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Erling Haaland: Why does Man City striker drink raw milk and why is it contentious?

Despite its listing as a “risky” product, the FSA told BBC Sport there has been an increase in the popularity of raw milk because “people believe it has health benefits” – though it says there is little credible scientific evidence to support that.

The farm at which Haaland was filmed buying milk wrote on Facebook that its product had been “rather in demand” since the episode was posted, staff had been “frazzled”, and it hoped to “buy a new dairy cow very soon” so orders could be met more quickly.

Former City academy nutritionist Dan Richardson told BBC Sport he would always look for the “safest approach possible” so as “not to compromise on the safety of food”.

He said: “The challenge with raw milk is that you can get some companies who do a good job in reducing the risk factor to bacteria, and I am sure Haaland will be using the premium quality available out there.

“A nutritionist is not going to allow him to buy raw milk that has a high risk of contamination. When people begin to copy these dietary habits, it can become unsafe as people will go out and buy the cheapest and most accessible version that may carry the food-borne illnesses.”

Asked if he felt the trend of drinking raw milk would gain momentum, Richardson said: “Unfortunately, I can see it happening.”

For Haaland, drinking raw milk is part of an unconventional off-field routine that also includes red-light therapy and adding maple syrup to his coffee.

Richardson added: “Young athletes need to remember that getting the right amount of carbohydrates, hitting the protein intake and eating three regular meals with snacks is a better approach than jumping towards trends.

“Some athletes will try to find a quick fix by replicating a role model rather than doing the mundane stuff really well.

“We just want to use safe food where possible.”

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At beautifully weird Cento Raw Bar in L.A., flamboyance meets fish dip

The cantina on Tatooine in the first “Star Wars” film. A Greek taverna on a layover in Miami. A mermaid’s womb. Every friend I take to, or even ask about, Cento Raw Bar and its fantastical design has a knee-jerk one-liner at the ready.

The wildest new bar in Los Angeles

Walk into the West Adams space adjoined by an awning to Cento Pasta Bar — both conceived by chef Avner Levi — and the first sight of the curving walls will spin anyone’s mind. They look plastered with a mixture of stucco and meringue, smeared like a frosted cake in progress, that’s meant to evoke the shimmer and shifting light of a Mediterranean cave. A three-sided seafoam-green bar anchors the room, girded by tall white chairs with metal backs patterned in a snail’s spiral. Details fill every corner: rounded, sculptural pillars and pedestals; a blue-tile floor mosaic resembling a pond; pendant sconces in shapes that remind me of the “energy dome” hats worn by the band Devo in the 1980s.

A mosaic moment in the dining room of Cento Raw Bar.

A mosaic moment in the dining room of Cento Raw Bar.

(Bill Addison / Los Angeles Times)

The effect leans more toward trippy than transportive. As one stop during a night out for a drink and a stopgap plate of seafood or two, I’m into it.

Idiosyncrasy is welcome right now

Maybe in another era I would gawk once and move on. But in times like Los Angeles is living through, in a half-decade that has begat one trial and horror after another, the operators of new restaurants, particularly those in the highest-rent districts, tend to default to conservative choices. Menus full of comforts familiar to whatever cuisine is being served. Atmospheres easily described as “pleasant.” The decisions are so understandable, and given a particular neighborhood or desired audience perhaps it pays off economically. Familiarity is a priority to many diners. Hospitality workers deserve stable incomes.

Culturally, though? The restaurant pros who can’t stomach the status quo, who go regionally specific or deeply personal or brazenly imaginative, are the forces who inspire cities toward creative rebellion. Thinking about this, I found an article from 2011 by former Times critic S. Irene Virbila about the year’s restaurant openings. The nation was burrowing out of the Great Recession at the time, but the roster of emerging talents mentioned by Virbila would wind up shaping the 2010s as the decade that landed Los Angeles on the global culinary map: names like Bryant Ng, Josef Centeno, Nyesha Arrington, Michael Voltaggio, Steve Samson and Zach Pollack.

She also pointed out Ludo Lefebvre, who in 2011 was still in pop-up mode before launching his defining restaurants Trois Mec (felled by the pandemic) and Petit Trois. Maybe it’s a sign that this week Lefebvre came full-circle with a new occasional pop-up series he’s calling Éphémère.

Point is, we could use more extreme individualism in restaurants right now. I appreciate the obsessiveness from designer Brandon Miradi, who has the title of “creative director” at Cento Raw Bar and who counts Vespertine, Somni, the Bazaar at SLS Beverly Hills and Frieze Art Fair as previous projects. Note the spiraling ends of the silverware, matching the chairs, and the ways napkins too are rolled into a tight coil. He managed to find colored glassware in geometries that register at once as retro and postmodern.

