Glenlivet: the single malt that would have made my dad’s Father’s Day by Milly Adams

It’s  the single malt that was my dad’s absolute favourite. He would savour the moment, sipping it from one of his cut glass tumblers, just as it was, no ice, no water.

 

The extraordinary thing was that after decades, his son from a previous relationship found him. Young Bill he was called because though my dad’s name was Ron, his surname was Williams, and therefore, as a wartime spitfire pilot he was called Bill.

 

Young Bill was yonks older than us, and the spitting image of my dad, he even wore similar clothes, but would they bond? We were agog.

 

He sat down, Dad said,

 

‘Have a drink. What’s your favourite tipple?’

 

Sure enough, it was the same as Dad’s. So it’s all in the genes. All was well, I can still picture them both, running their forefingers down the glass – two peas in a pod. Sniffing the aroma, then relaxing, sipping, the shoulders going down. Time to catch up.

 

The pair of them are long gone, but my son is a chip off the old block – a great Glenlivet fan.

 

So to all you out there, looking for something special for Sunday 18th June, do consider this Glenlivet Founder’s Reserve. I’d buy it for my dad, to honour his parenting and guidance, not to mention sense of mischief.

 

In Gaelic, Glenlivet means ‘valley of the smooth-flowing one’ and whisky from Livet Valley has been known for exceptional quality since the 19th Century. The Glenlivet has created an expression to honour the original vision of its pioneering founder George Smith; The Glenlivet Founder’s Reserve pays tribute to the uniquely smooth and fruity taste Smith first envisioned in 1824, but with a contemporary twist.

A few details with which to impress your dad: skilful selection of casks enhances the signature fruity flavours of The Glenlivet, while whisky taken from traditional oak casks is complemented by the selective use of American first-fill casks to give a hint of creamy sweetness. The result is a whisky with delicious aromas of citrus fruit and notes of oranges and pears and hints of toffee apples and candy, while the long, creamy, smooth finish makes this a deliciously satisfying dram.

Well, Dad wouldn’t know about that, but he knew what he liked, and so did Young Bill, so too my son. It will slip down a treat.

Go on, your dad deserves it, you know he does.

 

The Glenlivet, Founder’s Reserve is available RRP £34.15. Stockists include Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Waitrose, Morrisons, ASDA, www.thewhiskyexchange.com and all specialist retailers.

@TheGlenlivet

www.TheGlenlivet.com

* Milly Adams’ latest book, At long Last Love is published by Arrow on 15th June.

 

 

The Business of Books: Fresh Endeavours

The Business of Books: Fresh Endeavours 

Jane Cable talks to former publishing director of Endeavour Press, Amy Durant, at the start of her freelance career

1) What is your book related job or business?

Until earlier this month I was Publishing Director of Endeavour Press, but I have just left to move into freelance work, specifically in editorial and consultancy. I have worked in digital publishing for four years, and manage everything from commissioning new titles to overseeing marketing campaigns.
2) What is the most rewarding part of it?

The most rewarding part of my job is finding and falling in love with a book, and then getting to meet the author and sharing my enthusiasm. Seeing a book grow from a submission to a published book; and working with the author on everything from edits to cover ideas to a new title is so much fun! We also worked with a lot of estates at Endeavour Press, and it was great
when you get in contact with the family of an author whose books have gone out of print, and you get them selling again – it is really rewarding to keep an author’s legacy going strong.
3) What do you consider to be your major successes?

I recently got shortlisted for the Kim Scott Walwyn Award for exceptional women in publishing, which was a great honour and personal success, and I feel privileged to have been on the same shortlist as so many inspirational women (including the wonderful publisher and editor Alice Curry of Lantana who won!). My major successes at work have been mainly around tracking down obscure literary estates (I have spent many an afternoon stalking unsuspecting relatives of authors on the internet!); signing them up; and injecting new life into the books – transforming them from hard-to-find second-hand copies, to shiny new ebooks, which are reaching a whole new generation of readers.


4) Have you always loved books and what are you reading at the moment?

