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Saturday, May 16, 2026

‘Our daughter was murdered by a stalker’

What it’s really like to be a concierge to the 0.01 per cent | ‘I lived through the Blitz. Aged 99, I still struggle with PTSD’
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Sunday, 17 May 2026

Issue No. 441

Good morning.

Alice Ruggles had become increasingly withdrawn, ground down by her former boyfriend’s late-night calls, constant texts, threats to kill himself and the suspicion that he had taken control of her Facebook account. When he made a strange promise not to kill her, the 24-year-old became really afraid. The police were alerted, but they did nothing. Days later, Alice was murdered. Steve Boggan has spoken to her parents to discover the full, horrific story. When you've read it, you are bound to agree with them that the law around stalking must change.

Elsewhere, we bring you the latest from the Labour leadership power struggle and the Unite the Kingdom march in London, in which 50,000 protesters demonstrated against Sir Keir Starmer.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Telegraph readers can now enjoy a year’s access for just £1.99 per month. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

What it’s really like to be a concierge to the 0.01 per cent

‘I lived through the Blitz. Aged 99, I still struggle with PTSD’

Plus, the best new TV shows of the year so far

Ends soon: A year for £1.99 a month

Save on an All Access Subscription with your email-exclusive offer

 

‘Our daughter was murdered by a stalker. This is why the law needs to change’

Clive Ruggles and his wife, Sue Hills, whose daughter Alice was stalked and murdered by her ex-boyfriend

Steve Boggan

 

When 24-year-old Alice Ruggles was stalked by a former boyfriend, she and her parents, Sue and Clive, thought the police would stop him. They didn’t. Constant messaging from her ex had escalated into threats and controlling behaviour. Sue described how their relationship seemed to progress “so fast”, adding: “I now know that’s a red flag.”

When I spoke to Alice’s parents at their home in Leicestershire last week, writes Steve Boggan, it was hard to listen to the story of what happened to their daughter. Ten years after Alice’s death, recounting what happened next doesn’t get any easier. Trimaan Dhillon violently murdered her days after she was “palmed off” by the system that was supposed to protect her.

Alice Ruggles

Alice Ruggles was killed by her ex-boyfriend in the bathroom of her home in October 2016

Alice had alerted the police to his behaviour, but no action was taken. Part of the issue is the complex way stalking is defined – this is the point that campaigners are trying to highlight.

Alice

‘Alice loved life,’ says her mother. ‘We hadn’t realised how much she held our family together’

When the first legislation was introduced in 1997, it was supposed to put an end to the terrifying crime. However, victims – the majority of whom are female – are still being failed, murdered and driven to suicide. Sue Hills and Clive Ruggles say the law must now be changed, and vigorously applied, to address an offence that affects 1.5 million adults annually.
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Opinion

Nicole Lampert Headshot

Nicole Lampert

Why doesn’t Starmer make a video warning about far-Left hate marches?

How dare our leaders fixate on the threat from the far-Right descending on London but overlook the anti-Semitism connected to Nakba 78

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Sophia Money-Coutts</span> Headshot

Sophia Money-Coutts

The posh are heading to Reform – and dinner parties have become a minefield

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Daniel Hannan</span> Headshot

Daniel Hannan

Dear new PM... You can save Labour from oblivion (but you won’t like how)

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Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Weekend reads

Amelia Hutchinson, owner of Discreet Recruitment, works for two of the top 10 richest families in the world

What it’s really like to be a concierge to the 0.01 per cent

What does an assistant to the ultra-rich actually do? LA Robinson takes you inside London’s world of discreet wealth, where she meets a 30-year-old concierge arranging everything from Montessori-trained nannies to private jets for pampered dogs. Amelia Hutchinson’s clients include royalty, tech millionaires and some of the world’s richest families, though she insists “real wealth whispers”.

