‘I can run 1:58’: Sabastian Sawe sets new target after historic London Marathon win

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Sabastian Sawe believes it is only a matter of time before he runs a ­marathon in one hour and 58 ­minutes after his superb sub-two hour ­performance in London on Sunday,Sawe ran 1hr 59min 30sec to break the world record by 65sec and the 31-year-old Kenyan confirmed that he plans to race again in the autumn, although he has not decided where,It will probably be in Berlin, which is a faster course than ­London, in September,When Sawe was asked whether he agreed with his coach, Claudio Berardelli, that 1:58 was possible in his next race, he smiled,“It’s only a matter of time.

If you have good starting preparation for any race, then to achieve anything is possible.“I started running back in primary school.But I mostly focus on studies first.But in my mind, I knew one day I will be a champion and it came true.Because finally, I’m a champion.

”Sawe said he had been so focused on racing Ethiopia’s Yomif Kejelcha that he had no idea he was on course to run under two hours until near the finish.“It was competitive, because ­Kejelcha was with me.We were patrolling each other.It wasn’t like, let’s see the time.I only ­realised I was running two hours when ­finishing the race.

It was near the finish line when I saw the time and I was so excited and tried to push and I did it,“For sure, racing with Yomif made a difference,What I did yesterday, it’s because of him,He tried his best and I tried my best,We pushed to our limits and we ran sub-two.

”Sawe conceded that while his legs were “a little bit sore” after his ­monumental effort, his head was clear because he turned down the chance to mark his achievement with a sponsor’s bottle of champagne.“I didn’t drink anything to ­celebrate, just water,” said Sawe, who is teetotal.“I ate rice and a piece of chicken for dinner.It was very simple.”Sawe was due to fly back to ­Nairobi on a Kenya Airways flight on Monday evening, but because of his world record went to Germany and the headquarters of his sponsors, Adidas, to celebrate.

Sawe thanked them for paying the Athletics Integrity Unit $50,000 a year to ensure he is drug tested more, which he hopes will make people trust his performances.“We came up with this idea, and I really like it, because doping has become a cancer in my ­country,” he said.“And we said – from the ­management of my company, my coaches and also the whole group – we must get rid of doubts for ­individual results.“The AIU agreed to start the ­process and everything goes well.I think it makes me feel comfortable in athletics, because no one’s doubting Sabastian Sawe.

I would like my fellow athletes to follow me and to show the world that we can run fast and clean,”The records continue to fall as it was confirmed the London ­Marathon had set an all-time best for the ­number of finishers in a marathon, with a total of 59,830 beating the 59,226 who completed the New York race in November 2025,The event director, Hugh Brasher, said he was proud to have made sporting and marathon history, as he hailed Sawe’s performance,“It was just a historic day for the sport of athletics,” he said,“It is absolutely one of the ­boundaries that a lot of people said they wouldn’t see in their lifetime.

You try and put the greatest athletes together.You try to look after them.And you put that ­concoction together.And sometimes it just works.”Brasher believes it was right to draw comparisons with Sawe’s sub-two hour marathon and Sir Roger Bannister’s four-minute mile, which his father, Chris, was part of, in 1954.

“It’s just beautiful that 72 years on from Sir Roger Bannister and my dad pacemaking we had a day that makes me really proud of what the team have put together.“I told them afterwards to open a bottle of champagne.Whatever you do, just remember it.Don’t let it pass you by.Because what the athletes have done is redefining the possible.

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The surprising boom in blouge wine: ‘It’s for 5pm, in the sun’

Twenty years ago, a winery could do well selling one white and two reds, says Konrad Pixner, a northern Italian winemaker who set up his vineyard, Domaine de L’Accent, in Languedoc, France, in 2019. But today, importers and bars always ask: “Do you have something new?” So up in the hills, surrounded by deep gorges and limestone plateaus, Pixner is constantly experimenting.After a good harvest in 2023, Pixner walked into the shed he shares with other winemakers at 4am to find that his biggest vat of white wine, pressed from carignan blanc grapes, had overflowed during fermentation. He had run out of space, so he quickly “pumped the white juice into the tank where whole bunches of carignan noir were,” he says, and left them to ferment for 10 days together. In contrast to rosé, made from red grapes left for a short time with their skins on before being pressed, he created “blouge” – a light, fresh wine blended from white and red grapes that’s best served chilled

