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How to make your kids’ clothes last longer

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Mia Freedman talks about making her kids’ wardrobe look good, no matter what life brings.

The best advice I ever got about motherhood is this: If someone gives your child an item of clothing you don’t like, make it disappear. Because kids have a finely tuned radar for knowing just how much you hate that awful animated logo T-shirt, and then deciding they want to wear it every single day! Even to bed. Even when it no longer fits.

Similarly, if there is something you want them to wear, they will sense this and stubbornly refuse. I adore buying clothes for my kids but when they’re growing fast, it can be expensive.

With a boy and a girl only a few years apart, I have discovered the joy of neutral colours that can be swapped and shared between them. There will always be a pink explosion in my daughter’s wardrobe but happily, she’s starting to broaden her colour palette.

Wardrobe essentials Mia’s kids can’t live without

  1. Dress: Cool and comfortable, my daughter lives in dresses.

  2. Cargo pants: I love a unisex hand-me-down!

  3. Socks: I only ever buy them in white. It makes pairing easier!

  4. Growsuits: A practical solution for every baby.

Your say: How do you keep your kids’ clothes clean? Share your thoughts below.

This article is brought to you by Vanish Napisan. To find out more on how to keep whites “crystal white”, head to www.vanishstains.com.au.

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The highs and lows of online dating

The highs and lows of online dating

According to global statistics, the popularity of online dating is at an all-time high. With the “desperate and dateless” stigma long gone, many are swapping the club scene for computer screens as a fun and efficient way to find love.

In fact, a US survey commissioned by dating website Match.com found that during 2009-10 more couples had met online than at bars or parties. Just as staggering is the fact that one in six US marriages reportedly stem from dating sites.

Australians take the business of love just as seriously, with 70 percent of Aussie singles currently searching for a committed relationship on one of our 250 dating websites.

RSVP spokeswoman Lija Jarvis believes online dating hasn’t replaced traditional forms of meeting people but it’s just another way of maximising your chances.

“You meet through friends, you meet through work functions, you meet online,” she says.

But with all this success and hope floating around, it’s easy to forget that dangers and disappointments do exist. So before charging headlong into the throes of cyber love, weigh up all the pros and cons first.

Timesaving

Time is a valuable commodity in our fast-paced society. Internet dating cuts straight to the chase. Forget waiting until your fourth martini to realise the most interesting thing about him is he collects Russian stamp; you can screen him from day one.

It also takes much of the guesswork out of who’s available or not. No more scoping out local bars wondering who is or isn’t attached. If they’re on a dating site, you’d assume they are there for the same reasons you are.

Releasing inhibitions

Checking out available online partners from the safety of your swivel chair allows you a certain freedom and empowerment not often granted. The initial anonymity allows open communication where attraction is based on who you are rather than what you look like.

Jarvis believes social networking has helped our openness.

“People are more comfortable putting themselves on dating sites because social networking has changed the way we feel about sharing personal information,” she says.

Rejection can also be less hurtful online because chances are you’re less emotionally attached and ready to yell, “Next!”

Thirty-year old “serial dater” Lara agrees.

“Somehow rejection isn’t as personal online because there’s a common understanding between internet daters,” Lara says. “You’re either there for dating practice or to find ‘the one’. No-one benefits by dragging things on that aren’t working.”

Someone for everyone

In Australia especially, remoteness and transient jobs means the opportunity for love is difficult for many. Online dating has bridged this gap, allowing everyone from outback farmers to lonely miners, to get back in the dating game.

Niche markets have also begun to spring up, catering for every taste. Whether you’re looking for a sugar daddy, a vegetarian or a nice Jewish man, there are specific dating websites to cater to those needs.

Emotional expectations

Be realistic. Profiles may suggest a 100 percent match but take away those tiny white lies and you could only be 50 percent compatible. Bigger deceptions also exist, where married people masquerade as singles and twentysomething underwear models are actually elderly bank managers named Brian. You get the picture? People tend to describe their ideal self. Sure, anonymity can be liberating but it’s also a dangerous mask.

Psychological issues

If you’re not mentally prepared for online dating, your self-esteem could plummet. The reality is people can disappear with no explanation and potential husbands may still be dating when you’d already picked out the church. That’s life.

