England to show ‘nastiness’ as Itoje backs side to wrestle back Calcutta Cup

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England have vowed to show their nasty side against Scotland on Saturday with the captain, Maro Itoje, calling on his team to buck the trend of recent history by clinching the Calcutta Cup for the first time in five years.Buoyed by their one-point victory over France last time out, England have been champing at the bit all week with Tom Curry saying there was an edginess to training on Monday and Ben Earl revealing the squad were subjecting to a series of video clips showcasing their failings in recent defeats by Scotland.England last beat Scotland in 2020 and have not defeated Saturday’s opponents at Twickenham since 2017 but victory can keep Steve Borthwick’s side in the hunt for the Six Nations title.Itoje is one of only five of England’s starting team to taste victory over Scotland and will be aware that defeat on Saturday will ensure a worst ever run against the auld enemy.“You don’t want blind rage and you don’t want blind, beating-your-chest fury, but you need some of that,” said Itoje.

“You definitely need an element of that, but you also need accuracy.Rugby is not a game of brute force alone, you need accuracy and you need to have the composure to identify space and execute.Wherever we land in the balance of the two is something that we have to feel, but we definitely need elements of both.“Scotland have had a number on us for a few years and that’s something we’re not proud about.That’s something that we don’t like and hopefully on Saturday we can create our own history.

They have a better record against us in recent times than most nations.That’s something we are massively motivated to try to overturn.“From our point of view, it’s a brilliant opportunity on Saturday to try to change the narrative there and win the Calcutta Cup.It is always personal.Rugby is an emotional game.

In my humble opinion it is a game that requires more emotion than most other sports because of the nature of what we do.We want our team to be full of emotion.But we want that accuracy.We don’t want blind emotion that clouds your judgment.But we need some of it so we can get to the place we want to get to.

”Scotland are the only Six Nations side Borthwick is yet to beat since taking charge but while Gregor Townsend’s side seem to raise their game for this fixture, England are determined to meet fire with fire,“We’ve spoken about it as a group, everyone says teams that play against England, they find a bit extra but actually there’s a nastiness to us,” said the assistant coach, Tom Harrison,“We want to win the Calcutta Cup back here,We haven’t done so,We want to do that.

Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionEngland: M Smith (Harlequins); T Freeman (Northampton), O Lawrence (Bath), H Slade (Exeter), O Sleightholme (Northampton); F Smith (Northampton), A Mitchell (Northampton); E Genge (Bristol), L Cowan-Dickie (Sale), W Stuart (Bath), M Itoje (Saracens, capt), O Chessum (Leicester), T Curry (Sale), B Earl (Saracens), T Willis (Saracens),Replacements: J George (Saracens), F Baxter (Harlequins), J Heyes (Leicester), T Hill (Bath), C Cunningham-South (Harlequins), B Curry (Sale), H Randall (Bristol), E Daly (Saracens),Scotland: B Kinghorn (Toulouse), K Rowe (Glasgow), H Jones (Glasgow), T Jordan (Glasgow), D Van der Merwe (Edinburgh), F Russell (Bath, co-capt), B White (Toulon); P Schoeman (Edinburgh), D Cherry (Edinburgh), Z Fagerson (Glasgow), J Gray (Bordeaux), G Gilchrist (Edinburgh), J Ritchie (Edinburgh), R Darge (Glasgow, co-capt), J Dempsey (Glasgow),Replacements: E Ashman (Edinburgh), R Sutherland (Glasgow), W Hurd (Leicester), S Skinner (Edinburgh), G Brown (Glasgow), M Fagerson (Glasgow), J Dobie (Glasgow), S McDowall (Glasgow),“You want to win every game you play in, you want to win every Six Nations Test match.

There are loads of blokes playing week in, week out with these players and if you lose to someone you have to wear it for a whole year, every day when you go into the club you know they have got the better of you.Everyone has got their different reasons why they want to win and how deep that hurt goes.”Tom Willis, who will appear against Scotland for the first time, echoed that sentiment.I think the way we compete with each other in the week sets the tone for the weekends,” said the No 8.“We’ve got some unbelievable players in the squad, and everyone drives each other on.

