Tag: sweet

  • Ravneet Gill’s recipe for mini courgette and olive oil cakes with lime frosting | The sweet spot

    Ravneet Gill’s recipe for mini courgette and olive oil cakes with lime frosting | The sweet spot

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    Don’t be perturbed by the savoury ingredient in these cakes, because it is truly magical: the courgettes release all of their water, leaving a very moist, spongy cupcake. I recommend baking them in heavily buttered muffin tins or silicone moulds; baker Julia Aden recently recommended putting a round piece of greaseproof paper in the base of each mould to help remove small cakes, and it works a treat.

    Mini courgette and olive oil cakes with lime frosting

    Prep 15 min
    Cook 30 min
    Make 12

    Butter, for greasing
    200g golden caster sugar
    175g plain flour
    15g baking powder
    A pinch of salt
    Zest of 1
    lemon
    3 eggs
    , beaten
    110ml olive oil
    300g courgettes
    , coarsely grated

    For the lime cream cheese frosting
    160g cream cheese
    80g icing sugar
    Zest and juice of 1 lime
    , plus extra zest to garnish

    Heat the oven to 180C (160C fan)/350F/gas 4 and liberally grease a 12-hole muffin tin with butter.

    Mix all the dry ingredients in a large bowl. In a separate bowl, mix the wet ingredients, apart from the courgettes. Add the wet mix to the dry, stir to combine, then fold the grated courgettes through the batter.

    Pour the mix into the muffin tray, and bake for 25-30 minutes, until golden and cooked through. Leave to cool, then carefully remove the cakes from the tin.

    To make the icing, beat all the ingredients in a medium bowl until combined, then pipe or spoon on top of each cake. Garnish with extra lime zest, then serve.



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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Sweet Tooth season two review – this fantasy drama pulls off a miracle

    Sweet Tooth season two review – this fantasy drama pulls off a miracle

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    So, there are a bunch of kids imprisoned in a cell, planning their escape. First, they need a scheme to get hold of the keys. What tools do they have at their disposal? The floor is earth, so it’s obvious: the child who’s half-chipmunk should burrow out. The kid with the lion’s mane, the girl with the pig’s nose and the little guy who has the full face and trunk of an elephant all agree. The chipmunk boy starts chewing the ground.

    Welcome back to the singular world of Sweet Tooth, the pandemic dystopia drama the whole family can enjoy. If you missed season one: the world has been devastated by the Sick, a virus which sprung up and rapidly spread right at the same moment when babies started being born with animal features. In the absence of any other explanation, these “hybrids” are seen as dangerous vermin, routinely incarcerated or just killed by fearful humans. Previously we have been following Gus (Christian Convery), a 10-year-old boy with the ears, antlers and senses of a deer, as he crossed a ravaged America – at first he was looking for his mother, but he’s recently discovered that no such person exists. He is a scientific experiment, made in a lab, and he might be the key to the story of the hybrids and/or the hunt for a cure for the Sick. But he needs to break out of jail first.

    Season two feels, in its early episodes, like more of a kids’ show than ever, albeit with plenty of sly nods to the parents to keep them interested. Imprisonment means Gus has become separated from Tommy “Big Man” Jepperd (Nonso Anozie), his adopted father figure and physical protector. “He’d tell me to grow a pair,” Gus tells the girl with the pig’s nose as he muses on what his pal would say if they were still together. A pair of what, she asks? “I don’t know. He never said.”

    When the adults do appear, we are reminded that this is a series for older kids only: any viewer younger than Gus would find the violence of the post-Sick world too scary. Those hybrids are locked up because oddball mercenary General Abbot (Neil Sandilands), an arresting Gaiman-esque visual creation with his bald head, huge grey beard and red-tinted John Lennon specs, wants to experiment on them to help him find a cure. Any tiny inmate hauled off by the guards is unlikely to come back, unless it’s in the form of a hoof or claw worn around one of the bad guys’ necks. Not that Abbot does the evil science himself, since another of his captives is Sick expert Dr Aditya Singh. The second season gains a sense of greater import from bringing together what were, in the first run, disparate storylines: Singh, previously the isolated star of a subplot kept interesting by him being played so brilliantly by Adeel Akhtar, now meets Gus, giving them – and us – intriguing new info.

