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Marks and Spencer launch Marmite pizza and it's 'already set to overtake classic Margherita'
Marks and Spencer launch Marmite pizza and it's 'already set to overtake classic Margherita'

Daily Record

time16-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Record

Marks and Spencer launch Marmite pizza and it's 'already set to overtake classic Margherita'

The new 'love-it-or-hate-it' pizza is set to top the charts as shoppers switch from marg to marm. It's the thick, dark, savoury spread that has long divided the nation, but now a top UK supermarket is hoping to unite people's taste buds by making it the base of a brand new pizza "set to overtake the classic Margherita". ‌ As the saying goes, you'll either love it or hate it, but Marks and Spencer has launched 3 Cheese & Marmite pizza that is already on track to overtake classic Margherita in less than one week, according to M&S Food sales. ‌ Marmite lovers rejoice, because in less than a week since it landed on shelves, the retailer's new must-have 3 Cheese & Marmite pizza, which costs £6, has instantly become one of their best-sellers. ‌ In fact, daily sales per store are set to overtake those of the beloved classic Margherita. The iconic cheesy-savoury collaboration has also been a viral hit on social media, with posts about the pizza already racking up over 10,000 likes, comments and shares from fans on the M&S Instagram and Facebook accounts. Rave reviews from shoppers were aplenty. Another gushed: "You have outdone yourself with the pizza!" ‌ Meanwhile, a third stated: "BEST PIZZA EVER – FACT". Sarah-Jane Large, Lead Product Developer for Meals at M&S Food, said: "Whether you love it or hate it, Marmite is undeniably the most iconic British savoury spread and one we know our customers love in combination with creamy, cheesy dishes. "Perfecting these savoury sensations required a great deal of time and expertise to get the balance of flavours just right, and we tasted hundreds of different versions to find the exact right percentage of Marmite in every bite." ‌ Hand‑stretched and stone‑baked, the new Marmite pizza is layered with lashings of creamy Marmite béchamel, melting mozzarella, sharp cheddar and nutty Red Leicester. It's also vegetarian, making it a great alternative to your usual Margherita or veggie pizza of choice. ‌ Marks uses specialty '00' flour for its bases and allows the dough to slow‑ferment for 24 hours, creating an authentic crust that's perfectly crisp on the outside and satisfyingly chewy within. And better yet, this new launch is available as part of the supermarket's popular Pizza Night Dine In deal where you can pick up two pizzas and two sides for just £12. "Over the past five years our teams have worked together to create some brilliantly imaginative launches to satisfy shoppers' savoury cravings, combining that high quality and innovation that M&S Food is known for with the popularity of Marmite – after all, these are two of the nation's best-loved brands," Sarah-Jane went on. "We can't wait to see what people think of our first sweet Marmite collaborations when they launch later this summer." Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community!

Remember Alex Salmond gained indyref on the basis of an SNP majority
Remember Alex Salmond gained indyref on the basis of an SNP majority

