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52 Educators providing Courses

Get Cooking, Cookery School

get cooking, cookery school

5.0(20)

Leeds

A home cooking school Get Cooking is about you discovering the home cook in you, your passion for food that you can enjoy, show off and share. Whether you’re a beginner or advanced in the kitchen, if you want to cook fantastic food we can help. Delicious dishes that impress don’t have to be complicated, the simplest combinations can be the best, turning your mealtimes into the ultimate pleasure. Each class or event is always a personal one teaching you simple, homemade and classic dishes to indulge in. New culinary skills are taught using fresh and wholesome ingredients – delivered to you in an accessible and friendly way. Our cooking classes range from Mediterranean, Spanish, Italian and South Asian to craft ale brewing, breadmaking, slow cooking, vegetarian and vegan. We offer half, full day and evening classes including a new range of fast cooking courses where you’ll learn quick and easy dishes to fit into your busy lifestyles. Crafting and wellness To us, the principles of home cooking extend throughout home and lifestyle. That’s why, if you love making food, drink and beautiful dishes we’re sure you’ll enjoy our crafting and wellbeing workshops too. Get Cooking is about doing more of what you love whatever that might be. Come to us looking for a cooking course and you might end up booking on a herbalism & natural cosmetic making workshop! Whatever you choose you’ll learn new skills and take something you’ve made home with you. Team building events, parties and our venue Whether it’s just you, a group of friends or a team; we want you to feel at home with us. We offer team building events for businesses and private parties centred around cooking and crafting. Located in the vibrant area of Farsley, Leeds – a creative district with a growing number of independent businesses and eateries – we are easily accessible from other areas of Leeds and Bradford.

Antur Cymuned Brithdir Mawr Cyfyngedig

antur cymuned brithdir mawr cyfyngedig

Sir Benfro

We have always had working horses on site. A family of four coloured gypsy cobs were rescued and brought here, with hopes of training up the two youngsters to take over. The two parents have retired and moved elsewhere and training has begun on the other two so that they can help us with carting, wood extraction and other jobs. We also have four dairy goats, a good flock of chickens and ducks as well as three rowdy geese. We currently have one colony of bees after not having a bee keeper for a couple of years, we’re hoping to increase this over the next couple of years. There are compromises involved in any animal farming system and we try to meet these in an ethical manner that everyone can agree with. We have cats to keep the rodents in check and some of us have dogs. The land is fantastic for wildlife, we have a huge range of residents including badgers, foxes, owls, dormice, bats, buzzards, frogs and newts. We probably have less animals in total than most farms, but we look at our animals differently to most farms. All the stock is free-range and what we ask of them seems to us a fair exchange for their food, security and comfort. We milk our nanny goats morning and evening, which is enough for all the goat milk drinkers plus enough extra from Spring until Autumn to make fresh cheese. The chickens have a large enclosure where they are free-range and they produce enough eggs in the longer days for all our needs. The ducks are Khaki Campbells, highly trained slug-killers, which patrol the organic gardens keeping them relatively pest-free. The dogs and cats are family pets, but their very presence around the yard tends to keep foxes and other predators away from the poultry. We rent some of our land for short periods to local farmers to graze their animals. We raise geese to graze the orchards and to generate a bit of income by selling young birds. Many of us eat meat which is produced as a by-product of the milk and eggs, that is to say excess billy goats, cockerels and ganders. We have been keeping sheep in recent years for meat, although we don’t currently have any at the moment but are looking into how we can better managed our grassland to produce meat. One of our members also keeps pigs, they are used to clear land for vegetable growing and used to graze wider areas for conservation. They are fed on organic grain grown in Pembrokeshire and waste whey from a local cheesemaker, and occasional brewers grains from a local brewery as well as fresh organic fruit and veg waste from local shops. In general communal meals are vegetarian but when we do eat meat there is normally a vegetarian / vegan option.