My father is a writer and he worked in children’s publishing when I was growing up, so I was lucky enough to always have a house full of books! I have a few books on the go at the moment: I have just finished working my way through nearly 100 submissions for the HWA Endeavour Ink Best Historical Novel Award, and at the moment I am reading (and thoroughly enjoying!) The Girl in the Glass Tower by Elizabeth Fremantle; I am also reading The Queen’s Mary by Sarah Gristwood, which will be published as an Endeavour Ink book this summer; and The Power by Naomi Alderman, of which I have heard great things!

BIO
Amy Durant is a freelance editor and digital publishing consultant. She is also working part-time on a PhD on the works of Aphra Behn.

Contact Amy on Twitter @SavingBooks

 

 

Smirnoff: the newest – and fruitiest – cider on the block

smirnoff cider barbecue drink

Smirnoff Cider – ideal drink for barbecues

 

If you’re looking for something to drink when you next have a barbecue, this might be just the thing!

Smirnoff (the famous vodka company) is now producing a great range of ciders. The latest is flavoured with mandarin and pink grapefruit, with a dash of vodka. Smirnoff also has Passionfruit and lime flavoured cider and a rather unusual Raspberry and Pomegranate.

They’re not exactly subtle, but they’re cool and sweet and my kids – straight back from university – loved them. My favourite was the Mandarin and Pink Grapefruit, which had a lovely sharpness and a really fresh fruit flavour. My son went for the passionfruit and lime, which absolutely burst with scents of tropical fruit.

Perhaps not the sort of thing to have with steak or even chops, but they’d go down well with burgers and ketchup or with those oriental chicken wings in sweet chilli sauce that everyone seems to serve, or with pizzas for that matter. And they’re not expensive – the big supermarkets sell them for around £2.19 for a 500ml bottle.

This Modern Love by Will Darbyshire Book Review

This Modern Love by Will Darbyshire Book Review

There are a few things which are unique about This Modern Love. Firstly, it was crowdsourced. Secondly, the idea: people sharing their personal stories of love and loss. It is full of letters, stories and photographs all put together by YouTuber Will Darbyshire. The submissions are deeply personal. They are sometimes beautiful and other times heartbreaking. A glimpse into other people’s love lives that we would never usually get to see. A unique book that is definitely worth a read.

 

This Modern Love is a unique crowdsourced book of letters, stories, and photographs about the state of modern romance by YouTuber Will Darbyshire. 

‘Question 1. What would you say to your ex, without judgement?’

Seeking closure after a tough break-up, Will Darbyshire was driven to strike up an intimate conversation with his online audience. Posting a series of questions via his YouTube, Twitter and Instagram channels, Will asked his followers to share their innermost thoughts about their relationship experiences, in the form of hand-written letters, poems, photographs, and emails.

After 6 months and over 15,000 heartfelt submissions later, from over 100 countries, This Modern Love collects these letters together to form a compendium of 21st century love, structured into the beginning, middle and end of a relationship.

Tender, funny and cathartic, This Modern Love is a compelling portrait of individual desires, resentments and fears that reminds us that, whether we’re in or out of love, we’re not alone.

 

This Modern Love is available here.

 

Review: Sweet Bird of Youth, Chichester Festival Theatre

Sweet Bird of Youth

Chichester Festival Theatre

Until 24 June

Box Office: 01243 781312 www.cft.org.uk

Photo credit: Johan Persson

With the run-up to General Election a veritable carnival of hypocrisy, self-interest, arrogance and rampaging egos, the day after the event itself wasn’t the ideal time to digest more of the same. Alas, in Tennessee Williams’s 1959 play there is little relief from such monstrous conduct.

Fearing derision and rejection after the premiere of her latest film, aging Hollywood movie star Alexandra Del Largo (Marcia Gay Harden) has bolted and is holed up in a hotel in St Cloud on the Gulf Coast of Mexico with Chance Wayne (Brian J. Smith), a gigolo and wannabe actor who skipped the town a few years previously. While the actress hides behind an alias and dulls her demons with alcohol, narcotics and sex, Chance is determined to be reunited with Heavenly, his teenage sweetheart. Unaware that before leaving St Cloud he infected his girl with a STD that necessitated a hysterectomy, he has no idea that Heavenly’s father and brother are resolute: should Chance ever show his face in the neighbourhood again he will pay for his crime.

