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Cornichon shortage leaves British sandwich shops in a pickle

With their sharp flavour and crunch, pickled cucumbers are an essential component of any sandwich worth its salt.But an unexpected shortage of cornichons has caused consternation in sandwich shops across the country as cafes scramble to get their hands on jars of the small green pickles.A favourite sandwich of hungry office workers is the simple jambon beurre. A staple across the Channel, the French sandwich contains ham, a generous amount of butter, and, crucially, a sharp, crunchy cornichon to cut through the fat.Sandwich chain Pret a Manger brought it to popularity in the UK, and a jambon beurre retails for about £4 in its shops

1 day ago
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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for chilli eggs with miso beans and spinach | Quick and easy

My go-to cheat ingredient for a dash of heat is White Mausu’s peanut rāyu – it has a gentler flavour profile than, say, Lao Gan Ma crispy chilli in oil, and works perfectly in this dish of creamy, lemon-spiked beans and eggs. I recommend using jarred white beans for the speediest cook time. For an easy, get-ahead breakfast, make and chill the spinach and beans the night before, then reheat the next morning and crack in the eggs when the beans are piping hot.Prep 10 min Cook 20 min Serves 2-32 tbsp neutral oil 2 onions, peeled and roughly sliced2 garlic cloves, peeled and finely grated200g baby spinach, roughly chopped570g jar white haricot or butter beans, drained and rinsed (400g net)2 heaped tsp red miso paste (white will work, too) 150ml single cream Juice of ½ lemonSalt (optional)2 eggs 2-3 tbsp White Mausu peanut rāyu, to tastePut the oil in a large, heavy-based saucepan on a medium heat, then add the onions and stir-fry for five minutes, until just colouring around the edges. Stir in the garlic, turn down the heat to low, then partly cover the pan and cook for five minutes, to soften

1 day ago
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The US small town coffee shop that created a viral drink: ‘I still don’t understand how it went so far’

A viral coffee drink created by a little college town coffee shop on the outskirts of Minneapolis is now making its way around the world after its inventors decided to give the recipe away for free.After Little Joy Coffee’s raspberry danish latte, a spring seasonal drink, went viral in March, the shop’s owners decided to encourage coffee shops to rip off the recipe directly and add it to their menus.Posting both a home recipe and step-by-step instructions for coffee shops, they asked shops if they wanted to be added to a map of places that will serve the raspberry danish latte. Hundreds of shops quickly signed up. A map of the shops shows a presence on every continent except Antarctica, with pins in dozens of countries

1 day ago
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Simpson’s-in-the-Strand, London WC2: ‘A rollicking list of cosy British joys’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

The British may not have the most sophisticated palates, but we are adorable in our culinary urgesAs we sit awaiting the beef rib trolley in the Grand Divan dining room at the whoppingly sized Simpson’s-in-the-Strand, we fizz with ideas of how to describe its wildly unfettered quaintness. “It’s all a bit Hogwarts, isn’t it?” I say to my friend Hugh.He’s been four times already, but then, Simpson’s is that kind of place: a handy-as-heck, posh canteen a short stroll from Covent Garden. There’s a twinkly, ye olde cocktail bar upstairs as well as Romano’s with its more European-style menu. But, for now, let’s concentrate on the Grand Divan

3 days ago
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Benjamina Ebuehi’s sweet and salty chocolate chip cookies recipe | The sweet spot

Everyone has different ideas on what makes the perfect chocolate chip cookie, with everything from thickness and chewiness to the amount of chocolate up for debate. In my opinion, no cookie is worth eating if it’s not well salted; without it, everything feels a little off balance and flat. My not-so-secret way of salting cookies is to use a bit of miso. Not so much that it becomes a miso cookie, but just enough to bring a slightly savoury, umami vibe that makes the cookies a bit more complex-tasting and not sickly sweet.Prep 5 min Cook 30 min Chill 3 hr+ Makes 12100g unsalted butter, softened 110g dark brown sugar 110g caster sugar 35g white miso paste 1 large egg 220g plain flour ½ tsp baking powder ½ tsp bicarbonate of soda 100g milk chocolate, roughly chopped100g dark chocolate, roughly choppedPut the butter and both sugars in a large bowl and beat for two to three minutes until creamy, scraping down the sides of the bowl often

5 days ago
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Gentleman’s Relish is toast after its maker axes the pungent anchovy spread

