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Tom Kerridge reveals the European destination with the best food - amid rumours he's set to replace John Torode on MasterChef

Tom Kerridge reveals the European destination with the best food - amid rumours he's set to replace John Torode on MasterChef

Daily Mail​a day ago
Could British superchef Tom Kerridge be the man to take hugely successful BBC cookery show MasterChef into a new era, following the highly controversial departures of presenting duo John Torode and Gregg Wallace?
The odds on it happening are shortening by the day, but he wouldn't put a bet on himself - at least not for now.
The 51-year-old tells MailOnline Travel: 'The phone hasn't rang yet! I doubt it will be me but whoever does get the role has a magical experience coming their way. It's a phenomenal show.'
Kerridge is a busy man, and shoehorning one of Britain's biggest TV shows into a schedule that already includes running a six-restaurant empire - said to be worth more than £37million - that started with his two Michelin-starred pub The Hand and Flowers in Marlow, Buckinghamshire, wouldn't be easy.
He already spends nine weeks a year filming another BBC hit, Great British Menu, and has just finished filming the follow-up to Tom Kerridge Cooks Britain, which bagged more than a million viewers per episode when it aired on ITV in the autumn.
For the follow-up series, airing this week and in collaboration with M&S Food, he's pointed his compass at Spain, spending five weeks trundling a bright blue 1980s Mercedes truck north to south, east to west in Britain's favourite holiday destination - and saying hola! to some very unique producers.
'One of the characters we met - and I loved this guy so much - was called Juan. He's a rice farmer but he's also a former Spain's strongest man.
'The juxtaposition between this absolute giant monster of a man who's up at five in the morning training, and then he's spending this wonderful, tranquil time in the rice fields sowing his rice plants.'
That Spain even has rice fields - Tom visited the Ebro Delta in the Catalonia region - was amazing to the chef, who grew up with a single mum on a council estate in Gloucestershire, with childhood holidays rare.
'The highlight of the whole series for me was probably those paddy fields. When you think of rice fields you always think of South-east Asia - but of course, Spain's most famous dish is paella!'
He loved the 'amazing' anchovies in the Bay Of Biscay, saying the northern Spanish coastal towns felt 'like a really hot Cornwall' with their rugged coastline and cobalt horizons - 'and the working fishing ports were beautiful and brilliant'.
The weather was universally hot, except for one day of filming in Seville in which the series celebrated the city's famous oranges, for which Kerridge conjured up citrus-inspired dishes.
'The region has more sunshine than any other part of Spain - except the day that we visited, when it was like a November day in Oldham, throwing it down with rain and freezing cold.'
How's his Spanish? He laughs: 'Really rubbish. I haven't got a brain for languages. It's just not there. I love culture and I love meeting new people and learning new words... but they don't stay in my brain.'
Exploring the world is something Kerridge, who's married to sculptor Beth Cullen, says he's still learning to do.
His childhood summer holidays were mostly spent 'hanging around having fun with my mates' on the estate where he grew up - although two classic British bucket-and-spade destinations did feature.
Tranquility: For new series Tom Kerridge Cooks Spain, the chef headed for the paddy fields on Spain's Ebro Delta - and found a former Spain strongman planting rice
'To be honest, I didn't really have many holidays [as a child]. We had a couple to the Isle of Wight, my mum, myself and my brother.
'We went probably two or three years in a row to a holiday camp, staying in chalets. It felt really important for me because we went on a ferry - it felt like we were properly leaving, we weren't just driving there.'
There's big nostalgia for Weston-super-Mare in the Bristol Channel too, where the family would take day trips to the beach.
'It's only down the M5 from where I grew up in Gloucester. It was a big holiday town and I still have huge fond memories of Western, I think it's amazing.'
