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How to make moreish cookies from store-cupboard odds and ends – recipe | Waste not

I often eat a bag of salty crisps at the same time as a chewy chocolate bar, alternating bite for bite between the two, because the extreme contrast of salt from the chips and the sweetness of the chocolate fire off each other and create an endorphin rush. The same goes for these cookies, adapted from a recipe by Christina Tosi at New York’s legendary Milk Bar.Christina Tosi writes in Gourmet Traveller Australia how she first learned to make these cookies at a conference centre on Star Island, New England, where they’d bake them each week with a hodge-podge of different ingredients. Being on an island, they didn’t always have access to what they wanted, so they had to come up with a new recipe every week using whatever they had. In the spirit of the recipe’s origins, I’ve adapted Tosi’s recipe for the UK, and made it flexible, so you can raid your own store-cupboards and adapt and invent your own version from it

1 day ago
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Camilla Wynne’s recipes for blood orange marmalade and no-bake marmalade mousse tart

If you’re intimidated by making marmalade, the whole-fruit method is the perfect entry point. Blood oranges are simmered whole until soft, perfuming your home as they do so, then they’re sliced, skin and all, mixed with sugar and a fragrant cinnamon stick, and embellished with a shot of amaro. Squirrel the jars away for a grey morning, give a few to deserving friends, and be sure to keep at least one to make this elegant mocha marmalade mousse tart. A cocoa biscuit crust topped with a chocolate marmalade mousse and crowned with a cold brew coffee cream, it’s a delightful trifecta of bitterness that no one will ever guess is an easy no-bake dessert.If you’re not up for preserving, make this using shop-bought thick-cut marmalade

1 day ago
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The dump dinner: spaghetti is now being served straight on to the table – but why?

Name: Dump dinners.Age: Horribly new.Appearance: Feeding time at the zoo, but for humans.I’ve just Googled this. Apparently a dump dinner is a make-ahead slow cooker recipe

2 days ago
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Australian supermarket coconut water taste test: ‘Smells like an island holiday’

Overcoming his irrational fear of coconut products, Nicholas Jordan tests a lovely – and lowly – bunch of coconuts in a rowIf you value our independent journalism, we hope you’ll consider supporting us todayGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailI have a fear of coconut products. Like all fears it’s based on a questionable rationale and trauma, and my trauma is taste testing “health” coconut-heavy products that taste like soap. Which is why, until recently, almost all the coconut water I’d drunk was from a straw reaching out of a fresh coconut.Surely there’s no way a bottled coconut water, made from 100% coconut, could be that bad. Maybe it could be better than the real thing? I enjoy Melona more than the average honeydew melon

2 days ago
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Miso mystery: red, white or yellow – how does each paste change your dish? | Kitchen aide

What’s the difference between white and red miso, and which should I use for what? Why do some recipes not specify which miso to use? Ben, by email“I think what recipe writers assume – and I’m sure I’ve written recipes like this – is that either way, you’re not going to get a miso that’s very extreme,” says Tim Anderson, whose latest book, JapanEasy Kitchen: Simple Recipes Using Japanese Pantry Ingredients, is out in April. As Ben points out, the two broadest categories are red and white, and in a lot of situations “you can use one or other to your taste without it having a massive effect on the outcome of the dish”.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more

2 days ago
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The pie and mash crisis: can the original fast food be saved?

