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The Smith Family supporting disadvantaged kids

The Smith Family supporting disadvantaged kids

When the Smith Family asked 1000 Australian children what they wanted to be when they grew up, the answers weren’t all that different.

No matter what their background, all 1000 children said they had high hopes for the future.

Unfortunately, the reality is many disadvantaged kids won’t have the opportunity to reach their potential, due to a lack of educational resources and support.

But with the help of singer-cum-radio host, Ricki-Lee Coulter, and celebrity chef Matt Moran, the Smith Family is seeking to level the playing field for more than 30,000 disadvantaged students nationally.

The message? To spread awareness and let people know the importance of giving to the 2010 Winter Appeal.

To show your support, visit www.thesmithfamily.com.au.

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Neil Perry give MasterChef’s Matt a go outside the reality cooking show

Neil Perry give MasterChef's Matt a go outside the reality cooking show

He was tipped as a favourite to take out the MasterChef title, but recently eliminated 21-year-old contestant Matthew Caldicott tells Woman’s Day how the show has helped him explore a career in the food industry.

You guys have been filming since late last year. What has it been like being out of the MasterChef house? Is it hard to adjust after being in there so long?

It’s a little bit strange being home with the family but it’s good to be back home and back in my own kitchen. It’s less stressful back here. I’m having fun.

How have you been keeping yourself busy?

I’ve been doing some work experience. I’ve been doing some catering for functions. I did a food demo last week, just trying to write my blog and get that back up for when the show’s finished.

A lot of the other contestants want to start up their own restaurants. Is that something you’re looking to try in the future?

I would like to, however I am still young. I don’t really have the capital behind me to do that. I’ve been talking with some of the other people in the competition and there might be a chance of opening a restaurant down the track with Dom. At the moment I just need to start training so that I actually know how to run a kitchen.

Are you completely focused on food now? Have you stopped working in accounting?

I’m still employed by the accounting company. I haven’t worked there since I started this but I’m just trying to work out my options. I’ve got so many things going on and have so many awesome avenues to take.

Has MasterChef opened any particular avenues for you in terms of achieving your dream? Or is it mostly your own doing?

I met Neil Perry through the show and I’ve done quite a bit of work experience with him in his restaurants in Sydney. That was awesome — to be able to meet him and do that stuff. In terms of other avenues, I think once me being eliminated is aired on the show some more stuff will come to me. I’m looking forward to seeing what that is. But most of the stuff I’ve done more proactively on my own.

When did you realise that working with food is something you wanted to pursue as a career?

I think last year when I was at work I was sort of looking at cookbooks and on the websites trying to get different recipes. But in terms of going on the show, I was having a party with some friends from uni that I hadn’t seen in a couple of months and I was making all this crazy stuff and they were like, ‘Dude you should be on MasterChef!’ I hadn’t watched the first season. They suggested it to me and I watched a couple of episodes online from the finals and I thought ‘I could do that’. So I applied and here I am … top nine.

You’ve made it pretty far! Were you shocked to make it this far? Are you happy with how far you came?

Yeah, I was pretty shocked to have made it this far but I thought I could have gone a bit further. But to get to number nine with all the talent that has been in this season is pretty awesome.

You were one of the youngest contestants on the show. Did you learn a lot from the older contestants?

Definitely. I think one of the biggest things that I struggled with was just tasting food and seasoning it properly and Asian food as well. But Marion and Alvin have amazing Asian palettes to balance food on and they taught me how to and I was stoked about that. I was able to help them out with desserts and stuff as well.

Did you find it strange, competing with one another but then also wanting to help one another?

We all wanted to help one another. I mean, as much as it’s a competition it’s also like a small family in there. You’re going through the same things every day and they’re pretty intense things that you’re doing. You never really think, ‘I don’t want to help this person because they might beat me.’ It’s just like helping out one of your good friends.

Who were your good friends in the house? Were there particular people you were close to?

Callum.

