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foodSee all
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Doom Bar maker Sharp’s Brewery in Cornwall to be closed by US owner

The Cornish brewery that makes Doom Bar ale is to be closed by its US owner, throwing the popular beer brand’s future into doubt and putting about 200 jobs at risk.The drinks company Molson Coors said it plans to shut Sharp’s Brewery in Rock, along with its national call centre in Wales, saying it was “no longer financially sustainable”.The Chicago-based company, which bought Sharp’s 15 years ago, said it was planning to close the site by the end of this year but it “remains committed” to Sharp’s beer brands.Sharp was founded in 1994, and most its sales come from Doom Bar, which is among the bestselling cask ales in the UK, and was named after a notoriously dangerous sandbank in Cornwall’s Camel estuary. Sharp’s also makes Atlantic and Twin Coast pale ales

2 days ago
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Table for one: is eating lunch at work on your own a bad thing?

Name: The lonely lunch.Age: Recent, but growing.Appearance: Très misérable.Why are you talking French to me? Have you gone all pretentious? I am talking French to you because this is a French problem.It is? Oui

2 days ago
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How to use on-the-turn milk to make an Italian classic – recipe

According to the Sustainable Food Trust, “the milk from 40,000 cows (300,000 tonnes) is tipped down the kitchen sink each year – a real slap in the face for the farmer”. Even though some supermarkets have now swapped use-by for best-before dates on their milk, those dates can still be confusing, so always do the sniff test before binning it: even if it’s a little sour, you can still cook with it.The Food Standards Agency advises that food with a best-before date can usually be tested using sensory cues such as the sniff test. And what better way to use up spent or sour milk than maiale al latte, or milk-braised pork, for which pork is slowly braised in milk and flavoured with a few aromatics until tender. The milk splits and forms large curds that thicken and caramelise the sauce, so creating a creamy rich dressing for the meat

2 days ago
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Nadiya Hussain on food, faith and finding her voice: ‘I get paid less than the white version of me’

In a food world where the trend is for protein and weight-loss injections and sugar is the supervillain, Nadiya’s Quick Comforts seems somewhat contrary. There are golden syrup dumplings. There is a chapter devoted to deep frying, with cheese balls and ingenious deep-fried cannelloni.“If I could write an entire book on deep frying, I absolutely would,” says Hussain with a laugh. “This is how I cook, this is how I eat, this is how I show love to my family

3 days ago
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Should you sanitise your strawberries? Experts on the right way to wash fruit and vegetables

You know the cost-of-living crisis is biting when videos of influencers unpacking their grocery “hauls” are viral on TikTok. Chewing through millions of views, fruit and vegetables are aesthetically plopped into a sink filled with water, piece by piece. “Sanitising” products are then added, ranging from the fizz of baking soda and vinegar to specialised vegetable soaps (“Amazon link in my bio!”). There are even expensive electronic purifiers, which shake, shimmy and bubble away in the basin, supposedly removing any nasties.But is ASMR deep-cleaning your fresh produce really necessary? And is it all too late for those of us who can barely remember to rinse our pears?For Queensland’s Rebecca Scurr, who shares what it’s like to “sell fruit for a living” to her 26,000 TikTok followers, fruit-washing videos make her “cringe so much”

3 days ago
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Do you really need to chill cookie dough? | Kitchen Aide

Does chilling cookie dough really make for a better result?Emily, by email “It all depends on what kind of cookie it is,” says Guardian baker Helen Goh. “Let’s say it’s a cookie that you need to stamp out – the dough needs to be firm enough to roll it, but not so firm that you can’t.” That said, the question of whether to fridge or not to fridge is probably most prevalent in the chocolate chip cookie sphere. “There’s a perceived wisdom that chilling helps the dough develop the flavour and caramelisation,” Goh says, “but, to be honest, it also makes the dough a little easier to roll and ensures it bakes evenly, which is worth far more than that slight improvement in flavour.”Recommended chilling times vary from 30 minutes to overnight, although Goh finds the latter results in a “cakey” cookie: “I’m a real Goldilocks, so I like crisp at the edges with a chewy centre

3 days ago
politicsSee all
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Polls close in Gorton and Denton byelection after three-way battle between Greens, Labour and Reform

1 day ago
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The leadership issue may be settled, but Your Party’s struggle for electoral relevance has only just begun

1 day ago
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Dual national rules are another own goal for Labour | Brief letters

1 day ago
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The Your Party committee election was chaos. Why break the habit of a lifetime? | John Crace

1 day ago
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Labour, Green party and Reform make final pitch to voters in Gorton and Denton – as it happened

1 day ago
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Your Party under Corbyn to work with Greens on ‘coordinated left-flank offensive’