There used to be hundreds of pie and mash shops in London. Now there are barely more than 30. Can social media attention and a push for protected status ensure their survival?Outside it’s raining so hard that the sandwich board sign for BJ’s pie and mash (“All pies are made on the premises”) is folded up inside. The pavement along Barking Road in Plaistow is a blur through the front windows and deserted, and there are only two customers in the shop. Another sign – this one on the counter – says “CASH ONLY”

3 days ago
technologySee all
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Condemnation of Elon Musk’s AI chatbot reached ‘tipping point’ after French raid, Australia’s eSafety chief says

1 day ago
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Pinterest sacks two engineers for creating software to identify fired workers

1 day ago
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Fairphone 6 review: cheaper, repairable and longer-lasting Android

1 day ago
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French headquarters of Elon Musk’s X raided by Paris cybercrime unit

2 days ago
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From ‘nerdy’ Gemini to ‘edgy’ Grok: how developers are shaping AI behaviours

2 days ago
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UK privacy watchdog opens inquiry into X over Grok AI sexual deepfakes

2 days ago

Mandelson files will be published even if embarrassing to No 10, says ISC chair

about 13 hours ago
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A parliamentary committee looking into the appointment of Peter Mandelson as US ambassador and the depth of his relationship with the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein will not be afraid to publish material that is embarrassing to the government, its chair has said.Lord Beamish, who leads parliament’s intelligence and security committee (ISC), said there had to be “maximum transparency” about the vetting process Mandelson went through before he was appointed ambassador to the US in December 2024 and what the government knew about his friendship with Epstein.The ISC, which has statutory responsibility for oversight of the UK’s intelligence services, will assess whether documents should not be released because they compromise national security, rather than jeopardising international relations, the Labour peer told BBC Radio 4’s The World Tonight.Beamish said it was possible the committee could publish documents that impacted international relations.“In the past, for example, we’ve had disputes where things have potentially been embarrassing to governments, but we’ve put them in because it doesn’t jeopardise national security,” he said.

Asked if he felt Starmer had let the Labour party down, Beamish said the prime minister was a “decent individual” but the furore over the release of documents about Mandelson’s appointment had been badly handled.“We do need to ensure that we get maximum transparency,” he said.“If the committee which I chair, can then also get as much transparency as possible around the information which can’t be put in the public domain, that’s … what we need to do.”On Wednesday, Downing Street had attempted to mitigate the Conservatives’ attempt to trigger the release of the documents by adding exemptions for national security and to protect international relations.But MPs called the move a “cover-up” and demanded that judgment on their release be taken by the intelligence and security committee rather than the cabinet secretary.

Whips were forced to draft a second amendment to appease MPs, which was passed on Wednesday night,No 10 said it would comply as soon as possible, in accordance with police advice,It had said it hoped to release documents on Wednesday, but was prevented from doing so by the Metropolitan police, which said certain records could not be released in case they prejudiced a criminal investigation into Mandelson’s alleged sharing of confidential government documents with Epstein,Tempers continued to flare at Westminster on Thursday after a day of anger among Labour MPs, who warned Starmer’s days as prime minister were numbered after he confirmed publicly that he was aware of reports that Mandelson had continued his association with Epstein after the latter’s conviction,Further revelations in the Epstein files suggest Mandelson offered to help Epstein obtain a Russian visa, which the disgraced financier planned to use to meet young women in Moscow, BBC News has reported.

There is no indication that the politician knew why Epstein wanted the visa, and later emails suggest the trip was cancelled because it could not be obtained, it said,On Thursday, the housing secretary, Steve Reed, said Mandelson had “conned everybody”, and that the prime minister and his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, were safe in their jobs,“The person at fault here is not the prime minister or his team,” he told Sky News,“It is Peter Mandelson who lied, manipulated and deceived everybody, including the media … He conned everybody,”Labour MPs continued to voice disappointment about the handling of the scandal.

Paula Barker, the MP for Liverpool Wavertree, told Radio 4’s Today programme that Starmer had broken every pledge he had made when he stood to become leader of the Labour party and questioned his judgment.Asked how she felt when Starmer confirmed he knew about reports of links between Epstein and Mandelson before his appointment as ambassador, she said: “I was disappointed.I was sickened.And quite frankly, I think the country deserves better.”Barker stopped short of calling on Starmer to resign, but said: “I think the prime minister has shown that his judgment is questionable.

I think he has questions to answer … I think he has a very long way to go to build trust and confidence with the public and trust, and confidence within our party as a whole.”