Dating sites can also be addictive. When hours are spent glued to the computer screen scanning for dates and checking emails, instead of out in the real world, there’s a problem. Ex dating addict Jenny knows how easily it can take over.

“I was obsessed, not to mention exhausted!” Jenny says. “There were new men popping up all the time. I’d miss friends’ birthdays and nights out just so I didn’t miss out on new dates. I even had alerts directed to my mobile telling me of new matches.”

Safety and cost

Many sites allow free searches, or the ability to “wink” or virtual kiss a love interest but full access isn’t granted until you cough up the big bucks. With extras designed to make “the one” only another $20 click away, it’s easy to get conned into parting with more money than necessary.

Internet fraud is a huge issue thanks to the amount of personal details drifting through cyberspace.

Many scammers join sites to gather email addresses or target the weak and lonely for money. The possible risks of meeting complete strangers, is also a serious and well-documented problem.

Weighed up all your options? Ready to take the plunge but don’t know where to start? Follow these top tips to get you safely on your way:

Five quick tips for online dating

1. Profile: Make sure it’s the right length. Too short? Not enough effort. Too long? Boring. People don’t want a life history, what’s left to discover? Three paragraphs are enough.

2. Photo: Nothing too sexy but nothing too formal. You want to show the real you. Let your personality shine through.

3. Personal details and safety: Never reveal where you work, live or your last name in a profile posting. Initial meetings should always be in a public place.

4. Honesty: Be truthful about your needs and remain honest about yourself. If not, you could get involved with someone on a completely different page to you.

5. Contact: Chemistry is an important thing so meet as soon as you feel comfortable. Whether in emails or in date conversation, never bring up complaints about past relationships or how lonely you are. Emotional baggage is highly unattractive.

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Why no exit fees doesn’t mean no worries

To the delight of the public, several Australian banks have decided to abolish mortgage exit fees in the past few weeks, but it's not all good news.
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WITH no nasty fees charged to transfer from lender to another, the days of poor service and impromptu rate hikes seemed to be numbered. But the 40 per cent of home loan customers who are ready to jump ship should beware — there is an even more insidious game banks are playing. Clients who have decided to refinance to a lender of their choosing and have gone through the approval process with the new lender, are then put through the monotonous and painful process of having their current bank play games when the new lender attempts to refinance the debt.

Some or all of the following are practices often employed by lenders:

  • “Misplacing” the discharge authority signed by the client to advise their bank they wish to leave despite the request being sent numerous times

  • Refusing to provide the new lender with the settlement booking number required for the settlement to proceed

  • Having a dedicated retention team call their client to attempt to dissuade them from leaving, offering to match the rate offered by the new lender (could this rate not have been offered previously?!)

  • Allowing a settlement booking to be made and then not showing up at settlement as agreed

These practices can drag out the refinancing process for weeks or even months and often leave the client in an agitated state, sometimes of the mistaken belief that the new lender is at fault for the delay.

Public awareness of these tricks should be raised and true banking reform should legislate for these settlement requests to be actioned in a timely manner.

Virginia Graham is a mortgage broker at Model home loans.

Your say: Have you refinanced your mortgage lately? How long did it take? Do you think we need new laws to prevent banks playing these tricks? Email us on [email protected]

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Review: Rabbit Hole

There are not many actresses that polarise Australian audiences the way Nicole Kidman does. But there is little doubt that in Rabbit Hole (of which she is also producer) Nicole puts in a career-best performance and deserves her Academy Award nomination.

Based on David Lindsay-Abaire’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play, Rabbit Hole is about a couple who are struggling with the death of their four-year old son in a car accident. The film opens with Becca (Nicole Kidman) rebuilding her garden when a friendly neighbour accidentally treads on one of the smaller plants. Becca declines her invitation for dinner and is unmoved by the damage. It sets the tone for the movie.

Movies: 127 Hours review

Her husband, Howie (Aaron Eckhart) doesn’t play the stoic husband who moves on. He is just as fragile and pained as she is. This is a very warm, realistic drama that avoids all the clichés.