He didn't get on a plane 'until I was 18' and holidays didn't feature while he was carving out the stellar career that's made him one of Britain's most famous chefs.
'I was in the kitchen as an 18-year-old and that was it. I don't regret it at all - I loved every minute of it.
'The first holiday that I probably went on was with my wife Beth. We went to a small little Greek island and it was it was magic.
'I just remember thinking, wow, holidays are amazing. I can't believe I've waited until I'm 25 to do this.'
Kerridge took a retro 1980s Mercedes truck around Spain for his latest ITV series
Tom pictured as a child, he grew up on a Gloucester council estate and says holidays were a rarity - and became even more scarce as he threw everything at making it as a top chef
'Now, we always try to go back to one of the Greek islands, I like Crete a lot. It's a four-hour flight, the weather is beautiful, the people are lovely.
'The vocabulary of Greek food is very, very simple too but you can always get something pretty tasty, whether it's grilled fish, simply roasted potatoes or just a Greek salad.'
He's determined to make up for lost time on the holiday front and 'expand our horizons.
With wife Beth and son Acey, nine, the family escapes two or three times a year now, he says, with winter sun, a European summer jaunt and an annual trip to Carrara in Tuscany, where Beth sources the marble for her sculptures, their general routine.
'In all honesty, I normally do what I'm told. I'm super busy so my wife books the holidays! We try and get some winter sun, we'll have Christmas with the family, then go away for New Year with another chef and his family. This year it was Thailand, which was phenomenal.'
You won't find him by the pool though with a book though. 'I'm not very good at sitting on a sunbed and doing nothing.
'I'll be there for about six minutes and then I'll say "what are we doing now?". It drives my wife nuts.'
Thankfully, he's got a partner in crime to turn to. 'I'm quite lucky that my son's nine - we're more like brothers, to be honest.
The star took his first proper holiday with now wife Beth Cullen, a sculptor, when he was 25 and says while he can't sit still on beach breaks - he's got a partner in crime, son Acey, nine, to have adventures with
Family favourite: The top chef is a big fan of Greece and Greek food, saying simple dishes such as salads, grilled fish and potatoes are done really well (Pictured: Crete)
'We'll say: "Let's go play somewhere with the ball. Let's go throw something at something. Let's go swimming. Should we go find a go-kart track? What about going on a jet ski?"
'Later in the day, Beth comes and finds us somewhere.
'By the time she's read her book and is ready for lunch, we've played seventeen games of table tennis, had a go at water skiing and flown a kite.'
Speaking of lunch... when it comes to holiday food, Tom says he's not always expecting culinary alchemy - 'bog standard is fine' - but there's destinations he rates with his chef's hat on: 'Singapore is always amazing, Hong Kong is also brilliant and Asia is somewhere I'd like to go a lot more to.
'I'd love to do India and Sri Lanka. We try to expand our horizons and go and eat in as many places and visit as many places as possible.'
He reluctantly admits he didn't like Portugal - saying a burger he ate at a water park was 'one of the worst things I've ever eaten' - but is forgiving.
'I think it was the wrong time of year, we went to the wrong place and it wasn't Portugal's fault.'
Over the border in Spain for his most recent TV adventure though, it was, happily, a much better foodie proposition - with easy-to-recreate dishes in the new series including crispy tempura anchovies, a pork chop and white-bean stew and yes, paella.
'I loved seeing how rich and vast the country is with so many different varying areas.
'You've got foodie Meccas such as Catalonia, Andalucia and San Sebastian - it's a country that's so full of passion for food, for flavour and for life.
'It was great doing the Britain show and it's been magic now adding Spain too.'
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Deadly storms hit France, wildfires break out in Italy and Spain and 43C blowtorch heatwave hits Greece - as Brits prepare for the big summer getaway
Deadly storms hit France, wildfires break out in Italy and Spain and 43C blowtorch heatwave hits Greece - as Brits prepare for the big summer getaway