Continue reading

 

Millie Matthews, 99, is part of a generation who rarely spoke about the terrors of growing up during the Second World War

‘I lived through the Blitz. Aged 99, I still struggle with PTSD’

I happened across both Millie Matthews, and the wartime incident in which she nearly died, while researching my book about the Blitz, writes John Nichol. I was trying to find out what my own late mother might have experienced during the bombing in the North East when a local researcher pointed me towards Millie. Like so many of the generation who endured the war’s privations, Millie, now 99, never dwelled on her experiences, yet she suffered lasting effects we now recognise as a response to trauma. As a former RAF Tornado navigator myself, listening to Millie’s long-buried memories was a haunting reminder of my own experiences of bombings.

Continue reading

 

Paul Simon in London in 1965

The trip to England that saved Paul Simon from oblivion

In 1964, Paul Simon was a struggling troubadour from New Jersey whose first album had flopped at home. However, in the folk clubs of Brentwood, Barking and Stevenage he was hailed as a genius. As the 84-year-old plays what may be his last shows in Britain, Ian Winwood remembers his first.

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Your Sunday

The best new TV shows of the year so far

Lucy Punch as Amanda in Amandaland

Amandaland skewers the subtle class codes, status dressing and social hierarchies of the modern school run

Time to look at the best of British television so far this year. Our critic, Michael Hogan, finds there’s plenty to choose from, including returning favourites such as Rivals (“as rollickingly fun as ever”) and Amandaland (“a scalpel-sharp satire of school-gates politics”) and new arrivals such as the BBC’s Waiting for the Out (“gripping and moving”) and HBO Max’s The Pitt (“begging to be binged”).

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Devil’s Advocate

Gin and tonic may be Britain’s favourite drink – but it will never be mine

Every week, one of our writers takes an unfashionable position, either defending a subject that’s been unfairly maligned or criticising something that most people love.

Londoners cartoon
Evgenia Siokos

Evgenia Siokos

 

Summer leers around the corner: trifles and housewives quiver in the larder, Quavers crackle, and bloodshot, booze-thirsty eyes roll back in their sockets in anticipation of their six o’clock fix. Britain’s tipple of choice? The gin and tonic.

It’s one of the nation’s favourite cocktails; besides tea, it’s probably the beverage for which we’re best known. The G&T proper was first invented in the colonies, where the quinine in the tonic served as an anti-malarial compound. While the Empire has long since died a shrivelling death, gin and tonic culture now reigns supreme. Gin has replaced sherry at lunchtime parties in Guildford, lingers in lukewarm tins on GWR services and is a mainstay among Wellie-wearing, padel-playing millennials.

The modern G&T is a Trojan horse, a mixological sleight of hand served up in a vast goblet, choking with ice, festooned with bushlets of rosemary and half a grapefruit, and diluted with any number of tonics ranging from the utilitarian (90p for a litre in Tesco) to the preposterous (peppercorn, “Mediterranean”, or, God forbid, more grapefruit).

Alas, these maladroit attempts to mask the rasp of juniper invariably result in a sickly concoction prone to premature dilution – and before you know it, the insidious gin has cut through all the watered-down theatre and ploughed into your bloodstream with the subtlety of a locomotive. When looked in the mouth, this gift horse is merely one of the more successful lies sold to the middle classes by Big Booze.

Our forbears, at least, knew better. Gin’s legacy in this green and pleasant land is rooted, correctly, in excess and social decay. Mother’s ruin. Maudlin-making. Sin-inducing. The “gin craze” of 18th-century England was a public-health disaster – the drink became synonymous with neglect, vice and desperation. (The late medieval Benedictines responsible for the propagation of jenever, gin’s predecessor, ought to have their credentials reviewed post-mortem; a clear black mark against these otherwise most reverend Black Monks.)

Do not be led astray by the botanical evangelists. In my experience, while tequila brings on hip-swinging glee, and a couple of pints lead to mischief, gin only ever leads to tedious ruin. Tears, moping, laments about ex-boyfriends or dead pets – or, if it’s been a big one, scenes akin to Hogarth’s Gin Lane.

