Cardiff stages thriller while Women’s Six Nations favourites show strength

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Sporting theatre reached Shakespearean heights at the Principality Stadium on Saturday as Wales and Scotland produced the best match of the opening Women’s Six Nations weekend.Welsh hearts broke seven minutes past the full 80 as Scotland managed to get a comeback win over the line.The fixture had sensational tries and late drama, and played out on BBC Two.The only thing missing was the type of crowd that such a thriller deserved.Wales hosted the game at the national stadium, the only one taking place there during this year’s tournament, watched by 10,569 supporters.

The number is a record for a fixture between the two teams in Wales but if it had been held next door at Cardiff Arms Park, which has an official capacity of just over 12,000, or at Cardiff City Stadium, which holds about 33,000 and is hosting Wales men v Fiji in July, the atmosphere would have translated better to the players as well as to those watching at home.The Welsh Rugby Union held the game at the Principality Stadium as part of its commitment to grow the women’s game and plan to play at least one game a season there.The Principality is certainly a stage the team deserve to play on and the hope is bigger crowds will follow.Other national stadiums are being used across the tournament.Also in round one, England set a Women’s Six Nations attendance record with 77,120 watching for their 33-12 victory over Ireland at Twickenham and the Red Roses travel to Murrayfield on Saturday to face Scotland in front of a crowd expected to surpass 25,000.

It will be Scotland Women’s first standalone game at the venue and when the Scots travel to Dublin in the final round that will represent Ireland Women’s first standalone game at the Aviva Stadium, for which 20,000 tickets have so far been sold.Wales’s round two match against France will be held at Cardiff Arms Park and they will be aiming to deliver another spirited performance, with the head coach, Sean Lynn, making clear consistency is what he’s looking for from his players during this tournament.“The fight and the character that those girls showed at the end, to be playing phase after phase from their own try line, is what we’ve been going after,” he said following Saturday’s match.“For me it was a Test match, the improvement we’ve made from the World Cup to where we are now, you can clearly see it.I was super proud of them all.

”Wales’s performance was a step up from their disappointing performances at last year’s World Cup and was perhaps their best since Lynn took over just before the previous Six Nations.They remained in the fight after going 24-12 behind and put themselves within five points towards the end of the game.As the clock ticked into the red, Wales were battling from their own try line to secure a first Six Nations win since their 22-20 triumph over Italy in 2024.The crowd urged them on but, ultimately, a fumbled lineout dashed their hopes, though some believed Wales should have had an additional penalty as there appeared to be a deliberate knock-on at the set piece.The result was a good one for Scotland, though, and was a first win for the head coach, Sione Fukofuka, after his appointment in December.

“It was a little bit tight at the end – we got our defensive play in finally,” said Helen Nelson, the Scotland fly-half and player of the match.“It’s always tight against Wales but I’m just proud that we put in that full performance and managed to get the win.“It’s been a fast pre-season, we’ve had 12 days together, so we’re just focusing on us, we’ve got a lot of experienced players but also those young players that came in.Just trying to get to know each other off the pitch, get those connections and then show that on the field.”The Red Roses were favourites to be leading the table after round one but it is France who take top spot on points difference after an impressive second-half display against Italy in Grenoble.

François Ratier’s team travel to Cardiff on Saturday as favourites, with two out of three of the Cardiff Arms Park stands sold out.
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From soups and greens to roots, how to survive the ‘hungry gap’

