‘Put the blinders on’: how Jakara Anthony can make Winter Olympics history | Kate Allman

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In less than 30 seconds on a field of icy bumps pitched steeper than most recreational ski runs, Australian freestyle skier Jakara Anthony will try to do what no woman ever has.She will attempt to defend her title from Beijing 2022 and win back-to-back Olympic gold in moguls.At 27, Anthony is Australia’s greatest gold medal hope at the Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics.She is the most successful Australian World Cup skier ever, she carried the flag at the opening ceremony last week and featured on the cover of Vogue in January.The latter a rare crossover moment that underlines how Olympic gold can propel an athlete into the national consciousness.

But moguls is a sport that does not care for expectation.And history suggests that even the very best rarely repeat.Only one mogul skier, Canada’s Alexandre Bilodeau, has ever won Olympic gold twice in a row.No woman has managed it.“There are very few people who do back-to-backs in any sport,” says Ann Batelle, a four-time Olympian turned professional moguls coach in Steamboat Springs, Colorado.

“Livigno’s course is 28 degrees which is steeper than many – ours in steamboat is 25 degrees.That makes it even more challenging.In my opinion, it’s a good thing, because it will separate the best athletes.”Anthony arrives in Italy ranked world No 1, with a résumé unmatched in Australian winter sports.Her trophy cabinet includes 26 World Cup gold medals and seven Crystal Globes – the esteemed trophy awarded to the athlete who accumulates the highest points total in their discipline across a World Cup season.

Raised in Barwon Heads, Anthony began skiing moguls at Mount Buller and joined the World Cup circuit at just 15.Her 2024 season was one of the most dominant ever recorded in women’s moguls: 14 wins from 16 starts and three Crystal Globes in a single campaign.For audiences unfamiliar with moguls, the event might look chaotic: skiers bouncing down Livigno’s 235-metre field of icy mounds at speed, launching aerials off two jumps before sprinting to the finish.But speed accounts for just 20% of the total score.Another 20% comes from jumps.

The remaining 60% is judged on turns.Judges reward smooth carved turns rather than skidding, with controlled absorption as skiers’ legs compress and extend over each mogul.Batelle, whosemountain base of Steamboat has produced more Olympians than any other town in the US, says the best runs look almost calm.“Your legs stay together, your arms are out in front, your upper body is quiet,” she says.“You ski the line that water would take if you poured a pitcher at the top of the course.

”This is where Anthony separates from the field.“She makes a really nice carve,” Batelle says.“Her upper body doesn’t move.Her hands are perfect.She’s incredibly clean and makes very few mistakes.

”The Australian is also peaking at the right time.After missing most of last season with a broken collarbone, she returned this winter with three World Cup wins.Her most recent victory came in January at Waterville Valley in the US, where she was the only woman to break the 80-point barrier, scoring 81.17.The 2018 Olympic champion, France’s Perrine Laffont, remains Anthony’s biggest threat.

Laffont finished fourth in Beijing and the notoriously fast 27-year-old is again chasing the podium.The 2022 silver medallist, American Jaelin Kauf, has 16 career World Cup wins and 50 podiums.She dominated the World Cup season while Anthony was injured, winning the overall, single and dual moguls Crystal Globes.Another threatening American, 20-year-old Elizabeth Lemley, is returning from an ACL injury but in remarkable form – finishing second to Anthony at Waterville.Added to this deep field is the unique pressure of the Olympic spotlight: two weeks of intense global media attention as winter sports briefly dominate the mainstream sporting consciousness once every four years.

“Right now, expectations on Jakara are that she will win a second gold,” Batelle says.“If she doesn’t win, it will likely be seen as a failure to the media and to many people – which is brutal.”Anthony has spoken about how the weight of an Olympic campaign shifts with each Games.“Each Winter Games has been a different experience for me,” she said in January.“My first one was going in with no real expectations, then the second as a gold medal favourite … These ones I’ll be going in as the defending champion.

There’s still a lot to learn.”Batelle’s advice is for Anthony to “put the blinders on”.“If she starts thinking, ‘I have to win again,’ it will mess with her,” she says.“Just ski – and Jakara knows how to ski.”Gold in Beijing made Anthony a household name.

