Eve's GM Free Beef

  • Home
  • Eve's GM Free Beef

Eve's GM Free Beef Farm to fork supplier of naturally reared beef,Gm free ,

07/11/2020

🥩BEEF🥩

Seven good reasons to get a roast this weekend! 😋

03/11/2020

A beef cuts chart that will turn you into a master of meat. Never get stuck at the counter again wondering what beef to buy.

03/11/2020

Sesame fried steaks in honey sauce

Ingredients

Undercut steaks ½ kg (make like thin pasandas)
Baking Soda ½ tsp
Salt ½ tsp
Water ¼ cup
Chicken powder 1 tsp
Sesame seeds as required

Ingredients for Batter

Corn flour 4 tbsp
Flour 2 tbsp heaped
Egg 1
Baking powder ½ tsp
Oil 2 tbsp
Chilled water 2 make batter

Ingredients for Honey Sauce

Water 1 cup
Sweet chili sauce ½ cup
Vinegar 2 tbsp
Lemon juice 2 tbsp
Crushed red pepper 2 tsp
Honey 2 tbsp
Sugar 1 tbsp
Orange color pinch
Dry corn flour 1 tbsp
Capsicum 2 tbsp finely chopped
Carrot 2 tbsp finely chopped
Onion 2 tbsp finely chopped

METHOD

Marinate undercut pasandas with salt, soda and water, then add chicken powder, dip in prepared batter, roll 1 side in sesame seeds and deep fry in fry pan.

METHOD FOR BATTER

Put all the ingredients in a bowl and make medium consistency batter with chilled water.

METHOD FOR HONEY SAUCE

Put all the ingredients under honey sauce, cook together till boiling, thicken with corn flour paste, then mix with chopped veggies, cut fried beef pieces diagonally and spread with prepared sauce. Serve immediately.

03/11/2020

How do you tell a rump from a sirloin? 🤔All is revealed in our ultimate beef cuts guide for British Beef Week 🥩http://bit.ly/31Yku19

01/11/2020

Castleeve farm supplies Eve's grass fed gm free beef,All our cattle graze land that no artificial fertiliser is applied,Any cattle fed for slaughter receive a non gm diet.Customers can pick their own animal for their deep freeze,if a full carcass is too big we can sell half to another customer,The benefits of having a deep freeze is that the beef you buy is consistent with the same animal, you know what you are eating,quality suckled gm free beef,Any orders please contact me.

30/10/2020

The Sweetmans of Castle Eve

The following passage comes from Carrigan's History and Antiquities of the Diocese of Ossory, published in 1905 by Rev. Canon William Carrigan, and entitled "The Sweetmans of Castle Eve."

The Sweetmans or Swetmans succeeded the D'Erleys in their property of Earlstown, and title Baron of Erley, probably towards the close of the 14th century, when the family first began to take a prominent place in local affairs. Milo Sweetman was treasurer of Ossory in 1360, in which year he was elected Bishop of the Diocese by the Chapter. His election was cancelled by the Pope, who, however, in the following year appointed him Archbishop of Armagh. Having governed the Primatial See for nineteen years he died in 1380, and is buried in Dromiskin, Co. Louth.

John Sweetman was appointed Keeper of the Peace for Co. Kilkenny, in 1382; he was Sheriff of the same county Nov. 13th, 1390. In 1405, Nicholas Sweetman was appointed Keeper of the Peace for Co. Kilkenny. In 1478, John Sweetman was chief lord of all the Barony of Erley (source: Register of Kells Priory). He is, no doubt, identical with the "John Sweetman, son and heir of Nicholas Sweetman of Castellyse [i.e. Castellyfe, or Castle Eve) in the Co. Kilkenny, gent.," who received a royal pardon for treasons &c., Oct. 23rd, 1482 (source: Patent Rolls).

William Swetman, BAron of Erley, died, as his monument in Newtown Church testifies, in 1507.

James Swetman was presented, with the other gentry of Co. Kilkenny, in 1537, for charging coyne and livery. He was Sheriff of Co. Kilkenny in 1543. He was still living in March, 1549, when we find James Sweteman, of Castelliff, and William Swetman, of Tullahaght, Co. Kilkenny, gents., receiving pardons.

William Sweetman, next Baron of Erley, was the largest freeholder in the Barony of Kells, about 1560, his estate being then valued at 74 pounds. He was Sheriff of Co. Kilkenny, in 1564, and was pardoned in 1567, after which he appears no more.

John Sweetman, his [son ? and] successor, who set up the slab with the family escutcheon, in Castle Eve castle, in 1580, was arrested for complicity in the rebellion of James Fitz Maurice, in 1583, but was soon after liberated. He was more fortunate than his brother George Swetman, who, being arraigned on the same charge, was found guilty and put to death. As "Sweeteman living in Castlelyf," John Swetman is reckoned among the chief nobility of Co. Kilkenny, in 1596. He erected his monument in Newtown church in 1600, and died May 28th, 1605. By Inquisition of April 5th, 1638, he was found to have been seised, in his lifetime, of the manor of Erley otherwise Earlestown, with the appurtenances, and of the towns and lands of Castleleife, Rathculbin and Spruce's Haies, parcel of the said manor, and of Foulke's town in the aforesaid county [of Kilkenny]; and he was further found to have died on the third of May 1605, at which date his grand-nephew [recte grandson] and heir, William Sweetman was but 10 years old (source: Inquis. Lageniae).