My blind aunt once had a fateful incident with a bottle of what she calls “b------d up gin” (i.e. a botanical variety). She ended up being lapped back to consciousness by her seven concerned, and bloodthirsty, Pomeranians.

Gin can’t even defend its own integrity. You would never have it neat, as you would a good reposado or even, in exceptional circumstances, vodka; I recommend Black Cow or Tito’s. From the hobgoblin-green shape of Gordon’s – loved by Queen Elizabeth, the late Queen Mother; hated by teenagers left hanging over the porcelain – to its other wily guises – sloe gin, pink gin, dry gin, craft gin – all gin is beyond salvation.

To be clear, there’s nothing worse than a gin martini. What sacrilege. I’m surprised that Ernst Stavro Blofeld didn’t weaponise the gin-laden Vesper against 007: “No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to die… poisoned by this cursed cocktail.” It’s like trying to make Savlon sexy. Enough. Give me a dirty vodka martini, with three buttery olives, any day of the week.

Do you agree with Evgenia? Send your replies here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, for which you can sign up here.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

One great life

Claudine Longet, singer and actress who shot her lover

Claudine Longet during her trial in 1971

Claudine Longet, who has died aged 84, was a French-born actress and chanteuse who enjoyed some success in the US before her career was sensationally derailed when she shot and killed her lover, the ski champion and American hero “Spider” Sabich, writes Andrew M Brown, obituaries editor.

Until then, she had been best known for her appearances on her then husband Andy Williams’s weekly TV show. He was the legendary crooner behind hits such as Can’t Take My Eyes Off You and she radiated glamour and wholesomeness.

Yet it all unravelled for her in 1976, when she shot Sabich in their chalet in the hedonistic resort of Aspen, Colorado. In Britain even the Daily Mirror weighed in, declaring Aspen to be “the modern Sodom and Gomorrah”.

Dunn, centre, with his Halifax crew

Claudine Longet with Andy Williams on their wedding day in 1961

The singer admitted that she was holding the gun when it killed Sabich from close range, but insisted that it went off accidentally while she was asking him for a lesson on the safety catch.

To complicate matters, the trial revealed oversights by the local justice department. In the end, the jury accepted her version of events and she was sentenced to only 30 days in jail.

After divorcing Andy Williams she ended up marrying one of her defence lawyers.

Read the full obituary here.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was LIBRARIAN. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Please share your thoughts on the newsletter here.

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Follow every twist and turn in the plot to topple Starmer – and what it could mean for Britain.

 
 

Friday, May 15, 2026

Dear diary... Labour is imploding

Humanity’s uncertain fate under AI | The 50 greatest moments in FA Cup history
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Saturday, 16 May 2026

Issue No. 447

Good morning.

It has been yet another difficult week for Sir Keir Starmer. If you’ve wondered what the Prime Minister might have been thinking about the slow-motion demise of his premiership, you’re in luck. Gordon Rayner, our Associate Editor, looks back at this week’s trials, while Guy Kelly, our Features Writer, takes an imagined glance inside Starmer’s diary.

Elsewhere, today is National Pub Day, and Rachel Reeves is the latest political figure to back The Telegraph’s campaign. Limited-edition Telegraph Ale will be available at participating pubs today – below, we tell you how to claim your pint.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Telegraph readers can now enjoy a year’s access for just £1.99 per month. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Humanity faces an uncertain fate as experts brace for superintelligent AI

Catherine Deneuve is back: The screen siren who said non to MeToo

Plus, the 50 greatest moments in FA Cup history

Ends soon: A year for £1.99 a month

Save on an All Access Subscription with your email-exclusive offer

 

Dear diary... Labour is imploding

Starmer
Gordon Rayner

Gordon Rayner

Associate Editor

 
 

Monday

After last week’s blood-curdling local, Senedd, and Holyrood election results, Starmer attempts to pacify mutinous Labour MPs with yet another “reset” speech. He urges them to hold their fire until they have heard him out. The result? After a predictably uninspiring address, devoid of new ideas, scores of MPs rushed to their keyboards to call for him to go.

