botanicals helps relieve stress, mental and physical tiredness. 

Discover more about The Future Kept in our online directory.

This is a sponsored blog post, created in collaboration with The Future Kept. For more information on partnerships and joining our directory please email advertise@ernestjournal.co.uk.

The real Moby Dick

Mark Blackmore regales us with the true story of a sperm whale that wreaked havoc on a whaling ship and its crew, leading to inspire a maritime legend

Herman Melville’s sixth and most famous book is Moby Dick, the story of Captain Ahab’s obsessive pursuit of the gigantic white sperm whale that took his leg. The novel was inspired by The Essex, a whaling ship out of Nantucket whose fate became maritime legend.

On the morning of November 20, 1820, the crew of The Essex, led by Captain George Pollard and first mate Owen Chase, attacked a pod of sperm whales near the Pacific equator, 2,000 miles from the coast of South America. But on this day, an 85-foot bull sperm whale fought back. Ramming The Essex twice, it inflicted critical damage before withdrawing, leaving 20 crew members to watch from three whaleboats as their ship sank.

The boats soon drifted apart, and one was never seen again. The men in both Pollard’s and Chase’s boats resorted to cannibalism before they were rescued, three months later, with Pollard and his surviving crewmate found “sucking the bones of their dead mess mates, which they were loath to part with”. The eight men who survived the ordeal were forever haunted by their experience, as their story became a cautionary tale – and an inspiration to a great American novelist.

Extract from issue one of Ernest Journal (now sold out).

Coffee harvesting in Quindío

Ricardo of The Roasting Shed travels back to his Colombian homeland to explore the journey of his coffee beans from plant to cup

colombian farmer.JPG

The Roasting Shed is expanding this year – importing its own green coffee beans from coffee farms in Quindío in the west of Bogotà in Colombia. The area is perfect for growing coffee – rolling jungly hills with rich volcanic soils and bursting rivers, which rarely lose momentum. It also happens to be my home.

A little visit was necessary to see the production techniques, build relationships and of course sample some coffee. The harvesting of coffee beans is a relatively low-tech process. The ripe red cherries are picked off the coffee bushes by hand; experienced pickers only pick the red cherries at their optimum ripeness. Baskets full, they head back to the farm to begin the washing process. They remove the sweet pulp to reveal the bean, which is covered in a membrane. The beans are then soaked in concrete pools to allow this membrane to break down; a natural chemical process that enhances the flavours of the bean. They are then air and kiln dried. Finally, after being hulled and sorted for size, they are bagged in the classic hessian 60KG bags ready for export.

After a busy morning of harvesting, washing and drying we sat down to a delicious lunch of spicy salchichón (chorizo) and my favourite avocado on arepa (Colombian corn bread tortilla) washed down with a delicious freshly-roasted coffee. Simple pleasures are the best.

This coffee from Quindío isn't available yet (watch this space) but we have an amazing Colombian bean among our range called Agustino. This is a clean, bright- tasting coffee, with a buttery feel in the mouth and a delicious caramel sweetness with delicate orange citrus notes.

Discover more about The Roasting Shed in our online directory.

This is a sponsored blog post, created in collaboration with The Roasting Shed. For more information on partnerships and joining our directory please email advertise@ernestjournal.co.uk.

Word of the week: bluestocking

bluestocking

\'bluːstɒkɪŋ\

Image: freeimages.com

Image: freeimages.com

noun: a woman having intellectual or literary interests

"The author is a bluestocking, with a weakness for etymology and archaic religious texts." Kathryn Harrison, The New York Times Book Review, December 21, 2008

Did you know..?

In mid-18th century England, a group of ladies decided to replace evenings of card playing and idle chatter with 'conversation parties', inviting illustrious men of letters to discuss literary and intellectual topics with them. One regular guest was scholar-botanist Benjamin Stillingfleet. His hostesses were willing to overlook his cheap blue worsted stockings (which were usually disdained by the elite) in order to have the benefit of his lively conversation. Those who considered it inappropriate for women to aspire to learning derisively called the group the Blue Stocking Society. The women who were the original bluestockings rose above the attempted put-down and adopted the epithet as a name for members of their society.