Guests sit around the bar at Cento Raw Bar, an all-white restaurant and bar

Cento Raw Bar, the sibling cocktail and seafood bar to chef Avner Levi’s pasta restaurant, features an all-white interior.

(Stephanie Breijo / Los Angeles Times)

Maybe no surprise, but the TikTok-magnetic vibes keep the bar full of young, beautiful groups — Angelenos or visitors modeling their best L.A. looks, who can say. In June, about a month after the place opened, a friend and I were sitting at one of the low tables and she pointed over to the bar: The women seated in the high stools all came in wearing stilettos that were now dangling half off their feet. Panning this shoe moment could have been a montage sequence during a Carrie Bradshaw voiceover in an early season of “Sex and the City.”

What to eat and drink

Perhaps to fully center or to balance Miradi’s visual extravaganza, the food and drink options are quite straightforward. A few cocktails do wink right into the camera, among them a play on a Screwdriver made with SunnyD (which the menu calls “Sunny Delight,” the branding name I also remember from my Gen-X childhood). Most are mainstays: a classic escapist piña colada, a spicy margarita, an Aperol situation spiked with mezcal. The bartenders listen kindly when I request they stir my dry gin martini well.

A martini at the bar of Cento Raw Bar.

A martini at the bar of Cento Raw Bar.

(Bill Addison / Los Angeles Times)

Seafood towers, served on undulating green-glass plates designed by Miradi, are stylish and modest in size and arrive as two levels for $83 or three levels for $97.

A buddy and I recently split the smaller one, neatly polishing off a handful of tiny, briny oysters along with scallops served in their shells, some bouncy shrimp and a couple meaty lobster claws. We had shown up to Pizzeria Sei without a reservation — because scoring one at a prime hour is maddening, and so I take my chances as a walk-in — and were told the wait was an hour and 15 minutes. Cento Raw Bar was a 12-minute drive away, ideal for one round of drinks and pre-dinner shellfish.

On another occasion, I might skip the pricey tower and order a plate of hamachi crudo (dotted with stone fruit during the summer season) and a dip of smoked cod with bagel chips. I’ve found more substantial plates, such as ridged mafaldine tangled in lobster sauce, in need of spice and acid.

Fish dip topped with trout roe, ringed with a circle of crostini, at Cento Raw Bar.

Fish dip topped with trout roe at Cento Raw Bar in West Adams.

(Stephanie Breijo / Los Angeles Times)

Desserts riffing on a Hostess cake or an ube cheesecake spangled with prismatic bits of flavored gelatins? Fun, but I’ve had my share of outlandish décor and cocktail nibbles — exactly what I came for.

4919 W. Adams Blvd., Los Angeles, (323) 795-0330, cento.group

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Testicles, snakes and raw wolf – the grossest meals our travel team has ever had

Wish chew were here? The unusual foreign foods we’ve ‘enjoyed’ on our travels, from century eggs and frog stew, to guinea pig in Peru and rattlesnake with bison testicles in Texas

Going on holiday abroad has many pleasures – new horizons to explore, new cultures to embrace and new food to try. But when you order off an unfamiliar menu more in hope than expectation, it’s possible to end up with a plate of mystery morsels.

So, in the spirit of culinary curiosity, we asked our journalists (a pretty well-travelled bunch) for their foreign food memories.

To start the undercooked meatball rolling, I’ll contribute braised jellyfish with ‘century egg’ (fermented for months until a gelatinous greenish-grey) for an awful eggs-over-queasy breakfast in China, whole baby frogs in Thailand, guinea pig in Peru and rattlesnake with bison testicles in Texas. The rattlesnake wasn’t too bad. A bit like chicken…

What’s the most unusual food you’ve ever eaten? Let us know in the comments below or by emailing [email protected]

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  • Peter Rickman (production): “Octopus cooked in its own ink in the then Yugoslavia. Now I like a bit of octopus but this was like chunks of rubber floating in a watery black broth with two sad looking school dinner boiled potatoes… no thanks.”
  • Ben Rankin (editors): “Horse intestines – never again. We were in a lovely restaurant in Kazakhstan, with a feast of food served to us, including special occasion dish Beshbarmak.

“The noodles and the horse meat were fine but the smelly, chewy, white intestine bites were difficult to, erm, stomach. I couldn’t get enough of the Kumys (mare’s milk) to wash it down and the Baursak (puffy bread) to get rid of the taste!’’

  • Clare Fitzsimons (books): “Who doesn’t love a boiled egg? Me it turns out when it’s been cooked for about three seconds and then poured – yes poured – into a cup for you to eat (or clearly in this case drink) for breakfast.

