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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

1 day ago
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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

3 days ago
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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

4 days ago
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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

4 days ago
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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

4 days ago
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Rich plums and ripe tomatoes: Australia’s best-value fruit and veg for February

Tomatoes ripe for cooking, cheap watermelon and cucumbers for $2 a piece – but it’s the final call for apricots, cherries and mangoesGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailJuicy watermelon, deep-purple plums and ripe roma tomatoes are some of the vibrant fruit and veg highlights this month, says Graham Gee, senior buyer at the Happy Apple in Melbourne.“Tomatoes are plentiful, in particular the saucing varieties,” he says. “Roma varieties are sold nice and ripe, ready to make passata.” Cooking tomatoes are roughly $2 a kilo at the Happy Apple, with Australian field tomatoes going for about $5 a kilo in supermarkets.Watermelon is “very cheap”, says Michael Hsu, operational manager at Sydney’s Panetta Mercato

5 days ago
politicsSee all
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For some, McSweeney resignation removes obstacle to eventual downfall of Starmer

about 14 hours ago
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Keir Starmer’s next steps: what hurdles must the prime minister now negotiate?

about 15 hours ago
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Who are No 10’s new power brokers after Morgan McSweeney’s resignation?

about 15 hours ago
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Morgan McSweeney: brains behind Labour’s comeback undone by poor judgment

about 17 hours ago
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Decent or disastrous? Starmer’s judgment and leadership divide opinion | Letters

about 17 hours ago
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Morgan McSweeney resigns as Keir Starmer’s chief of staff

about 17 hours ago

NHS doctor struck off over botched circumcision still performing operation

2 days ago
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A doctor who was struck off over a “reckless” circumcision that risked killing a toddler is still performing the procedure as a layperson, the Guardian can reveal.Campaigners say Zuber Bux’s private circumcision business highlights a “catastrophic failure of safeguarding”, as alarm grows about the absence of regulation of the procedure.Bux is one of three former doctors who have had their licence to practise removed by the medical regulator over complaints about botched circumcisions from 2012 to 2022, according to data obtained by the National Secular Society (NSS) under freedom of information.In 2021 the General Medical Council upheld a NHS complaint of serious misconduct over the circumcision of a 15-month-old boy, which Bux conducted in the community despite the boy’s known heart condition.A series of medical blunders by Bux led to the boy, referred to as Patient A, being transferred to hospital amid fears for his life.

Summarising its decision, the GMC panel said: “Patient A was a serious case involving a vulnerable child where Dr Bux adopted a cavalier approach to the procedure resulting in a hospital admission of Patient A in a potentially life threatening situation.”It said Bux’s misconduct was of “such a serious nature” that removing him from the medical register was “the only proportionate sanction to protect the public, promote and maintain public confidence in the medical profession, and to uphold proper professional standards and conduct”.Despite this finding, Bux, 55, continues to advertise his services as a “circumcision practitioner”, which is legal as there is no requirement for circumcisers to be medically trained.In 2015 Mohammad Siddiqui, a private circumciser, was struck off by the GMC over medical failures in four circumcisions in separate homes.He, too, continued to perform circumcisions.

Last year he was sentenced to more than five years in prison for causing “gratuitous pain and suffering” in circumcisions conducted between 2014 and 2019.Last month, the Guardian revealed the Crown Prosecution Service was consulting on guidance for prosecutors that would categorise circumcision as potential child abuse, amid concern from judges and coroners about the lack of regulation of the procedure.Since 2001, circumcision has been a factor in the deaths of seven boys, including three children who bled to death.On his website, Bux offers circumcisions for “religious/cosmetic reasons” for babies up to six months old in north-west England, including Blackburn, Preston, Bolton, Burnley, Accrington and Nelson.The website says he has been performing circumcisions since 2003 and was a former senior partner at a GP practice.

The website says he is no longer registered by the GMC but does not explain why.The tribunal hearing was told that Bux was “reckless and cavalier in his treatment of Patient A” and “risked fatal complications by carrying out the procedure in the community”.Specific mistakes upheld by the panel included: failing to consider Patient A’s congenital cardiac condition; failing to adequately inform his parents about the risks of the procedure being done in the community; failing to ensure the boy had sufficient pain relief – the cream Bux used did not “produce adequate numbness of the foreskin”; and administering excessive amounts of a liquid morphine.Bux’s lawyer told the panel it was a one-off incident and Bux had conducted thousands of circumcisions in the community without complications or infections.But the panel found Bux lacked insight into his mistakes, showed no remorse and gave no explicit apology.

He was also struck off for “financially motivated dishonesty” after signing hundreds of bogus sicknotes for his wife’s legal firm.Alejandro Sanchez, head of human rights at the NSS, said: “The fact that Mr Bux can perfectly legally continue to circumcise boys is a catastrophic failure of child safeguarding that is endangering the lives of boys.“More fundamentally, ritual circumcision is medically unnecessary, dangerous and violates the child’s independent right to freedom of religion or belief.“When it comes to children, circumcision should only be performed by doctors, and only with medical necessity.“Decisions about non-therapeutic circumcision should therefore be deferred until the individual is old enough to decide for himself based on his own values.

”Bux has been approached for comment.