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Canadian News

Mom of newborn left on London, Ont., porch found, police say

CBC Canadian News - 3 hours 16 min ago

Police say they've found the mother of a newborn boy left on a doorstep in London, Ont., earlier this week.

Categories: Canadian News

Want stronger coffee with fewer beans? Pour from high up, study says

National Post - 5 hours 57 min ago

Those hoping to have a strong cup of coffee with fewer beans should pour water from high up, says a new study.

Researchers from the University of Pennsylvania wanted to test how to make a great cup of one of the world’s most popular drinks. In a   research article published in April in the scientific journal Physics of Fluids , they wrote that “issues such as climate change threaten the growth of the temperature-sensitive Coffea arabica plant, more commonly known as Arabica coffee.”

The researchers wanted to find a way to become more efficient brewers, “using less coffee while still meeting the high demand for the beverage.” They decided on the pour-over method, which involves pouring hot water over coffee grounds in a paper filter that sits in a coffee dripper, or cone. The cone is placed over a vessel that catches the liquid — coffee — that has gone through the filter. “This brewing method primarily uses gravity to push water a single time through coarse, loosely packed coffee grounds,” the researchers explained.

They used Simply Nature Organic Honduras whole coffee beans, and ground them with a Eureka brand grinder.

One of the researchers, Ernest Park, told National Post over email that the team tested pouring water from up to around 50 centimetres above the filter. However, he said that people can realistically pour from about 20 to 25 centimetres above the filter, with a maximum of around 30 centimetres, because it can start to “get a bit dangerous with hot water” if it’s poured from too high up.

The researchers first did tests using silica gel particles (to mimic the coffee grounds), a glass filter that they could see through, a laser sheet and a high-speed camera. They discovered “an avalanche effect (where granules suddenly slide and form large-scale flows) that leads to strong mixing at various pour heights, even with a gentle pour-over jet” — or a thin stream of water. To achieve a gentle pour-over jet, the team used a gooseneck kettle.

Next, they tested the coffee grounds with hot water.

Increasing the height between the kettle used for pouring and the cone ended up maximizing the mixing of the grounds with water. It also reduced the flow rate of the water to increase extraction time. (As it pertains to coffee, extraction refers to when compounds like caffeine are pulled from the grounds when they are mixed with hot water.)

The findings suggest, per the researchers, that “instead of increasing the amount of beans, the sensory profile and the strength of the beverage can be adjusted by varying the flow rate and the pour height.”

Researchers recommend keeping a laminar water jet, or constant flow of water, when pouring. This allows the stream to create the avalanche effect.

“These alterations assist in extracting and dispersing the flavourful compounds in coffee grounds effectively while reducing the necessary mass of grounds,” the paper says. “In this way, the extraction efficiency could be better controlled to help alleviate the demand on coffee beans worldwide.”

The publication of the paper comes at a time when tariffs have been imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump on countries around the world, including some of the biggest producers of coffee. Globally, coffee prices surged to   record highs in January .

Canadians may be particularly interested in finding ways to consume more caffeine for less.

In Canada, the cost of 350 grams of roasted or ground coffee has been on the rise in recent months,   according to Statistics Canada . That amount was sold for $7 in January, but increased to $7.32 in February. This is a significant increase since October 2024, which saw 350 grams of coffee sell for $6.72.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our newsletters here.

Categories: Canadian News

Pickleball curious? Here’s what you need to get started

Global News - 6 hours 57 min ago
Balls, bag, paddles…what else do you need to play pickleball? Here are 12 accessories that may help foster your love of the game.
Categories: Canadian News

Could your next surgery be done by a robot? Meet the patient who tried it

Global News - 6 hours 58 min ago
Ferenc Jakab underwent groundbreaking robotic heart surgery, which offered a faster recovery and less trauma. But how often are these surgeries performed in Canada?
Categories: Canadian News

Indigenous DNA in wastewater is vulnerable to exploitation, Ontario researchers say

CBC Canadian News - 6 hours 58 min ago

Scientists collecting wastewater samples gain access to a variety of sensitive information. At the University of Guelph in southern Ontario, researchers are working to protect that data.