    Big Man, meanwhile, has teamed up with Aimee (Dania Ramirez), formerly the manager of a haven for hybrids that Abbot has now retooled as a prison. Their pairing, one of them motivated by loss to save the kids and the other by guilt, is not the only bit of heavy character drama skilfully woven into the grand adventure. When we get to know Johnny (Marlon Williams), Abbot’s ineffectual younger brother, the psychodrama that develops about contrasting siblings bonded by trauma is certainly one for the grownups.

    Aimee and Big Man’s temporary exile in the ordinary outside world brings them into contact with crowds of people who, to Aimee’s bewildered disgust, seem blase about a killer virus that is still very much on the loose. This tilt at the reality into which Sweet Tooth has arrived is a companion to the season one scene that furiously took the mickey out of anti-vaxxers, but the show generally is too confident in its own world to function as an allegory.

    The miracle Sweet Tooth performs is in keeping everyone happy. It’s a brutal post-apocalyptic drama that successfully harnesses the cute innocence of children, but is also a fantasy series grounded in the harshest of truths about what adults can do when times are tough, so it never falls into the trap of making the viewer feel as if nothing is real and nothing really matters. Season two builds skilfully to a showdown with several bravely uncompromising payoffs, delivered in a way that its younger viewers can easily appreciate, not least because it tends to be grownups who meet their fate. Sweet Tooth knows that kids – with or without horns, paws or tails – are not to be underestimated.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Sweat behind sweet dates: Life of Indian farm workers in date farms in deserts

    Sweat behind sweet dates: Life of Indian farm workers in date farms in deserts

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    Dates are a staple of the Arab world. For the rest of the world, it is associated with the month of Ramzan, as its popularity reaches a peak in the holy month when Muslims prefer to break the fast with dates.

    Dates or the date palm are mentioned in the Quran 22 times, indicating that the significance of the dry fruit is rooted deep in Islam. The date was one of Prophet Muhammad’s favourite and most desired food items as well.

    Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of Islam, is not only the largest producer of oil but also dates in the world. The Kingdom harvests more than 300 types of dates across the country. Khalas, Sukkari and Ajwa varieties are the most sought ones. Saudi Arabia is also one of the major sourcing countries of dates for India.

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    The harvesting of date is a prime agricultural activity in Saudi Arabia where more than 33 million palm trees in more than 123,000 agricultural holdings exist. Indians including many from Telangana constitute a significant workforce in date farming.

    Dates are high in sugar and vitamins such as potassium and magnesium for consumers but it is full of spine-thorns like the ones on roses, but much larger in size. Working on these farms is not easy and the routine mishap of pricking is painful.

    Mortad Sri Babu, a native of Darpalli Mandal in the Nizamabad district, has been engaged in the harvesting of dates for over a decade in Saudi Arabia.

    “When thorns prick our arms and fingers, we are not able to move our arms for three to four days because of the pain,” he said, adding that the workers also have brave venomous snakes and scorpions.

    Each acre contains 150 trees, and each tree yields about 5-6 cartons of date, equivalent to about a quintal. The crop yields about four months before Ramzan.

    “After the harvesting cycle and production, we prefer to go to our homeland where we can attend the Dasara festival along with our loved ones,” Babu said.

    Babu is among one of the thousands of Telangana date farm workers in Saudi Arabia.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Ram Charan’s sweet surprise for Sidharth-Kiara in Hyderabad

    Ram Charan’s sweet surprise for Sidharth-Kiara in Hyderabad

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    Mumbai: Ram Charan and the ‘RC15’ team shared a special message video on Monday for newlyweds Sidharth Malhotra and Kiara Advani.