William Sweetman, just mentioned, was the next Baron of Erley. He became of age in January 1615-16, at which date, as son and heir of James Sweetman, son and heir of John Sweetman, he had Pardon of Intrusion and Alienation "as to the manor of Early otherwise Earliston, the towns and lands of Castleiff, Rathcu[l]bin otherwise Rathcu[l]bbin, Spruce's Haies otherwise Garranspure, Tullaghmaine otherwise Tulleame and Killtullaghmaen, Fowkestowne, Hodesgrove otherwise Garranhody, together with a chief rent out of Owentown (Ovenstown), all the Kilkenny Co., for a fine of 10 pounds Irish."

He took part with his countrymen in the War of the Confederate Catholics, for which he forfeited under Cromwell in 1653, and was transplanted to Connaught in 1654. The time and place of his death are unknown. By his wife, Joan, daughter of Thomas Walsh of Piltown, Co. Waterford, son of Sir Nicholas Walsh, he had five sons, viz., John, Edward, Piers, ffrancis, and Nicholas.

John, the eldest son, is presumably the John Sweetman who forfeited Rathculbin under Cromwell, and was transplanted to Connaught in 1654. He must have returned from Connaught at the Restoration, as his will, now in the Record Office, Dublin, is dated from Castle Ife, in 1672. Probate of the will was taken out, April 17th, 1690, by Beale Archer al' Sweetman, testator's widow, and by Mary Conway al' Sweetman, his only child and heir.

Mary Sweetman's husband, "Hugh Conway of Castleiffe, gent.," by his will made May 10th 1690, bequeaths all his real estate, as well what he has now as what may descend to him hereafter, to Patrick Conway, his eldest son and heir and his lawful heirs; remainder to his third son Silvester Conway, and his lawful heirs; he bequeaths his wife Mary Sweetman one-third of all he possesses, and appoints he and his eldest son, Patrick Conway, his executors; overseers, his cousins, Captain Henry Archer of the city of Kilkenny, and John Shee, gent., of the city of Dublin; he mentions his mortgages on lands in Meath, Kildare, &c. ... This will was proved, Nov. 18th, 1702, by the testator's eldest son and heir, Patrick Conway of Magestown (Maxtown), Co. Kilkenny, saving the right of testator's relict, Mary Comerford al' Conway al' Sweetman.

The Sweetmans held on in the neighborhood of their old Castles till about 1845, when the last of them emigrated. They are said to have been men of large stature and great bodily strength.

Most Rev. Dr. Nicholas Sweetman, Bishop of Ferns, inherited some of the family characteristics, as he is described as possessing an "iron frame and great powers of body." He was appointed Bishop of Ferns, by Papal Brief of Jany. 25, 1745. His death, which occurred in Oct. 1786, is thus recorded in Finn's Leinster Journal of Wednesday, Nov. 1st, same year:

"Died on the 21st (recte 19th) inst, in Wexford, Dr. Nicholas Sweetman, aged 90 years. He had been titular Bishop of Ferns 42 years. He was born in the county Kilkenny, of the family of the Sweetman's of Castle Eve, near Callan, Barons of Erley for ages until the year 1653. His father had lost a small estate in the aforesaid county by the late revolution, and his grandfather a very large one by Cromwell's sanguinary proscriptions," &c.

John Sweetman, Esq., Drumbaragh, Kells, Co. Meath, is the best known and most respected of the Sweetman family in this country at the present time (circa 1905). His parents were John Sweetman and Honoria, only child of Malachy O'Connor of Dublin; his grandparents were Michael Sweetman and Alicia Taaffe; his great-grandparents were Patrick Sweetman and E. Thunder; his 2nd great-grandparents were John Sweetman and a daughter of Patrick Sweetman of Stephen's Green Brewery, whose will was proved in 1771; and his 3rd great-grandparents were John Sweetman, Esq. of Ashton Quay Brewery, Dublin (will proved 1757) and Margaret Dodd (will proved 1767).

It is probable that the John Sweetman who appears last in this pedigree was descended from William Sweetman, the forfeiting proprietor of Castle Eve, in Cromwell's time. "I heard from Mr. Laurence Sweetman, of the County Wexford, that two sons of this William Sweetman, viz. Francis and Nicholas, settled in County Wexford, and that two other sons settled in Dublin." (as quoted to Rev. Carrigan)

Sweetman is pronounced Swuthamonn (all syllables short, accent on the first syllable)

Address


Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Eve's GM Free Beef posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

  • Want your practice to be the top-listed Clinic?

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram