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More than a third of whisky drinkers are female. Time for the industry to wake up to women

3 days ago
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Why wait for International Women’s Day to celebrate women? A commemorative day is a good excuse, true, but we don’t need to wait to recognise the contributions of female and female-identifying individuals to the drinks industry.Right? Right.The Guardian’s journalism is independent.We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link.Learn more.

When I put out a call on my social media to ask for the contacts of inspiring women who work in whisky, my inbox was flooded with names, press releases and, most hearteningly, whisky professionals commending their contemporaries and friends.“The industry is getting better at giving women credit for the work they do,” whisky educator and writer Kristiane Westray told me, noting that blender Margaret Nicol at Whyte & Mackay, who started in the industry way back in 1974, has only recently been in the spotlight.Similarly, Maureen Robinson, who worked in whisky for more than 45 years, was inducted into the Whisky Magazine Hall of Fame as recently as 2020.“There are also more women studying Stem subjects [science, technology, engineering and mathematics], which is usually a requirement in roles such as distilling and blending.”Support from within the industry is crucial to these women’s success, which is where the OurWhisky Foundation comes in: this non-profit, established in March 2022 by Becky Paskin, supports women working in whisky internationally, and has the backing of the wider industry.

Its dedicated editorial output (managed by award-winning drinks writer Millie Milliken) is a bulletin for women’s wins in the industry.On the consumer side of things, are we seeing more women there, too? A few months ago, pop diva Sabrina Carpenter was named as the new face of Johnnie Walker, which, though it received a mixed reception from industry professionals, made something very clear: brands are targeting a female audience right at the nascence of their drinking habits, to secure the whisky drinkers of the future.(I doubt many 60-year-old old-school whisky collectors will be scrambling for the Johnnie Walker because Carpenter put her name to it, but I might be wrong.) That audience is growing, too: women now make up 36% of whisky drinkers, up from just 15% in the 1990s.I asked Fikayo Ifaturoti, founder of Cellar Atelier, a wine and spirits consultancy, if she’s noticed an uptake in her female clientele: “I’ve seen women’s engagement deepen, but whisky still feels like ‘the other room’: admired by many, yet seldom invited into their collections,” she says.

“For many men, whisky has long carried generational meaning – a father passing down a bottle, a toast at milestones – but women are often written out of that narrative,”Distillery experiences, for example, which tend to be built around clay shooting or fishing, rarely imagine how other audiences, especially women, wish to engage,“Why do we see special editions for Father’s Day, say, but not for Mother’s Day?” Ifaturoti asks,“The next frontier is the marketplace, and to craft experiences with women in mind as well as men,”Laphroaig 10-Year-Old Single Malt Whisky £31 (on offer; 70cl) Waitrose, 40%.

Extra-smoky whisky from senior blender Sarah Dowling.Johnnie Walker Black Label 12-Year-Old Whisky £35.50 (70cl) Tesco, 40%.Smooth, rich and made by Dr Emma Walker, JW’s first female master blender.Nc’nean Organic Single Malt £51.

75 (70cl) The Whisky Exchange, 46%.This female-founded brand, started by Annabel Thomas, takes its name from the queen of spirits.Uncle Nearest 1856 Whiskey £70.75 (70cl) The Whisky Exchange, 50%.All syrup and sultanas, and crafted by fifth-generation master blender Victoria Eady Butler.

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More than a third of whisky drinkers are female. Time for the industry to wake up to women

Why wait for International Women’s Day to celebrate women? A commemorative day is a good excuse, true, but we don’t need to wait to recognise the contributions of female and female-identifying individuals to the drinks industry. Right? Right.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more

3 days ago
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Jimi Famurewa’s recipe for Marmite and leek homity pie

The first time I encountered homity pie was in a disused train carriage. It was Deptford market in the late 2000s: a reliably chaotic, noisy morass of jostling bodies, the wafted smell of sweating burger onions and a vast section where the “stalls” generally comprised gatherings of orphaned trainers, boxy VHS players and other random house-clearance items dumped on to lengths of tarpaulin. I was an eager but gastronomically green 25-year-old in my first proper flatshare and this ragtag locus of trade became an early site of core dining memories. I thoughtfully appraised very ordinary vegetables, channelling Rick Stein in Gascony; bought warm, hectically seeded granary loaves from the Percy Ingle bakery; ate average pub Thai, better kerbside rotisserie chicken; and generally tried, with limited success, to ignore the creeping sense that I had settled in a part of town that wanted for some structure or culinary vitality.It was this atmosphere of cultural nascence into which the Deptford Project trundled

4 days ago
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$1.50 mangoes: Australia’s best-value fruit and veg for November

Kensington Pride, Calypso and Honey Gold mangoes are the juiciest of the crop right now – but avoid potatoes until prices come back downGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailHot weather in the Northern Territory has been favourable for summer’s golden child.“Everyone should be eating mangoes right now,” says Josh Flamminio, co-owner of Galluzzo Fruiterers in Sydney.The mango abundance will continue throughout the month and will only get better as supply from Queensland increases. Flamminio is selling larger premium mangoes for $2.50 to $3 each, and smaller-sized ones for $1

4 days ago
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How to turn the dregs of a tin of golden syrup into a delectable toffee sauce – recipe | Waste not

Lyle’s golden syrup comes in the most ornate and nostalgic of tins, but the syrup inside often proves almost impossible to extract entirely. Turn what might otherwise be wasted into this luxurious toffee sauce to savour on Bonfire Night, especially when drizzled generously over cinnamon baked apples with scoops of vanilla ice-cream.Apples transform beautifully when baked, turning this hyper-seasonal fruit into a super-simple yet decadent dessert. I prefer cox or braeburn varieties (ie, something not too large), so you can serve one apple per person.Gordon Ramsay’s recipes are my go-to for traditional techniques that deliver reliable results

4 days ago
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Mirepoix kimchi and vegetarian umami chilli: Kenji Morimoto’s recipes for cooking with homemade ferments

Cooking with ferments brings a tremendous amount of flavour to whatever you’re making, and it’s a great way to showcase how an ingredient evolves through the application of heat. The idea of combining a Korean preservation method with a French technique is exactly what I love about creativity in the kitchen. This mirepoix kimchi is not just a fun ferment to dot on savoury oatmeal or eat alongside cheese, but it also acts as the backbone for a plant-based, umami-filled chilli.This versatile, umami-rich paste is a twist on the classic mirepoix and can be used to add a hit of flavour to everything from soups to marinades, or even enjoyed as is.Prep 10 min Ferment 2 weeks+ Makes 500ml jar150g carrot 150g white onion 150g celery 13½g salt (or 3% of the total weight of the first three ingredients)½ tbsp red miso, or fish sauce½ tbsp sugar 15g gochugaru chilli flakesRoughly chop the vegetables (there is no need to peel the carrots if they have been rinsed), then put them in a food processor

5 days ago
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Divine dining: Australian church restaurants claim their own devout followings

At these places of worship, secular and churchgoing diners place their orders for coffee, curry puffs and za’atar pastries, served with kindnessGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailOn Sunday mornings, thousands stream through Our Lady of Lebanon Co-Cathedral, a Lebanese Maronite Catholic church in Sydney’s western suburbs. In between back-to-back mass services, worshippers rush to its onsite cafe, Five Loaves.“Sunday is our busiest day,” says Yasmin Salim, who has fronted the counter for eight years. Lines are long and diners’ appetites are large: a single customer might ask for 10 pizzas and 10 pastries flavoured with za’atar, the Middle Eastern herb mix. “It’s like at Maccas, everyone wants their french fries,” says Salim

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