This is taken from 365 New Words-A-Year 2015 Page-A-Day Calendar
pageaday.com 

Witshop: This is where I work

Jake and Freya of Witshop, designers and makers of stationery and homeware, invite Ernest into their Brighton home and workshop to discuss Serial addiction, work-life balance and lunchtime dips in the Channel.

Tell us about your workspace?

We  have two workspaces. The desk area is where we plan how to take over the world through stationery! We discuss ideas and envisage what we want to do. With that in mind we have surrounded our desk area with things we like and inspire us, to get in the right mindset. The other area is dedicated to compiling and storage. We built a handy tall, wide desk, which is perfect for keeping all the things we need to put together orders. We spend many an hour at this  ‘station’ packing boxes ready to go out to our lovely customers and stockists.

What's good about working from home?

The biggest advantage is we’re always very close to work  and can work all hours when needed. But this can also be a negative as work-life boundaries get intermingled, which is why a separate studio will be great. We are looking to share with other talented Brighton artists, designers and makers and we look forward to this helping build our network of friendly coastal creatives.

Do you prefer your workspace clean and minimalist or cluttered and haphazard?

Theres two sides to this one. Jake likes clean and minimal while Freya tends towards the cluttered, so the workspace is a mixture of clean, organised and full. Everything is purpose built, which really helps as it means everything we need is close to hand and easy to use. We are very organised and everything has a set place – it has to be that way when working from home!

What do you listen to?

There is always something playing. We usually spend the day with music. Current favourite artists include Agnes Obel, Baxter Dury, Daniel Avery, John Talabot and Plaid. We sometimes put on  Radio 4 (got to love Woman’s Hour) or Radio 6 because we’re ‘alternative’. When we are doing a lot of compiling we also like to listen to audiobooks or podcasts and be drawn into a story. A recent podcast we couldn’t turn off  was Serial.

What do you usually do for lunch?

We have lunch here. Eggs are a WitShop staple as there are so many ways to eat them! We then try to get outside for half an hour. We live 632 steps from the sea so that is always the destination. Seeing that open expanse and the brilliance of nature never fails to clear your mind and help refocus. In the summer months we often take a packed lunch to the beach and have a swim but it can be hard to leave again!

What books are on your shelves?

We have a bookcase for novels, which often consists of crime thrillers like Henning Mankell and Jo Nesbo.  Our other book case is a multitude of design books, from Taschen picture books to factual materials and process encyclopaedias to Gestalten greats like Northern Delights. We love to travel and have a collection of Lonely Planets, which we often open to reminisce or plan adventures. We love cooking so there are various cookbooks around, we are particularly enjoying Rick Stein's India book, which takes us back to our travels there.

What's on your walls?

At the moment we have a great A-Z poster by Sara Ball for Beltz & Geldberg, which we picked up in Munich. It has animal drawings for each letter, though they are in German so we learn from it as well! We recently made a big pin board to keep collected inspirational imagery and graphics and ideas we are considering. There is a portrait of Jake, which was done by a unusual Leeds artist by the name of Tony Tomlin.  There is a Pinboard Calendar and a Paper Clock – both our own products. The Paper Clock was a popular item we once produced in a small batch, but it was too labour intensive. Watch this space for mark two! There are a couple more pieces of work including one by Jake’s artist mother and one by the illustrator James Brown called Cloud Classification, which we bought from our favourite Brighton shop Dowse.

If your workspace walls could talk, what would they say?

Design and produce good work!  We surround ourselves with work that is not necessarily in a style we aspire to but the execution of it all is succinct. This inspires us in developing our brand and keeps us aiming high. Freya recently put up a a statement on the wall that speaks to us every day. It says “Don’t be obstructive just be constructive”. Sometimes you just have to go for things without over thinking them and don’t let negative thoughts hold you back.

Discover more about Witshop and their design-led stationery and homeware in our online directory.

This is a sponsored blog post, created in collaboration with Witshop. For more information on partnerships and joining our directory please email advertise@ernestjournal.co.uk.