Was that just because you guys were around the same age, or did you have a lot in common?

Yeah, definitely. We roomed together since top 50 and then we were in the same room in the house and we had similar ideas about food. We both really liked desserts and interested in plating food up nicely.

He’s from South Australia and I’m from Sydney, two totally different walks of life, but we were really similar. We love sport and our personalities were quite similar so it was easy to get along.

Do you think you’ll stay in touch with any of the other contestants?

Yeah. I’ll definitely stay in contact with Cal. Dom as well and I’ve met up with him a couple of times. Joe as well, Fiona from Melbourne and I’ve been to Melbourne a couple of times and caught up with her for a coffee and stuff. I was friends with everyone.

For me, I’m so young so I don’t really have any qualms with anyone. I’m pretty chilled out and relaxed so I was friends with everyone basically. So it was great.

A lot of the other contestants were saying it was hard because they missed their families and everything. Do you think it was easier for you because you’re young and you don’t have a girlfriend or kids?

For sure. No girlfriend. I could just focus on the food. And I didn’t have a mortgage or kids. Obviously my family was back home and I’ve got a little puppy that I was missing; he’s not really a puppy he’s actually like 11. It was a lot easier for me. I wasn’t worried at all.

Who should win the competition and why?

I really hope that Callum goes as far as absolutely possible, but in terms of who I think is going to win — I’ve said it from early in the top 50: Adam. He’s pretty amazing, he’s got a diverse range of skills. I think he underestimates his abilities. Jono is also awesome. I reckon the final will be Jono and Adam.

Have you had a chance to watch much of it back?

I’ve been watching a bit. Not much though.

It’s sort of hard to avoid though isn’t it?

Yeah, I was in the pub last night to meet up with a mate and the pub had MasterChef on! [Laughs] I didn’t come to the pub to watch myself on TV. We probably went to the only pub in Sydney that shows MasterChef.

Can you pinpoint the most important thing you’ve learnt from your time on MasterChef?

Probably tasting your food while you’re cooking it. If you don’t taste it as you’re going you don’t know what your food is going to taste like. I think I’ve come really far in terms of seasoning food properly and knowing the balance of flavour so I think as a cook I’m definitely a lot better from being on the show.

With the time limits and so on, is it hard to taste as you’re going? Or are you always aware of what your dish tastes like by the time it gets to the judges?

It’s quite difficult, especially if there’s like a half-hour challenge or something. But I think you always need to carry a spoon around with you so you can just dip it in quickly and see how it’s going and how the balance of flavour is.

I never thought about it back when I started, just balancing flavours. It was all just going by the recipe and just making it as the recipe says. But things change every time you cook. The garlic might be a bit more fragrant this time than it was last time you did it. Or the chilli might be a bit hotter, so you need to keep tasting it.

Otherwise, you could have something that is more dominant than the other thing. Tasting has definitely improved my cooking skills tenfold. So if I get nothing else out of it, I’m definitely a better cook from it.

What is the most memorable comment you received from the judges?

Definitely that Rick Stein said he would have served my seafood platter in his restaurant. That’s a pretty huge compliment. I remember watching Rick Stein on television. The thing that got me cooking was when we got Foxtel I started watching the Food Channel for like four hours a day.

I’d be at uni and watch Rick Stein cooking something or just seeing other chefs and thinking, ‘Wow, they really love what they’re doing.’ So I started trying to cook hard stuff and it was one of those things where I tried to test my limits in the kitchen.

What age did you start cooking, just while you were at uni?

Yeah, while I was at uni I started going to the gym and started trying to cook healthy meals. Then I started watching the TV shows and started putting butter and cream into everything I made and started making desserts.

So your cooking went from trying to be healthy to desserts?

Yep, to desserts — as much chocolate as I could melt and as much cream as I could boil and making ice-creams and mousses.

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*MasterChef*’s Sharnee says she loves being a foodie!

MasterChef's Sharnee says the food industry doos have opened up!