I think naturally you need an element of nastiness in you, from that competitive side of things, to push each other on.I think that lends itself to the best performance possible.”
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Nearly 500 cat figurines stolen from Gordon Ramsay’s London restaurant

Nearly 500 cat figurines were stolen in one week from Gordon Ramsay’s new London restaurant, the TV chef has said.The restaurateur, 58, recently launched Lucky Cat 22 Bishopsgate by Gordon Ramsay in one of London’s tallest buildings, which features the beckoning Japanese cat models called maneki-neko.He told ITV’s The Jonathan Ross Show there had been numerous thefts.Ramsay, known for his Hell’s Kitchen and Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares reality TV programmes, said: “The cats are getting stolen. There were 477 stolen last week – they cost £4

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Bored kids and empty cupboards? Try these child-friendly recipes this half-term

This is an extract from our weekly Feast newsletter, written by Felicity Cloake, Meera Sodha, Rachel Roddy and others. Sign up here to get it free to your inbox every Thursday.Happy half-term everyone! If you are a parent reading this, the chances are you are in desperate need of a snack/strong coffee/stiff drink. I start these school breaks with great intentions – lots of wholesomeness, baking, arts and crafts, and so forth. But the snack cupboard is now bare, the kids have had a side of cucumber sticks with every meal as a token bit of “green” and there are only so many episodes of Bluey I can take (actually, that’s a lie, but you know, we can’t have it playing all day)

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This is my final OFM column. Here’s what I’ve learned about buffets, ‘clean eating’ and what not to serve food on | Jay Rayner

I have been writing this column for 15 years. That means there have been 180 of them, filled with wisdom, insight, whimsy, prejudice, contradiction and sometimes just outrageous stupidity, all of it interrogating the way we cook and eat now. As this is my last of these columns I thought, as a service, I should summarise the key points. Are you ready? Good. Let’s go

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How to make rhubarb crumble – recipe | Felicity Cloake's Masterclass

When I last set finger to keyboard on this subject, I claimed that anyone can make a decent crumble. Age has made me slightly less generous; we’ve all chewed our way through dusty scatterings of flour and stodgy doughs that, delicious as they may have been, could, honestly, also have been a lot better. Fortunately, perfection here is not difficult.Prep 10 min Cook 40 min
 Serves 6-8800g rhubarb
 40g demerara sugar, or white sugarA pinch of spice (ginger, cinnamon – optional)For the crumble topping
150g plain flour
 75g demerara sugar ¼ tsp salt 75g ground almonds
 170g chilled unsalted butter
25g skin-on almonds, or other nuts (optional)Nigella reckons rhubarb is “the best crumble in the world”, but the recipe can, of course, be adapted to other fruit, according to both taste and season (or, indeed, to frozen fruit at any time of year); for other options see step 8. The fruit will be hidden underneath the topping, so crumble is also a great use for less lovely thicker or greener stems of rhubarb, underripe stone fruit, gluts of apples, etc

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How to use up the remains of a can of coconut milk | Kitchen aide

I rarely use a whole tin of coconut milk in one go. What can I do with the leftovers?Happily, the warming sweetness of coconut milk is welcome in all the things you want to eat right now, sitting at home in your thermals (Curry! Soup!), meaning leftovers are no bad thing. When Mandy Yin, chef-owner of Sambal Shiok in north London, is faced with this same predicament, it usually means coconut rice: “It’s so straightforward, too: just replace half the water you’d need to cook the rice with coconut milk.” Otherwise, the excess milk could make an appearance in stews, even bolognese, or creamed spinach, she adds: “Replace the cream with coconut milk and a dash of fish sauce, and that’s really delicious.”The Guardian’s journalism is independent

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Australian supermarket meat pie taste test: ‘What I want to dribble down my front at the footy’

Nicholas Jordan and friends wade through the gristle and the gloop to find out if there’s such a thing as a bad meat pieAfter years of eating the wares of service station hot cabinets, stadium menus and country bakeries, I never found a pie I didn’t enjoy. I doubted such a thing existed. But I thought maybe, somewhere in the depths of an Australian supermarket freezer, I would find it: a pie that would save me from the shame and utter plainness of writing an article that says “any pie is fine”.I bought every frozen or refrigerated pie labelled beef or meat and did a blind taste test with a team of Sydney bakers and chefs – Rob Pirina (Glenorie Bakery), Tom Mitchell (Shadow Baking), Andy Bowdy (Kiln), Justin Narayan (MasterChef), Toby Wilson (Ricos Tacos), Kimmy Gastmeier (Cherry Moon General Store) and Ryan Broomfield (Broomfields Pies).I cooked the pies according to their packet instructions then placed them in a pie warmer