Drinks of the Month

Wildpress: apple juice reimagined
One of the crops that grows really well in this country is apples so it’s great to see a producer taking the whole experience of apple juice to a higher level.
Wildpress is a joint venture between Nadeem Lalani Nanjuwany and Adam Grout that uses heritage apples from uncultivated orchards to make a deliciously distinctive (and beautifully packaged) range of juices.
Some are made from one variety and others blended
I particularly liked two of the juices that came from Waltham Palace in Berkshire, Monarch, which has a lovely soft, sweet apple flavour like an apple compote and Spartan which has more of the flavour of a russet apple and is sweeter, almost like a dessert wine - in fact I thought it might go with a crumble. (you can buy a mixed case of the Waltham Palace juices for £41.50)
I also tasted the Rebel Harvest - a full-flavoured deeply appley blend of James Grieve,May Queen and D’Arcy Spice which, as they say, sounds like members of an ageing rock band and Adam’s Pearmain, known as AP, which is drier, sharper and I thought would go well with fish. Both come from Shires Farm in Lincolnshire.
I’ve never been particularly drawn to apple juice as a partner for food - I generally find it too cloyingly sweet but these were wonderfully fresh and natural tasting. For the quality they’re amazingly reasonable and come in full-sized bottles that would look great on the table.
If you can access the Telegraph you can read Xanthe Clay’s piece about the Wildpress project here.
I received the juices as a press sample.

Drink of the week: Cawston Press Apple and Rhubarb Juice
I’m continually on the lookout for soft drinks that are not too sweet as I know there’s a big demand for them. This isn’t perfect - it’s still a fruit juice so quite high in sugar - but it is genuinely refreshing.
It’s made by Cawston Vale, a British firm which uses pressed fruit rather than concentrate. The rhubarb gives it a lovely fresh tartness (rhubarb haters needn’t worry - there’s only 10% so it still tastes mainly of apple) which would make it delicious partner for a cheese or chicken salad or even with grilled oily fish like mackerel. It would also make a refreshing breakfast juice
If you don’t want to put a carton on the table just decant it into a jug with some ice, and a few slices of apple, cucumber and lemon - maybe even a sprig of mint.
You can buy it for around £2 a litre in Sainsbury’s, Tesco and Waitrose while Morrisons mysteriously charges £2.17
* On the plus side it contains 38g of Vitamin C which is a third of your recommended daily intake.
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