Daily Mail​

time17 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Deadly storms hit France, wildfires break out in Italy and Spain and 43C blowtorch heatwave hits Greece - as Brits prepare for the big summer getaway

Europe is in the grip of an unforgiving bout of extreme weather that is battering popular holiday destinations just as British tourists prepare to head abroad for the summer. Searing heatwaves, devastating wildfires and violent storms are sweeping the continent, threatening lives, scorching landscapes and putting emergency services under immense pressure. Tourist hotspots in Italy and Spain are contending with several punishing blazes, with hundreds of firefighters and water-carrying aircraft dispatched to quell the flames. Greek authorities meanwhile are warning residents and holidaymakers to expect a week of hellish warmth, with the mercury expected to peak at 43 degrees Celsius in parts of the country. The Hellenic Meteorological Service issued public health warnings this morning, declaring temperatures would linger between 38 and 40 degrees C today and increase well beyond that throughout the week. Similar temperatures are present throughout Turkey and southern Italy. Elsewhere, France and Germany are facing a contrasting crisis as punishing storms and torrential downpours tear across towns and cities, felling trees, ripping off rooftops and flooding roads. FRANCE: A lighting bolt lights up the sky as people prepare to leave the beach during a thunder storm over the city of La Baule Spain is struggling to quell a series of wildfires that have already burned through 70,000 hectares of land in recent weeks. On Friday, the skies above Madrid turned an ominous shade of orange as the Spanish sunshine illuminated a blanket of smoke drifting across the capital from nearby forest fires. Authorities say more than a dozen localised fires are currently raging, with high temperatures, intense winds and persistent drought having turned the country into a 'powder keg'. Several regions were placed under a very high or high warning level by the Forest Fire Potential Spread Index (FPI) published this morning, with Albacete, Ciudad Real, Cuenca, Guadalajara, Toledo and Castilla-La Mancha thought to be under threat. It comes as a fire in Toledo was extinguished overnight. The Italian island of Sicily is also battling six separate wildfires, with soaring temperatures leading authorities to issue red alert warnings for four provinces this week. Sicily's Forestry Corps and Civil Protection workers were engaged all weekend as they worked to extinguish the fires, with six water-dropping aircraft drafted into control the flames. Three of the blazes are located in the northwest in the countryside between the cities of Palermo and Trapani, with two more reported along the south coast and another in the suburbs of the eastern city of Catania. Horrifying images snapped overnight by residents in Trapani showed thick orange flames scything through bone-dry hills on the outskirts of the city. This morning, meteorologists placed the eastern provinces of Catania, Caltanissetta, Enna and Messina under red alert warnings, with emergency services preparing for the prospect of yet more infernos. These warnings come amid an intense heatwave engulfing southern Europe as winds bring subtropical air from northern Africa to southern Italy and Greece, according to meteorologist Giulio Betti. As Spanish and Italian emergency services battle the wildfires, Greek meteorologist Clearchos Marousakis said parts of his nation will experience 43 degrees Celsius heat, and said the mercury could go even higher. Marousakis said the 'ceiling' of this week's heatwave 'is estimated at 41 to 43 degrees Celsius inland'. He added that the heat wave 'will be intense and long-lasting' and will be accompanied by high winds along the coast. Greek emergency services will therefore be on high alert for more wildfires, weeks after Crete and several other parts of the country were overwhelmed by infernos that triggered evacuations of some 5,000 people. Those punishing blazes sparked in the mountains between the villages of Ferma, Achila and Agia Fota on July 1 and were whipped up by powerful gusts. Evacuations were ordered at three sites outside the port of Ierapetra on the island's south coast as the inferno raged out of control overnightand by Wednesday afternoon was threatening to engulf residences and tourist resorts. Around 230 firefighters were dispatched to contain the fires along with 10 water-dropping aircraft to fly regular sorties over Crete, with reinforcements sent from Athens. The president of a hotelier's association told Protothema that 5,000 people - mostly foreign tourists - were moved out of homes and hotels, while dozens were taken to hospital with respiratory issues triggered by thick clouds of smoke and ash. Wildfires have burned more than 227,000 hectares of land in Europe since the beginning of the year, according to the EU's European Forest Fire Information System - far above the average figure for the first six months of the year. It's not yet clear if 2025 will be a record year, as that will depend on how the fire season evolves in the coming months, but the number of fires in Europe has also surged this year so far, with 1,118 blazes detected as of July 8, versus 716 in the same period last year, EFFIS said. Countries are preparing for worse blazes. Warmer-than-average temperatures are forecast across Europe in August, EFFIS said, meaning fire danger will remain high across much of southern and eastern Europe. While Southern Europe is expected to see normal rainfall patterns, the rest of the continent is expected to be drier than normal in August, EFFIS said - potentially exacerbating fire risk in other regions. Firefighting efforts continue from the air for the forest fire which broke out at Mediterranean scrubs between Partinico and Alcamo, western of Sicily, Italy on July 20, 2025 While Italy, Spain and Greece battle wildfires and scorching heat, residents in France and Germany are facing a very different problem. Brutal storms engulfed much of eastern France over the weekend with one person killed and six more injured amid the violent weather events. The roofs of several houses were torn off in the department of Saone-et-Loire, north of Lyon, such was the intensity of the winds and the lightning storms. One person attempting to make repairs to his roof was killed when he was blown off a ladder, while in nearby Jura, almost 5,000 people were left without power. 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A mixture of level two warnings for 'significant weather' and level three warnings for 'severe weather' have been issued for Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Saxony-Anhalt and Saxony. A level three warning has also been issued for Berlin.

