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‘Sometimes you need to blow the lid off’: England confident of Rome response

about 14 hours ago
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England have “blown the lid off” in order to complete their Italian job and salvage their Six Nations campaign with Maro Itoje promising an emotional response to back-to-back defeats.Steve Borthwick’s side are out of contention for the Six Nations title for another year after dismal defeats by Scotland and Ireland but have won all 32 previous meetings with Italy and spent the championship’s fallow week ensuring they avoid a slice of unwanted history in Rome on Saturday.Borthwick invited nine of the 2003 World Cup winners to dinner with his squad last week while Thomas Tuchel addressed his players on Tuesday with England determined to find a physical intensity that was absent against Scotland and Ireland.In response, Borthwick has made 12 changes – nine personnel and three positional – and sent a clear message to his players with the assistant coach Richard Wigglesworth laying down the law.Asked if he has had to keep the leash on England before kick-off in Rome, Wigglesworth said: “I don’t think I’ve tried to put a lid on it too much.

The physical intensity that we need to bring, sometimes you need to blow the lid off.“I think the table-banging and that sort of era has crept out, but there’s always a time.It would be done on feel.You need to feel what the group needs.I would hope that we’ve got that right in the last 10 days so that we play really well Saturday afternoon.

“Physically we weren’t where we wanted to be, our physical intensity.The game of rugby is really complicated and has all these intricacies, but at the same time it’s really fucking simple.If your physical intensity is not right, then parts of your game really struggle to put together.We didn’t sort that out.”The captain, Itoje, meanwhile, has said that England have dialled things up a notch in preparation for facing a bullish Italian side who have beaten Scotland and showed themselves to be competitive against Ireland and France to date.

“We have just addressed some of the issues we have been lacking a little bit and I think there’s been a response to that,” said Itoje.“There was a response to the basic fundamentals of our game and naturally when things don’t go your way you want to see a response, you want to see a reaction, and I believe we’ve seen that so far.“Ultimately it looks like intensity going up a notch and that obviously manifests itself in a number of ways in training.But I would say the intensity and accuracy has probably stepped up.We all care.

We all want to win.When you don’t win it heightens the emotions even more.There has definitely been an emotional response at training.The most important thing is we see it in the game.”15 Elliot Daly14 Tom Roebuck13 Tommy Freeman12 Seb Atkinson11 Cadan Murley10 Fin Smith9 Ben Spencer1 Ellis Genge2 Jamie George3 Joe Heyes4 Maro Itoje (captain)5 Alex Coles6 Guy Pepper7 Tom Curry8 Ben Earl Replacements: 16 Luke Cowan-Dickie, 17 Bevan Rodd, 18 Trevor Davison, 19 Ollie Chessum, 20 Sam Underhill, 21 Henry Pollock, 22 Jack van Poortvliet, 23 Marcus SmithEngland have paid the price for slow starts in both recent defeats and while Itoje was tight-lipped as to his final words for his players, they will be left in no doubt as to the task at hand.

“The tone will be to relish the opportunity, relish the moment that we have, remember how privileged we are to do what we do,” he added.“We have a responsibility to ourselves, to everyone in the room, everyone in this programme and our fans.The very best of ourselves is aggressive, the very best of ourselves is confrontational, the very best of ourselves is accurate.We need to make sure we deliver on that.“In one sense you want to have the same things every week.

In another sense, every week presents its different kind of challenges, a different narrative et cetera,This week is about us taking the game to Italy,They’re a very good side,It’s not about us waiting to see what happens or how they shape up,As soon as the game starts, it is about us taking the game to them.

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Rachel Roddy’s recipe for apple, honey and poppy seed cake | A kitchen in Rome

Honey is, among other things, a successful embalming agent. It is also a humectant, which isn’t an eager cyborg, but one of many short-chained organic compounds that are hygroscopic, meaning they attract and hold water, which in turn prevents hardening and encourages softness. Other hardworking humectants are glycerine, which is what keeps face creams creamy and hydrating, and sorbitol, which ensures toothpaste can be squeezed and smeared all over the sink and on the mirror. Honey, though, is the humectant that’s most suitable for this week’s recipe: a one-bowl, everyday cake inspired by my neighbour’s Polish honey cake, miodownik, combined with the tortino di mele e papavero (apple and poppy seed cake) enjoyed at a station bar in Bolzano.Not only does honey keep the cake moist, its sweetness comes largely from fructose, which is naturally sweeter than refined sugar, so the perception of sweetness is much greater even when less is added