If only we could access the PM’s diary for the week. Well, luckily, we have managed to get hold of it*, and can bring you exclusive, eye-opening snippets below.

*As imagined by Guy Kelly

*As imagined by Guy Kelly

Features Writer

 

Starmer: Unbelievable. I think I’ve been very clear. Yesterday I gave new roles to Gordon Brown and Harriet Harman. Today, with sleeves rolled up and tie in the bin, I said we should get closer to the EU, then confessed that my family were working class-ish – and they say I’ve got no new ideas!

Have WhatsApped Morgan McSweeney to ask if we should do another reset tomorrow, this time not even wearing a shirt. No reply yet. I guess his phone’s been stolen again.

Keir Starmer gives his latest ‘reset’ speech at Coin Street Community Centre in London

Tuesday

The “Starmer Out” brigade talks excitedly of ministers using the weekly Cabinet meeting to oust the Prime Minister, or at least persuade him to set a timetable for his departure. Starmer ploughs through the meeting without giving them a chance to speak, and loyalist ministers file out of No 10 to give a series of mini press-conferences to waiting reporters.

Everything is fine, they insist. Jess Phillips, the safeguarding minister, and three other ministers resign.

Starmer: Put on my hard man voice for Cabinet, the one Lady Vic says makes me sound like Kermit with a hangover. “I’m going nowhere,” I told them all. “We know,” they replied. “That’s the problem.”

A few threw the towel in. “So rare of Jess Phillips to put her head above the parapet,” I said to Lammy, who told me it was good I’d not lost my sense of humour. He said Burnham’s on his way, but will probably be delayed. “Avanti…” I muttered. “English breakfast?” he replied. He really is a moron.

Wednesday

Undeterred by this being the most important day of the parliamentary calendar, the King’s Speech, Wes Streeting, the Health Secretary, decides now is a good time to catch the Prime Minister and tell him he should step down so he can have a crack at the top job.

The meeting lasts only 16 minutes, including the time taken for Streeting to walk to and from the Prime Minister’s office in Downing Street. Starmer says: “No.” The King’s Speech goes ahead, but yet more MPs call for Starmer to go.

Starmer: Wes asked to see me to brag about cutting waiting times. I told him he’d have to call at 8am to try and get a same-day appointment. Alas, all I had in the diary that morning was “7am-12pm: Scream Into Pillow”.

After that, the King’s Speech, which I have to say was different from how I remember the film version. Got to walk very slowly with Kemi. Must say, it felt good to speak to somebody who wants me to stay in the job until the election.

Thursday

The day begins with Angela Rayner announcing that HMRC has cleared her of wrongdoing over her £40,000 stamp-duty error, though she does not say whether she intends to run in any leadership contest. Then, the most expected resignation in recent political history finally comes when Streeting quits as health secretary, without declaring a formal leadership challenge, suggesting he does not have the backing of the requisite 81 Labour MPs.

A hectic day ends with Josh Simons, the former minister, giving up his Makerfield seat so leadership favourite Andy Burnham can try to get back into Parliament.

Starmer: Lammy says he saw white smoke rising from No 10, so wondered if it was like the Vatican and I’d finally been replaced. Turns out it was Big Ange vaping in the garden. “I thought you’d quit?” I said. “No that’s Wes,” she replied, “and Jess Phillips, and Zubir Ahmed, and Alex Davies-Jones, and Miatta Fahnbulleh, and six ministerial aides…” I have missed her.

Bad news, though: Burnham managed to find his way out of Euston Station. Not sure if I should be concerned about him coming over to No 10 earlier with a tape measure, Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen and a deck of curtain swatches. “Just having a look…” he said. All Ange asked was if it comes tax-free.

