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Donald Trump’s granddaughter Kai in last after 83 in shaky LPGA debut

about 6 hours ago
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Kai Trump, the US president’s granddaughter and the eldest child of Donald Trump Jr, opened her LPGA career with a 13-over-par 83 on Thursday at The Annika, a debut round that left her at the bottom of the leaderboard and underscored the chasm between elite junior golf and a field stacked with the sport’s top professionals.The 18-year-old amateur, playing on a much-discussed sponsor’s exemption, began her round on the back nine alongside former major champion Hinako Shibuno and Germany’s Olivia Cowan.She received warm applause when her name was announced on the par-4 10th tee and again after she drove it safely into the fairway, one of the few calm moments in a jittery start.Trump confessed afterward she was more nervous than when she spoke at the Republican National Convention last year and it showed.She bogeyed her opening four holes, a run of tentative strokes that left her scrambling before she had taken a fifth swing from a fairway.

A steady par at the par-5 14th finally stopped the slide, and she mixed two more bogeys with a pair of pars, including a sharp up-and-down at the par-3 16th that drew one of the biggest roars of the early afternoon.She reached the turn in 41.Her mother, Vanessa, and University of Miami assistant coach Jim Garren walked inside the ropes throughout – one day after Miami formally announced her commitment to join the Hurricanes for the 2026–27 season.What Golf Channel commentators described as the day’s largest gallery trailed along, a mix of supporters, skeptics and onlookers aware that her exemption had dominated American golf discourse for weeks.The LPGA’s television window expired after Trump’s first hole, an awkward scheduling outcome given the buzz surrounding her debut, but it did nothing to slow the crowds.

Fans pressed up against the ropes on nearly every fairway.The back nine offered more turbulence.Trump dropped a shot immediately after the turn, then ran into real trouble with two double-bogeys over her next four holes.On the par-4 eighth – her 17th – a topped iron produced an audible gasp, only for her to answer with her crispest swing of the day, knocking the following shot to four feet despite Trump looking straight into the sun.Two more bogeys at the finish left her at 83, the highest score of the day.

“The whole time I was nervous without a doubt,” Trump said.“But I thought I did pretty good for a first time, being the youngest player in the field.Now I kind of know how it goes.”Her presence has split opinion across the US golf establishment.Some analysts argued that the combination of Donald Trump’s granddaughter in the field and WNBA star Caitlin Clark in the pro-am made this one of the tour’s most talked-about weeks in recent memory.

Others questioned whether a player ranked No 461 in the American Junior Golf Association should occupy a late-season spot in a field where professionals are fighting for season-ending accolades and – for some – their jobs next year.Tournament host Annika Sorenstam defended the decision, urging critics to “give this girl a chance.” Pelican Golf Club owner Dan Doyle Jr, whose club controlled the exemption, said Trump’s presence had already driven a noticeable surge in attention, particularly across social media, where she has more than nine million followers.“She’s lovely to speak with,” Doyle said.“And this has created a buzz on top of the other great players we have here.

”Sign up to Soccer with Jonathan WilsonJonathan Wilson brings expert analysis on the biggest stories from European soccerafter newsletter promotionTrump has repeatedly framed the week as a learning experience.She has been candid about weaknesses in her short game and putting, even as Pelican officials praised her length and ball-striking during practice rounds.Her support network includes her grandfather, whose advice was to “have fun, don’t get nervous”, and Tiger Woods, the 15-times major champion who is dating her mother, Vanessa.Woods told her to “go with the flow”, guidance she referenced again Thursday as she recounted regrouping after mistakes.South Korea’s Ryu Hae-ran led after a six-under 64, one shot ahead of Australia’s Grace Kim.

Jennifer Kupcho sat two strokes back, while Charley Hull was among a group one shot further behind – a reminder of just how sharp the standard is at an event that routinely draws one of the LPGA’s strongest fields.
foodSee all
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Polpa position: budget tinned tomatoes score well in Choice taste test

Consumer advocacy group Choice has taste-tested 18 brands of chopped and diced tomatoes, finding three cheaper cans outranked many more expensive brands.Four judges ranked tinned tomatoes from Australian supermarkets and retailers, assessing them on flavour, texture, appearance and aroma – with flavour accounting for the biggest percentage of overall scores.Italian brand Mutti’s Polpa Organic chopped tomatoes, costing $2.95 for a 400g tin, was awarded the highest score of 80%. It was the most expensive product tested, described by judge Fiona Mair (who also judges at the Sydney Royal Fine Food Show) as having “an earthy fresh tomato aroma, really rich juice and flesh”