Fans of traditional British cuisine were heartbroken by news that Gentleman’s Relish was being discontinued by its manufacturer.But Jeremy King, who last month reopened Simpson’s in the Strand, has instructed his chef to create a version of the pungent anchovy-based condiment almost identical to the real thing for the 198-year-old London restaurant.King, who has run famed establishments including the Ivy, the Wolseley and Le Caprice, told the Guardian: “We actually make our own, due to the difficulty in obtaining, so are able to continue to serve it.”Simpson’s, which offers traditional fare including spotted dick and roast beef carved on a silver trolley, serves the relish on toast for £6.50

5 days ago
societySee all
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We need to build houses people can afford | Letters

1 day ago
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Sussex baby deaths inquiry will fail to learn lessons after excluding families, Streeting warned

1 day ago
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AI to predict how bowel cancer patients will respond to new NHS drug

1 day ago
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More than a fifth of UK’s ‘austerity children’ scarred by poverty, study says

1 day ago
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Private firms providing services to NHS made £1.6bn profit in two years, research finds

1 day ago
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‘I just want to feel like me again’: the women still waiting for breast reconstruction years after lockdown

2 days ago

China now the ‘good guy’ on AI as Trump takes ‘wild west’ approach, MPs told

about 4 hours ago
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China is now the “good guy” on AI rather than Donald Trump’s US, where the technology is being pursued in a dangerous “wild west” manner, a former UN and UK government adviser has told MPs.Prof Dame Wendy Hall, who was a member of the UN’s AI advisory board and co-wrote a review of AI for Theresa May’s government, told the House of Commons business and trade committee that China was backing multinational attempts to introduce global governance of AI, in contrast to America, which had set up a race between profit-hungry companies that relied on hype.“China is doing some amazing work in AI, and in fact, at the moment they’re acting as the good guys because the US is totally against any regulation and talk about global governance,” said Hall, who is director of the Web Science Institute at the University of Southampton.“It’s all Maga.It’s all: we’re going to win at all costs.

”She said Chinese AI researchers were efficient, innovative and willing to release their models on an open-source basis, but it had been increasingly difficult for UK experts to collaborate with China on research to the extent she felt that her academic freedom was being limited.Beijing requires Chinese AI companies to cooperate with state intelligence work.Only last month the UK government-funded Centre for Emerging Technology and Security warned of national security risks posed by adversaries cooperating on AI, amid what it called increasing evidence of collaboration between nations such as China, Russia, Iran and North Korea.Trump claimed in January that “we’re leading China by a tremendous amount” in what the White House has billed as a straight race between Beijing and Washington for AI dominance.China’s DeepSeek is expected to release a new model later this month to put Chinese AI on the map with a powerful chatbot that challenges US rivals.

Demis Hassabis, the chief executive of Google DeepMind assessed in January that China was only six months behind the US but said the country had not yet pushed the frontier of AI science,The MPs were also warned that the UK’s reliance on US tech companies including Google, Microsoft, OpenAI and Amazon risked a repeat of the Post Office Horizon scandal,Neil Lawrence, Cambridge University’s DeepMind professor of machine learning, said: “We’re constantly hearing about AI that works for the UK is AI that works for Microsoft, Amazon, OpenAI, Google and these other big tech companies,”Apparently referring to a string of ministerial announcements of multibillion-pound AI deals with US tech companies, he said that while the deals were framed as in citizens’ interests, “when you centrally deploy a technology on people without engaging them” there was a risk of another Horizon scandal,“I think it’s a weakness to be looking outside and constantly across the Atlantic,” he said, warning of “a lack of confidence in our own people, in our own businesses and our own universities”.

The Labour MP Dan Aldridge asked Hall and Lawrence: “Have we effectively outsourced our AI model development to private billionaires, with zero loyalty to the British state and consumer?” Hall replied: “Yes,”Lawrence, who has worked for Microsoft and Amazon, said: “These corporations are clearly not aligned with the interests of our citizens,”There have been recent signs that promises from US-backed tech companies may not be delivered as planned,This month it emerged OpenAI had put a UK datacentre project named “Stargate UK” on hold,Last month a government plan to open “the largest UK sovereign AI datacentre” by the end of this year was revealed to be well behind schedule, with the site still in use as a scaffolding yard.

The MPs were on Tuesday told by the tech industry that a lack of power was a key problem,Microsoft said a planned datacentre in the north of England would not come online until at least 2033, because of a shortage of power from the grid,Kao Data, which operates datacentres, said: “We are waiting up to 15 years now for firm grid offers,”