Author: |Posted: 4:02 pm on 25/11/08
Category: Playing with Your Food
It’s National Curry Week. To celebrate, author and food enthusiast, Sam Jordison, decided to put his curry where his mouth is.
There are said to be two rivals for the title of world’s hottest curry: The Bombay Burner from The Cinnamon Club in London and the infamous Curry Hell from the Curry Capital in Newcastle. I wanted to try both and, as a kind of control, I also thought I should try to come up with my own. read more
Author: |Posted: 2:02 pm on 14/11/08
Category: Playing with Your Food
There are a few sporting occasions that have assumed such global significance as to change the world forever: the 1936 Olympics, for instance, or the 1966 World Cup final.
To these 4Food can now proudly add a new sporting triumph. An event that will change tea breaks across Britain forever – the 4Food biscuit dunk off. read more
Author: |Posted: 11:28 am on 12/11/08
Category: Food on TV
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Melissa Cole, beer writer and author of popular beer blog Girl’s guide to beer: Taking the beard out of beer, gives us the lowdown on Neil Morrissey’s latest madcap beer brewing show…
Big supermarket deals, first brews and shiny barbecues were all on the agenda for Neil Morrissey and Richard Fox in the last episode of Risky Business last night. And the securing of a major distribution deal with Tesco must still have the boys hugging themselves as their money troubles seem solved. read more
Author: |Posted: 1:56 pm on 05/11/08
Category: Food on TV
Melissa Cole, beer writer and author of popular beer blog Girl’s guide to beer: Taking the beard out of beer, gives us the lowdown on the second instalment of Neil Morrissey’s beer brewing show…
Last night when the voiceover announced: ‘Neil Morrisey and Richard Fox are running out of money, time and patience’, all I could think was ‘welcome to the world of pubs and brewing boys!’. read more
Author: |Posted: 4:30 pm on 03/11/08
Category: Playing with Your Food
As America begins its final countdown to the dawn of a new presidential era and the two would-be world leaders bring their door-knocking, mud slinging and policy proffering to a close the world bites its nails and nibbles its lip over who will win.
But after 21 months of fraught campaigning and an estimated £1.9 billion coughed up for the combined crusades, we’re still no nearer a dead cert. It’s a bookie’s nightmare. Oodles of vote analyses and prediction polls have got us nowhere – time to bring on the pumpkins. read more