Nottinghamshire v Surrey, Worcs v Durham, and more: county cricket – live

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In Div 2, Derbyshire bat on and on against Northants, though Conway has three wickets.431-5.At Canterbury, Mikey Cohen and Sam Northeast are joining Crawley in an early bath, but Ben Dawkins and Tawanda Muyeye are sticking it out.Kent 96-3.And after the failure of the top order, Worcestershire continue to battle at New Road.

Twenty overs but no more wickets for Stokes,Worcs 272-9,It’s continuing to rain at OT where we’ve taken an early lunch,As the rain continues, Ken Grime plays us Red Rose/The Ballad of David Hughes as recorded by Lancs CCC at Strawberry Studios in Stockport in 1972,It’s certainly of its time…Actually they’re all out.

Losing six for 15 in 14 overs.Five catches for Rob Yates.Bad Yorkshire.Four wickets for OHD at Edgbaston, Yorkshire have subsided – losing five for 15 since Harry Brook was bowled chasing an elaborate drive.Yorks 152-9 only lead Warwicks by five.

Now hosing it down at OT.Or maybe bad light.Anyway, they’ve come off – Middlesex 116-5, Leus du Plooy 39 not out.Looks pretty miserable to be honest.Dan Hughes collects a rapid fifty at Hove, after Tom Clark and Dan Ibrahim were both extracted c Rishi Patel, b Tom Helm.

Sussex 85-2 trail Leics by 328,Notts’ tail is causing Surrey some frustration,Joe Clarke was out without adding to his overnight score but 41 from Fergus O’Neill and 25 not out from Olly Stone has added another 58,Notts 375-9,Glammy have lost both openers, ul Hassan following Asa Tribe back into the dressing room.

A wicket each for Gregory and Ball.Glamorgan 38-2, trail by 316.James Fuller has been chopping through Essex, though has hit some resistance in the shape of Matt Critchley and Wiaan Mulder.Essex 104-5, trail Hants by 131.(a fearsome drive by du Plooy off Stanley – ping! over mid off)Some nasty looking skies approaching from behind the OT pavilion.

Higgins and du Plooy at the moment fighting off the Lancashire storm 90-4, trail by 111.Time to wander round the grounds.Oooof, a nasty, brutish delivery from Mitchell Stanley to unsettle Ryan Higgins.Another talked about opener falls early – Asa Tribe caught for four.Glamorgan 16-1 after Somerset picked up another 17 runs for the last wicket.

and Bairstow, both bowled,Brook driving, Ethan Bamber picking out off stump,YJB totally misjudging Olly Dannon-Dalby and watching the ball jingle into his stumps,Yorkshire 142-6, still trail by five,No hundred for Falconer on Championship debut, a chorus of bouncing slips and an imploring Tom Bailey enough for the umpire to raise an off-you-go finger to an lbw shout.

Poor Zak Crawley out again cheaply, chopping on,I really hope this doesn’t disintegrate into a Haseeb Hameed 2019 summer and that someone has an arm round his shoulder,Kent 13-1,An injury replacement here at OT – Yorkshire’s Harry Duke has joined Middlesex for a two-week loan to replace Joe Cracknell, who hurt a finger standing up to Jennings yesterday,Middlesex 50-3.

Five slips, Jimmy pistoning in.Middlesex supporters, hunker down.A test for young Caleb Faulkner on county debut, who scored 100 in the U19 World Cup final.That didn’t take long.Jimmy Anderson comes on at the Jimmy Anderson end, and first ball Ben Geddes gives a catch back.

Raf runs her eye over England’s summer, and a first captaincy gig for Charlie Dean,Ali’s trip to Worcester to see Ben Stokes bowl,The vacancy sign over one England openers slot continues to swing,The selectors fancy James Rew, but he keeps wicket and bats in the middle order for Somerset,How to square the circle? Friday’s answer was Rew opening for Somerset for the first time in his first-class career.

It was a short-lived experiment, Rew lasting just seven balls before being bowled for four.Around Rew there were runs for young Josh Thomas (71) and Tom Lammonby (45) before Glamorgan debutant Tom Norton picked the first of three wickets.Tom Abell’s 86 propped up the rest of the innings.Dan Worrall slipped into his Surrey bowling boots for the first time this spring and soon dismissed Nottinghamshire’s openers.He pocketed another wicket when Ben Duckett (42) fended at a lifter, and another two in a mini Notts collapse of four for five.

Joe Clarke’s unbeaten 129, his second century of a rich early season, kept Notts in the match,Middlesex’s skilled young seam attack made Lancashire work hard for their runs, Keaton Jennings (67), was, as ever, the glue,James Anderson then reduced Middlesex to 38 for two as the clouds closed in,Jack White (four for 49) and his band of Yorkshire right-arm seamers ruined Warwickshire, a string of single digit scores strung together by 57 from Sam Hain,Harry Brook, in his first innings of the summer, got off the mark with an outrageously dismissive cover drive.

Half-centuries for Jake Lehmann and Ben Brown hauled Hampshire towards near respectability against Essex.A marauding Sam Cook (three for 56) took out the top order and Wiaan Mulder finished things off.Sussex kept Leicestershire in sight, despite dropping six catches.Jack Carson pocketed four wickets and the impressive Ollie Robinson three.An unbeaten 91 from Caleb Jewell topped a morale-boosting day for Derbyshire against Northamptonshire.

