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Cocoa-crazy: chocolate-infused liqueurs deserve their own moment

about 8 hours ago
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Among my minor childhood traumas was the time my dad returned from a business trip to Belgium with a smart box of assorted chocolates (cue tiny violins),Expecting caramel, I bit into a truffle and was met by an explosion of very boozy liqueur,The box seemed to be an exciting change from the usual duty-free Toblerone, but after this incident, truffle assortments have always struck me as deeply unsafe,(I have tried liqueur-filled chocolates since, but still remain flummoxed by them,)The Guardian’s journalism is independent.

We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link.Learn more.So you can imagine my feelings about chocolate-infused liqueurs.Personally, I think some things don’t need to mix, but in this era of edible collabs (see the recent Flying Goose sriracha x Heck sausages), brands can’t resist a dabble.Enter Bailey’s x Terry’s Chocolate Orange Irish Cream Liqueur, which will send fans of both products aflutter.

Most creamy chocolate liqueurs use a neutral grain spirit as their base, which is mixed with dairy, sugar and chocolate flavouring – the base for Bailey’s, for example, is Irish whiskey,Waitrose is less specific about the base of its No1 Blonde Chocolate Cream Liqueur, which is inspired by the supermarket’s chocolate bar of the same name and made in partnership with a distiller in Burgundy,Apparently, it has “notes of caramelised white chocolate”, though I found it cloying,Such things are better served ice-cold, however – Waitrose recommends serving it on the rocks or over ice-cream; I might use it to spike a bread-and-butter pudding or chocolate tart,What distinguishes these creamy liqueurs from the more traditional créme de cacao is the absence of dairy in the latter (confusingly, given its name).

Made by macerating fermented and roasted cacao nibs in alcohol before distillation, it is the syrupy, chocolate-infused liqueur found in cocktails such as the brandy alexander and has a higher ABV.Fortnum & Mason’s Chocolate Chestnut Liqueur (see today’s pick), meanwhile, is made with a base wheat spirit infused with cacao husk, and vodka and other flavourings are then added.That’s marketed as a Christmas number, but it would lace coffee nicely year round.I also enjoyed Marks & Spencer’s cacao nib-infused Distiller’s Cove with Jamaican rum, in which the spirit is married with cocoa extract and sea salt – an intuitive union given that cocoa and rum are made in the same corner of the globe, and because rum is naturally sweet.Drink it neat and on the rocks, not least because, when mixed with Coke, you’d struggle to taste the chocolate.

I was less taken by Rubis, a fortified wine made with tempranillo grapes and chocolate flavouring, but I can understand why some people might be – dark chocolate and red wine is not an incongruous pairing, after all.I can, however, get on board with Angostura’s Cocoa Bitters, the happiest discovery of this trip down trauma lane.It brings zhuzh to soda or tonic water, nuttiness to classic cocktails – in a vodka martini, say, or an adonis (half sherry, half sweet vermouth) – and would also work in bakes and savoury dishes alike (a Mexican mole, perhaps).Fortnum & Mason Chocolate Chestnut Liqueur £25, 20%.Serve ice-cold in a frozen glass for a post-Easter lunch treat.

Marks & Spencer Distiller’s Cove with Jamaican Rum £28 Ocado, 40%.Serve on the rocks with lime – a nice alternative to amaretto.Angostura Cocoa Bitters £9.10 Ocado, 48%.A revelation to put a twist on classic cocktails.

Edmund Briottet Creme de Cacao £27.25 The Whisky Exchange, 25%.Spike your coffee or make a round of brandy alexanders.
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‘System malfunction’ causes robotaxis to stall in the middle of the road in China

A “system malfunction” has caused several self-driving robotaxis to stall in the middle of the road in China, police have confirmed, after distressed riders were stranded for hours.Local authorities in the central Chinese city of Wuhan said they began receiving calls “one after another” on Tuesday night from riders reporting that autonomous vehicles operated by the Chinese internet company Baidu had frozen.“Multiple Apollo Go cars stopped in the middle of the road, unable to move,” police said in a statement on Wednesday, referring to Baidu’s driverless taxi service. “After investigation, preliminary findings suggest the cause was system malfunction.”Baidu has a fleet of more than 500 driverless cars in Wuhan