Andy Burnham

Andy Burnham spotted out for a jog yesterday

Friday

Labour’s ruling National Executive Committee confirms that it will not block Burnham from standing in Makerfield, having prevented him from standing in Gorton and Denton in February.

Meanwhile, Donald Trump says it will be “tough” for Starmer to survive, “unless he can straighten out immigration – where he’s weak – and if he doesn’t start drilling and stop with the windmills all over the place... he’s got to open up the North Sea”.

Starmer: Have texted Donald a bit – needs must. “The G20 needs its best players on the pitch to fight for peace, and I’m easily in the 1st XI!” I pleaded. “WHAT? I AM WITH XI IN CHINA NOW. U MAKE NO SENSE!!!,” he responded.

I asked him if he could declare war on Liechtenstein or Malta, to create a distraction, but he said I shouldn’t make places up. McSweeney says there’s only one thing for it. I nodded solemnly and undid my top button. “Time for a reset.”

Go deeper with our coverage of the Labour power-struggle:

Starmer could stand aside for Burnham

Four ways Labour’s psychodrama could play out

How Labour’s leadership rivals will come for your money

The £800m skyscraper deal casting a shadow over Burnham’s leadership bid

Dale Vince: I’d give Starmer cash to fight off leadership rivals

 

Celebrate National Pub Day with a free Telegraph Ale

 

Telegraph Ale will be available at participating pubs today while stocks last

An average of four pubs per day have announced their closure so far this year, robbing towns and villages of their community hubs. Many of Britain’s remaining pub owners now face a barrage of relief cuts, red tape and ruinous taxes.

The Telegraph’s National Pub Day is a great opportunity to support this vital industry – and the people that depend on it.

Yesterday, Rachel Reeves backed our campaign and encouraged people to go to their local this weekend. The Chancellor said pubs were “at the heart of our communities”.

To mark the occasion, Telegraph Ale will be available at participating pubs, while stocks last. The classic English bitter is made by Renegade Brewery. Casks will be delivered to more than 250 pubs across the country for patrons like you to enjoy.

If you’d like to claim your free pint, we’ve put together a guide. Check if your local will be pouring our limited-edition brew and arm yourself with an email voucher.
Claim your glass of Telegraph Ale

 

Opinion

Charles Moore Headshot

Charles Moore

Starmer is right to resist this clumsy Labour coup

The PM’s stubborn defiance of his challengers is constitutionally sound, even if this Government deserves its troubles

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<span style="color:#DE0000;">Camilla Tominey</span> Headshot

Camilla Tominey

Andy Burnham is destined to be a disappointment

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Jake Wallis Simons</span> Headshot

Jake Wallis Simons

Prince Harry has done a brave thing but the King showed greater courage

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Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

weekend reads

The sectarian nightmare predicted by Enoch Powell is here. Tommy Robinson doesn’t have the answers

Protesters gather outside the Houses of Parliament during last year’s Unite the Kingdom march

Fifty-eight years after being exiled by the liberal establishment, Enoch Powell’s prophecies have become reality, writes Simon Heffer. As local councillors are elected for their views on Gaza and Tommy Robinson exploits migration failures, British politics is fracturing. Powell would reject today’s Unite the Kingdom march, organised by Robinson. Yet, today’s climate offers the late politician the chance to say “I told you so”.

Continue reading

 

‘Uncontested ideas about power and privilege are being taught in our universities to explain how society works – and it puts us all at risk’

‘As a professor of social work, I saw how today’s obsession with victimhood is endangering all of us’

During my two decades teaching social work at the University of Dundee, I watched my once-lively classrooms fall completely silent, writes Jane Fenton. A new orthodoxy of critical social justice and victimhood had taken hold, but this relentless fear of causing “harm” isn’t just stifling debate. It is creating a perfect storm for professional inaction that puts the wider public in danger.

Continue reading

 

Humanity faces an uncertain fate as experts brace for superintelligent AI

Artificial intelligence may soon be able to develop better versions of itself. Experts believe that vast amounts of human tasks could be automated in the next couple of years – including the development of AI itself. As James Titcomb reports, AI that can make itself smarter could act like an evolutionary chain reaction, rapidly building to a system vastly more capable than mankind.