The National

time10-07-2025

  • Politics
  • The National

Remember Alex Salmond gained indyref on the basis of an SNP majority

This can be seen very clearly from the Hamilton by-election, where had Reform not taken part it is conceivable that the Conservatives would have won; similarly if the Greens hadn't been so scunnered a couple of years ago, the SNP could have. This is based on the figures alone, as obviously there would have been many other factors involved. READ MORE: Ross Greer launches leadership bid after fiery BBC Donald Trump clash This principle applies to the list votes, which Alba seem to be majoring on. The difficulty here is that, based on the voting system, any party that has no constituency MSPs has a significant chance of winning a seat if and only if it has a very substantial number of votes, enough that the phase divisors act in their favour. This concept itself produces a number of other issues. How will a shared mandate be agreed and seen by voters, and how will that translate into anything better than, yet again, another coalition majority? The underlying basis of the D'Hondt system as set out on the Scotland Act is that the party that has the most constituency seats is handicapped significantly and has purely been set to minimise the likelihood of anyone succeeding in gaining a majority. Like it or mostly not, the Westminster establishment, who have the final say on the Scotland Act and devolution itself, do not recognise a coalition as forming a public mandate. While there are demands for the SNP to bend over and accept unquestionably others' support, they are the largest party by far and with the most visible media presence, such as it is. So, it really needs the other parties to join in and accept and acknowledge the larger partner in that shared goal. In this it has to be remembered that Alex Salmond gained a referendum on the basis of a Holyrood majority, not for any other reason. Alba, for all their best stated intentions, are saddled with the Marmite presence and legacy of Alex Salmond, who had used his platform and visibility as a means of attacking Nicola Sturgeon and by inference the rest of the SNP. The wider public then saw factional infighting and lost their trust that Scotland could go it alone. The message of Independence became lost in the media mire, leaving Unionists laughing at us. READ MORE: Kelly Given: Launch of Corbyn-Sultana party has big implications for Scotland It is of course fair for the larger partner to be gracious and accept others' assistance and support, but that also requires the smaller to play its part by not undermining the other. In each of the elections since 2011, the SNP went from a list-vote high to fewer and fewer list seats. It is not possible to predict the outcome of the regional vote as it is down to the various proportions of votes cast. There are far too many ifs and buts for this to be reliable, other than to reiterate that any splitting of voting intentions can only harm prospects. Which again illustrates the difficulties of involving smaller or fringe parties. For Alba to have any significant bearing on the outcome they must be prepared to fully support the SNP, and acknowledge that another coalition may not actually help the ultimate goal. To gain public acceptance we need to demonstrate firstly that we can govern ourselves without factional fights, and secondly that we have a credible financial plan. The first means we need to show people how the country would work through a written draft constitution, and secondly how we can budget with all of our GDP and taxes. The public can then see tangibly what they are being asked to support. This needs to show how pensions would be managed, how and when we would introduce our own currency, what we would do about defence in tomorrow's uncertain world. These need to be in simple presentable and meaningful form, not embedded in multi-thousand-page white papers of options. All independence supporters need to get behind these common messages and all the internal bickering, argumentative navel-gazing, new or changed parties can wait until after independence. Ultimately, what is more important: being independent, or being the ones who gain the kudos of getting us there? Nick Cole Meigle, Perthshire

M&S launches new Marmite range and 'love or hate' items have people talking
M&S launches new Marmite range and 'love or hate' items have people talking

Daily Mirror

time10-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mirror

M&S launches new Marmite range and 'love or hate' items have people talking

Marks & Spencer regularly launches new products in keeping with the biggest trends of the day, and the supermarket has now released a new range inspired by the country's most controversial condiment Fans of Marmite might want to make their way to Marks & Spencer, as the supermarket chain has recently launched a new range inspired by the nation's most controversial condiment. Whether you love it or hate it, Marmite isn't going anywhere, and M&S has leaned into the trend. The beloved supermarket, which recently launched a strawberry sandwich, is now offering a fresh range of Marmite -inspired treats - as well as some desserts people can't stop talking about. It comes as the popular food social media page New Foods UK shared a video showing off the new products - and fans are obsessed. Many have already been rushing out to buy them. ‌ New products include a Marmite Unique Wood Fire Stonebaked Base pizza for £6, Marmite Mac and Cheese for £3.75, as well as Marmite Mac and Cheese Bites. These products are currently available in store but not listed online yet. ‌ On Wednesday evening (July 9), a shopper also shared a video on TikTok, writing: "M&S New marmite range in now. Something you love or hate but something for everyone. Get down to store now to find the new lines." M&S also offers other Marmite products in store, including a cheddar cheese and Marmite sandwich, as well as a whole block of Marmite cheddar, plus High Protein It's Cheese Clouds and Marmite and Dinky Cheese Pinwheels & Marmite. ‌ Commenting on the New Foods UK video, one individual said: "I'm quitting the diet tomorrow!! I need that 3 cheese marmite pizza in my life ASAP!" "I bought the marmite cheese, it was lush," added another. "The pizza! The pizza!" commented another excited shopper about the pizza. ‌ But it was one item that got everyone's tongues wagging - the 'chunked n' loaded' cookies. While the chain's white chocolate cookies previously had people talking, shoppers now can't get enough of these new treats, which have been described as "crunchy, chewy, soft & gooey." The cookies are available in pistachio, chocolate and hazelnut, as well as raspberry cheesecake flavours. M&S states: "Get ready to upgrade your cookie game – these chunky, single-serve delights are made to a rich all-butter recipe, hand-finished and baked in store every day for that proper bakery-style bite. And because we don't do ordinary, these are the cookies on the high street to be both filled and topped." ‌ Popular social media influencer Katylee Bailey, who boats over three million followers, recently said: "Don't to Marks and Spencer. When I tell you these are amazing… wow!". "Stop it right now, running there now," commented one individual on her video. "Pistachio one is unreal," insisted one other. One added: "I've just done exactly the same. Seen them on here did school run and went straight to M&S." The cookies are available in stores around the UK now and are priced as £2 each.