They go to group therapy, although Becca doesn’t last long before she flares up. Her sister Izzy (Tammy Blanchard) has just fallen pregnant and has moved back in with their mother, Nat (Dianne Wiest) who does her flawed best to help. Becca strike up a friendship with Jason, the teenage driver of the car that killed her son (Miles Teller), while Howie strikes one up with Maggie (Sandra Oh) and pushes the boundaries of his vices. They each take their strength from where they can, and still slip backwards.

There is no real point in going into the storyline; there hardly is one. There are no more dramatic turning points in the plot, only subtle changes and nuances. This is a slice-of-life portrait about the struggle of the grieving to reconnect with their world and each other before they have really reconnected with themselves.

Director John Cameron Mitchell does a lovely job to keep the performances honest and powerful without becoming overwrought. The emotion is so strongly between-the-lines there is no need to hit the audience over the head with it. He tries to find your heart on the way to touching your grieving soul.

Related: Nicole Kidman discusses ‘harrowing’ Rabbit Hole shoot

Ironically, the “ice-queen” criticisms of Kidman work well for her in this role, and she shows great fragility against her Botoxed bravado. Eckhart is always dependable and also puts in a career best. But it is Dianne Wiest who is brilliant and provides the most power. She shows that wrinkles will never diminish real talent. The scene where she talks about “carrying a brick in your pocket” moves me just thinking about it.

However, while I could hear much sniffling in the audience, I felt a little underwhelmed by this film. The lack of an impactful storyline robbed it of more power, but there is no criticising a story which eschews clichés and feel-good endings for raw honesty and subtlety, with a few touches of humour. This is a three-and-a-half star kind of movie. It may not leave you awestruck but it will make you feel.

Your say: Do you think Nicole Kidman is a good actress? Do you think she deserves her Academy Award nomination for this film?

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Elle Macpherson models uniform

Supermodel, mum and businesswoman Elle Macpherson returned to her roots this week for a modelling stint in Sydney.

Elle, who turns 48 next month, jetted into her homeland to take part in the launch show for the new Virgin Blue uniform, designed by Project Runway winner Juli Grbac.

To unveil the stylish uniforms, Virgin Blue hosted a catwalk show in the middle of Sydney’s newest fashion precinct, Westfield Sydney. The event saw Elle take to the catwalk dressed as a pilot alongside glamorous Virgin Blue staff.

Click through the pictures to watch a video of Elle modelling at the event.

Elle MacPherson dressed as a pilot at the new Virgin Blue uniform launch event.

Elle on the catwalk with Virgin Blue staff.

Elle with the designer of the uniform, Juli Grbac, winner of *Project Runway*.

Elle with the designer of the uniform, Juli Grbac, winner of Project Runway.

Juli Grbac with models showcasing the chic new uniform.

The pilots’ uniforms also had a stylish make-over.

Models preparing for the catwalk.

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Anna Bligh: the calm after the storm

Anna Bligh: the calm after the storm

The recent months have been a huge challenge for Anna Bligh. As she faces the daunting task of dealing with the devastation in Queensland, Jordan Baker reveals the premier’s personal that side so few of us know.

It’s the Saturday after Cyclone Yasi hit North Queensland and residents of Ingham have had no power or water for three days. The evacuation centre has been home to those cut off by floodwaters and fallen trees, and dozens sprawl on borrowed mattresses or slouch in front of an old television, silenced by heat, grief and the burden of the enormous task ahead. They can’t get home, think of the future or even wash. Some cannot contact the family they left behind.

In pictures: Notorious Australians

Few notice the visitor arrive, but those who do shake off their stupor to crowd around her. “I congratulate you,” says Garry, a volunteer from Hervey Bay, taking her hand. “All I can say is you’re doing a mighty job,” says Maria, from the devastated town of Halifax. One by one, evacuees and volunteers thank Anna Bligh, the woman who guided them through the most terrifying night of their lives. “She was just a different person during the floods and cyclone,” says one woman. “Before, she was a politician. Now, she is a woman and a human. People are leaning on her. She just seems to be in touch with what we’re feeling.”

For many Australians, the stand-out memory from the floods and cyclone will be Premier Anna Bligh. She won the respect of Queensland and beyond with her empathy and sincerity at a time when other politicians seem obsessed with focus groups. Yet what few of us understood was how the experiences of her life – a childhood cut short, an alcoholic father, her years as a social worker – had forged the skills she relied upon to lead her state through the crisis. This was Anna’s moment and she rose to it.