    Taking to Instagram Story, Kiara shared the special surprise that she received from her RC15 team. Along with a video, she wrote, “This is the sweetest surprise for us. Feeling the love. Thank you soo much sir Shankar Shanmugham. And my RC 15 team! Lots and lots of love to you guys.”

    In the video, the team can be seen wishing Kiara and Sidharth happy married life with throwing flowers.

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    She also tagged director Shankar, Ram Charan, and producer Dil Raju in the post.

    On Monday, the makers of the film dropped the video and showered their blessings on the newlywed couple.

    Sharing the video, they wrote, “Team #RC15 #SVC50 wishes @SidMalhotra and @advani_kiara a very happy married life! Wishing you a lifetime of happiness, love and light.”

    Kiara and Ram Charan worked together in the 2019 Telugu action movie ‘Vinaya Vidheya Rama’ and have been friends since then.

    The film ‘RC 15’, billed as an action drama with current-day politics, features an ensemble cast, with Kiara playing the female protagonist.

    The upcoming project is jointly produced by Dil Raju and Shirish Garu under the banner of Sri Venkateswara Creations for a Pan-India release.

    ‘RC 15’ will release in three languages – Telugu, Tamil and Hindi.

    Apart from Ram Charan and Kiara, the film also stars SJ Suryah, Jayaram, Anjali, and Srikanth.

    The film is slated to release in 2023.

    Sidharth and Kiara got hitched on February 7 at Suryagarh Palace in Jaisalmer.

    They hosted their first reception for the groom’s family at The Leela Palace, Delhi on February 9.

    The duo’s second reception was held at Mumbai’s St. Regis on February 12. It was a grand affair, as many Bollywood stars and industrialists attended the reception. Karan Johar, Shahid Kapoor, Manish Malhotra, Kareena Kapoor, Alia Bhatt, Neetu Singh, Varun Dhawan, Mukesh Ambani’s son Akash Ambani with his wife Shloka Mehta, Ajay Devgn, Kajol and Rakul Preet Singh among others.

    Sidharth and Kiara dated for a couple of years, before tying the knot. However, they always remained tight-lipped about their relationship.

    The two apparently fell in love during the shoot of their film ‘Shershaah’, which was released in 2021.



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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The sweet spot: is ethical and affordable chocolate possible?

    The sweet spot: is ethical and affordable chocolate possible?

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    Is it possible to make an ethical chocolate bar that’s also affordable? Tim McCollum, the founder of the bean-to-bar chocolate brand Beyond Good, says the answer is yes – but you have to transform the way it’s made.

    Beyond Good produces single-origin chocolate bars from cocoa sourced in Madagascar, an island nation off the eastern coast of Africa. Like other specialty chocolate brands, the company says it has sought to improve farmer livelihoods by curtailing the long chain of middlemen that typically participate in the trade of cocoa. Unlike most others, though, Beyond Good says it has managed to eliminate intermediaries altogether: the company buys its cocoa beans direct from local farmer co-ops and drives them to its manufacturing facility in Antananarivo, Madagascar’s capital.

    McCollum says that transacting directly with farmers, coupled with the savings of manufacturing in a lower cost environment, means that Beyond Good can pay farmers a premium while selling its single-origin chocolate bars for $4 a piece, less than half the cost of a bar from US-based competitors like Dandelion and Ritual. That more modest price point has allowed Beyond Good to move beyond the Whole Foods chocolate shelf and sell its products at mainstream retailers like Costco and Albertsons.

    Beyond Good is still small – the company works with about 100 farmers in Madagascar, and employs a staff of several dozen there. But if it’s operating as it says – the Guardian did not visit its facilities or employees in the country to independently confirm this – it offers one new way of thinking about chocolate production in an industry in desperate need of an overhaul. Despite decades of promised reforms from confectionary giants, the cocoa supply chain remains riddled with human rights and environmental abuses.

