H
recent
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Kurdish kitchens, baked bean alaska and Mexican soul: the best spring cookbooks for 2026 – review

about 21 hours ago
A picture


Nandên: Recipes from my Kurdish Kitchen by Pary BabanBecause the Kurdish people are spread across several national boundaries, their food tends to get lumped in with that of the Turkish, Iranian, Syrian and other communities with which they coexist.Indeed, when Pary Baban opened her first London restaurant she was told by a fellow Kurd she was “brave” to advertise it as Kurdish, given how few people would be familiar with the concept.“If I don’t do it,” she recalls saying then, “and you don’t do it, then who will do it, and when will we put our food on the map?” For those who can’t make it to Nandine (which, like Nandên, means kitchen in Kurdish) in Camberwell to learn from her own hands, this book serves as an admirable guide through a world of slow-cooked lamb and vegetable stews, fluffy breads and cooling yoghurt soups, as well as a wealth of stories from her childhood surrounded by the peaks of Iraqi Kurdistan.Driven out by Saddam Hussein’s government in the 1980s, she and her family fled east into the hills, staying with relatives, farmers, shepherds and foragers, in mountain villages – a journey that ignited Baban’s interest in recording her people’s traditions at a time when it seemed they could easily be lost for good.She began scribbling down their recipes in notebooks: and almost 40 years of cooking later, Nandên is the very fine end result.

Nandên by Pary Baban (Ryland, Peters & Small, £25).To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com.Delivery charges may apply.Beans by Ali HonourYou can’t fail to have noticed that pulses are having a bit of a moment – but if you’re one of the third of British adults whose sole consumption comes in the form of baked beans, then you need this colourful little book in your life.

Slim enough to slip in your shopping bag, the collection ranges from classic bean burgers, dips and falafels to the more fancy likes of lentil salads with burrata, and confit butter beans with garlic and herbs.Plus, there’s a frankly startling-sounding black bean baked alaska, which just has to be tried.Pea podka is first on my list, though.Beans by Ali Honour (Blasta Books, £15).To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.

com.Delivery charges may apply.The Racine Effect: Classic French Recipes from a Lifetime in the Kitchen by Henry HarrisSimon Hopkinson, who gave Harris his first job in the kitchen, writes in the introduction to his protege’s first book in 20 years that the most important quality in a cook is a “natural greedy interest in food”.Harris, he says, had – and still has – this love “in spades … and, what is more, he can write about it all very well, too”.Having failed more times than I’ve succeeded to get a table at Racine, his glorious hymn to the gutsy bouchons of Lyon, I was delighted to find I can now at least attempt to recreate his sensational celeriac remoulade salad at home.

As well as the classics confit duck and creme caramel, andouillettes and strawberries in Beaujolais, Harris has included recipes from his four decades in food, which turn this from a mere restaurant tie-in to a rich culinary memoir.There are the buttered kippers his dad ate every day for a week when he was born, the Thai crab omelettes he fell in love with on his first trip to Bangkok with his wife, a family favourite of chilli chicken wings, and an intriguingly bizarre beer and prune trifle.If you love food as much as Harris, you will love this book – I guarantee.The Racine Effect: Classic French Recipes from a Lifetime in the Kitchen by Henry Harris (Quadrille, £40).To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.

com,Delivery charges may apply,Weeknight Vegetarian by Joe WoodhouseAlthough I’m an omnivore, unlike Joe, his new book reflects exactly how I like to eat at home in the week, when meat is rarely on the menu – in fact, just a few pages in and I went online to order some of the roasted beans he recommends as a garnish for his take on bhel puri,Full of quick, practical but elegant recipes for filling lunchboxes and family tea tables, advice on encouraging nervous eaters, and batch cooking, the flavours are big, bold but not overcomplicated,Charred leeks with broken eggs, capers and dill, and roasted onion soup with olive rosemary croutons reflect his cheffing past in kitchens at the Towpath Cafe and Vanilla Black, while pea-sotto, and crispy noodle omelette feel like the kind of dishes he probably cooks on a Tuesday evening.

Not just for vegetarians, in short.Weeknight Vegetarian by Joe Woodhouse (Kyle Books, £26).To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com.Delivery charges may apply.

Mexican Soul: A New Style of Cooking by Santiago LastraMexican cuisine is recognised by Unesco as part of the “intangible heritage of humanity” for its complex cultural significance – yet in the UK we still struggle to move past its (admittedly delicious) street food,Santiago Lastra, whose first London restaurant KOL was awarded a Michelin star barely a year after opening, has set out to create a manifesto for what he calls Mexican soul cooking, imbued with the spirit of what that country eats daily (no “genre-defying” bone marrow sourdough tacos here), but using ingredients easily available to a British audience: a granny smith and gooseberry salsa verde, quesadillas using poppadoms rather than corn masa and so on,It’s a genuinely exciting mix of cheffy-looking but accessible dishes such as cured sea bass and rhubarb ceviche or pistachio guacamole, and more homely favourites like molten, spicy choriqueso and tinga pulled chicken stew,Perhaps even more helpful is the introduction covering regional cuisines, popular cooking methods and key flavours, and how these translate abroad,Lastra is a true ambassador for Mexico, and this book is your passport there.