“Singapore is a wonderful place but my breakfast left a lot to be desired and while bodybuilders like to neck raw eggs, it’s definitely not for me.”

  • Lawrence Goldsmith (cartoons): “In Iceland I was served Hakarl, or fermented shark.

“It’s a traditional dish made from Greenland shark meat, cured through a fermentation process and then hung to dry. I was told that it was an ‘acquired taste’. If you like a dish tasting like highly spiced leather this is the one for you.’’

  • Milo Boyd (travel): “Wiggly eel and frog stew: both fished out of a river in Croatia’s Neretva Delta in front of me and then served whole and steaming.

“The local community even came out to watch me tackle the slippery concoction, despite all of my protestations that I am a vegetarian.’’

  • Mark Silver (sport): “I was with my girlfriend in her homeland of Belarus. And I was in the mood to propose to her after a good few years together. Well, I ended up not having the stomach for it, literally, after she dished up a traditional Belarusian delicacy – raw pig sausage.

“The smell did not entice me. It is a pig intestine stuffed with minced or chopped meat and spices.’’

  • Michael Ham (sport): “A 10-course meal is not to be sniffed at anywhere, but the Minazuki custard with conger eel, scallop and veggies I had in Japan was also not to be sniffed at, if you catch my drift. And then it was followed by courses of crab brains and squid guts…. ‘’
  • Siobhan McNally (features): “On a visit to Vilnius, Lithuania, in the late 1990s, we were served a traditional lunch of chewy boiled pigs’ ears for starters followed by Cepelinai or “zeppelins”, which are stuffed potato dumplings. We hungrily ate them up, and then our host explained ‘cooks make them like this’ before proceeding to spit in his hands and mould an imaginary German airship. We all stopped chewing and regurgitated the remains into our napkins. Now I will eat most things but I draw the line at human spittle.’’
  • Andrew Gilpin (editors): “Fermented shark (again!) No one knew how it came to this: our Icelandic host dancing about with a knife in his hand and a giant cod eye in his mouth. That wasn’t even the worst thing eaten that day. The fermented ancient shark buried for months to give it that ­distinctive ammonia taste surely was. Even though it was five years ago I can still summon up the ‘taste’ in my nostrils. ‘A delicacy 400 years in the making’ – and certainly not worth it.’’
  • Karin Wright (production): “On a food tour of Florence – lampredotto (lining of a cow’s fourth stomach) from a food truck, served in a sandwich with a strong salad verde (presumably to obscure the taste)… interesting flavour, awful texture. I took a bite to be polite.’’
  • Aaron Flanagan (sport): “Singapore’s ‘Ice kachang’ translates very literally into ‘iced beans’ and is a traditional Malay dessert. Online reviews claim it is supposed to be a thirst-quenching concoction, but the combination of ice, jelly and red beans looks like something a five-year-old would throw together. Imagine freezing your chilli con carne overnight and eating it seconds after it leaves the freezer. Some foods shouldn’t have iced alternatives.’’
  • Vicky Lissaman (travel): “Wolf, on the Côte d’Azur, France. It was described on a restaurant menu as ‘loup’ and I thought it was probably some sort of fish. (This was long before we had mobile phones to Google the meaning of words). When it arrived, all bleu and bloody, I thought that perhaps they had given me someone else’s steak. But then the waiter confirmed that it was, in fact, exactly what I ordered – wolf. I howled with laughter, and then spent a lot of time chewing it and forcing it down as if it was a bushtucker trial.’’
  • Chris Granet (production): “Grilled cat, on a drunken Friday night in a Rio de Janeiro favela. It wasn’t great. A bit sinewy.”

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Uganda Bans Raw Exports, Launches $250M Gold Refinery

Yoweri Museveni likes to profile himself as Africa’s biggest proponent of value addition.

According to the Ugandan president, in power 39 years, Africa has for decades allowed itself to be “robbed” by exporting raw materials, particularly minerals and other commodities, to developed economies that then reap the higher margins further up the value chain.

Museveni banned export of unprocessed agricultural products in 2021, and in April he extended the prohibition to all unprocessed raw materials, including gold, lithium, and tin. Last month, the push for value added manifested in the inauguration of Uganda’s biggest gold project, Wagagai Gold Mining.

The fuel behind the venture is a $250 million investment by China’s Liaoning Hongda Enterprise, of which Wagagai Mining is the Ugandan subsidiary. With 30 million tonnes of proven reserves of gold ore, Wagagai can refine gold to 99.9% purity, the government says, enabling production of 1.2 metric tonnes annually.

When fully operational, the project is expected to create over 5,000 direct jobs, with gold exports generating over $100 million annually during its 20 years’ lifespan. Uganda raked in $3.4 billion from gold exports in 2024, but mostly from artisanal mining that Museveni wants to discourage.