The first act, almost entirely a two-hander set in a hotel bedroom, offers superb performances from Harden and Smith. Convincing and compelling, on the Festival Theatre’s thrust stage, however, some of the intensity and intimacy is lost.

Elsewhere the performances are strong, especially Richard Cordery as Boss Finley, a bully with double standards and an unshakable belief in the American Dream. Victoria Berwick as Heavenly Finley is also excellent. Vulnerable, compliant but filled with a rage, when she sobs silent, despairing tears, her grief and anger is sorely palpable.

Easy on the eye, Anthony Ward’s set is stunning; clever, evocative and stylish, it is also beautifully complemented by Mark Henderson’s lighting.

The ruthless marching of time is one of the play’s key themes. In Jonathan Kent’s undeniably ‘classy bird’ there remains a niggling sense that the pace needs to be stepped up.

Mind Over Sugar

Dementia affects more than 850,000 people in the UK and it is set to rise to over 1 million by 2025!*

However, not many people know that there is a strong link between sugar and Alzheimer’s. Almost 70% of people with type 2 diabetes are now known to develop Alzheimer’s, compared with only 10% of people without diabetes! 

Dr Marilyn Glenville, the UK’s leading Nutritionist explains this phenomenon in her latest book Natural Solutions for Dementia and Alzheimer’s“The high levels of insulin block a group of enzymes that would normally break down the beta-amyloid proteins responsible for the brain plaques in Alzheimer’s. Although high levels of insulincan have this effect, confusingly the brain also needs insulin for its cells to flourish and survive. Your brain has its own supply of insulin – if this supply is hampered in any way, and levels of insulin in the brain fall, brain degeneration is the result. So, as with most things in Nature, we don’t want too much or too little of something – it’s all about homeostasis; that is, balance.”

Naughty clumps

Dr Glenville explains, “It’s thought that changes in insulin function in the brain are the cause of beta-amyloid (a protein fragment) plaque build-up. Beta-amyloid itself is not a problem. In fact, it has a vital role to play in transporting cholesterol, protecting against oxidative stress, and aiding immune function. Problems occur only when the beta- amyloid proteins start to form clumps.”

Can sugar affect your memory?

As well as helping you to regulate your blood sugar, insulin regulates neurotransmitters, brain chemicals that aid learning and memory. If you become insulin resistant, not only will your body struggle to control its blood sugar, but your neurotransmitters will be unable to function as normal, with fallout for your brain function. Dr Glenville adds, “Studies showing the effects of insulin resistance on the brain support the importance of reducing sugar in your diet and show that just having higher levels of sugar (glucose) from eating too much sugary food is a risk factor for dementia even if you don’t have diabetes.”

In fact sugar’s impact on the brain goes beyond the effects of insulin. Dr Glenville says, “Being on the blood-sugar roller coaster also increases levels of the stress hormone cortisol, and this, over time, increases inflammation in the brain, speeding up the deterioration of brain and memory function.”

To keep your brain healthy and young for as long as possible we’ve asked Dr Glenville to share with us her 12 step program to quit sugar:

Spring clean your cupboards. Clear out temptation. Biscuits, chocolates and sweets are all for the local food bank. And remember that you’ll find sugar in savoury foods, too – pasta sauces, soups, ketchup, breakfast cereals and many more are all culprits. If you have a sweet tooth, the hidden sugars in savoury foods will be easiest to give up first. Replace them with your own homemade salad dressings, pasta sauces, soups, granola and so on. Grit your teeth and be ruthless with those cupboard stocks.

Stop adding sugar to drinks and food. You may be doing this on autopilot, the way some people salt their food before tasting it. If you still take sugar in tea or coffee, for example, wean yourself off it half a teaspoon at a time. If you sprinkle sugar on your pancakes or cereal in the morning, try a handful of fresh berries instead. Your taste buds will adapt surprisingly quickly.

Read the labels as you shop. Every 4g of sugar per ‘serving size’ is 1 teaspoon of sugar. The NHS says that added sugar can comprise up to 5 per cent of your daily calorie intake – that’s 30g (7 teaspoons) a day. The World Health Organisation (WHO) wants to limit added sugar (including honey) to just 6 teaspoons a day. I say to keep it as low as possible – no added sugar should be the ideal 80 per cent of the time, and then the other 20 per cent on special treats at special times won’t matter.