Categories: Canadian News

Ukrainian family in Nova Scotia faces new challenge with son’s cancer diagnosis

Global News - 8 hours 58 min ago
The family arrived in Canada on a special work permit program, but now Pavlo needs 24/7 monitoring as he undergoes chemotherapy -- meaning both parents are unable to work. 
Categories: Canadian News

Demidov fever; new Montreal Canadiens sniper bringing fanfare frenzy

Global News - 8 hours 58 min ago
The 19-year-old Russian player will join the team on the ice on Monday evening in a highly anticipated first game against the Chicago Blackhawks.
Categories: Canadian News

No goulash? Some parents lukewarm to N.S. school lunch program

CBC Canadian News - 8 hours 58 min ago

CBC News obtained hundreds of submissions parents filed with the Education Department about the school lunch program. Food quality and safety, the ingredients used in the dishes and whether the meals cater to specific diets were frequent topics.

Categories: Canadian News

Liberals are already dreaming of a majority — and more seats in Calgary might be key

National Post - 9 hours 57 min ago

CALGARY — It’s a little less lonely to be a Liberal in Calgary these days.

The line of supporters extends a kilometre outside of the Red and White Club at McMahon Stadium, where Liberal Leader Mark Carney is set to hold a rally. It is taking place in the riding of Calgary Confederation, which Liberals expect could be a nail-biter this election .

Running under the red banner is Corey Hogan, vice president at the University of Calgary and host of the political podcast “The Strategists.” He is hastily replacing the previous candidate, Thomas Keeper, who stepped down reportedly for a 20-year-old domestic assault charge.

Hogan will be facing off against former United Conservative Party MLA Jeremy Nixon, now running for the federal Tories. Nixon was also tapped as a last-minute candidate after the incumbent MP, Len Webber, suddenly announced his retirement before the election call.

At only 15 years old, William Grunan-Harlow is waiting in line to enter the Liberal venue, a sign with Hogan’s name on it in hand.

He may not be able to vote for the candidate but is eager to meet Hogan, who he knows of through his podcast. It is Grunan-Harlow’s first partisan event, and he is beaming with excitement at the idea of meeting other people who hold similar political views to him.

“I had never met a Liberal in my entire life outside of my family, and now I’ve met quite a few,” said the articulate teenager, pointing to the long line of supporters behind him.

One of those supporters is Richard McMillan, who is clearly of voting age and says he will be casting his ballot for Hogan.

“He’s really capable and I honestly think he’s cabinet minister material,” he said.

Inside the venue, the crowd goes wild when Hogan briefly takes the stage.

Hogan is clearly at ease in front of such a large crowd. He tells them that Janet Brown, Alberta’s most recognized pollster, told CBC that a riding like Calgary Confederation is “a bellwether riding” for whether Liberals are going to win a minority or a majority.

“The polls say if we show up, we’ll win,” Hogan said.

The next one to take the stage, Lindsay Luhnau, the director of a local investment co-operative running for the Liberals in Calgary Centre, another riding that the party is hoping to pick up, said her team is getting “incredible feedback at the doors and on the doors.”

“Progressives across Calgary are uniting,” she said, referring to the NDP’s slide in the polls that is seemingly benefiting her party.

Calgary is typically a Conservative stronghold in federal politics. Liberals elected a lone representative, George Chahal, in Calgary Skyview in 2021. Chahal is now running in the Calgary McKnight riding, while Hafeez Malik is hoping to succeed Chahal in Skyview.

Chahal said he thinks he will no longer be alone in Calgary after the next election.

“I think we will see Liberal support be much higher than it has in previous elections, and I am confident that I will be joined by more colleagues representing their constituencies from the Liberal Party of Canada after April 28,” he said.

According to Duane Bratt, a political science professor at Mount Royal University, four ridings in Calgary are going to be in play: McKnight, Skyview, Centre and Confederation.

“Those will be battlegrounds that we haven’t typically seen in this city,” he said.

It is no coincidence that Carney decided to make his announcement to transform Canada into an “energy superpower” with some of his candidates in Calgary.

“We need to get… Liberal candidates elected, as many as possible, so we can put this into place,” he said of his commitments.

Liberals are pushing another candidacy: Priti Obhrai-Martin, daughter of beloved long-time Conservative MP Deepak Obhrai. She is running in the riding of Calgary East against Conservative incumbent Jasraj Singh Hallan, also popular in the riding.

In a recent interview, Obhrai-Martin said her father had spoken highly of Carney’s work as governor of the Bank of Canada during the 2008 recession. When Carney decided to run for the leadership, she said he “piqued” her interest and put her hand up to get involved with the party.

Community members then asked her if she would be willing to run. She said yes.

“It’s very emotional,” she said. “It’s my dad’s riding. I’ve been door-knocking in this area since I was 16. I know the Conservatives. I know everybody here. It was not an easy decision. But people were asking me to step up. I was like, ‘Okay, I’m all in.’”