    Known primarily for its exceptional vanilla crop, Madagascar is also home to an exquisitely flavorful species of cocoa ideal for use in expensive single-origin chocolate bars. Yet the local farmers, who labor at the end of a protracted chain of middlemen, make a pittance for their harvest. McCollum – who served in the Peace Corps in Madagascar in the late 1990s – believed that he could improve farmer incomes if, rather than buying through intermediaries and shipping cocoa to a distant processor, he set up a manufacturing facility locally. Processing the chocolate and manufacturing the bars at origin also creates dozens of well-paying local jobs in a region where few such opportunities exist.

    “The only way to ensure that money is going into a farmer’s pocket is to buy directly from farmers,” McCollum said. “And that’s physically impossible if you’re manufacturing in the northern hemisphere.”


    Modern reports of rampant human rights and environmental abuses within the chocolate industry emerged more than 20 years ago. Millions of farming families in the west African countries of Ivory Coast and Ghana – where the majority of the world’s commodity cocoa crop is grown – subsisted on less than $1 a day. Children were performing forced labor, wielding machetes and spraying toxic agrichemicals instead of attending school. And vast swaths of tropical forest were being clearcut to make room for more cocoa.

    In 2000, chocolate processors and manufacturers formed the World Cocoa Foundation, tasked with leading the charge toward a fair, sustainable cocoa sector. Many companies vowed to enact their own internal reforms, too, funding a wide array of initiatives aimed at enhancing supply chain traceability, empowering women, preventing deforestation, and stamping out the worst forms of child labor.

    Browsing the pages Nestlé devotes to its Cocoa Plan, Mars to Cocoa for Generations, Mondelēz to Cocoa Life, or Hershey’s to Cocoa For Good, it seems as if progress is well under way. In reality, though, industry watchdogs agree that little headway has been made on the path to a fair and sustainable cocoa sector.

    According to the recent Cocoa Barometer report issued by the Voice Network, a leading consortium of NGOs and trade unions working on sustainability in cocoa, deforestation continues at an alarming rate in Ghana and Ivory Coast. Child labor is still widespread on cocoa farms, perhaps even more so than when it was first uncovered two decades ago. The driving factor behind both is that the vast majority of west African farmers earn well below a living income.

    “Today, there’s more openness to the conversation between companies and governments, there’s a lot more funding available, a lot more data available,” said Antonie Fountain, the managing director of the Voice Network and the report’s co-author. “But farmers are still poor, children are still working, and trees are still being cut down.”

    (Recent testing by Consumer Reports also showed that many popular dark chocolate bars, including Hershey’s, Godiva, Trader Joe’s, Lindt, Dove, Chocolove – and Beyond Good – were found to have high levels of lead or cadmium, metals that have been linked to some health problems. McCollum, of Beyond Good, said in an email: “Our products mentioned in the Consumer Reports article comply with quality and safety requirements of the US FDA and California’s Proposition 65.”)

    For Bill Guyton, a founder and former president of the World Cocoa Foundation who now works as a senior adviser to the Fine Chocolate Industry Association, the cause of that persistent poverty is hardly mysterious. The price of cocoa today on the New York Mercantile Exchange is $2,400 a metric ton; it fluctuates a great deal, but the average price of cocoa has been $2,400 a ton for five decades. While chocolate bars have gotten more expensive, cocoa farmers have continued to be paid the same. In the 1970s, according to Fairtrade, the price of cocoa accounted for up to 50% of the value of a chocolate bar, but fell to 16% in the 1980s. Today, farmers receive about 6% of the value of every chocolate bar sold.

    Guyton said that despite well-publicized investments by the industry in things like reforestation, rural health clinics and agricultural education for farmers, these have not led to transformative changes for west African cocoa farmers. Farmers, Guyton said, remain at the base of a complex chain of cocoa collectors, brokers, traders, processors and exporters. This chain often lacks transparency, which can lead to exploitation.