You don't have to like the Nothing Phone 3 – but it won me over, and might win you over too
You don't have to like the Nothing Phone 3 – but it won me over, and might win you over too

Stuff.tv

time08-07-2025

  • Stuff.tv

You don't have to like the Nothing Phone 3 – but it won me over, and might win you over too

Stuff Verdict Phone 3 takes Nothing's distinctive design to extremes, for better or worse. It's not your typical flagship handset, but the capable all-rounder has a fun side you just don't see anywhere else. Pros Powerful and long lasting enough to earn flagship billing Capable rear camera trio Glyph matrix LEDs are fun and functional NothingOS software as slick as ever Cons Not everyone will be able to see past the unique styling Rivals either have more power, longer batteries or better cameras Introduction Distinctive. Divisive. discordant. Whatever you call it, there's no denying that Nothing got people talking with its first flagship phone. The firm with a fondness for transparent tech has embraced asymmetry and ditched its signature glyph lighting for a more functional dot matrix display. Phone 3 is also a big leap into premium territory for Nothing, which until now had majored on affordability. With prices starting from $799/£799/€799, Phone 3 is going directly up against heavyweights from Samsung, Google and Apple. In some respects it's up to the task, with three high pixel count cameras and one of the slickest versions of Android around. But Nothing's definition of 'flagship' internals might not tally with yours, and the radical design change most certainly won't be to all tastes. So, is Nothing boldly going where no phone brand has gone before? Or does Phone 3 deserve to be jettisoned out the airlock? How we test smartphones Every phone reviewed on Stuff is used as our main device throughout the testing process. We use industry standard benchmarks and tests, as well as our own years of experience, to judge general performance, battery life, display, sound and camera image quality. Manufacturers have no visibility on reviews before they appear online, and we never accept payment to feature products. Find out more about how we test and rate products. Design & build: the Marmite mobile There's no mistaking Phone 3 for anything but a Nothing creation. The glyph lights might've gone, but the semi-seethrough rear panel remains, in your choice of black or white colours. The lines are more angular and grid-like this time around, except only two of the three rear snappers are aligned to it. The asymmetric telephoto lens feels deliberately provocative, and almost certain to put some potential buyers off. They don't stick out nearly as far as the Nothing Phone 3a Pro's chunky camera island, at least. It's the circular glyph matrix panel that takes pride of place, with white LEDs that flash up app notifications when the phone is placed screen-down. Press the touch-sensitive dot built into the rear casing and it can cycle through countdown timers, remaining battery life and the current time, act as a pixellated selfie camera viewfinder (though there's no way to capture photos in this style), and play a handful of micro-games. That these include spin the bottle should give a clue as to who Nothing is aiming Phone 3 at. A software development kit arrived for community developers when the phone was first unveiled, so I'm betting it won't be too long before there are a bunch of third-party tools and functions to download. The firm also has an update in the works that'll let you assign glyph mirror portraits to your contacts for person-specific call notifications. A long-press will then show the contact name or number. It's a fun addition, and far more functional than the old glyph lights were, but I don't think it has quite the same personality. Asus already puts a similar dot matrix screen on its ROG Phones, so it's not like this is a truly unique feature – however well implemented it might be. The rest of the phone is more in keeping with Nothing's older models, with a flat mid-frame made from recycled aluminium and flat front and rear glass. It's practically the smartphone norm at this point, but that dramatically styled back panel helps the Phone 3 avoid accusations it's merely copying Apple's design beats. The screen bezel is suitably skinny and at 9mm thick there's plenty of purchase at the sides. My biggest issue is the button placement; the left side volume keys are in line with the power and Essential key on the right, so I was constantly taking screenshots by mistake when unlocking the phone. The Essential key doesn't feel different enough from the power button, either, which led to a few accidental activations. Gorilla Glass 7i covers the screen and there's Victus glass around the back, so it should survive small drops and scrapes without any battle scars. IP68 dust and water resistance is also reassuring, if not quite on the level of flagship rivals that have even hardier IP69 ratings. The phone has stayed pristine throughout my week of testing. Screen & sound: clear vision Nothing resisted the urge to go big with with the Phone 3's screen, settling on a relatively palm-friendly 6.67in. Still substantially more than the vanilla Galaxy S25 or Pixel 9, sure, but more compact than the OnePlus 13. It's an AMOLED, of course (because no self-respecting flagship uses LCD these days) and a flexible one at that – necessary to make the outer bezels so slim, not because it curves or folds in any way. The 2800×1260 resolution looks plenty sharp form arms' length, for lots of resolvable detail in images and crisp text. It also won't work the graphics chip quite as hard as some flagship rivals with even more pixels. Colours are rich and vibrant, without straying too far into unnatural territory using the default Alive picture preset. A Standard settings dials things down if you prefer more subdued hues. There's HDR10+ support, so compatible content is able to really ramp up the brightness; Nothing says the Phone 3 can manage a peak 4500 nits. The High Brightness Mode HBM) tops out at a more realistic 1600 nits, which while less than the best smartphones can manage, is still just fine for outdoor visibility. I had no trouble seeing what was onscreen, even on the sunniest of days. Because Nothing has steered clear of expensive LTPO tech, the screen's dynamic refresh rate flits between 30 and 120Hz. Being able to drop to 1Hz for static content like the always-on display mode would've reduced battery drain, but because the glyph matrix encourages you to put the phone screen side down, I've had less reason to use it. The dynamic switching is fast enough to react to swipes and scrolls, so there wasn't much need to force it to 120Hz full-time. The stereo speakers are a fine match to the screen, with more than enough volume on tap from the earpiece tweeter and down-firing main driver. It's treble-heavy, but not so much it gets peaky or shrill when you crank things up. Cameras: a clearer picture If the Phone 3a Pro set Nothing's photography bar earlier in 2025, now the Phone 3's trio of 50MP rear snappers has to raise it. The firm hasn't gone crazy on sensor size, but the hardware compares favourably with Google, Samsung and Apple's similarly-priced alternatives. You get an optically stabilised lead lens with an f/1.68 aperture, paired to an ultrawide with a generous 114-degree field of view. The questionably positioned periscope telephoto also has OIS and is good for 3x optical zoom. Macro focusing lets it get as close as 10cm from your subject for sharp close-up shots, and it promises to deliver 60x super res shots using AI upscaling – though in my experience image quality falls a long way short of rivals here, and isn't that much different from the cheaper 3a Pro. Better to stick to 6x snaps, which are far more competitive. All three cameras can manage 4K/60fps video. The red LED indicator lighting up on the rear of the phone when you hit the record button is a nice touch. Nothing's mature image processing has impressed me in the past, but now it has to hold its own against top-tier Galaxys and Pixels. An updated camera pipeline that crams in 13 more frames than Phone 2 to generate each HDR photo is a great start. It helps deliver colourful and contrast-heavy shots in a wide range of lighting, with lots of dynamic range. There's great colour consistency across all three lenses, and enough natural depth of field for portraits and close-ups – if nowhere near the level of rival phones with 1in lead lenses. During daylight hours the main camera captures loads of detail and keeps noise to a minimum, though shutter lag isn't the best. Trying to capture cars at a motorsport event proved tricky, especially when using some of the camera app's picture presets. A bit like film simulations on a Fujifilm digital camera, I'm a big fan of being able to download new looks with a QR code to mimic black and white film or light leak retro snaps with a button press. The Action mode speeds things up, but you're restricted to the default preset and locked out of the ultrawide lens. Ultrawide shots are a half-step behind on outright resolved detail, but there's not a whole lot in it. The telephoto holds up equally well, with great clarity and punchy colours. 6x uses sensor cropping and is a little more sensitive to light, and while things don't fall apart at night, noise definitely creeps up the darker it gets. A Pixel 9 does a better job here – and Samsung isn't far behind – but the Phone 3 still puts in a very respectable showing for the price. Tele-macro snaps are easy to pull off and let you get satisfyingly close to your subject; shots stay colourful and noise-free, too. Do I think the zoom lens is a quantum leap forward from the Phone 3a Pro? Not in good light, no – but Phone 3 still compares favourably to rivals within its price bracket here. Low light is where Nothing's cameras struggle to match the best sub-$1000 phones. Static subjects are absolutely fine, with convincing colours, well-controlled noise and contrast that maintains plenty of shadow detail. As soon as you introduce motion, however, things get blurrier. Crisply capturing the crowd at an evening concert proved a challenge. Google's Night Sight processing keeps its edge here. I'd take more noise if it meant sharper shots – maybe Nothing can tweak things with a software update later down the line. As it stands, this is a perfectly capable high-end cameraphone – just one that doesn't compete for class honors. Software experience: where it all comes together Nothing's monochrome, widget-filled operating system continues to be one of my favourite takes on Android. There's a design consistency and level of customisation here that you really don't find anywhere else, and not a piece of preinstalled bloat in sight. The only additions to Google's default app selection are a voice recorder and photo gallery, which match the black and white aesthetic to a T. Essential Space is the headline attraction, using a mix of on-device and cloud-based AI to gather and organise all your screenshots, voice notes and web links together in one place, separate from your camera roll. Squeeze the dedicated button and it'll capture whatever's onscreen; hold it down and it'll record a voice memo; double-press it and you're taken to the hub. I'll admit to not finding much use for the feature when it first launched on the Phone 3a Pro, but the new flip-to-record mode is an absolute gem. Putting the phone face down and press-and-holding the Essential key will record a conversation, with a waveform appearing on the