In pictures: The devastation caused by the Queensland floods

Throughout the crisis, she put herself in victims’ shoes. “I imagine being on the rooftop in the dark, in the pouring rain, and no one knows I’m there, and the water’s rising and you’re just so terrified,” she says. “Some people were elderly. I was trying to imagine my mother sitting on a rooftop in the dark at three o’clock in the morning.” When floods reached Brisbane, her mother was evacuated. “It made it very real. I wasn’t imagining this – I was evacuating my mum.”

Sometimes, she felt overwhelmed, but never hopeless. She has been inspired by the courage of the victims and the tirelessness of her colleagues. “The sense of responsibility is what actually, for me, I think, drives me,” she says. “The price of failure here is unthinkable. You can’t afford to think, ‘I don’t want to do this anymore.’ It’s not an option.”

Read more of this story in the March issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Were you impressed with how Anna Bligh handled the floods and Cyclone Yasi? Do you think she performed better than Prime Minister Julia Gillard? Would Anna make a good Prime Minister?

Get 3 issues for Only $6 when paying by direct debit. That’s a massive saving of 71% on your first 3 issues! $18.95 every 3 issues thereafter.

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Shane Warne: celebrity playboy

Shane Warne: celebrity playboy

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Once a brilliant Test cricket star, Shane Warne is now making millions by turning his controversial private life into a public spectacle, writes Sue Smethurst.

On Australia Day morning, Shane Warne rolled out of bed and did what any self-respecting international playboy would do. Ciggie in hand, he grabbed his phone and tweeted to his 306,000 social media mates that his mouth felt like “the bottom of the budgie cage” after a marathon night at the poker table. Dozens offered remedies, from potato cakes to fish oil tablets, but the cricket legend settled on his favourite hang-over fare, tinned spaghetti on toast, a Berocca, a banana milkshake and, of course, “a ciggie” to top it off.

Among the tweets was a morning missive from British bombshell Liz Hurley. The supermodel cooed, “Ping Pong [her pet budgie] would like to peck you, you’d be her first blond.”

In pictures: Notorious Australians

And that cheeky little tweet, with its Benny Hill-ish double entendre and sexual innuendo, holds the key as to how the baked bean-loving larrikin has become red carpet royalty. Billionaires befriend him, Hollywood superstars party with him, rock ‘n’ roll icons adore him and, of course, women swoon over him – and he shares every delicious detail with an insatiable “twittersphere”.

Shane Warne Inc is big business and the more he plays, the more it pays. With the click of a camera, Shane Warne was smashed into the celebrity stratosphere last December, when the paparazzi snapped him passionately kissing Liz Hurley, a married model and one of the world’s most beautiful women, at an upmarket London hotel.

At the same time, on the other side of the globe, Shane, who had been sharing a house in Melbourne with his former wife, Simone, and their children, was alleged to be pestering married mother Adele Angeleri for sex, bombarding the 44-year-old, who owns a fashion store opposite the offices of The Shane Warne Foundation, with graphic “sext” messages to seduce her. He said she made him “horny” and pleaded “I want to see you riding me”.

Her furious husband, Dennis, passed on dozens of the 100-odd dirty text messages to the British tabloid News Of The World and the heady love triangle of the married mother, her bitter husband, a British supermodel and the sporting superstar had tabloid editors in a spin.

In the past, Adele and Dennis Angeleri would have pocketed a hefty sum for sharing their sordid details and Australia’s greatest spin bowler would’ve called upon powerful media mates to assist with damage control. Not this time, though, because rather than bemoaning the press coverage of his latest scandal, playboy Shane is having the last laugh, cleverly milking the moment by tweeting every move he makes to his growing fan club and world’s press.

Related: Liz Hurley flies to Melbourne to spend time with Shane Warne

The cricket superstar, whose genius on the field is unsurpassed, is cashing in on his playboy image and every scandalous new headline is only adding to the bank balance of Shane Warne Inc. “Before he met Liz Hurley, if you weren’t a cricket fan, you probably wouldn’t know much about him. Now you do!” says legendary UK publicist Max Clifford, who believes that “Warnie’s” relationship with Liz Hurley has dramatically increased his celebrity status in the UK and the lucrative cricket-mad Indian market, where Liz was married to millionaire businessman Arun Nayar.