    “In mainstream chocolate, you have a whole system set up that doesn’t want to change,” Guyton said. “You’ve got governments and large companies involved, and making changes to that system would require a new way of trading, and a new way of compensating farmers.”

    People who seek out ethical alternatives might be disappointed to learn that, in some cases, even bars with virtuous branding are more closely tied into this supply chain than they may appear.

    Tony’s Chocoloney identifies itself as a mission-driven chocolate company that aims to make cocoa production “100% slave-free”, and in its marketing materials, lambasts the industry as “dominated by a handful of chocolate giants that profit from keeping the cocoa purchasing price as low as possible”. But the company, which has official Fairtrade and B-corp certifications, relies on one of those giants – Barry Callebaut, one of the world’s largest chocolate processor – for manufacturing, a relationship that led to the brand being dropped in 2021 from Slave Free Chocolate’s list of ethical chocolate companies. It was the same year Barry Callebaut, along with Nestlé, Mars and Hershey, faced a lawsuit in the US brought by eight children claiming they were used as slave labor on cocoa plantations. (The supreme court ruled the companies could not be sued.)

    Tony’s Chocoloney.
    Tony’s Chocoloney. Photograph: Josh Bergeron/Stockimo/Alamy

    Tony’s has responded to this criticism by saying that the company has “never found any cases of modern slavery in our chain” and that working with Barry Callebaut allows it to “further scale up our production”. Tony’s did not respond to the Guardian’s requests for comment.

    Ray Major, a 40-plus-year veteran of the chocolate industry who currently directs cacao sourcing, sustainability and innovation for US chocolate manufacturer Scharffen Berger, says that consumers may also misunderstand the significance of fair trade certifications of chocolate packaging – such as Fair Trade USA, which is one of the longest-running certifying bodies, with a widely recognized logo. These do not promise a more direct, bean-to-bar supply chain. Fair Trade USA protects farmers with a minimum purchase price when the market falls below $2,400 a ton of cocoa, and indicates that farmer cooperatives have been paid a modest premium above cocoa’s market price (currently about 20% above the going rate for commodity cocoa). That premium may or may not ever reach individual farmers.

    Fair Trade representatives also visit select cocoa farms to inspect for certain environmental and human rights criteria, but that process is not failsafe. The explosive growth of demand for certified beans in the past decade has left inspectors stretched thin. “Now you have hundreds of thousands of farmers producing fair trade beans, and the auditing staff that would be required would be tremendous,” Major said.

    Vernaé Graham, senior manager of public relations for Fair Trade USA, said in an email that the group deposits premium payments into a community development fund run by farmers who “democratically decide what projects to invest those funds in to benefit the community”, and that it has agricultural production and trade standards to ensure that farmers and workers are receiving payment. She said the organization also conducts in-person inspection audits at a “statistically significant sample” that rotates each year.

    As for Beyond Good? Antonie Fountain, of the Voice Network, sees direct trade models like this one as promising for growers of specialty cocoa in places like Madagascar or many parts of Latin America. But for the millions of west African farmers growing commodity cocoa, dismantling embedded supply chains in favor of direct trade and manufacturing at origin would be hard to envision.

    For Fountain, the solution for lifting cocoa farmers out of poverty lies in better governance from both chocolate-consuming and cocoa-producing nations – things like improving supply management and putting in place regulations for the multinational corporations buying cocoa. Those companies should also pay higher prices to farms, and offer long-term contracts to provide farmers with financial security, he said.

    “We’ve spent the past two decades talking about what the farmer needs to do differently,” Fountain said. “The farmer needs to stop using his children for labor, the farmer needs to treat women better, the farmer needs to grow other crops. The farmer isn’t the problem. The problem is the system he’s in. Let’s spend the next two decades talking about what governments and multinationals need to do differently.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )