Author Archives: Sarah


Busaba Eathai – Ten Years On

Lisa Markwell, The Independent On Sunday
Is this lauded Thai stop-off in Soho really any better than all the rest?
I don’t expect much sympathy (all right, any), but visiting new restaurants can be tiring. The day’s preparation: not eating too much, avoiding scorched tastebuds from too-hot coffee, remembering pseudonym the table is booked under, and so on. To say nothing of the occasional fear involved. For instance, tonight I’m going to Dinner by Heston Blumenthal and the media frenzy and elaborate ? some might say perversely ? historically accurate menu is making me nervous. (You’ll be able to read my review in a fortnight.)
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The jewel of the aisle: Skye Gyngell cooks with pomegranates

The Independent On Sunday
There is not a great deal of fruit around at this time of year, but what little there is, is truly beautiful in both appearance and flavour ? and pomegranates are among my favourites. Spectacular in colour, like ruby jewels, their fleshy seeds pop in the mouth once chewed, imparting their delicious juice, and can be used in all sorts of things, from salads to ice-creams.
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Year Of The Rabbit Wonton Soup

More Than Burnt Toast
This year 2011 is the year of the Golden Rabbit. It is a placid year, very much welcomed and needed after the ferocious year of the Tiger. We should go off to some quiet spot to lick our wounds and get some rest after all the battles of the previous year!!!! According to Chinese tradition, the Rabbit brings a year in which you can catch your breath and calm your nerves. The Rabbit symbolizes graciousness, good manners, sound counsel kindness and sensitivity to beauty. His soft speech and graceful and nimble ways embody all the desirable traits.
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Why don’t we drink pigs’ milk and eat turkey eggs?

Stefan Gates, BBC Food blog
I am OMNIVOREMAN! I see it as my genetically programmed evolutionary duty to eat everything that I possibly can, from rotten walrus and palm weevils to insects and hamster food. The ability to eat pretty much anything has been vital to the survival of the human race. When certain foods like fruits became scarce, we were able to turn to others such as roots – by comparison the koala eats eucalyptus and little else, so when eucalyptus becomes scarce, the koala dies. With the world population expected to reach nine billion by 2050, we desperately need new resource-efficient food sources to sustain the human race, so exploring and experimenting is still vital to our survival. So why are there some foods that must be available, but which we never seem to eat? Here are my top five…
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Wholemeal and granary boule

Salad Club
Back in November, thick slices of this bread were used to mop up the juices from a bowl of exquisite moules marinière in a family friend?s kitchen. I pleaded for the recipe and here it is. A food processor makes life much easier here but I don?t see why you couldn?t mix everything by hand. Although, if you?re lacking machinery, the soda bread below might be an easier option.
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Working A Kitchen Shift At #meateasy

Food Stories
The truth behind dem burgers…
On Wednesday night I worked a shift in the #MEATEASY kitchen. Not so much as a cook, they already have a team of chefs; what they really needed was a Kitchen Gimp. I embraced the role. The structure of the kitchen goes like this: you?ve got your Grill Boss who obviously manages the grill, your Fryer in charge of um, frying stuff and then your Burger Bed Prepper plus various other brilliant people in between. At the bottom of the food chain, you?ve got your Kitchen Gimp. That?s me. Turns out I was born to play the role and I fully entered The Zone.
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Restaurant at the Royal Academy

Guy Dimond, Time Out
Overdone food for art’s sake…
Oliver Peyton used to be the most innovative restaurateur in London, launching a string of brave and cult restaurants through the ’90s and noughties – the fabulous Atlantic Bar & Grill, Coast and Isola, among many others. These were all slightly too far ahead of the curve, and subsequently closed. In recent years, Peyton’s new catering operations have been less ambitious, and largely restricted to art galleries. The Restaurant at the Royal Academy, run by his Peyton & Byrne catering company, is a natural extension of places such as the National Dining Rooms (in the National Gallery). The setting, with high, vaulted ceilings, frescoes and pillars, is marvellous despite the car-boot-sale lighting installed by designer Tom Dixon.
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Around Britain with a Paunch

Pollock Yassa ? A Blast of West African Sunshine in Icy Gothenburg
The weather in Sweden right now is about as grizzly as a vagabond bear. The snow has temporarily melted leaving behind a palimpsest of grit, dark ice and illicit glimpses of pavement. In many ways I prefer Gothenburg when it?s properly cold rather than just in this manky in-between phase. Bleak conditions whip up cravings for warm memories.
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Meet the Heston Blumenthal of Beer

Sabotage Times
The darks arts of beer brewery turn out to be quite the art form, a million miles away from hillbilly moonshine with the added bonus of not making you go blind. One day I will be asked: what did you do in the recession daddy – Get on your bike – Sell the Big Issue – Spend all day on the Guardian’s Comment is Free section- No, I shall answer, I brewed my own beer – even though past history shows that while I’m rather good at consuming and writing about the stuff, I’m not so good at producing Cuvee Tierney-Jones. Previous efforts at home brewing have resulted in a) brown ale that was so rubbish I used it to wash my Aladdin Sane feather cut with b) bitter so insipid that the dog turned its nose up at a bowl of it though my brother enjoyed a glass or two. But then in those days his idea of the perfect pint was Castlemaine XXX or a can of Fosters. Finally there was the cack-handed attempt at a barley wine so solid that I could have worn it as a coat.
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Will Write for Food by Dianne Jacob

simply cooked
If you’re craving not only food but some way to tell the world in minute detail about your lunch… read on
What do you look for in a food blog? Are you drawn in by gorgeous photos? Are you perhaps captivated by delicious dishes? Or are you arrested by compelling writing? These are the three areas of our pursuit that food bloggers are keen to develop. I have certainly felt over the life of this blog that both my photography and cooking have improved. But I have a hankering to learn to craft beautiful sentences, too.
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