She was one of the youngest contestants in MasterChef, now 21-year-old Sharnee Rawson tells Woman’s Day her next step in the food industry and which fellow competitors inspired her during the competition.

Has it been strange adjusting to reality since leaving the house?

Yeah, it has! There’s so much freedom [laughs] obviously it’s nice waking up and not having to be on camera every day. That’s something you never quite get used to so it’s been really lovely coming home.

What have you been up to since?

Yeah, quite a few things. I’ve definitely thrown myself into the food industry. My primary focus has been working with my mum’s catering company full-time at Chow Baby on the Sunshine Coast.

We’ve been doing revamps of the menu’s and focusing on expanding the company. As well as that I’ve been working part-time as an assistant at a cooking school and I’ve also been doing lots of work experience and food writing which has been really fun.

Has MasterChef opened any of those doors for you?

Yeah, absolutely. I think with the catering company with mum, I just needed a push to start so it’s definitely given me that. But in terms of the food writing, I don’t think I’d have the opportunities I have at the moment without being able to say ‘Yep, I was top 10 MasterChef and I’m here to work hard.’ I wouldn’t be able to do all the stuff I’m doing without it.

What made you audition for MasterChef? Did you watch the first season?

I watched it a little bit. But I think it was just that I was doing law and my heart wasn’t in it and I really had this passion for food but I didn’t really know what I wanted to do with myself. So MasterChef was just a really good opportunity to explore it and all the different avenues it can take you in.

Wwhat made you choose to study law?

I’ve always had a really strong sense of justice and what’s wrong and right and I think that kind of led me into a legal field. I also had a really strong interest in politics. I represented Queensland in new parliament when I was younger and it was kind of a natural progression, especially when I got the marks to get into a law degree and I got a scholarship. That was the path I took myself in.

Do you think you’ll go back to law or are you dedicated to food now?

I’ve been thinking about going back to study part-time next semester and I just don’t know if I can get my head there. I’m loving what I’m doing and I’m enjoying myself so much I’m not sure if I can go back to something I don’t have the passion for.

You were one of the youngest contestants on the show. Are you happy with how far you came in the competition?

Absolutely! Number 10 out of 8000 people, you’ve just got to be happy with it. I don’t think there is any possible negative thing I could say. And I think my pressure test was a bit of an atrocious performance but overall I’m so proud of myself and I’m so happy with how I went on the show.

Being one of the youngest, do you think you had more to learn then the older ones?

Yeah, but you learn a lot from them and the judges and the challenges. The other contestants are an excellent resource as well. They’ve obviously been cooking a bit longer than I have, some of them have done travel or different cooking courses. There’s a whole bank of information there that you’d be silly not to use.

Did anyone hold out on you? Because you are all competing against one another.

I’d love to say yes but the truth is everyone was really helpful and we did all share knowledge. It’s a sad and boring truth [laughs].

Who were you closest to in the house?

I was close to a lot of people who left fairly early on. I loved Devon and Sarah, who were kind of gone in the first week. And during the competition I got really close to Skye and Jake as well.

And Skye left just before you?

Yeah, it was sad. We were both the Queensland girls!

Do you think you’ll stay in touch with any of the other contestants? Or have you?

Yeah, absolutely. I have it’s been great. It’s really funny texting each other through the show.

Who should win the competition and why?

I’ve got two favourites that are left in the running and I think Callum and Adam would both be great Masterchefs. Callum because he inspires himself so much and he is definitely the most dedicated contestant. And Adam does really brilliant food and has a real interest in it and he can put his own little quirky twist on things, which is really fantastic. Either of those two.

You’ve obviously learnt heaps but can you pinpoint the most important thing you’ve taken from your time on MasterChef?

Yeah, it’s going to start a little bit cheesy, but really trust yourself. First instincts kick in for a reason and they’re normally the right ones so trust yourself, have some confidence, go with your instincts and it normally all works out right. And it can kind of be applied to everything in life but for me it applies really well to food as well.