“Millions more now know who he is. This has been a stellar career move,” says the publicist. “He will now be one of the first ones on the invitation list for movie premieres and A-list events, and in terms of his earning capacity, he’s doubled, even tripled his earning potential.”

So, why is it that with such a notorious reputation, women are still attracted to Shane Warne? With his dazzlingly bleached white teeth, Tuscan spray tan and mysteriously smoothed forehead (he swears he’s never had Botox or surgery, despite his appearance changing quite dramatically over the past few years), women seem to fall as easily as wickets…

Read more of this story in the March issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Why do you think women swoon over men like Shane Warne? Have you had any experiences with playboys like him? Why do you think his lewd behaviour has made him more popular than ever when men like Tiger Woods have had their reputations destroyed? Do you think Simone Callahan is right to pose in a bikini and flaunt her new relationship, or do you think she would be better off staying out of the spotlight?

Get 3 issues for Only $6 when paying by direct debit. That’s a massive saving of 71% on your first 3 issues! $18.95 every 3 issues thereafter.

Video: Porn star claims affair with Warnie

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Katie Holmes and the Kennedys

Katie Holmes and the Kennedys

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Fifty years after the Kennedy presidency, the family who had it all is still making headlines. Sharon Krum reports on the efforts to ban a new Kennedy TV mini-series that has been branded “sex-soaked bunkum”.

The news footage is 50 years old, but it still has the power to move us. Those grainy images of US President John F. Kennedy and his glamorous wife, Jackie, on inauguration day, both so young and full of hope – or Jackie, moments away from heartbreak, in her pink suit and pillbox hat in Dallas, in 1963 – are mesmerising even for those not born in that magical time dubbed Camelot.

In pictures: The secret life of Jackie O

One person who was watching the old newsreels most keenly last year was Katie Holmes, who had just been cast as iconic First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy in the $30 million, eight-part TV mini-series,The Kennedys. Katie, 32, played the news footage over and over to prepare for the role, even making it a family affair. Husband Tom Cruise “watched everything with me, he found it fascinating”, she later toldEllemagazine. At night, she confided, she would practise Jackie’s famously feathery voice on him.

Of all the possible actresses, the formerDawson’s CreekandBatmanstar was a smart choice to play Jackie. It’s not just that she and Jackie share a resemblance in their lithe bodies and intense beauty, but an elusiveness as well. You can look at photographs of Jackie 50 years ago and Katie today, and sense they’re both knowingly hiding something of themselves.

“I worked as hard as I could because I loved her. On set, there was this feeling that we had to create something very special because these people were very special. The Kennedys were like movie stars,” Katie said, summing up the thousand-day JFK presidency perfectly.

When the mini-series was announced it caused excitement and criticism. “Malicious”, cried one historian who read an early script. Others branded it a “travesty”, “soap opera”, a political hit job and sex-soaked bunkum.

Then, suddenly, in January,The Kennedyswas dropped from the US History Channel, who claimed it was “not a fit for the History brand”. Hollywood was stunned, and the Kennedy family was reportedly to blame.

Has the historic family overreacted, though?The Hollywood Reporter’sMatthew Belloni watched the finished first episode and claims what he saw appeared toned down from earlier scripts, as the director and producers promised. “I think people will really like it,” he said. “It’s definitely melodramatic in parts, but the acting is very good. Katie Holmes is uncanny as Jackie.”

Related: The History Channel cancels Kennedy mini-series

The Kennedy family still hasn’t spoken publicly about the series, which is set to air in 30 countries, including Australia. It has recently been taken up by US cable channel, ReelzChannel, according toThe Hollywood Reporter. Yet the Kennedy family must realise that this fuss is only going to make people more curious to see it.

Still, many agree that their fight is understandable. “If people watch the series,” says Robert Greenwald, “please read a good history book on Kennedy as well.”

Read more of this story in the March issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Do you think Katie Holmes was a good choice to play Jackie Kennedy? Will you watch the series when it airs in Australia?

Get 3 issues for Only $6 when paying by direct debit. That’s a massive saving of 71% on your first 3 issues! $18.95 every 3 issues thereafter.