2 days ago
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My whey: dairy milk back on menu as protein boom cuts demand for plant-based alternatives

Gabriel Morrison hadn’t touched dairy milk for a decade until he read the ingredients label on his cheap carton of oat milk.“It’s [so much] canola oil and you imagine that in your glass, and imagine discovering that much olive oil, you’re like, that’s actually really gross,” he says.“I was just like, ‘ooft, I should stop this’.”The 28-year-old cinematographer had exclusively drunk soy, then almond, then oat milks since 2015 but had started worrying about processed foods – despite expert reassurance.In early 2025, with his housemate already buying cheaper dairy, he gave the old classic another look

3 days ago
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It’s crunch time! Gala apples and nashi pears among Australia’s best-value fruit and veg for March

It’s a core month for pome fruit, with apples, pears and quince all heralding the start of autumn. “The first cab off the rank is the gala – a big sweet and juicy apple,” says Graham Gee, senior buyer at the Happy Apple in Melbourne.Granny smith, jazz and kanzi apples will come in during March too, and “Australia’s most popular variety, the pink lady, generally starts in April,” he says.Royal gala apples are between $5 and $8 per kilo at supermarkets. They’re $7 to $9 per kilo at Sydney’s Galluzzo Fruiterers, and Gee is selling them for about $3 to $5 per kilo; Spudshed in Perth is selling bags of prepacked new season apples for $3

3 days ago
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How to turn limp rhubarb into tasty jam – recipe

Rachel de Thample is one of my food heroines. She’s the author of six books, and has also been course director of the College of Naturopathic Medicine’s natural chef diploma, head of food for Abel & Cole and commissioning editor of Waitrose Food Illustrated, among so much else. She trained with the likes of Marco Pierre White, Heston Blumenthal and Peter Gordon, and now teaches fermentation and gut health at River Cottage HQ, where I cut my own teeth in teaching eco-gastronomy more than 20 years ago. While researching honey fermenting recently, I came across her recipe in River Cottage’s Bees & Honey Handbook, which I’ve adapted here so you can make as much as you like using a variety of aromatics.The Guardian’s journalism is independent

3 days ago
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£25 for a cookie? What the baffling luxury bakery boom tells us about Britain

Amid a cost of living crisis, pricey patisserie is all the rage – and not just in London. Our reporter goes on a crawl to find out if a tart can really be worth £45There was a time when you could get a stuffed vanilla cream slice or a neon-pink Tottenham cake for about £1 on the leafy, residential corner of Hackney, east London, where I stand today. But the branch of Percy Ingle bakery that was here for nearly 50 years is gone. In its place sits Fika, a cafe where a cinnamon bun costs £4.20 and a pistachio croissant will set you back nearly £5

3 days ago
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Stuffed peppers and aubergine dip: Sami Tamimi’s recipes for savoury Palestinian snacks

I still remember, when I was a kid, the end of spring and early summer when markets in Jerusalem and across Palestine overflowed with freshly harvested freekeh. As you approached, the air carried a smoky, earthy aroma. Freekeh is an ancient grain, a staple across the Middle East and Turkey, made from green wheat roasted over open fires to burn off the husks, which gives it the characteristic nutty flavour. The name comes from the Arabic freek, meaning “to rub”, which describes how the grains are cleaned, dried, cracked and stored for the year.Throughout the Middle East and Palestine, mahashi (stuffing vegetables) is a true labour of love, creating dishes that are designed to be shared

3 days ago
politicsSee all
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Crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne no longer interested in Reform-Tory pact

about 12 hours ago
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Nigel Farage to discuss Chagos Islands deal at Mar-a-Lago dinner with Donald Trump tonight – as it happened

about 12 hours ago
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Starmer is facing a cocktail of dissent that is growing ever more potent

1 day ago
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Defence secretary accuses Tory and Reform MPs of ‘unpatriotic’ behaviour

1 day ago
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Kemi is wrong about everything. Which is almost an achievement in itself | John Crace

1 day ago
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Best way forward for Iran would be negotiated settlement, says Starmer

1 day ago