Do you think that’s what let you down in the pressure test?

Definitely. That was a big learning curve that pressure test, even though it was a bit late.

What was hardest for you in the competition?

The pantry picks were the worst.

What is the most memorable comment you received from the judges?

I don’t know if it made it to TV but Matt Preston said I’m in intelligent cook and you could see the way I thought out my dishes. So I think about food in an intelligent way and that for me was a brilliant comment.

What was your most memorable challenge?

The cruise ship was pretty epic but definitely a very intense situation. And the kids’ party was a lot of fun, even though I was on the losing team.

What was your biggest achievement?

Making it to top 10.

Did you expect to make it that far?

No. I didn’t think I’d get into the top 24 let alone the top 10. I feel extremely honoured.

I read somewhere that in maths class you used to write sample menus on the back of your book instead of listening to the teacher. What would be on your ideal cafe menu?

[Laughs] I did. I’d love to do it one day but it’s not an immediate goal. I’m thinking about but it’ll always be in the back of my head. I love a good lazy Sunday breakfast. When you go to Sydney and Melbourne a lot of cafes do all-day breakfasts but in Queensland after 11 o’clock there are none to be seen!

I would love to have really gorgeous house-made muesli with dried figs and some yoghurt then I’d love to do really good quality fresh stuff with a menu that changes every day. That would be pretty perfect for me.

Do you still have any of those books from high school?

No. After year 12 I destroyed all my books [laughs].

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I want my husband to earn more money

Image source: Getty - posed by models

Image source: Getty - posed by models

We’re both going to be 30 this year and I think we should be doing a bit more planning for our future, because in the past we’ve discussed having a family and moving to a house in an area where there’s good schools.

The problem is that we both earn about the same amount, which is fine for the way we live just now but not so good if we make those changes. I would like to have a baby in the next year and to work part time, which we couldn’t afford on our present salaries. It’s also harder to get a mortgage now so moving to a house wouldn’t be that simple.

My husband won’t apply for a manager’s post at his work, which would give him a much bigger salary. There are two jobs coming up at that level and he’s been with his company for seven years so he should have a good chance at one of them but he says he doesn’t want the responsibility, wouldn’t enjoy the work and it would mean that he was in charge of some of his friends.

I’m sick of talking about it and he refuses to change his mind but I think he’d like it once he got used to it and it would make all the difference to us and the future. My best friend’s husband works very long days but she says it’s worth it because he earns so much. How can I persuade my husband to go for this job?

You could save for a couple of years so you have money put by for having a baby, earn more money yourself or consider whether your husband might be the one who would opt for working part time if you have a family.

If he really isn’t comfortable going for this promotion then stop going on about it and starting talking, planning and acting like a team.

Don’t compare yourself with other people’s situations unless it’s to assess honestly how they live would work in your own relationship.

There is always a certain amount of juggling necessary when it comes to planning for the future, whether that involves work or family, but you cannot be making demands instead of working this out together. Slow down, have an honest and non-bullying conversation with your husband and decide on your future plans together.

Picture posed by models.

Your say: Have you experienced a similar problem? How did you deal with it? Tell us your story below…

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Take your thyme

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Getty Images

Red wine lovers can happily justify moderate tippling, thanks to the impressive body of research which indicates that one of its key components, resveratrol, interferes with the action of the inflammation-producing COX-2 enzyme, which is linked to a host of health disorders, including cancer and heart disease.

However, people who don’t drink or who don’t like red wine may also be able to achieve a similar effect with certain essential oils. In a study published in the Journal of Lipid Research, Japanese scientists have found that thyme, rose, clove, fennel, eucalyptus and bergamot essential oils all had the ability to reduce COX-2 activity in cells. Thyme oil had the most dramatic effect, decreasing COX-2 levels by nearly 75 percent.