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The stars who beat bullying

Bullies and bullied more likely to consider suicide by age 11

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The school bullies of today can have devastating effects on victims now and in adulthood. Bryce Corbett looks at why bullying is on the rise, the advent of cyber bullying and why all parents have a responsibility to stamp out the perpetrators.

The new school year is well and truly underway. Kids all over the country have tripped back to the classroom and spent the better part of the last month adjusting to their new surroundings, taking stock of their teachers, sizing up their peers and awkwardly jostling for playground social status.

Related: Ten things not to say to kids

Before the school year is out, one in four Australian students will be the victims of bullying. Not a simple disagreement in the canteen line or an isolated incidence of name-calling, but sustained physical, verbal or psychological abuse at the hands of their peers.

It’s an experience that has scarred school children for as long as there has been organised education – and one that four high-profile Australians haven’t forgotten in a hurry.

At first glance they may not fit the stereotype of the bullying victim, but Michelle Bridges, Hazem El Masri, Ruby Rose and Rebecca Breeds all suffered at the hands of schoolyard bullies.

When contacted by The Weekly to participate in this story, each leapt at the chance to share their stories in the hope they would serve as an example to bully victims – proof positive that a world of personal and professional fulfilment lies waiting just outside the school gates.

It was, they all said in interviews after the photo shoot, their desire to shine a light on what leading psychologist Dr Michael Carr-Gregg calls “one of the most overlooked public health issues of our time”. Their two-pronged message to young people who are being bullied: “You’re not alone” and “It gets better.”

Ruby Rose, MTV VJ:

“It was only when I left school that I discovered there’s a whole world out there – and it’s a big, exciting, tolerant world, filled with people just like you.”

Michelle Bridges, personal trainer onThe Biggest Loser:

“I really believe my life started when I left school. When you’re at school, you can’t imagine there’s life outside. But there is. And it can be so good”

Related: How to protect your children from cyber-bullying

Rebecca Breeds, star ofHome and Away:

“The only thing I would say to parents is just love and support your kids. Be there for them and remind them whenever you can that school is just one experience in a lifetime’s worth of experiences.”

Hazem El Masri, rugby league player:

“My message to kids who are being bullied: Don’t give up. School is just a small part of your life. And try to talk to someone – a parent, a teacher, a coach. You don’t have to struggle alone.”

Read more of this story in the March issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Were you bullied at school? Do you think children these days are bullied more than in the past? How do you think society should deal with bullies?

Get 3 issues for Only $6 when paying by direct debit. That’s a massive saving of 71% on your first 3 issues! $18.95 every 3 issues thereafter.

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Eat now: Asparagus

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Most vegetables come from a family where they share similar characteristics. One family you may not have heard of before is the lily family, which includes onions, garlic, leeks, turnips — and asparagus. Like the other members of its family, asparagus is grown mostly below the ground.

You are probably familiar with the green variety of asparagus that comes in spears, but have you experienced white or purple asparagus?

In pictures: Mood foods

White asparagus is harvested when it is very young, while the spear is still underground, and it can make a wonderful contrast when served with the green variety. Just remember, because it is picked while it is young the outer layer needs to be removed before cooking.

Purple asparagus is a newer variety, and actually loses its colour when it is heated, turning a vibrant green.

One of the great things about asparagus is that it is versatile. It can be used in a variety of recipes or enjoyed simply blanched, steamed, or grilled. And because it only takes a few minutes to cook, asparagus is the perfect last-minute addition to a meal.

You can also find asparagus in the canned vegetable aisle of your local supermarket, which is great in sandwiches, quiches or omelettes.

In pictures: The London skyline recreated in vegetables

Nutritionally, asparagus is a great source of vitamin C and also provides dietary fibre, which is ideal for bowel health.

Asparagus is currently in season, and best bought in Australia and New Zealand from September through to December. Choose spears that have a vibrant colour with stiff stems. Try not to purchase limp and dry asparagus.

Often the thicker the stem, the better the quality of the asparagus. Unblemished spears will last for around two or three days in the fridge.

This information is provided by the Sanitarium Nutrition Service.

Video: Which is better for you, fresh or frozen vegetables?

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