‘It's the low-key moments that stay with us': the secret to happy summer holidays with the kids
‘It's the low-key moments that stay with us': the secret to happy summer holidays with the kids

The Guardian

time20 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘It's the low-key moments that stay with us': the secret to happy summer holidays with the kids

On a walk with my children, now in their mid-20s, I asked them what they remembered best from their school summer holidays. I expected to hear about the fiesta we witnessed in the heat of Tarifa, Spain, or be berated for the time I booked early flights to Crete, leaving us sitting in the waiting room of a resort from 4am until check-in time. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more. I was greatly amused (and slightly relieved), then, to hear my son say: 'Our summer books – that time we collected all those random things, took them home and stuck them into a book.' He was delighted that we've kept them. My daughter said: 'Soup on the beach.' We'd stayed on the Isles of Scilly (one of our favourite destinations), and had promised them a bonfire next to the sea on our last night. Of course, by the time we got around to it, night was falling – and with it the temperature – and poor four-year-old Lulu got tired and cold. We wrapped her in a blanket, propped her on a rock and gave her a mug of bonfire-heated tinned soup – and watched as the colour sprang back into her cheeks. The point of this (rather sentimental) reminiscing is to show that you don't need expensive foreign holidays or trips to amusement parks for your children to have a good summer. It's the low-key moments that tend to stay with us – and they can be as simple as a fun craft activity or a makeshift meal under the stars. Sure, lazing on a beach in the Algarve for a week or two is what keeps parents going through the winter months, but the 4am start for the ferry or the queues at passport control can start to undo the benefits of a holiday. If you're looking for ways to entertain your children during the holidays but sadly can't just down tools and take the day off, read our guide to the summer holidays. It includes lots of ideas for inexpensive activities to do around your home or garden, from den-building to arts and crafts, as well as short and longer days out. We've also rounded up the best garden games for children of all ages. Don't ever feel guilty about not being with your children for the entire school summer holidays, nor for amusing them with low-cost activities. Sometimes, the simplest activities turn out to be their most memorable. The best wedding gifts in the UK: 13 ideas that couples will actually want The best moisturising lip balms to hydrate and protect your lips The best gins for G&Ts, martinis and negronis, from our taste test of 50 'Unbelievably terrible': the best (and worst) supermarket vanilla ice-cream, tested and rated 'It's hard to know what to wear when the sun comes out,' says fashion and lifestyle editor Morwenna Ferrier, 'so it always seems strange just how little thought we give to it.' But we've done all the thinking for you in our bumper guide to summer dressing, with 69 ideas for women, men and the kids. From a spicy marg T-shirt and a purse for your beach change to perfect men's shorts and a bag charm for grownups, there's something here to suit every summer style. Monica HorridgeDeputy editor, the Filter If you've ever planned to spend the evening outside only to be tempted back on to the living room sofa, it may be time to upgrade your garden furniture. Whatever the size of your outdoor space, there'll be a sofa, bistro seat or bench to suit in design expert Claudia Baillie's guide to the best garden furniture. There are also tips for buying vintage or secondhand furniture if you'd rather avoid buying anything new. Have you made an eco-friendly swap that's stuck? Maybe you found a microfibre cloth that transformed your skincare routine, plastic-free cleaning products that actually work, or a shopping tote that finally broke your addiction to plastic bags. Let us know by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at thefilter@