DIVISION ONEChelmsford: Essex 51-2 v Hampshire 235Sophia Gardens: Glamorgan v Somerset 337-9Trent Bridge: Nottinghamshire 317-7 v SurreyHove: Sussex 3-0 v Leicestershire 328Edgbaston: Warwickshire 147 v Yorkshire 110-4DIVISION TWOThe County Ground: Derbyshire 342-3 v NorthamptonshireBristol: Gloucestershire 325 v Kent 1-0Old Trafford: Lancashire 201 v Middlesex 38-2New Road: Worcestershire 209-7 v DurhamGood morning! And welcome to a reassuringly old fashioned Manchester spring day, slightly damp, slightly overcast, slightly muggy at the seams.It was a day mostly for bowlers yesterday, and we wait to see if Jimmy Anderson can inflict more pain on Middlesex, how Kent fare against Gloucestershire, Essex against Hampshire and Glamorgan against Big Craig and co.It’s already a tight tussle at Trent Bridge, and Harry Brook proved highly entertaining last evening at Edgbaston in the gloom.And all eyes to New Road, where Ben Stokes will go into bat at the ground where he blasted 161 off 88 balls four years ago.It all starts at 11am, do join us!
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Navel gazing: oranges, mandarins and persimmons top Australia’s best-value fruit and veg for May

“Sweet, low seed and great for snacking” imperial mandarins have just started their season, says Josh Flamminio, owner and buyer at Sydney’s Galluzzo Fruiterers. The tangy-sweet citrus is selling for between $2.99 and $3.99 a kilo in major supermarkets. At Galluzzo, Queensland-grown imperial mandarins are $3

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How to save asparagus trimmings from the food-waste bin – recipe | Waste not

Asparagus butts are a particularly tricky byproduct to tame because they’re so fibrous. I usually cut them very finely (into 5mm-thick discs, or even thinner), then boil, puree and pass them through a sieve (as in my green goddess salad dressing and asparagus soup), but even then you’ll still end up with a fair bit of fibrous waste. Enter asparagus-butt butter: a recipe that defies all odds, making the impossible possible by transforming a tough offcut into an intense compound butter that’s perfect for grilling or frying asparagus spears themselves, or for eggs, bread, gnocchi or whatever you can think of. The short fibres brown and caramelise in the butter, and in the process become the highlight of the dish, rather than the problem.This transforms an unwanted byproduct into an intense expression of the plant’s flavour

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Thoran and chaat: Romy Gill’s Indian-style asparagus recipes

Spring’s first asparagus always feels like a celebration, but there’s so much more to cooking those spears than just butter and lemon. Here, those tender stems combine with bold Indian flavours in two playful dishes. The thoran, inspired by Keralan home cooking, involves stir-frying asparagus with coconut, mustard seeds and curry leaves to create something warm and comforting (my friend Simi’s mum always used to drizzle it with a little lemon juice to give the flavours a lift). The chaat, meanwhile, tossed with tangy tamarind, yoghurt, spices, crunchy chickpeas and sweet pomegranate, is a delicious snack or side. Together, they show how versatile asparagus can be: easy to cook, vibrant and moreish even in unexpected culinary traditions

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Australian supermarket sauerkraut taste test: one is ‘like eating the smell of McDonald’s pickle’

It’s ‘Gut Coachella’ for Nicholas Jordan and friends, who blind taste a line-up of 20 shredded and fermented cabbage productsIf you value our independent journalism, we hope you’ll consider supporting us todayGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailI cannot tell you how many times I’ve been introduced to a fatty, salty hunk of meat and thought, “my god, I’m going to need a pickle”. I feel the same eating cheese toasties or deli sandwiches with rich mayo-based sauces. Where is the pickle, hot sauce, citrus or ferment? Even the most savoury, juicy slab of umami is a bit much without acidity to balance it.What is the point of sauerkraut without acidity? It’s just wet, salty cabbage, and what is that for, other than deflating my spirits and inflating my gastrointestinal system? Sauerkraut should be sour; it’s the hallmark of the very thing that created it – fermentation.Why am I saying all this? After eight friends and I tasted 21 supermarket sauerkrauts, I was shocked to find some lacked not just acidity but any vigour at all

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Fears for spears: how to cook asparagus without blanching | Kitchen aide

I always blanch asparagus, but how else can I cook it?Joe, via email“Blanching captures that green, verdant nature of asparagus so well, and saves its minerality, too,” agrees Bart Stratfold of Timberyard in Edinburgh, but when the season is going full tilt, it’s just common sense to expand our horizons. For Billy Stock, chef/owner of the Wellington in Margate, that means salads, especially with spears that are really fresh: “Use a peeler to shave thin strips off the raw asparagus, and use them in a delicious variation on salade Niçoise.”Another approach would be the grill, Stratfold says: “Coat the spears in rapeseed oil, then grill on an excruciatingly high heat for just a few seconds, until they develop some char.” After that, he rolls them in a tray of vinegar or preserves: “At the restaurant, that’s usually sweet pickled elderflower and elderflower vinegar.”Joe could even abandon the kitchen altogether

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Georgina Hayden’s quick and easy recipe for spanakopita orzo | Quick and easy

For me, it isn’t really spring until the first May bank holiday; the days are longer, the flowers are out, and an abundance of green graces our shelves. This spanakopita orzo is a celebration of all things light, bright and spring. It’s a great weeknight dinner that will instantly transport you to Greece.This dish should be oozy, like a good risotto, so if your orzo absorbs all the stock, add a little more hot water to give it that requisite creamy finish.Prep 15 minCook 25 min Serves 425g butter 2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra to serve1 bunch spring onions, trimmed and sliced2 garlic cloves, peeled and finely sliced220g baby leaf spinach, chopped1