The researchers concluded that a chemical called carvacrol, which is particularly prevalent in thyme oil, was responsible for the anti-inflammatory effect, and they also suggest that it may provide the basis for future anti-inflammatory drugs.

Your say: How do you look after your health? Share with us below.

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What are my rights as a new mum?

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Having a baby? Then find out about your maternity leave entitlements.

Government-paid maternity leave around the world varies from 68 weeks in Sweden to 39 weeks in the UK and 12 weeks in China to no weeks in the US and Australia.

Last year, there was a lot of talk about the federal government introducing an 18-week paid maternity leave scheme. But there’s no funding for the scheme in next year’s budget, so where does that leave our mums-to-be?

If you have been working full-time or part-time for 12 months with your employer, you are entitled to take up to 52 weeks of unpaid maternity leave. If you’re a casual, you need to have worked on a regular basis for 12 months and intend going back to your job. Maternity leave is guaranteed under the law.

When your child is born, your partner is entitled to take “short paternity leave” for up to a week. If your partner plans on being the primary carer and you are returning to work, then “extended paternity leave” is allowed for up to 51 weeks. But both of you can’t be on leave at the same time. If, for example, you have six weeks off after the birth, your partner will only be entitled to 46 weeks when you return to work.

Unless your company has a policy or it’s stipulated in your employment contract, maternity leave is unpaid. However, a lot more companies are starting to offer paid maternity leave.

Check with your employer, but generally you need to give a letter of intent to take leave, supplying your start and finish dates and any dates requested by your partner for paternity leave.

Notice periods vary from four to 10 weeks. If you intend to work up until the birth, you may need to provide a medical certificate indicating you’re fit to work. If your baby comes early, notify your employer in writing within two weeks of the birth.

Make sure you give your employer a letter of intent with a return date before you start your leave. If the date changes, notify your work in writing. When you go back to work, it should be to the same job, but if this isn’t possible, it must be a similar job.

For more information, visit www.workplace.gov.au. Support paid maternity leave at www.nfaw.org/paid-maternity-leave. .

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Demi Moore closer to closing book deal

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Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher

Queen of the cougars, Demi Moore, is one step closer to telling all about her life, career and relationships in her autobiography.

The 47-year-old has signed a US$2 million ($2.3 million) deal to write a tell-all book for publisher HarperCollins, CrainsNewYorkBusiness.com reported last month .

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The book will reportedly detail Moore’s complicated relationship with her mother, Virginia King, marriage to Bruce Willis and relationship with current husband Ashton Kutcher.

Your say: Would you read Demi Moore’s autobiography?

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I’m Over All That

I'm All Over That

Win our Book of the Month

Be one of the first 25 people to sign up to the Simon & Schuster monthly update and correctly answer the competition question for your chance to win a free book!

About the book

At a certain time in life, we all come to realise what is truly important to us and what just doesn’t matter. For Shirley MacLaine, that time is now. In this wise, witty and fearless collection of small observations and big-pictured questions she spells out exactly what she’s “over” in life and some of the things she isn’t.

An Oscar, three-time Emmy, and ten time Golden Globe-winning actress, Shirley has appeared in more than fifty films including Valentine’s Day, Rumor Has It, In Her Shoes, Steel Magnolias, Guarding Tess, and Postcards from the Edge, and received the Oscar for Best Actress in 1984 Terms of Endearment).

In her overture to I’M OVER ALL THAT Shirley writes that all of life, even the cruelest drama and most absurd comedy, is a form of show business, a kind of performance, and she’s been lucky enough to have created the moving picture show of her own life.

“In this third act of my life,” Shirley says, “a lot has become clearer to me. So much is over…and I am over so much.”

She’s learned to ease up on worry, scheming for films or roles, planning for better surroundings, and feeling anger at leaders who operate politically rather than humanely. Yes, she says, she’s over all that. She’s also over listening to advertisements, the latest fashions (not that she was ever much into that), events she should attend in order to be seen, and red carpet madness.