glyph matrix. Press the key when something interesting is said and it'll mark it in the recording; another press-and-then completes the recording and files it to Essential space to be transcribed and summarised automatically. The new AI-powered Essential Search could perhaps use a little more time in the oven. I like that it can replace the stock home screen's Google search bar, and taps into your apps list, calendar, contacts book and gallery images, but it can't pull straight from Essential space yet. Nothing was quick to commit to Android 16, saying an update for Phone 3 would arrive before the end of the year. That's part of the firm's commitment to five years of new Android generations, on top of seven years of security patches. A small step behind Samsung and Google, perhaps, but still a great showing for anyone wanting long term support. Performance & battery life: what more do you need? Nothing is no stranger to chipset controversy, having rattled a few cages when picking MediaTek power for the Phone 2a. This time the online flame wars have been over whether Phone 3's Snapdragon 8s Gen 4 silicon is deserving of flagship status – especially now the Poco F7 comes similarly equipped for less than half the price. It's true that raw performance places the Nothing behind rivals with Snapdragon 8 Elite power, whether you get the entry-grade model with 12GB of RAM or the pricier 16GB variant. Single-core benchmark tests show a narrower margin, but there's a 15-25% gulf in the multi-core results. It's a similar story on the GPU side, if you just focus on synthetic tests. That could be a sticking point for anyone wanting maximum grunt for minimal outlay, though keep in mind this still comfortably out-drags the Google Pixel 9 across the board. Real-world performance is a different story. I can honestly say there was no point during testing where I felt like I was down on power. The Android interface feels instantly responsive, apps open rapidly, multi-tasking was never a chore, and my current rotation of mobile games all played at a smooth frame rate. Unless you're using your phone to churn out 4K video edits on the regular, there's zero reason to feel short-changed over the choice of processor. Nothing Phone 3 benchmark scores Geekbench 6 single-core 2093 Geekbench 6 multi-core 6485 Geekbench AI 3670 3DMark Wild Life Extreme 4156 3DMark Solar Bay 7902 The one area I thought the Phone 3 did underwhelm a bit was battery life. Nothing has adopted silicon carbide chemistry, but stated conservative on capacity, so you're getting a 5150mAh cell. Or if you pick up the Indian variant, 5500mAh. No, I don't know why either. The global model's battery is a fair bit bigger than Phone 2's was, sure – but it's still a long way short of slightly more expensive rivals like the OnePlus 13, with its sizeable 6000mAh. While I did manage to last all day from a full charge, it was touch-and-go by bedtime and needed the power saving mode enabled. That was with a mix of video streaming, photography, social scrolling and gaming, but largely sticking to Wi-Fi. On a travel day with more 5G connectivity and some GPS navigation thrown in for good measure, I had to plug in mid-afternoon to guarantee I'd make it through to the end of the night. I saw similar with the Pixel 9 and Galaxy S25, but if longevity is a must-have the OnePlus 13 can manage two days per top-up for not a lot more cash. Things did improve after a couple of days of testing, but most days still ended in the high 20% range. 65W wired charging is quicker than anything Google or Samsung will sell you, and good for 0-50% in less than twenty minutes. And while the rear panel doesn't incorporate a charging coil into its design any more, there definitely is one underneath; it'll manage 15W top-ups from a compatible pad. Nothing Phone 3 verdict This is comfortably Nothing's highest-end handset to date, but is that enough to make the Phone 3 a true flagship? It isn't trying to challenge the Ultras and Pro Maxes on the hardware front: the chipset isn't quite top-tier enough for that. Or rather it isn't for anyone who puts a lot of stock in spec sheets. Personally, I don't see that as a stumbling block. There's ample everyday performance here, with well-optimised and highly customisable software to match. The rear cameras take engaging photos and the battery can go all day. The alternatives might have more muscle, last even longer, or have superior snappers – but few have them all at once for this kind of cash. Without the buying power of megacorps like Samsung, Nothing has carefully picked components to make this a competent everyman underneath the flashy glyph features. The divisive looks aren't going to be for everyone, end of story. But if you like your tech to stand out, it's a tempting left-field alternative to the major players. Stuff Says… Score: 4/5 Phone 3 takes Nothing's distinctive design to extremes, for better or worse. It's not the textbook definition of a flagship handset, but the capable all-rounder has a fun side you just don't see anywhere else. Pros Powerful and long lasting enough to earn flagship billing Capable rear camera trio Glyph matrix LEDs are fun and functional NothingOS software as slick as ever Cons Not everyone will be able to see past the unique styling Rivals either have more power, longer batteries or better cameras Nothing Phone 3 technical specifications Screen 6.67in, 2800×1260 AMOLED w/ 30-120Hz CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon 8s Gen 4 Memory 12/16GB RAM Cameras 50MP, f/1.7 w/ PDAF, OIS + 50MP, f/2.2 ultrawide + 50MP, f/2.5 telephoto w/ 3x optical zoom, PDAF, OIS rear 50MP, f/2.2 front Storage 256/512GB Operating system Android 15 w/ NothingOS 3.5 Battery 5150mAh w/ 65W wired, 15W wireless charging Dimensions 161x76x9mm, 218g

