Justin Rose struggles to keep his cool in the heat but Masters dream lives on | Andy Bull

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Hot days and hard greens at the Masters,It was up in the mid- 80s by lunchtime on Friday, and that was if you were underneath the trees with a Georgia peach ice-cream sandwich,Out there on the other side of the ropes it looked a whole lot hotter again,The world’s best golfers sweated away chasing after Rory McIlroy’s lead in conditions which, they all agreed, could yet get as tough as they come at Augusta National,By midway through the afternoon McIlroy loomed over the tournament like the Augusta sun, and you worried players who made the mistake of looking right at the big white leaderboards might burn their eyes on the numbers he was running up.

A way up ahead along the course, Justin Rose, Brooks Koepka and Jordan Spieth were each doing their best to just stay focused on their own game,There was a time, and not so long ago, when both Spieth and Koepka had a claim to be even better than the man they were now trailing, and Rose, of course, played one of the very best rounds of his life to finish runner-up to McIlroy here last year,They have won nine majors between the three of them, but with McIlroy in this sort of form, it was hard work just to stay within a short iron’s distance of him over the weekend,After an hour all three were bunched together on one under par, four shots off McIlroy’s overnight lead,Spieth had made up a shot with an improbable birdie at the 1st after lumping his opening drive into the fairway bunker, Rose had dropped one at the same hole after he three-putted from the fringe, and so had Koepka, who then made two strokes back again with birdies at the 2nd and 3rd.

That meant all three were in the sort of position where they were thinking about making a run.By the end of the day Rose was five under, tied for fourth place.Koepka was two shots behind him, in 13th.He put a lot of his improvement down to the fact that he’d accidentally had the wrong settings on his driver during the opening day’s play.Then there was Spieth, and, well, you needed to scroll a way down the pages to find him.

He finished one over par, back among the also-here-this-years,-12 Rory McIlroy (NI)-6 Sam Burns (US), Patrick Reed (US)-5 Justin Rose (Eng), Shane Lowry (Ire), Tommy Fleetwood (Eng)-4 Wyndham Clark (US), Tyrrell Hatton (Eng), Li Haotong (Chn), Kristoffer Reitan (Nor), Jason Day (Aus), Cameron Young (US)-3 Brooks Koepka (US), Ben Griffin (US), Chris Gotterup (US)While Spieth zigzagged around the course, Rose just kept plugging away along the fairways,After dropping that shot at the 1st, he covered the next five holes in even par, as if, regretting that early mistake, he was determined not to even attempt anything that might cause him to make another one until he had steadied himself again,If you needed an idea of just how tough it was out there Rose, usually as imperturbable as a butler, ended up tossing his club after he missed his birdie putt on the 4th,Rose knows that it pays to be patient, and he regathered himself.

His first birdie of the day finally came at the 7th, and after that they rushed in a flurry as he made the turn.He was kicked into it by a long back-and-forth with his caddie about exactly what sort of shot he should play at the 9th.“I really wanted to hit nine iron in there, and the wind wasn’t fitting that club, and I just didn’t really want to hit eight iron in there because I felt like it was going to skip through the green,” he explained.“So I was really trying to bide my time and wait for that little moment where I could commit to the nine-iron.It was a great moment where I was able to get it quite close to the hole and make birdie.

”Rose followed it with a pair of spectacular approach shots at the 10th and 11th, both of them to within a few feet of the pin.There was a bogey at the 12th but he made it back at the 15th.Given that Rose has finished as the runner-up here in three different years, and lost two playoffs doing it, there are a lot of people out here pulling for him.There have been so many sentimental bets, at comparatively long odds, that the only people who don’t want to see him get it done are the bookmakers.He tries not to think about it.

“Of course I want to win this tournament.I don’t really need to try any harder; know what I mean? I think trying harder ain’t going to help me.So that’s probably the dance I’m doing with myself.I know the intrinsic motivation is there.It’s about execution.

”It’s not going to get any easier over the weekend.Last year he decided he needed to try to birdie every hole if he was going to catch McIlroy on Sunday, and he damn near did exactly that on the second nine, which he covered in 32.“I was just trying to run to the clubhouse as fast and hard as I could,” Rose said.“That’s the luxury of playing from behind sometimes, and maybe there’s a lesson in there of that’s the best way to play sometimes, too.”Chances are he’ll need to be even better again if he’s going to catch McIlroy this year.

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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

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Can’t face another mouthful of chicken? You’re probably coming down with the ick

Name: The chicken ick.Age: Chickens have been around since, well, eggs …Unless it’s the other way round. Whatever. The chicken ick, on the other hand, is new.And what is it, please? You know when you suddenly feel disgusted by the chicken you’re eating, possibly mid-bite, despite previously enjoying it?Er, not really, to be honest