After seventy-six ‘adventure-peppered’ years of life and decades as Hollywood royalty, nobody is more qualified than Shirley MacLaine to call it as she sees it.

Some of her passionate and no-holds-barred topics include:

  • I’m Over Being Concerned About What I Shouldn’t Do

  • I Will Never Get Over Africa

  • I’m Not Over Good Lighting

  • I’m Over Fear Being Taught In the Name of Religion

  • I Am Over Being Polite to Boring People

  • Aging in Hollywood?!? Get Over it!

  • I’m Trying to Get Over Anger

  • Sex Got Over Me

  • I Can’t Remember If I’m Over Memory Loss

I’m Over All That is out now.

To read the first chapter of of I’m Over All That click here.

To purchase I’m Over All That click here.

To join the AWW and Simon & Schuster book club and chat about our books online click here.

To read about previously featured Simon & Schuster book titles visit The Registrars Manual for Detecting Forced Marriages and Left Neglected.

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Considering a balance transfer

It's all fun and games until the bills start rolling in. Is it time for you to switch to a low-rate balance transfer credit card?
distressed woman with credit cards

If you’re like most women, you probably have a credit card or two and seek pleasure in using it for purchases that you can’t really afford right now.

It’s because of our love affair with the power of credit, the feeling of freedom and the independence we have over our finances to be able to choose whether we want that cute black cashmere in purple as well.

And then when all the fun is over and the bill arrives in the mail, the money-savvy spenders jump online and look to switching their high interest credit card for low balance transfers.

Balance transfer credit cards can be very useful for getting rid of your debt quickly if you don’t use the card for spending. With rates as low as 0 percent for six months by HSBC, for example, no wonder many women are rushing out to move their debts and make the most of these low rates.

Credit cards are one of the easiest financial products to open, close and switch around — especially with so many providers on the market competing for your business. All you need to do is compare deals and click the apply button online at comparison sites such as RateCity and before you know it you will have a new credit card in your letterbox.

The danger to watch out for

These money-savvy spenders are not so savvy if they don’t break their spending habits, though. This is because if you build up a debt, switch to a balance transfer card, pay it off while building up your next debt and continue switching for the lowest rates in town, you can damage your credit rating and make it hard for you to apply for loans or other credit cards in the future.

The trick is to not let your independent woman persona get the better of your spending sprees and instead take control of your debts. The easiest way to avoid the urge to use your credit card is by avoiding the shopping centres. Try doing the weekly food shop at a local supermarket instead of in the centre and make a list to avoid buying things you don’t need.

If you take control of your credit cards by using balance transfer deals sensibly you will not only protect your money in the bank but you will also ensure no problems with getting a home loan in the future.

Michelle Hutchison is Consumer Advocate at RateCity.

The above information is general only and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation or needs.

Your say: Do you have an out-of-control credit card debt? Would you consider switching to a low-rate balance transfer credit card? Email us on [email protected]

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The scent of lemon

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Getty Images

Lemon is one of the most magic scents in the garden. Much as I love roses — especially a cloud of rose perfume on a hot day — lemon scents are often stronger, as they come from the leaves, not the flowers. There are more leaves than blooms, so much more scent.

This doesn’t mean you can’t have flowers as well as lemon scents. My favourite winter bloomer — okay, one of my 50 favourites — is the evergreen pineapple- or lemon-scented marigold. It grows to a large bush, about 1.5m to 2m high, and the foliage is glorious every time you brush against it.

Pineapple marigold (though it’s more lemon than pineapple) responds well to hard pruning, and makes a good hedge if you are prepared to trim it every few weeks in summer. Otherwise just cut it back by about 60cm after the flowers die back.

Lemon grass is possibly the most lemony plant in the universe. It’s a perennial — in other words, it just keeps growing. Heavy frost kills it, so in cold areas grow it in a pot and keep it on a sunny patio or even take it indoors in winter.