Published by (Quadrille, £30)The Caribbean Cookbook by Rawlston Williams The past few years have seen a welcome crop of new guides to the incredibly diverse (and historically underappreciated in the UK) cooking of the Caribbean region.This, by the Saint Vincent-born-and-raised, Brooklyn-based restaurateur is another important contribution; a survey of each country’s cuisine, which also functions to highlight the things they all share, from ingredients like pickles and plantains to a determination by people to create plenty from little.The photography is as vivid and colourful as the recipes – the fiery sòs ti-malice that brightens any Haitian plate, the swimming pool-coloured blue curaçao drizzle that adds a citrus kick to desserts.This is not a book that makes concessions to the British supermarket shopper, though it has plenty of recipes that can be created from one.So if you’re unlikely to find the ingredients you need for a Bahamas conch broth, you’ll certainly find them for the smoked herring (kipper!) version from Martinique on the facing page.

Best of all, for me, are the essays on subjects such as the Indian influence on preserving culture, and the role of soups, which make this a bible I know I will return to again and again.The Caribbean Cookbook by Rawlston Williams (Phaidon, £39.95).To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com.

Delivery charges may apply.Peckish by Ed Smith I must admit, as someone who consumes more eggs than chicken, I wasn’t expecting to be excited by yet another book devoted to the UK’s favourite meat – and yet such is the genius of this collection that I will put myself on the record as officially wowed.Of course, there are the usual classics here, an “actually good!” caesar salad and a roast, but also enough genuinely fresh ideas such as garlic butter meatballs with orzo (like mini kievs without the faff), fish sauce caramel wings and chicken liver mapo tofu to have me eating my words all the way to the butcher’s.Peckish by Ed Smith (Quadrille, £22).To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.

com.Delivery charges may apply.Lebanon: A Culinary Celebration by Anissa HelouAnissa Helou’s first book on the cuisine of her native Lebanon, published more than three decades ago, was a collection of her late mother’s recipes.This follow-up, for which she crisscrossed the tiny country with a photographer friend, celebrates its remarkable culinary diversity.As such, it’s as much of a pleasure to sit down and read as it is to cook from.

Go with Helou into one-room bakeries high up in the mountains to watch bread being made, which she says can never be reproduced at home, yet is still fascinating to hear described.We learn that the city of Baalbek is famous for “Imperial Roman architecture at its apogee” as well as its irresistible hand pies.We discover that, although Lebanese salad dressing is traditionally heavy with lemon juice and garlic, she often tones it down when serving wine … Impeccably researched, beautifully written and gorgeously illustrated, this already feels like a classic.Lebanon: A Culinary Celebration by Anissa Helou (Bloomsbury, £30).To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.

com.Delivery charges may apply.The Malay Cook: Everyday Malaysian Recipes from Grandma’s Kitchen to Mine by Ranie SaidiRanie Saidi was raised in Perak by his grandmother, a well-travelled army wife turned professional caterer whose journey in some ways mirrors his own.He moved from Malaysia to London after her death and began to cook at first for himself and then for supper club guests as a way to recreate the flavours of his homeland and his much-missed mentor.There are family stories here and stunning location photography but it is, he insists, first and foremost a book designed for everyday use – full of dishes that, once you understand the foundations of the cuisine, should be adapted to your own taste.

More than half the recipes are vegetarian, many are one-pot and, without feeling like compromises, all are designed for ingredients readily available here in the UK, where he still lives.There’s a slow-roast leg of lamb based around Perakian rendang tuk, stir-fried noodles he learned from a street hawker in Penang, a curry puff pie, as well as a whole chapter of his beloved grandmother’s well-honed recipes, which feel like treasure indeed.The Malay Cook: Everyday Malaysian Recipes from Grandma’s Kitchen to Mine by Ranie Saidi (Ryland, Peters & Small, £25).To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com.

Delivery charges may apply.New British Classics by Gary Rhodes Gary Rhodes was described by Tom Kerridge as: “without a doubt one of the greatest British chefs who almost singlehandedly put British food on the world stage” when he died in 2019.His New British Classics book (published to accompany his 1999 television series of the same name) was sold as “the definitive book on British cookery for a new millennium”.What I love about it is the mix of good, plain classics – suet puddings and syllabubs, boiled bacon and bubble, plus more ambitious projects such as white pudding or rowan jelly – with Rhodes’ own creations, which he hoped would become classics of the future, like a deconstructed steak and oyster pie or a strawberry-rich “afternoon tea pudding”.Along with the excellent essays on national institutions, such as the picnic and the Sunday roast, it’s a rich and valuable snapshot of our food culture at the turn of the century, which to my mind hasn’t been bettered to this day.

technologySee all
A picture

Matt Brittin: why the BBC’s new Doctor Who-loving boss may not have much time for sleep