1 day ago

Labour’s worst fears realised by Greens’ victory in Gorton and Denton byelection

about 15 hours ago
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Labour MPs have said for weeks that the outcome they most feared at the Gorton and Denton byelection was a Green party victory.On Friday morning, their worst fears were realised.The Greens’ convincing win in the Manchester seat gives the leftwing party its best byelection result and its first ever northern seat.More importantly, however, it gives progressive voters a clear signal that they do not have to vote Labour to beat Reform – a signal that could prove catastrophic for the government in some of its strongest heartlands over the next few years.“What makes this loss so consequential to Labour is not just the scale of the defeat but the message it sends to voters about future contests,” said the pollster Luke Tryl.

“One of Labour’s ace cards had been the hope that however frustrated or disillusioned progressive voters might be with the Starmer government the threat of Reform would be enough to bring them back into the fold and reunite the left – a similar approach to President Macron’s re-election against Marine Le Pen.“But that argument risks collapsing following last night’s result.”John Curtice, professor of politics at Strathclyde University, said the result underlined how two pillars of Labour’s traditional support – white, working-class voters and ethnic minorities – had deserted them.“The Green party’s historic success in the Gorton and Denton byelection means the future of British politics is now even more uncertain than it was already,” he wrote in a piece for the BBC.Hannah Spencer’s victory, with a majority of 4,402 votes over Reform, gives the Greens their fifth Westminster MP – 120 miles away from the next closest Green seat, proving the party can now win outside of its cluster of southern support.

She told supporters at the vote count on Friday morning: “To people here in Gorton and Denton who feel left behind and isolated, I see you and I will fight for you.”The Green party vote share of 41% is four times bigger than their previous best byelection result, and the increase in their vote is five times larger than they have achieved in any byelection since 2010.Officials for the Greens and Labour said there had been a shift among Muslim voters, with many mentioning Starmer’s positions on Gaza as a key reason for moving away from Labour.Spencer sought to capitalise on this with a campaign that targeted Muslim voters, including with videos in Urdu, in an echo of Zohran Mamdani’s mayoral campaign in New York.“I can’t and won’t accept this victory tonight without calling out the politicians and divisive figures who constantly scapegoat and blame our communities for all the problems in society,” she said from the count.

“My Muslim friends and neighbours are just like me: human.”But for Starmer, Labour’s distant third place is likely to reignite questions about his leadership and renew the criticism of those on the left of the party that he has not done enough to impress its progressive base.It comes after a similar result last year in the Welsh Senedd seat of Caerphilly, where Plaid Cymru topped the ballot, ending more than 100 years of Labour dominance in the region.The prime minister’s decision to block Andy Burnham from running for the seat is likely to come under renewed scrutiny, given many voters said they would have been more likely to vote Labour if the Greater Manchester mayor had been the candidate.Speaking before the result, one Labour MP said: “The worst outcome for us would be a win for the Greens, or any result which shows us finishing behind them.

That could herald the kind of split in the left which we saw in the right at the last election and which gave us a landslide victory.”Lucy Powell, Labour’s deputy leader, said: “What I take from this is that people want to see the Labour party shout more loudly about our values and how we are trying to change people’s lives for the better.”Andrea Egan, the general secretary of the trade union Unison, said: “The Greens won for a simple reason: many traditional Labour supporters, in Manchester and across the country, want to see progressive values robustly defended against the far-right, not gleefully abandoned.“A Labour government should be standing up for workers, defending migrants and refugees, and taking the fight to Nigel Farage rather than letting him set the agenda.”After Starmer fended off an apparent coup attempt against his leadership earlier this month, those close to the Labour leader insisted he would show a more authentic progressivism.

He will now come under more pressure than ever to empower the left of his party – something those on Labour’s right worry could pull them away from the kinds of swing voter who normally decide elections.For Reform, the party’s second place result with a swing of 14% adds to a sense that the party’s momentum may have stalled.The seat is well down the party’s target list – below 400 – and so is not needed if Reform are to win a majority at the next election.But party officials had hoped to prove that their anti-immigration message could translate into votes even in urban areas.Party leaders had come under fire for selecting Matt Goodwin, the former academic and prominent rightwing activist, as their candidate, rather than a more moderate candidate who lived locally.

Goodwin criticised the result on Friday morning, saying: “What you saw was a coalition of Islamists and woke progressives that came together to dominate the constituency,”For the Conservatives meanwhile, the result confirmed the party has collapsed in areas where Reform is performing strongly,The 1,9% won by their candidate Charlotte Cadden is the party’s worst byelection result in history, and marks only the second time the party has lost its deposit in a vote by polling under 5% since 1962,