I cut mine back regularly and tie the big bunch of leaves up in the hall where I’ll brush against them too, and cut off whatever I need to make lemon grass tea (far more fragrant when homegrown than any you can buy).

In frost-free areas, or where there is only light frost, lemon grass grows best in rich, well-drained, moist soil. It tolerates semi-shade in hot areas but prefers full sun. The small plant you buy at the nursery will eventually become enormous. One big clump will give many plants — just divide it and plant it out.

Lemon balm (Melissa officinalis) is a hard-to-kill lemon-scented small shrub, about 30cm high, for almost any area iun Australia. It’s great for hard-to-fill corners of the garden, but beware — it spreads. Don’t grow it near the bush! It’s also a bit disappointing in the taste department — despite the lemony scent it’s got a bit of a mothball flavour when you use it in cooking.

Lemon balm grows best in moist rich soil and partial shade from sunlight, especially in hot summers, but will tolerate drought, sun and exposure. It dies back after severe frost and looks really messy, all brown and spotty, after mild frosts but recovers with warm weather.

Lemon balm leaves can be picked as soon as they are large enough — small ones have less of an aftertaste than older ones. Young lemon balm leaves are good in salad sandwiches and a few can be added to give a faint lemon tang to salads. Old leaves are too tough.

Lemon verbena is a graceful, narrow leafed shrub. It loses its leaves in winter in cooler areas, but can keep them nearly all winter in subtropical regions. It grows up to 2m high and even wider but can be kept well trimmed.

It prefers full sun, though it tolerates semi-shade in hot areas. In very cold areas it needs to be protected from heavy frost for the first year but after that is sturdier and will survive anything from a blanket of snow to a four-year drought.

Lemon verbena tea is probably my favourite herbal tea. I use it as a base for all sorts of other teas, adding a few peppermint leaves or other flavourings, depending what I feel like. It’s one of the few herbal teas that men seem to like.

Lemon verbena leaves can be picked at any time but are most fragrant in the early morning and just before flowering. They can be dried and kept through winter in a sealed jar. Dry them as quickly as possible in a well-ventilated, dark place so they don’t lose their fragrance and seal them in a jar as soon as they are dry.

Lemon verbena tea can be drunk hot or cold. The leaves can also be added to equal parts of ordinary tea leaves for a lemon-scented tea and drunk either black or with milk and sugar, or frozen in iceblocks to add to cool drinks on hot days.

Lemon geranium is really a pelargonium, drought tolerant and hardy. Like all pelargoniums it grows easily from a cutting. I’ve tried cooking with it, but it too develops an aftertaste. It’s best grown where you will brush against it in the garden, releasing a gentle lemon whiff, though you can always do what the Victorians did — place sprigs in finger bowls to wash your hands after eating fish.

Lemon-scented gum tree is the giant of the lemon world, though as gum trees go it’s a nice small neat one, suitable for a backyard tree. It smells beautiful when you crush the leaves, and on hot days there is a haze of lemon about it — and the scent before and immediately after rain is magic.

Lemon and lime trees have their own scent too, from the ripening fruit and also to a lesser extent from the leaves, though none is as strongly perfumed as the plants above. Young lemon leaves are wonderfully fragrant, and tender enough to add to salads and sandwiches for a lemon tang, and of course kaffir lime leaves add their own individual fragrance to a whole range of dishes.

Kaffir limes are supposed to be tropical plants, but ours survives winters with -7°C frosts, although I grow it on a sunny bank, protected with other shrubs about it.

My favourite lemon is Eureka, drought hardy and cold hardy with big knobbly fruit, most in winter but some all year round. You never have to buy lemons when you have a Eureka lemon in the backyard.

You don’t even need a garden to have lemon scents. Try a kaffir lime in a pot, potted lemon grass or potted lemon “geranium”. Place them somewhere you will brush against them as you go indoors or walk up the stairs, and this winter will be filled with the balmy scent of lemon.

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