Obhrai-Martin said she was “scared” to join the Liberals at first but said people have been respectful of her decision. “They recognize that I have a legacy. They recognize that we have a family name and integrity, and they know that I didn’t take this lightly,” she said.

After the end of the Calgary rally, she is treated like a local celebrity, with Liberal supporters patiently waiting to take pictures with her and exchange a few words.

Obhrai-Martin might make it to Parliament like her father or she might not. But she said that if she felt the need to join Carney’s Liberals, others might do as well.

National Post, with files from Noah Brennan, Calgary Herald
calevesque@postmedia.com

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Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our newsletters here.

Categories: Canadian News

On the Brink: rent is eating up half her pay, payday loans made it worse

Global News - 9 hours 57 min ago
Ontario woman says on her salary today, her two pay stubs a month are already spoken for: one goes to rent, and the other covers everything else.
Categories: Canadian News

Muslims rallying voters have a message for party leaders: avoiding important issues could cost you votes

CBC Canadian News - 9 hours 58 min ago

Muslim leaders are mobilizing their communities to vote in the upcoming federal election, but some say party leaders haven’t done a good job of addressing issues that matter to Muslim Canadians. According to one expert, many politicians see some issues as too divisive to discuss during an election campaign, but Muslims say ignoring them could cost votes as well.

Categories: Canadian News

How young men are changing what conservatism looks like in Canada

CBC Canadian News - 9 hours 58 min ago

During Canada’s last federal election, roughly equal numbers of young men and women voted Conservative. Since then, young people have gone in opposite directions: young women identify increasingly as progressive, and young men increasingly as conservative.

Categories: Canadian News

White House uses Hamilton economist's paper to justify tariffs — but misses his point 'trade wars are bad'

CBC Canadian News - 9 hours 58 min ago

Both times, the Trump administration got it wrong, says Pau S. Pujolas, an associate economics professor at McMaster University in Hamilton who wrote the 2024 paper "Trade deficits with trade wars."

Categories: Canadian News

Will the U.S.-China tariff war drive up online shopping prices for Canadians?

CBC Canadian News - 9 hours 58 min ago

As tariff pressures force some sellers in China to hike their prices for U.S. markets, some retail experts say Canadians shopping online could potentially feel the ripple effects on everything from electronics to socks.

Categories: Canadian News

Measles outbreaks spark concern over rare 'horrific' neurological disorder

CBC Canadian News - 9 hours 58 min ago

As measles outbreaks in Canada grow and spread between provinces, pediatricians are again recommending vaccinations while also bracing for serious complications, including a rare, long-term neurological disorder that can emerge six to 10 years after an initial measles infection.

Categories: Canadian News

Carney and Poilievre have both pledged 'energy corridors.' That could be complicated

CBC Canadian News - 9 hours 58 min ago

Pierre Poilievre and Mark Carney are offering similar sounding plans that would fast-track regulatory processes and create energy corridors to develop natural resource projects. But some industry observers are cautioning that there may be big challenges to what they've put forward.

Categories: Canadian News

Environmental issues taking a backseat this election, Vote Compass data shows

CBC Canadian News - 9 hours 58 min ago

Environmental issues have slid way down the list of Canadians' concerns in this federal election compared to the last campaign, according to data from Vote Compass.

Categories: Canadian News

Are you paying more than before to buy Canadian? Experts say it's complicated

CBC Canadian News - 9 hours 58 min ago

Marketplace analyzed price data from one downtown Toronto Loblaws store from the start of the year to find out if products that are ‘Prepared in Canada’ have increased in price

Categories: Canadian News

Flames keep playoff hopes alive with crucial 4-2 win over Wild

Global News - Fri, 2025-04-11 23:49
Mikael Backlund’s first-period goal gave Calgary the lead and the Flames never looked back, picking up two huge points with a 4-2 victory over the Minnesota Wild on Friday. Yegor Sharangovich, Nazem Kadri and Ryan Lomberg also scored for Calgary (38-27-14), which has points in five straight games (3-0-2). The Flames climbed to within three points of both St....
Categories: Canadian News

Oilers clinch playoff berth with 4-2 win over Sharks

Global News - Fri, 2025-04-11 23:05
Connor McDavid assisted on all four goals as the Edmonton Oilers officially clinched a playoff berth with a 4-2 victory over the last-place San Jose Sharks on Friday. “Special teams was a big part of the game tonight,” Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch said after the win. “With the kills that we had, with the majority of...
Categories: Canadian News
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