EXCLUSIVE Ellen DeGeneres's £15m Cotswolds farmhouse where she fled after Trump won US election goes on the market - as TV star confirms she's 'staying in the UK for good'
EXCLUSIVE Ellen DeGeneres's £15m Cotswolds farmhouse where she fled after Trump won US election goes on the market - as TV star confirms she's 'staying in the UK for good'

Daily Mail​

time20 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Ellen DeGeneres's £15m Cotswolds farmhouse where she fled after Trump won US election goes on the market - as TV star confirms she's 'staying in the UK for good'

Ellen DeGeneres has put her £15million Cotswolds farmhouse on the market less than a year after moving there from the US. The US talk show queen told an 700-strong audience of British fans at a one-off show at Cheltenham's Everyman Theatre the farmhouse she moved into last year was now for sale. Yet she has also insisted she is staying in Britain 'for good' - with the decision to stay confirmed following Donald Trump 's re-election as US president last November. She has been living in the UK with her actress wife Portia de Rossi, 52, currently based in a new second home - having left the initial one that is now up for grabs. DeGeneres, 67, said at the Cheltenham event where she was in discussion with broadcaster Richard Bacon: 'We decided we needed a different house, and now we are selling that house. 'So if anyone wants a house, it's a beautiful house - it's a beautiful stone farmhouse. 'To clarify, I'm not selling the new one we now live in. I'm selling the old stone farmhouse.. Sources have confirmed that Ellen has quietly let it be known through her property agent that the farm is now available to the right buyer. The stunning farm, which is set in 40 acres among the rolling Cotswolds hills, was bought by DeGeneres and de Rossi in June of last year for £15million. Ellen was so enamoured by the property that she paid £2.5million above the asking price. However, the couple's new life in the quaint English countryside quickly went dramatically wrong after the seemingly-idyllic six-bedroom bolthole was swamped by flooding just days after they moved in. They were left virtually marooned after a tributary of the River Thames running beside the property broke its banks. Speaking at Cheltenham last week, Ellen told how she had decided to move permanently to the Cotswolds as a reaction to Donald Trump's second American presidential win last year. She said her and Portia had visited the English rural region often and always planned to spend some of the year there while reverting to the US as their main home, but that changed with Trump's victory over his Democrats rival Kamala Harris. Asked if she was staying here because of Mr Trump, she said: 'Yes. We were hopeful for Kamala. We were very hopeful and we thought at least let's get a place here. 'The idea was that we would be here for three or four months of the year - but always when we came here we loved it and we thought it was beautiful. Pictures were shared online of DeGeneres and de Rossi at last weekend's Cheltenham event 'We thought when I stopped the show [Ellen's eponymous US talk show] one day, that it was so beautiful here that we would get a farm here and then go back there. 'And we got here the day before the election. We woke up to lots of texts from our friends and crying emojis. And we were like, "He [Trump] got in. So we are staying here. We are not going back. We are not leaving." 'So we bought a house that we thought was going to be a part-time house. 'Then we decided we needed a different house, and now we are selling that house. So if anyone wants a house, it's a beautiful house. 'It's a beautiful stone farmhouse. To clarify, I'm not selling the new one. I'm selling the old stone farmhouse.' Speaking further about her first year in Britain, DeGeneres pondered on 'the best thing about life in the UK', telling her audience: 'I really like the people. Fish and chips are delicious too. 'The UK is beautiful. It is absolutely beautiful. We [Americans] are just not used to seeing this kind of beauty. 'Even in the villages and the towns, I love the architecture and houses. Everything you see here is charming. It is a simpler way of life. The couple have since moved to the safety of higher ground in a spectacular new property which is perched on a hilltop on the edge of a village in Oxfordshire 'It's clean. Everything here is just better. The way animals are treated, the way people are polite. I just love it here.' However, she did admit the weather was an early issue, adding, 'We moved here in November, which was not the ideal time' - prompting laughter from the audience. She went on: 'The winter is tough. I would definitely say the winter is tough. But I still enjoyed it because we are not used to seasons. 