1 day ago
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Three plant-based chocolate mousse recipes by Philip Khoury

Mousse au chocolat is one of the most exquisite ways to enjoy chocolate – so here are three recipes that offer it in different textures and levels of chocolate intensity. Each one works beautifully with dark chocolate containing 65-80% cocoa solids. Blends with no specific origin can be further rounded out with one teaspoon of vanilla paste or the seeds from a vanilla bean.Once the mousses have been prepared, they can be frozen and gently defrosted in the refrigerator. Top with chocolate shavings, cocoa nibs or a dusting of unsweetened cocoa powder for texture and contrast

1 day ago
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Don’t pour that olive brine down the drain – it’s a flavour bomb | Waste not

When I taste-tested olives for the food filter column a few months ago, it reminded me that the brine is an ingredient in its own right. This intensely savoury liquid adds umami depth to whatever it touches, and, beyond seasoning soups and stews, it can also be used to make salamoia, the aromatic brine that’s traditionally used to top focaccia and create that perfect salty crust.Pouring olive brine down the sink is like washing pure flavour down the drain. Instead, save it to supercharge your focaccia, creating a beautifully flavoured, salted crust that elevates an ordinary loaf into something extraordinary. While I’m partial to rosemary and olives as toppings, this focaccia delivers heaps of flavour even when kept completely plain and simple

1 day ago
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Jelly’s back! Here are three worth making – and three that should wobble off to the bin

Jelly has a dowdy reputation, but it may well be the perfect food for the Instagram age: when it works, it’s incredibly photogenic, so who cares what it tastes like?There can be no other explanation for recent claims that savoury jellies – the most lurid and off-putting of dishes, reminiscent of the worst culinary efforts of the 1950s – are suddenly fashionable. This resurgence comes, according to the New York Times, “at a time when chefs are feeling pressure to produce viral visuals and molecular gastronomy is old hat”.The notion that jelly is having a moment is actually a perennial threat: this time last year it was reported that supermarket jelly cube sales were rising sharply, while vintage jelly moulds were experiencing a five-fold increase in online sales. And it was 15 years ago that the high-end “jellymongers” Bompas & Parr – known for their elaborate architectural creations – first published their book on the subject.People who are sceptical about jelly are often put off by its origins

2 days ago
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Australian supermarket wheat crackers taste test: ‘All the reviewers knew which one was the real deal’

Nicholas Jordan risks it for the biscuits, sampling 19 wheat crackers in the driest taste test yetIf you value our independent journalism, we hope you’ll consider supporting us todayGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailI’ve been wanting to write this article for over a year but I’ve been too intimidated and confused to start. There are several hundred supermarket products that could be called a cracker. Imagine a taste test with 100 versions of the same thing. Do I have the stomach space or mental bandwidth to process that much? Otherwise, how do I decide what’s in or out? Even if I did, how do I rule what is a cracker or not? How do you determine the criteria for tasting something rarely eaten on its own? Do you rate the crackers for deliciousness or compatibility? Are those two things even that different?Then there’s the anxiety of spending several days agonising over all that, and conducting a taste test only to arrive at the conclusion that Jatz are great. Do people want to read an article about why Sir Donald Bradman is better than whoever the second-best-ever cricketer is?Instead of answering all those questions, I could just have a lovely afternoon making my way through 17 kinds of chocolate or many iced coffees

3 days ago
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Same sheet, different dish: how to use up excess lasagne sheets

I’ve accidentally bought too many boxes of dried lasagne sheets. How can I use them up? Jemma, by email This is sounding all too familiar to Jordon Ezra King, the man behind the A Curious Cook newsletter. “It’s funny Jemma asks this,” he says, “because I was in this exact same situation earlier this year after over-catering for a client dinner.” The first thing to say is there’s no immediate rush, he adds: “It sounds obvious, but you can keep the boxes for a long time.” Fortunately for Jemma and her shopping mishap, however, lasagne sheets are also flexible, and their shape doesn’t have to dictate what you do with them

3 days ago
politicsSee all
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Keir clubs himself with the lead pipe in a Downing Street game of No Cluedo | John Crace

about 13 hours ago
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Why some in No 10 think Wes Streeting is plotting to become prime minister

about 14 hours ago
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London congestion charge to rise to £18 – and electric vehicles will have to pay

about 15 hours ago
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If No 10 briefer is found Keir Starmer will sack them, Miliband says

about 15 hours ago
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Labour faces questions over Starmer aide who holds shares in lobbying firm

about 16 hours ago
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Housing secretary tells Labour MPs to vote down planning bill amendment

about 20 hours ago