
Brunch review: Something & Social for a captive audience
Something & Social needs more than vanilla notes to make it sing.
Something & Social needs more than vanilla notes to make it sing.
How is food a feminist issue? Guilty Feminist Deborah Frances-White explains.
Why is one TV critic taking Jamie Oliver's latest advice with a grain of salt?
The godfather of fermentation, Sandor Katz, talks with Anna King Shahab
Small garden? No problem - how to create and cook from fruit and veges grown in pots.
In praise of feijoas - fruit lovers get ready for their favourite time of year.
I see fire: Steve Braunias prepares for a winter wood harvest.
The first Native American poet laureate will visit New Zealand next month.
What Canvas book reviewers have been reading.
New York Times: A food festival like no other in the Russian Arctic.
A new village is taking shape at Long Bay - and its food offerings are expanding.
New book on humans and animal adolescence reveals what the nature docos don't show.
What working in a strip club taught one writer about humanity.
A defence that allowed criminals to get away with murder is in the spotlight again.
Ashleigh Young's encounter with house movers gets her thinking about unflappable humans.
Emily Nagoski, sex educator, feminist and trump opponent, on the potency of female desire.
Peaky Blinders producers' new star-studded, genre mash-up of a show promises to be big.
A sex worker reveals the realities of clients, consent and consequences
Comedian Eli Matthewson gets serious about being a queer teen at church.
Greg Fleming on the latest in crime fiction - including Steph Cha and John Grisham.
Sue Baxalle heads to Patch Cafe for a weekend brunch.
On Waitangi Day, take a day walk, like the Te Whara Track.
Casketeer Francis Tipene reveals his own thoughts about dying and why it still scares him.
World's first Māori - Aboriginal rom-com signals new moves for local theatre.
The star came clean about her drug use on an episode of The Goop Lab
Canvas critic awards "imperfect film" four stars - it's impossible not to get swept away.
Nicholas Sheppard wades into the cultural appropriation debate.
Change the national anthem? Simon Wilson has a few suggestions.