'In California it is pretty much always the same and that gets a little boring - and I like the seasons. 'There is no worse thing than that [the winter]. I enjoy going to British pubs. Of course we go to pubs. We love pubs.' She and de Rossi were pictured and filmed last November enjoying a visit to fellow Cotswold resident Jeremy Clarkson's pub The Farmer's Dog. Putting a positive spin on the winter, DeGeneres has now said: 'I saw snow for the first time in my life. 'I had honestly never seen snow before - it was just like a fairytale, it was beautiful. 'We love it here. Portia flew her horses here. I have chickens and I had sheep for about two weeks - don't get sheep 'They are now with a 12-year-old shepherd in training. I spent so much money on those sheep. I cannot tell you how much those sheep cost me. 'It was Portia's idea - she said, let's get sheep. We were riding lawn mowers all day trying to keep the grass down in the pastures for the horses and we were like, "We just can't keep up with this".' DeGeneres told how they bought four sheep which escaped, meaning they had to build fences and electric fences later taken down for being 'ugly' - while the sheep are now with a local shepherd boy, she added. A local property source who has heard from Ellen's buying agent confirmed that their original farm was now back on the market. The source said: 'Ellen's buying agent has let it be known to us that the farmhouse is indeed available again. 'It is not advertised on the open market and you won't see it on any estate agent's website but it is definitely now available if the right buyer makes an approach.' MailOnline revealed in April that the couple had moved out of that farmhouse following a series of setbacks including flooding. Ellen DeGeneres and de Rossi had already purchased their first Cotswolds home before the 2024 presidential election, but reportedly decided to 'get the hell out' of the US afterwards They have now moved to the safety of higher ground in a spectacular new property perched on a hilltop on the edge of a village in Oxfordshire. It is about a 30-minute drive from their original home and planning documents show it has a 'sustainable drainage system' and is not 'at risk of flooding'. The comedian posted an image on Instagram of Portia surveying the spectacular view from their new property with the image also featuring a rainbow. Describing the 'three things which make me happy' to her 136 million followers, Ellen wrote: 'My wife, a rainbow and my wife taking a photograph of a rainbow.' She also recently shared videos of the couple's growing family of chickens that they keep at the grounds. Their stylish new mansion does have a dark backstory, being built near the site of an old farmhouse where a man was murdered. Our source told MailOnline: 'The murder was a few years ago now and it was quite a grim one so for people around here who have long memories the place will always be notorious. 'And just because they demolished the old place, anyone who has grown up around here will always say, "Oh, that's where the murder was".' After the murder, the farmhouse stood empty for many years before it was finally sold as a derelict building only fit for redevelopment to a local architect for almost £2million. Planning permission was granted to demolish the farmhouse and erect a 'replacement dwelling' with associated buildings and for the surrounding site to be landscaped. The minimalist single-storey house features floor-to-ceiling windows offering breathtaking panoramic views of the Cotswolds, plus a giant outdoor infinity pool. The modern home with 10,000sqft living space has its own cinema, gym and steam room as well as a huge open plan kitchen and lounge area with a hanging fireplace. The massive master bedroom has a huge walk-in wardrobe and two en suite bathrooms, while four further bedrooms are also en suite. More than 1,000 trees have been planted on the surrounding estate to help reduce the noise. According to US magazine People, DeGeneres is a well-known collector of 'multi-million dollar homes' including a £24million property in the Montecito area of California the Duke and Duchess of Sussex also live. In 2023, she told one US outlet of having bought and sold 'over 50 houses' including a house in Malibu that once belonged to Brad Pitt. Earlier this year it was reported that she had put two homes in Montecito on the market - thought to be among her last remaining properties in California.

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