Continue reading

 

Catherine Deneuve is known for her hyper-feminine roles and Playboy photo shoots

Catherine Deneuve is back: The screen siren who said non to MeToo

At once French cinema’s favourite seductress and a pinup for conservative Parisian chic, Catherine Deneuve’s duality has come to define her career. With two films premiering at Cannes Film Festival, it is Deneuve, 82, discreetly vaping with her habitual look of lofty ennui, that the cameras still turn for. The former screen siren who said “non” to MeToo remains as enigmatic as ever, writes Eleanor Halls.

Continue reading

 

Floral tributes were left by mourners at the promenade of Bondi Beach in Sydney following the shooting that took place there on December 14

Australia is no longer safe for Jews, say Holocaust survivors

Peter Halas fled to Australia after his mother and grandparents were murdered by the Nazis. With anti-Semitic incidents on the rise, especially in the wake of the October 7 massacre, he is now questioning whether Australia remains safe for Jews. Halas and other Jews in the country spoke to The Telegraph about their growing fears.

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Palace’s tears of joy after taking down Manchester City in the 2025 final

The 50 greatest moments in FA Cup history

The FA Cup is not only the world’s oldest football tournament, it remains one that is still, despite every attempt to defuse its power, charged with drama, romance and tales of the unexpected. Here is our choice of the Cup’s most memorable moments. Do you agree with our list? Probably not, but that merely confirms how much the Cup has given us.
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Your Saturday

What drinking coffee every morning does to your gut health

Coffee lovers may be pleased to learn that their morning cup offers benefits beyond waking them up for the day. A growing body of research suggests that coffee may positively influence our microbiome (gut bacteria), leading to better overall health and even a longer life. Miranda Levy speaks to experts about exactly what coffee does to our gut health, the best way to prepare it and how many cups you should drink each day.

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Here’s another useful article for you this morning:

 

Food for thought

Have you got plans for this weekend? Whether you’re staying in or going out, we’ve got you covered. Every week, Diana Henry, The Telegraph’s award-winning cookery writer, brings you three dishes for a perfect weekend meal. Meanwhile, William Sitwell shares his view from the culinary world – and a recommendation or two.

If you’re staying in...

Soy-sesame-honey chicken

Diana Henry

Diana Henry

The Telegraph’s award-winning cookery writer

 

If you received last Saturday’s Recipes Newsletter you’ll have seen that my recipe was designed for someone who has never cooked before. A Telegraph reader who has had to take over the cooking from his wife – for whom he is now sole carer – wrote to me asking for help. He didn’t know where to start. The recipe I provided for roast chicken, red onions, potatoes and herbs was meant to be a blueprint for more dishes using chicken thighs (such as chicken with sweet potatoes, cayenne pepper, green olives and feta). I was moved by the response to that newsletter – I received emails not only from other novices, but from readers who wanted to recommend their own easy dishes to “Peter” (he did not wish me to use his real name). Here, then, I’m offering more recipes that are simple to assemble and cook in the oven.

This sweet-and-savoury honey and soy chicken dish, for example, is good with rice and a green vegetable. As the chicken is cooked with honey, it can get quite dark in colour, so cover it with foil if that’s happening. If you can cook chicken thighs and potatoes in the oven, you can do roasted vegetables. The same rules apply: keep everything in a single layer in your tin so that the food roasts instead of steams. Roasted Mediterranean vegetables are one of the most useful things you can make. You can eat them cold the next day – I sometimes make enough for four days – as a side dish. In this recipe you add white beans so it delivers both vegetables and a pulse. If you, like my reader, are a novice cook you can skip the mojo verde – a green sauce from the Canary Islands – and make it when you feel you have the skills.