“Under my leadership, we will not export unprocessed minerals, as this undermines our economy,” Museveni promised. The Wagagai project will end “wasteful” exports and usher Uganda into a new era of value addition.

Just as importantly, for many observers, Wagagai Mining represents a new phase in the deepening but unequal relationship between Uganda and China. Chinese investors have pumped close to $1 billion into sectors like mining, agriculture, manufacturing, oil and gas, and industrial parks in the East Africa nation.

The gold mining and refining project represents another step in China’s effort to control African minerals. For Beijing, keeping Wagagai in a tight grip is of strategic importance. Uganda has seen its public debt rise to unprecedented levels, hitting $31.5 billion in June, of which $2.5 billion represents expensive loans from Beijing. Parliamentary records indicate Uganda paid China $178.7 million as of December 2024 for debt servicing, the most to any of its lenders.

The cost of servicing the loans has prompted legislators to plead with China to cut interest rates; thus far, to no avail. 

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‘Raw sewage leaked all over’ as extent of ‘poop cruise’ disaster uncovered

A new Netflix documentary has captured the horrors on-board the ship dubbed the ‘poop cruise’

Passengers camping on deck
A Netflix documentary has revealed the horrors of the ‘poop cruise’ where passengers camped on deck(Image: SWNS)

Holidaymakers on a lavish cruise liner were plunged into a real-life horror when a blaze cut off power, leaving them adrift in the Gulf of Mexico.

The ill-fated 2013 journey spiralled into chaos as the fire damaged electrical systems, immobilising the vessel and leaving it without lights, air conditioning, and even working loos.

This ordeal is now the focus of Trainwreck: Poop Cruise, a brand-new Netflix documentary released yesterday (June 24), which gives viewers a harrowing glimpse into the experiences of the Carnival Triumph’s passengers.

The preview hints at the chaos: “Soon raw sewage leaks out all over the ship, food supplies start dwindling and passengers begin to revolt. As the cruise company races to control the fallout, a media frenzy ensues. Soon everyone is talking about ‘The Poop Cruise’.”

Camps set up on deck
Passengers began living on deck after the power went out(Image: Netflix)

Those intrigued by the incident and the boat featured in this new documentary may wonder what became of the ship. Some may even be brave enough to contemplate boarding her for a trip, reports Surrey Live.

But, is it still possible to book a holiday on the Carnival Triumph?

In line with standard practice for high-end cruise ships, the Carnival Triumph experienced a significant refurbishment and, as of 2019, has been navigating the seas with a new identity: Carnival Sunrise.

Still a favourite among cruisers, this celebrated liner remains operational throughout The Bahamas and the Caribbean with a lots of scheduled voyages for this year lined up, including a four-day trip to The Bahamas from Miami in November.

A spot in an inside cabin will cost travellers about $284 each, while those willing to splash out for a fancier space can expect to fork over up to $836 for a sumptuous luxury suite.

The Carnival Triumph
The ship was re-named the Carnival Sunrise after the debacle(Image: Nick de la Torre/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

TripAdvisor has seen recent guests sharing their experiences on-board. One said: “For an older ship, it’s still a lot of fun – just temper your expectations. We stayed in a balcony cabin on deck 8. Yes, the bathroom looks outdated with its bright blue sink and shower curtain – but it’s part of the charm.”

Another traveller gushed said: “I loved every minute of being on the ship. The food and shows were amazing… It was everything I wanted and more!”.

In the wake of the fire incident aboard Carnival Triumph and the subsequent scrutiny, Gerry Cahill, then the president and CEO of Carnival Cruise Lines, assured holidaymakers that such a calamity would “not happen again”, as he announced an inquiry into the cause of the blaze.

People camping on cruise deck
The documentary shows what passengers went through on the ship(Image: SWNS)

In response to the forthcoming Poop Cruise documentary, Carnival released a statement to Surrey Live’s Screen Time reporters, saying: “The Carnival Triumph incident over 12 years ago was a teachable moment for the entire cruise industry.

“A thorough investigation following the incident revealed a design vulnerability which was corrected and led Carnival Cruise Line to invest more than $500 million across our entire fleet in comprehensive fire prevention and suppression, improved redundancy, and enhanced management systems, all in support of our commitment to robust safety standards.

“This is in addition to our vigorous Health, Environmental, Safety and Security (HESS) protocols that guide the entire Carnival Corporation fleet as we maintain our commitment to industry leadership in this area.

“We are proud of the fact that since 2013 over 53 million guests have enjoyed safe and memorable vacations with us, and we will continue to operate to these high standards.”

Trainwreck: Poop Cruise is now available to stream on Netflix

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