Use your scales. It’s important to know what the manufacturer’s assumed serving size is compared with what you would serve yourself. For example, a 30g serving of cereal may be much smaller than you would typically eat – but if it already contains 11g sugar, how much would your own bowl contain?

Don’t skip breakfast. Skipping breakfast makes you far more likely to reach for a coffee and a cake at 11am because your blood sugar will have plummeted. You may feel moody, irritable, tense and not able to concentrate. Always eat breakfast and make it a mixture of protein and carbohydrate – avoiding sugar-laden breakfast cereals at all times!

Try a bowl of porridge sprinkled with ground nuts and seeds. The porridge oats give sustained energy and the nuts and seeds add protein to help further lower the GI.

Or, have an egg on wholemeal or rye toast with grilled tomatoes. This very low-GI breakfast provides a good amount of protein from the egg whites, omega 3 fats in the yolks, and good-quality complex, unrefined carbs from the bread – all in all a power-breakfast of energy that will sustain you until your healthy mid- morning snack.

Eat little and often. So, you get to 3pm and you feel sluggish and tired and every part of your body is screaming to have something sweet to keep you going until teatime. Think about how you’ve eaten over the course of the day – did you have breakfast? Did you allow yourself a handful of nuts mid-morning? Did you eat lunch? Eating little and often is the best way to avoid blood sugar dips that lead to cravings – usually for sweet things.

Avoid extreme diets … at least while you are trying to adapt to a no-sugar regime. This is because fasting will make it harder to avoid blood sugar dips and the cravings that come with them. Once you’ve cut sugar from your diet as much as you can, you’ll even find that you may lose weight naturally, which will remove the need for dieting altogether.

Watch out for caffeine. This stimulant and can trigger a roller coaster of stress hormones that feel a bit like sugar highs and lows. Even though it may feel like an appetite suppressant, in the end caffeine will boost your appetite and trigger sugar cravings. It’s all about removing the temptation to reach for the biscuits.

Say no to alcohol. Alcohol has an effect on your blood sugar, so look for drinks with lower sugar content. Spirits do not contain sugar, but their mixers usually do. White wine is more sugary than red, but on the other hand a white wine spritzer (made with sparkling mineral water) will be better for you than a full glass of red wine.

Add protein to starchy carbohydrates. If you eating starchy carbohydrates (pasta, rice, potatoes, bread) particularly if they refined remember that they are broken down into sugar – but protein (fish, eggs, cheese, nuts, seeds and so on) slows down the rate at which your stomach empties the food into the next part of the digestive tract and so it slows down the emptying of the carbohydrate, too. Add ground nuts and seeds to porridge for vegetable protein, or an omelette (animal protein) with brown rice.

Be kind to yourself. Live by the 80/20 rule: as long as you are eating healthily and avoiding sugar 80 per cent of the time you can have that occasional piece of cake without beating yourself up about it. This will also make it less likely you’ll obsess about sugar – and fall off the wagon altogether. You’re ‘allowed’ to have sugar 20 per cent of the time, so what’s the big deal?

Be smart about alternatives. Beware ‘natural’ sweeteners – some may be no better for you than sugar itself. The following, though, are all worth trying: maple syrup, barley malt syrup, brown rice syrup and coconut sugar.

*https://www.alzheimers.org.uk/info/20027/news_and_media/541/facts_for_the_media

 

 

Kiss Me: Theatre Review by Paul Vates

 

 

Trafalgar Studios 2, London

 

“It always brings a smile to my face when I hear Bix Beiderbecke”

 

 

It always brings a smile to my face when I hear Bix Beiderbecke. His music is playing as we enter the studio, so I know the setting is either between the wars or we’re in a comedy thriller in 1980s Yorkshire.

 

It happens to be the former as we are confronted by a single bed, placed centre-stage atop a bright orange carpet. The mirrored walls at the back turn this claustrophobic space almost into a theatre-in-the-round scenario. The characters have nowhere to hide, their emotions naked for all to see.