Chef's roast potato recipe uses 1 surprise ingredient for irresistible taste
Chef's roast potato recipe uses 1 surprise ingredient for irresistible taste

Daily Mirror

time07-07-2025

  • General
  • Daily Mirror

Chef's roast potato recipe uses 1 surprise ingredient for irresistible taste

A professional chef has shared a roast potato recipe that uses an 'unusual' ingredient to make them 'impossible to dislike' - and you only need a few ingredients to make them For a twist on the classic Sunday roast side, cooking whizz Poppy O'Toole has let slip her secret ingredient for the ultimate oven-roasted potatoes – Marmite. Despite the love-it-or-hate-it reputation of Marmite, Poppy assures that "you'll find common ground with these amazing spuds". She explains: "The addition of that sticky Marmite isn't overpowering in the slightest, it simply wraps the crispy golden potatoes in a deep, umami flavour that complements the subtle sweetness of a roastie. It's impossible to dislike these roast potatoes, and I ask even the most devout hater to give these a go." ‌ Choosing the right potato is key; varieties like King Edwards, Maris Piper, and Russet are top picks for their floury texture, which delivers that sought-after fluffy inside and crisp outside. ‌ Here's how you can achieve this culinary delight: Ingredients Four Maris Piper potatoes, peeled and cut into equal-sized chunks 100ml vegetable oil Plenty of salt to season One tablespoon of Marmite Method Start by getting your potatoes into cold salted water and bring to the boil. Boil for 10 to 15 minutes until falling off the tip of the knife. Don't overcook them as you want them to keep their shape. After boiling your chosen spuds, let them steam dry under a tea towel for 10 to 15 minutes to enhance their fluffiness, as per the Express. Crank up your oven to a fiery 240C/220C Fan/Gas Mark 9, get your oil sizzling in a baking tray, then give those tatties a vigorous toss to roughen them up before mixing in your Marmite and introducing them to the hot oil. ‌ Get those spuds sizzling for 20 minutes, then yank them out of the oven and dial the heat back to a toasty 200C/180C Fan/Gas Mark 6. Once the potatoes are ready, give them a good toss in the tray to fluff them up, mix with your Marmite and then carefully pour into the tray with all that lovely hot oil. Give those tatties a good tumble and sling them back in for another quarter of an hour. If you're mad about Marmite, now's your chance to slather on some more for that extra yeasty kick. Wait for them to turn "golden and crispy". Once they've reached peak crunch, whip them out, sprinkle a touch more salt for luck, and tuck in.

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