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How to make the perfect custard creams – recipe | Felicity Cloake's How to make the perfect …

Prue Leith reckons the custard cream is “arguably Britain’s most iconic biscuit” – and, certainly, we’ve been dunking this fern-patterned treat in our tea for well over a century, with early advertisements for this “delicious biscuit” placing it, perhaps aspirationally, in the “fancy” category. By 1920, Bermondsey baking behemoth Peek Frean could confidently declare the custard cream “far and away the most popular of all the cream sandwich biscuits”, a status only slightly dented by the time I was at school about seven decades later, when it sat just below its contemporary, the chocolate bourbon, in the playtime snack ratings.Despite my love of both custard and cookies, however, I’ve always found this particular custard-flavoured product a bit sugary and dull. As historian Lizzie Collingham explains in her magisterial book, The Biscuit: The History of a Very British Indulgence, it combines two early industrial foodstuffs, namely custard powder and machine-made biscuits, and though they may have been created in a factory, I think they’re much better made at home.Let’s be honest, the biscuit isn’t really the point of the packet variety – as children, we’d prise them open to scrape out the sugary filling, like bears sucking honey from a split log – but when you bake them yourself, it can be

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Impala, London W1: ‘Shamelessly, brilliantly too much’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

Impala is like no restaurant I’ve ever been to, yet it somehow has echoes of almost all of themLate last month, Impala drove into Soho already flaming hot in the hype stakes: this was a sizzling booking to brag about even before executive chef and co-founder Meedu Saad had turned on the stoves. Impala, after all, is a Super 8 restaurant, the group that has, among others, Tomos Parry’s Brat in Shoreditch, which has been constantly, unfalteringly brilliant since 2018. It also runs Parry’s second baby, Mountain, which is likewise wonderful; sometimes weird, yes, but always wonderful. Long before that, back in 2016, they opened Kiln, the famed live-fire Thai counter hangout that cheffy boys in beanies have tried and failed to emulate all over Britain, while Super 8’s beginnings were with the boundary-pushing and much-loved Smoking Goat. That is nothing less than a litany of solid-gold bangers, and now they’ve unleashed Impala by Saad, the former head chef at Kiln

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Ifrah F Ahmed’s debut cookbook is a love letter to Somali cuisine, history and people

On a video call from Brooklyn, between stops on her book tour, Ifrah F Ahmed is drinking ginger-root tea. The smell transports her to her childhood kitchen, where her mother often baked aromatic cardamom cake.“That’s a core childhood memory for me,” she said.For Ahmed, food isn’t just about sustenance. It is memory, inheritance and, perhaps most importantly, a record: “Somali history on a plate,” as she puts it

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Lure of being a social media chef means youngsters forgoing classic training, Michelin star cook warns

Scroll through your timeline of choice and it won’t be long until you land on a video posted by a social media chef trying to send their recipes viral.Such is the popularity of cooking videos that everyone from Michelin star masters to self-taught beginners like Brooklyn Beckham are setting up tripods on their kitchen counters to capture the perfect cut, cuisson or crust on their culinary creations.But the lure of social media could, according to some industry figures,be causing young cooks forgo the formal training of a catering college.Will Murray, who worked at the double Michelin-starred restaurant Dinner by Heston before opening his own critically acclaimed venue, Fallow, said social media cooking videos sometimes stretch the boundaries of what is possible.“Social media has helped people get into cooking

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Disco hit: Penne alla vodka, popular in New York 80s clubs, is now a menu staple

Despite most traditional Italians considering it sacrilegious, penne alla vodka is quickly becoming one of the most in-demand Italian dishes.Previously popular in suburban Italo-American restaurants during the 80s, the dish is now enjoying a widespread resurgence that is being driven by several factors including nostalgia and social media.Featuring a tomato and cream base with a splash of vodka, the silky smooth sauce sits somewhere between coral and carrot on the colour wheel. The Guardian’s Rome-based food writer Rachel Roddy describes it as “luxurious and a bit racy”.Dara Klein, a chef and founder of Tiella Trattoria in London, says the dish “hits lots of comforting notes”, comparing it to a slightly more grownup take on the Italian childhood favourite pasta al pomodoro which is “eaten from day dot”