 

This is a play primarily about sex. Our need for it, our hopes and fears about it, our concern that it is simply a physical act that somehow gets intertwined with the psychological and knowing the fine line leading to love is never far away. It has transferred from Hampstead Downstairs and is the latest penned by Richard Bean: Made In Dagenham, Great Britain and One Man, Two Guvnors being his biggest three successes.

 

[Claire Lams and Ben Lloyd-Hughes

image courtesy of Robert Day]

 

Around Georgia Lowe’s simple and efficiently designed bedroom of 1929, the audience watch like voyeurs in a seedy Soho club as the widowed Stephanie demands sex from the young stud Dennis. She is lonely and, although seeking companionship and love, wants a child so desperately that she is willing to join the long list of women hoping that a one-off sexual encounter with an unknown man will do the trick.

 

Stephanie is played by Claire Lams, fragile and scared, full of hope for the future and seeking a means to leave the darkness and sadness of the war just gone. Worried that she is over thirty and this is her final chance to have a child, she is willing to face the single-mother stigma because her heart yearns so.

 

Ben Lloyd-Hughes’ Dennis is cocky and matter-of-fact. It’s like a job for him. His mission, to impregnate as many women as is required. He is good at it too, revealing an implausibly high success rate.

 

Director Anna Ledwich doesn’t have much to go on with this static two-hander. Moving the couple smoothly around a small space is the task at hand here and she succeeds in dragging every nuance from the script, every look, every doubt.

 

This is quite a funny play but it is somehow unsatisfying. Lloyd-Hughes appears a tad cautious and uncomfortable. It felt like a long seventy minutes, too. There is little action and the jokes aren’t often or good enough to drive the characters to their inevitable climax. Kiss Me is not a comedy, yet I felt the drama was under-developed. It finishes prematurely without really succeeding in delving into some of the weighty issues it raises.

 

There is much to like about the two disparate characters and Lams carries the punchlines to perfection, but I found the play not funny or tragic enough to sustain the frustrations on show. More of an over-long sketch than a short play, almost like playwright Bean is just going through the motions rather than seducing me with the passion of his convictions.

 

[Ben Lloyd-Hughes and Claire Lams

image courtesy of Robert Day]

 

 

 

 

 

 

Running Time: 70 minutes (no interval)

 

Running until Saturday 8th July

 

Performances: Monday – Saturday at 7.45pm

3pm Matinees on Thursday and Saturday

 

Tickets: Trafalgar Studios Box Office and www.atgtickets.com

0844 871 7632

 

Twitter: @TrafStudios, #KissMe

 

Production photographs © Robert Day

 

Held – Theatre Review by Michael Rowan

 

Michael Rowan does time at a new play ‘Held’ set in a contemporary Prison somewhere in the UK.

Tristan Bates Theatre, Covent Garden.

 

The play presented in two acts, where a simple set recreates the physical and mental claustrophobia suffered by prison inmates.

This play refuses to pull any punches; drugs, male rape and self – harm all feature and with strong dialogue delivered at full volume, the pace of both pieces is often frenetic.

Over the course of the play the characters reveal that which has damaged them but perhaps the relentless misery robbed them of the opportunity to show a more nuanced side, which would have made me feel their fate more keenly.

In the first act the young naïve Jamie played by Jack Brett Anderson is given a crash course in the harsh realities of prison life by the older and more worldly wise Sleat (Anthony Taylor), who exposes the damage to both of them in an act of betrayal.

 

Act 2 provides the context to a scene that takes place off stage during act one and with the same actor playing a lead role in each; it was at first difficult to tell if this was a completely new character, or the original character transformed by his prison experience. All doubt soon disappeared due to the quality of the acting.

Three actors played the five roles, but special mention must go to Jack Brett Anderson for his clever portrayal of Flynn, in the aptly subtitled ‘Dog City.’ Flynn, the ‘abused puppy’, uses his good looks to gain what passes for affection at any cost in a destructive relationship with muscled, Cal (Darren Fulton Brown)

Ultimately the play is about betrayal and the fruitless search for loyalty cruelly denied by a system that can only brutalise those in its care.

Held: www.tristanbatestheatre.co.uk

6th – 17th June

Tristan Bates Theatre
1A Tower St, Covent Garden
WC2H 9NP