r/Wiltshire

▲ 23 r/Wiltshire+40 crossposts

I stumbled across this book from another post recently that completely changed how I think about food.

We’re so used to fridges, supermarkets, and next day delivery that I honestly never stopped to think about how people actually ate before all that existed. This book is basically a collection of old recipes that were designed to last months or even years without refrigeration. The same kind of food our great grandparents (and great great grandparents) relied on.

What surprised me most wasn’t even the recipes, it was the mindset. Everything was about making food stretch, using what you had, and not relying on systems that could disappear overnight. Reading it made me realize how dependent we are now compared to even a couple generations ago.

I’ve tried a handful of the recipes so far. Some are definitely outside my normal rotation, but a few were genuinely good and oddly satisfying knowing they’d keep without power or fancy storage.

It’s less of a cookbook and more of a little history lesson disguised as one. Made me appreciate how resilient people used to be, especially when it came to food. I wanted to make this post as a bit of a shoutout to the creators for putting it together and the person who shared it here a couple months back (I couldn't find the old post to go back and comment).

Here's the website I bought the cookbook from, it's a pretty niche book so I don't think it's available on any mainstream platforms - survivalsuppers.com

u/-plss- — 19 hours ago
▲ 28 r/Wiltshire+1 crossposts

I’m a Swindon local and I built a site to help us swap stuff for free. Would love some feedback!

Hi everyone,

I live over in Coate and I’ve been working on a project called Swapze (swapze.com).

I got fed up with the fees on eBay and the general sketchiness of FB Marketplace lately, so I wanted to build something just for swapping and trading items directly.

It’s still very much in the "early days" and I'm looking for my first 10-20 users to help me test if it actually works for people here. If you have 5 minutes to take a look or even list one random thing you were going to bin/donate anyway, I’d really appreciate it.

No pressure at all, just trying to build something useful for the town! If you have ideas on how to make it better, please let me know.

I've also got a bunch of flyers that I would like to distribute, so if anyone knows any good places/noticeboards I can put some on, that would be awesome!

Cheers!

[EDIT]

I am more than happy to negotiate something in return for the first few people to list some items up 😄 Just give me a shout and can work something out

u/Capable_Newspaper646 — 4 days ago

How is living in Marlborough? 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

I’ve been researching Marlborough as a place to live as there’s a potential job opportunity I’m considering there.

I am Canadian, female, single, in early 30’s. How is it to live there for someone who doesn’t have a family? How welcoming is it to newcomers? Is it easy to meet people? I don’t necessarily mean dating but just making friends and building community. I like a relatively peaceful, quiet life but also like to go out occasionally for a drink, dinner, live music or art event. I don’t care for nightclubs but it’s nice when a place feels lively and has things going on, and if you want to go out for a drink with friends there is an atmosphere for that.

I am an artist and designer so I like that Marlborough has a lot of independent businesses and shops with some notable art & design presence (galleries and studios). Plus the lit fest, jazz fest, market, independent cinema. And forest and nature trails. Pedestrian-friendly is important to me.

Anyway, curious to hear from those who are familiar with it!

reddit.com
u/monette131 — 7 days ago