Sweets spot: Love of cannoli runs in the family at Alati-Caserta
'I'm 53 years-old, and we just celebrated 50 years. I was born in this bakery,' says Marco Caldarone.
This Week's Flyers
Tomkinson: Sellers market or not, it takes more than listing to make a sale
Current market conditions may favour sellers but you have to make sure your property shows well and is priced competitively.
Meghan Markle hunting for Mary Poppins-like nanny after staffers quit
Diva Duchess Meghan Markle is desperately hunting for a Mary Poppins-style nanny after three of her closest aides quit,
can exclusively reveal.
-
Royals Prince Philip, 97, recovering after car crash
LONDON — Queen Elizabeth II’s 97-year-old husband was recovering Friday at the royal Sandringham estate after the Land Rover he was driving rolled on a nearby highway in a collision with another vehicle. -
World 'Very shocked' and shaken Prince Philip involved in car crash
LONDON — Queen Elizabeth II’s husband, Prince Philip, was involved in a car crash Thursday while driving in rural England but was not injured.
-
Columnists Brownstein: Is Blue Monday a hoax? Maybe not in these parts
Real or not, one shouldn't trivialize the profound depression too many have to deal with daily, and not just on the third Monday of January. -
Life Scotland to return remains of now-extinct Newfoundland First Nation to Ottawa museum
The Beothuk people have been declared extinct since 1829 following the tuberculosis death of the last known Beothuk woman -
Family & Child Who gets to decide when a 14-year-old wants to change gender? The child, the hospital, ...
A B.C. case raises difficult questions about parental rights and about how young is too young to make medical decisions. The result is a messy ethical and legal tangle -
Life Canada's family doctors get guidance on treating youth with gender dysphoria
Hormone suppression can delay puberty and give youth "more time to make decisions about transitioning," write the authors of a new review. -
Food Lesley Chesterman Leaves the Table: Final food for thought
In her final column for the Montreal Gazette, our departing restaurant critic reflects on lessons learned during her 20 years on the beat. -
Food Scientists say a plant-forward diet could save millions of lives and avoid climate change
For North Americans, the new diet means eating 84 per cent less red meat and six times more legumes -
Royals What is royal life really like for Meghan Markle? It's fair to say it hasn't ...
"In her current role she can't go anywhere without her protection team," one insider noted, "and that's a massive constraining force on an individual like her." -
Life Watch: Gillette 'toxic masculinity' ad stirs online uproar
A Gillette ad for men invoking the #MeToo movement is sparking intense online backlash.
-
Life How online dating saved Bolivia's endangered bachelor frog
In an effort to find 'Romeo' a mate, scientists at Bolivia's Museum of Natural History started an online fundraiser which included a match.com dating profile -
Life Here’s every cannabis college course you can take in U.S. and Canada
Want a job in cannabis? Start with these education opportunities -
Food Six O’Clock Solution: Perk up your pork for mid-winter
This recipe incorporates brussels sprouts and comes from veteran Danish writer Trine Hahnemann. -
Life Simple saliva test could predict breast-cancer risk: study
“It really is a game-changer,” said Dr. Jacques Simard, a co-author of the study, conducted in part by a group of Quebec researchers. “This will help for early detection of breast cancer and save lives.” -
Books Alone but together: Montreal author recalls caring for siblings at age 10
Anna-May Borden has returned to Montreal with a film producer who plans to adapt Nine Tears, her account of being left alone with her eight siblings. -
Life Inside a literal goose chase: the pursuit of a rogue bird
Swearing by trial and error, a wildlife centre has tried to capture the goose at a Shell gas station using many different methods. So far, no luck -
Life Moon sprouts: one small step for cotton, one giant step for China
China started successfully growing cotton on the moon -
Life People with extreme anti-science views know the least, but think they know the most: study
People often suffer from an 'illusion of knowledge,' write the authors of a new study that finds that people who hold them most extreme views about genetically modified foods know the least -
Life Too much of a good thing? Legalization means there is more cannabis-related waste
Common disposal methods include incineration, shredding, soaking waste in vinegar or mixing with cat litter and water -
Royals Meghan Markle's bodyguard leaves Kensington Palace team after just six months
The senior personal protection officee had been a prominent part of the couple's security service as the only woman accompanying them on public engagements