Spring may have firmly sprung – I write this with a view of vivid yellow forsythia blossom in next door’s garden, and the melodious warble of full-throated birdsong – but though the greenery may be flourishing in our gardens, it’s a different story at the farmers’ market. Despite a few spindly spears of asparagus and miniature jersey royals making an appearance on our Easter tables last weekend, the new season of British produce doesn’t kick off in earnest for another few weeks yet. That means we’re now heading into the so-called “hungry gap”, an annual quirk of our relatively northern latitude, when temperatures are too high for much winter veg such as kale and brassicas, but too low for the more delicate likes of peas and broad beans to ripen – let alone high-summer treats such as berries, squash and stone fruit.Happily, many hardy winter crops store well, and are versatile enough to shake off their heavy winter coat of cream and butter in favour of a lighter treatment. The late Skye Gyngell gifted us a carrot, celery, farro and borlotti bean soup, Nigel Slater has an early spring laksa with purple sprouting broccoli (and some spinach, which I suspect you could use frozen), and Nicholas Balfe offers a ceviche with celeriac and a baked beetroot dish (pictured top) – both of which look just the thing to wake up your taste buds

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Rachel Roddy’s recipe for hazelnut and chocolate cake | A kitchen in Rome

Having been kept waiting for three hours, Dick Dewy leaves Miss Fancy Day snipping and sewing her blue dress. The plan is that he will return for her a quarter of an hour later, however, Dick convinces himself that he has been scandalously trifled with by Fancy and decides that, to punish her, he will not return. Instead, he leaps over the gate, pushes up the lane for two miles, takes a winding path called Snail-Creep, and crawls through the opening to the hazel grove in Grey’s Wood.Getting a class of 15-year-olds to relay/read the opening of chapter four of Under the Greenwood Tree, which is memorably entitled “Going Nutting”, is an extremely effective way to engage them with the majesty of Thomas Hardy. And the title is nothing compared to the line (as Dick vanished among the bushes): “Never man nutted as Dick nutted that afternoon

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How to make cauliflower cheese using the whole plant – recipe | Waste not

This recipe, adapted from one in my cookbook, is a very elaborate way to serve humble cauliflower cheese. The whole plant, including the leaves and core, is seasoned with nutmeg and roasted, and it’s then dressed with a satisfying layer of rich cheese sauce and grilled until charred and bubbling. Choose a cauliflower with plenty of leaves, because they go deliciously crisp when roasted.This is perhaps the most decadent cauliflower cheese I’ve ever made. Inspired by an orange-coloured cauliflower I found sitting proudly in a box at my local Brockley Market in south London, I decided to make a vibrant and very orange cauliflower cheese using red leicester cheese and turmeric

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A marmalade-dropper for Paddington Bear? | Letters

As a Portuguese-British citizen, I feel it is my duty to add to your explainer article (Keir Starmalade, anyone? Will marmalade really have to be rebranded in UK?, 4 April) and explain where the word marmalade originated from. Marmalade comes from the fruit marmelo (quince). And marmalade was and is quince jam in Portugal. This jam began to be exported to England at the end of the 15th century. Only in the 17th century did the English start to apply the word marmalade to orange jam

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How to save limp herbs | Kitchen aide

What can I do with herbs that are past their best?Joe, by email Happily, Joe and his on-the-turn herbs aren’t short of options. “The obvious choice for hard herbs is to chuck them in a sandwich bag and freeze them for future stock-making,” says Alice Norman, founder of regenerative bakery Pinch in Suffolk. Alternatively, Sami Tamimi, author of Boustany, would be inclined to dry his excess herbs. In summer, he’d simply pop them on a tray and put them outside in the sun, but right now he “dries them in a 60-70C oven, then packs in containers, ready for the next time you’re short of fresh herbs”.Norman’s current MO is to blitz languishing herbs (“rosemary and/or thyme work best”) with a 3:4 ratio of fine salt

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‘Before I can stop her, my daughter is licking crumbs from the table’: my search for the perfect kids’ menu

Chips, fish fingers, pizza … restaurant food for children is depressingly predictable. Are there more adventurous options? I took my four-year-old daughter on a month-long mission to find outWe’re heading out for dinner. Before I tell my four-year-old where we’re going, she has already announced that she’s going to have fish, chips and lots of ketchup. It sounds delicious; a classic. But there’s the irksome feeling that the intrepid impulses of childhood should be met with food that expands palates rather than feeding into the well-trodden path to a beige meal