A pair of keen allotmenteers offer a guide to growing new plants from veg cuttings, fruit stones and pips. When you’re depositing your kitchen scraps – including old spuds, vegetable seeds and stones – in the bin, or on the compost heap, think again. There are many things you can grow again from food waste, insist gardening duo and allotmenteers Paul Anderton and Robin Daly, known on Instagram as Two Dirty Boys. “Regrowing scraps and cuttings can reward you with fresh homegrown food which can help reduce your grocery bill,” say the pair in their new book Regrown. “When we first started the process of regrowing, we did so in such small quantities that the cuttings generated just about enough food for Barbie’s brunch. However, if you get into the habit of continually saving potential plants before they get to your compost bin, you’ll find you are rewarded with a decent-sized harvest when the time comes.”
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1/1 TWO men have been fined after inspectors found rusty equipment and filthy conditions in their Bradford pie manufacturing business. Neil Anderton and Paul Anderton appeared at Bradford and Keighley Magistrates Court on Tuesday, pleading guilty to a number of food hygiene charges, and were each fined over £2,700. The charges stem from an inspection of their business, WH & S Anderton and Sons, based at Bowling Court, on November 1 2019. The business manufactures pork pies, and supplies cafes, shops, pubs and working men’s clubs across Bradford. It produces on average 1,800 pies and pastries a week. Bradford Council had issued a caution to the business earlier that year due to concerns over cleanliness, and during the November inspection found a number of issues.