1 day ago
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Unregulated chatbots are putting lives at risk | Letters

Your coverage of AI-associated delusions exposes a gap that training-level guardrails cannot close (Marriage over, €100,000 down the drain: the AI users whose lives were wrecked by delusion, 26 March). As someone who has worked in health systems across fragile and low-income contexts, I find it striking that AI companies have failed to adopt a safeguard that even the most underresourced clinic in the world already uses: screening patients before exposing them to risk.The Patient Health Questionnaire-9 for depression and the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale are administered daily in settings with no electricity, limited staff, and patients who may never have seen a doctor. These tools take minutes. They are validated across dozens of languages and cultural contexts

1 day ago
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Don’t blame AI for the Iran school bombing | Letters

Your article on the Iran school bombing rightly challenges the reflex to blame artificial intelligence (AI got the blame for the Iran school bombing. The truth is far more worrying, 26 March). However, the deeper problem lies not in the technology but in the language now forming around it. To say that there was an “AI error” quietly removes the human subject from the sentence. Where once civilians were “dehoused” or “collateral damage”, responsibility is now displaced altogether: from people to systems

1 day ago
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Patrick McKeown obituary

For the past four years, the James Webb space telescope has been returning stunning images of stars and galaxies that formed in the early universe. Parked in orbit a million miles from the Earth, the observatory is an extraordinarily sophisticated machine that shares a special engineering heritage with a swelling number of modern devices, from mobile phones to medical scanners and turbine blades.All are products of precision engineering, a discipline that blends the traditions of surveying, navigation, astronomy and time-keeping to create the technology that underpins our lives today. And one of its prime exponents was Patrick McKeown.McKeown, who has died aged 95, wrote the “11 principles of machine design” that were a distillation of everything he had learned about accuracy, stability and error correction in mechanical systems, and that have become the bedrock of precision engineering across the world

1 day ago
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Apple at 50 quiz: top sellers, turkeys and turtlenecks

In the 50 years since it was founded, Apple has long been seen as one of the most significant technology companies globally. The design and manufacturing decisions taken in Cupertino, California have affected product design across the world, helping usher in an era of ubiquitous touchscreen computing while insisting on exacting user experience design principles. How much do you know about the history of one of the most powerful computing companies on the planet? Test yourself with these 12 questions.The Guardian’s Apple at 50 quiz

1 day ago
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MP rejects Palantir’s claims that criticism of NHS England deal is ‘ideologically motivated’

Claims by Palantir that concerns over the US data analytics company’s multimillion-pound NHS contract are “ideologically motivated” have been rejected by the chair of a parliamentary committee.It was also appropriate for the government to seek guidance on activating a break contract in the deal, said Chi Onwurah, a Labour MP who heads the science, innovation and technology select committee.Louis Mosley, the executive vice-chair of Palantir in the UK, had urged the government not to give in to “ideologically motivated campaigners” as ministers explored a way out of a £330m NHS contract with the tech company for England.Ministers have sought advice on triggering a break clause in Palantir’s deal to deliver the Federated Data Platform (FDP) amid questions over the company’s presence in the public sector.The FDP is an AI-enabled data platform designed to connect disparate health information across the NHS

1 day ago
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‘After one gig, someone stole my car with my dole money in it’: Morcheeba on how they made The Sea

3 days ago
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Jayson Gillham announces tour with Palestinian-Jordanian musician ahead of MSO court case

4 days ago
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Fill that Glasto-shaped hole! The 40 best UK festivals you can still book

4 days ago
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Shaun Micallef: ‘Charlie Pickering said that’s the only thing keeping him going – to vanquish me’

5 days ago
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The Guide #236: Is celebrity casting a cynical marketing stunt or does it help to democratise theatre?

6 days ago
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I thought I’d been coping with my sister’s death – a Taylor Swift song showed me I hadn’t

6 days ago