How to Use the Versatile Blogger Award to Grow Your Blog

 

May was a rewarding month here at Legge Towers. Cath, who blogs at For Bella and Will, kindly nominated me for the Versatile Blogger Award. I’m grateful to her—this is a lovely chance to highlight blogs I enjoy and share a few personal details. The rules of acceptance are simple:

  • Thank the person who nominated you.
  • Include a link to their blog.
  • Select 15 blogs you follow or have recently discovered.
  • Nominate those 15 bloggers for the Versatile Blogger Award.
  • Tell the person who nominated you seven things about yourself.
  • Include this set of rules in your post.
  • Inform each nominated blogger of their nomination by commenting on their blog.

Versatile blogs to follow

Here are the blogs I’m nominating for the Versatile Blogger Award. Each one is a source of inspiration, knowledge or pleasure.

  • Radix Rootcrops — Owen Smith writes with botanical expertise and wry humour about new and unusual crops, particularly South American species. His posts are informative, generous with knowledge and occasionally hilarious.
  • Emma Cooper — An author, podcaster and sustainable garden enthusiast, Emma writes regularly about gardening and ethnobotany. She’s about to begin a Masters in Ethnobotany, and I’m keen to follow her journey.
  • Gregoire Michaud — A pastry chef whose work is astonishing in its beauty and precision. His blog and photography showcase culinary artistry and inventive flavour combinations that are breathtaking.
  • A Forkful of Spaghetti and A Kentish Kitchen — Helen offers delicious, well-tested recipes, restaurant reviews and warm, witty writing across these two blogs. Both are must-reads for home cooks and food lovers.
  • Thane Prince — A talented food writer and teacher, Thane writes about elegant, simple cooking with excellent ingredients. Her restaurant reviews are perceptive and useful.
  • It’sNotFingRocketScience — Hazel Paterson’s blog combines eclectic career experience with sharp, amusing writing about food and drink. The posts include recipes, reviews and engaging photography.
  • Weekend Bakery — Ed and Marieke provide one of the best online resources for bread baking. Their thorough testing, clear instructions, photography and videos make their recipes accessible and reliable.
  • Chocolate Log Blog — Choclette writes passionately and precisely about chocolate and baking. Her blog is the go-to destination for chocolate-inspired baking and ideas.
  • SmarterFitter — Monica Shaw focuses on healthy living through real food and simple cooking. Her recipes encourage experimentation and calm confidence in the kitchen, and the blog is visually appealing.
  • Azelia’s Kitchen — Azelia offers a treasure trove of recipes, tips, reviews and food science. She’s prolific, curious and tenacious—especially in exploring sourdough—and her photography is consistently strong.
  • Pukka Paki — Summaya’s blog is an excellent resource for Pakistani home cooking, combining recipes with cultural context and beautiful photography. It’s informative and engaging.
  • Zeb Bakes — Joanna mixes baking, sculpture, natural history and local life into an eclectic and thoughtful blog. She shares successes and failures with honesty, which makes her posts especially helpful.
  • Veg Plotting — Michelle Chapman curates a wide-ranging hub for gardening content: tips, recipes, reviews and resources. It’s a useful and varied place for anyone interested in growing food.
  • Permaculture Magazine — A rich resource for permaculture and sustainable living, featuring thought-provoking articles, practical tips and inspiring projects. I’ve contributed here and value the breadth of material.

Seven things about me

  1. I don’t like wearing socks; it generally has to be very cold before I give in. I do wear them with walking boots.
  2. I once filled in for a friend on an interview for Irish radio station Spin 103.8 FM about survival skills. It was an odd and memorable experience, and I particularly remember joking about procreation and nuclear war.
  3. I can use a sewing machine and have made dresses, skirts, shirts, trousers, fleeces and dry bags for myself and Debs.
  4. I do pen line drawings.
  5. I used to have a moustache; I’m much better now.
  6. I handmade all our kitchen units to fit an unusually shaped space. We washed up in the bath for six months while I built them.
  7. If I didn’t live where I do now, I think I’d like to live in Corsica.

Thanks for reading. If you made it this far, let me know what you think in the comments below.