In recent months, Matt Brittin, the Doctor Who-loving fitness fanatic and former Google executive, has made no secret of his desire to make the jump from big tech to the world of broadcasting.At the end of last year, he told an event filled with some of television’s most senior figures that he had wanted to break into their industry “for a very long time”.As the BBC’s new director general, Brittin has not only fulfilled that goal. He has parachuted into the British media’s most powerful – and treacherous – job.The 57-year-old may be a big believer in the transformative power of sleep – one of Brittin’s favourite books is Why We Sleep, by the neuroscientist, Matthew Walker – but his new job is guaranteed to ensure he has less of it

about 17 hours ago
A picture

Meta ordered to pay $375m after being found liable in child exploitation case

A New Mexico jury on Tuesday ordered Meta to pay $375m in civil penalties after it found the company misled consumers about the safety of its platforms and enabled harm, including child sexual exploitation, against its users.The lawsuit – the first jury trial to find Meta liable for acts committed on its platform – was brought by the state’s attorney general office in December 2023.It followed a two-year Guardian investigation published in April of that year revealing how Facebook and Instagram had become marketplaces for child sex trafficking. That investigation was cited several times in the complaint.“The jury’s verdict is a historic victory for every child and family who has paid the price for Meta’s choice to put profits over kids’ safety,” said New Mexico’s attorney general, Raúl Torrez

1 day ago
A picture

OpenAI shutters AI video generator Sora in abrupt announcement

In an abrupt announcement on Tuesday, OpenAI said it was “saying goodbye” to its AI video generator Sora. The move comes just six months after the company’s splashy launch of a stand-alone app with which people could make and share hyper-realistic AI videos in a scrolling social feed.“To everyone who created with Sora, shared it, and built community around it: thank you,” the company wrote in a post on X. “What you made with Sora mattered, and we know this news is disappointing.”OpenAI first made Sora publicly available in late 2024, but it wasn’t until the company launched Sora 2 and its stand-alone app last September that the video generator reached mainstream attention

1 day ago
A picture

Baltimore sues Elon Musk’s AI company over Grok’s fake nude images

The mayor and city council of Baltimore, Maryland, filed a lawsuit against Elon Musk’s xAI company on Tuesday, alleging that its Grok chatbot violated consumer protections by generating nonconsensual sexualized images.Baltimore’s lawsuit argues that xAI deceptively marketed Grok as a general-purpose AI assistant and X as a mainstream social media site, failing to disclose the risks, limitations and exposure to harm that come with using the platform and chatbot. The suit, filed in the circuit court for Baltimore city, argues that the court has jurisdiction over xAI given that the company advertises and operates in Baltimore.“Grok has flooded the feeds of Baltimore’s X users with NCII (non-consensual intimate imagery) and CSAM (child sexual abuse material),” the city’s complaint states. “Grok further exposed Baltimore residents to the risk that any photograph they uploaded – of themselves or of their children – could be ingested by Grok and transformed into sexually degrading deepfakes without their knowledge or consent”

1 day ago
A picture

Protect men and boys from manosphere influencers, Labour MPs tell Ofcom

Men and boys need as much protection as women and girls from harmful influencers and “the worst parts of the internet”, a group of MPs have told Ofcom as they called for the regulator to give specific guidance to online platforms.More than 60 Labour MPs have written to the Ofcom chief executive, Melanie Dawes, urging her to protect men and boys from “manosphere” influencers who may expose them to gambling, sextortion and violent pornography.The Online Safety Act forced Ofcom to give tech platforms guidance on how to tackle “harmful content and activity that disproportionately affects women and girls”, but MPs argued that men and boys are also targeted in specific ways.According to the Gambling Commission, 53% of 11- to 17-year-old boys see gambling adverts online each week, compared with 31% of their female peers, while 91% of sextortion victims are male, according to the Internet Watch Foundation.Alistair Strathern, the MP for Hitchin and a co-chair of the Labour group for men and boys, said the Louis Theroux documentary Inside the Manosphere was “another reminder of a particular way some of the worst of the internet can prey on young men and boys”

1 day ago
A picture

Divide between Silicon Valley and ordinary people grows ever larger

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery. This week in tech, we discuss a moment of divergence between Silicon Valley and everyday people; deep cuts at Meta to maximize spending on AI; writers caught using AI; and the frightening, fiery crashes of the Tesla Cybertruck.Nvidia hosted a conference last week where it emphasized AI agents – semi-autonomous chatbots that can perform digital tasks for you – as the next frontier in tech. The company announced a toolkit for agents, including NemoClaw, an AI agent software suite for businesses

1 day ago
foodSee all
A picture

Spring’s bounty: what to sow, plant, prune, harvest and eat

2 days ago
A picture

‘I’d smoke Biscoff if I could’: how a little Belgian biscuit became a social media sensation

2 days ago
A picture

Move over, pistachio – it’s pecan time! The food trends hotlist

2 days ago
A picture

Let them eat 1,600 cakes: inside Australia’s first Cake Picnic

2 days ago
A picture

Joe Woodhouse’s recipes for orecchiette with chickpeas, and polenta chips with saucy chickpeas

2 days ago
A picture

Fewer eggs, higher prices: Cadbury ‘doubled down’ on Easter chocolate shrinkflation, Choice finds

3 days ago