Milano Cortina will determine whether that moment stands alone or marks the beginning of something unprecedented.
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Cylla, Birmingham: ‘Maybe the best potato side dish being served in the UK today’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

Punchy cocktails and roaringly traditional Greek food in the heart of BirminghamCylla, a classy Greek restaurant on Newhall Street, Birmingham, draws inspiration, it says, from Scylla, the legendary Greek man-eating sea monster that lives close to the whirlpools of Charybdis. She’s a beautiful woman, but has six dog heads, all grumpy and snarling, as well as a serpent’s tail.If Scylla herself were ever to turn up at Cylla, dogs’ heads barking and tail flapping, they’d have to seat her in one of the gorgeous private booths at the front as you enter the room. These are the spots to grab if you want a little privacy, which is why we eschewed the long, prettily lit cocktail bar and headed straight to this cosy hidey-hole for a round of Poseidon’s Wrath. “It’s a bit like a dirty martini,” explained our server, who was one of those warm, bright, commanding, knowledgable souls who, in a hospitality setting, is worth her weight in drachma

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Spice up your life! 17 soups with a kick – from chicken curry laksa to roast pumpkin

Technically, many soups are spiced in some way, even if it’s just with pepper. But we all know what is meant by a spiced soup: something with a jolt to it, and a bit of heat to warm up a winter evening. When it comes to soup, spice is the ultimate companion to a main ingredient that may otherwise be considered boring or bland. In this sense, the spices are the most important component: they are what the soup will taste of.But which spices go with which ingredients, and how? Here are 17 different recipes to help you figure that out

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Helen Goh’s recipe for Valentine’s chocolate pots de creme for two | The sweet spot

These chocolate pots are dark, silken and softly bitter, with enough richness to feel a little decadent, but not heavy. Make one to share or two individual ones, depending on your mood. They can be made ahead, anywhere from an hour to a full day in advance, and will keep happily in the fridge. If they’ve been chilled for more than a couple of hours, let them sit at room temperature for about 20 minutes before serving. They should feel cool against the spoon, but not fridge-cold, which dulls their luxurious texture

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Craft beer has gone stale: let’s hear it for age-old favourites | Richard Godwin

The writer Vladimir Nabokov was extremely particular when it came to language, and rather more basic when it came to sustenance: “My habits are simple, my tastes banal,” he once told an interviewer. “I would not exchange my favourite fare (bacon and eggs, beer) for the most misspelt menu in the world.”I’ve often thought of this as I’ve perused misspelt beer menus over the years, wondering what Nabokov would make of all the hazy dubble IPAs and triple brown mocha porters, because, over the course of what we might have to label the “craft era”, beer has become anything but simple. You may well have lamented this, too, especially if you’ve ever been cornered by an enthusiast at a party. India pale ale (IPA), for example, which was once a distinctly British style of ale designed for export, has, in the hands of American craft brewers, become a sort of standard-bearer for complicated beer: aggressively hopped, often startlingly bitter and/or sour, and redolent of a bygone era of millennial hipster striving

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What a ​four-​year-​old ​taught ​us ​about the ​magic of ​baking​ a chocolate ​cake

Valentine’s is on the horizon, which means we are about to officially enter chocolate cake season – that soft-focus part of winter when confectionery and romance blur together. For our four-year-old goddaughter, it is always that time of year. Just hearing the two words together makes her roll her eyes and roll out her little tongue in anticipation of pleasure, like a cartoon kid. When we told her we would come and bake a chocolate cake with her, there were squeals of joy.Settling on a recipe was the first challenge – Ravneet Gill’s fudgy one, Felicity Cloake’s perfect one and Benjamina Ebuehi’s traybaked one were all contenders

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Rachel Roddy’s recipe for pork ragu with herbs (for gnocchi or pasta) | A kitchen in Rome

It’s 10.30am and steam carrying the smell of onions, beans, cabbage and braised meat escapes from the kitchen in the corner of box 37 on Testaccio market. In the small kitchen is Leonardo Cioni, a tall chef from San Giovanni Valdarno, midway between Florence and Arezzo, who, for the past three-and-a-half years, has run box 37 as Sicché Roba Toscana, which roughly translates as “therefore Tuscan stuff”. The escaping steam is effective advertising, leading eyes to the blackboard above the counter to discover exactly what is going on in the back.Always on the menu is lampredotto