Roasted vegetables with beans and mojo verde

Fish fillets baked in the oven are one of the quickest dishes you can make – fish cooks fast – so this recipe for baked salmon with herb and vermouth butter should also be easy and feels like a real treat. If you don’t want to make the butter, buy a flavoured one instead.

Don’t forget that if you have a specific problem, you can get in touch with me and ask for help. I am here to make your cooking life enjoyable, not frightening.

Baked salmon fillets with herb and vermouth butter recipe

Find me here every Saturday and in the new Recipes Newsletter, which you can sign up to here.

If you’re eating out...

Sitwell at the White Hart, his restaurant in Wiveliscombe, West Somerset

William Sitwell

William Sitwell

 

This week I’ve got brunch on my mind. It’s not pleasant. I have a long and storied history of hating it (I penned an early brunch takedown in The Telegraph in 2014 and still I resist it).

Bad for the soul, it encourages laziness. Instead: get up, eat, do stuff, have lunch, do more stuff, eat, go to bed (tried and tested for centuries). Frankly, there’s just way too much avocado involved.

The problem, of course, is that I no longer opine from the lofty heights of a critic and writer – I run a restaurant now and what a restaurant needs most is diners. So I’m relenting, putting aside my ire and, yes, we will now be serving brunch at my establishment The White Hart.

I’ve written about it in this week’s column. If you absolutely must go for brunch then my recommendation is London’s Duck & Waffle, where at least you can admire the views of our nation’s capital from the 40th floor of 110 Bishopsgate while you trough a “duck benedict”.

As for my own venture, sorry I won’t be joining you, but happily providing a bill. Rodney, this time next year we’ll be millionaires!
Read William’s column here

 

Your say

Nature notes

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
Sing, cuckoo! While summer is very much not icumen in at the moment, its long-serving messenger is at least making himself heard. In yesterday’s newsletter, readers raised fears that the bird had gone shy this year. Your responses suggest otherwise. In fact, they point to a veritable redux.


 

Helen writes: “We live in Cambridgeshire, and have been very lucky to hear a cuckoo on our walk in the Fens over the last couple of weeks. We have gone several years without hearing one, so it has been extra special.”


 

Another reader adds: “I have recently moved back to the Scottish Highlands, after a few years in the South of England. Four days ago, walking my dog among the gorse and pine trees, I heard a cuckoo for the first time in more than five years. Alas, I haven’t heard it again. Yet.”


 

Since we’re in Nature Notes territory, I should also mention the response to Monday’s newsletter, on David Attenborough’s centenary. It’s hard to think of another public figure who inspires such unequivocal affection and admiration.

Victoria Parker recalls her encounters with the great man: “Before I retired, I worked for WWF for 24 years. David Attenborough was a trustee. The first time I met him (in the 1970s), he was wearing his favourite sports jacket, and stood out from the other trustees in their grey suits. I was introduced to him as Vicky, and he always remembered my name – quite an art. A true gentleman.”

That’s all from me for this week, folks. I’ll be back on Monday to bring you our best talking points. In the meantime, you can contact me here.

 

Andrew Baker’s Saturday quiz

Gather round for the latest instalment of my Saturday quiz.

1. On this date in 1951, the first regularly scheduled flights commenced between London Heathrow Airport and Idlewild Airport in New York City. Which airline provided the service?

2. By which name is Idlewild Airport now known?

3. What was the name of Eric Idle’s 2005 Broadway musical based on Monty Python and the Holy Grail?

4. Which python is the world’s longest species of snake?

5. What is the name of the python in The Jungle Book?

You can find the answers at the end of the newsletter.

Plus, can you tackle The 1% Club? Scroll down to see if you got the questions right – and play for free on our website and app.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was COAGULANT. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Please send me your thoughts on this newsletter. You can email me here.

Quiz answers:

  1. El-Al
  2. John F Kennedy International
  3. Spamalot
  4. Reticulated python
  5. Kaa
 

1% Club answers:

  1. Cabbage
  2. Nigel
  3. Fed
 

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