
Hold the Mayo: A Potato Salad Recipe That's Perfect for Picnics
It's one of the easiest dishes to make, but success depends on a few basic tenets—starting with the right potato.

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Cosmopolitan
an hour ago
- Cosmopolitan
These 35 surnames have been identified as having royal connections: See if yours is on the list
Hear ye, hear ye! If you've ever felt that there's just a certain... regal energy to you, or that you'd have made a really good king or queen, or at least a decent noblewoman, it turns out there could be a reason behind that. The DNA-testing and family tree site MyHeritage has identified a list of 35 surnames that have strong royal connections to them, and some are actually pretty common. While it doesn't mean you're next in line for the throne if you have one of the below surnames, it could give an indicator that somewhere in your family tree there's a person (or persons!) of note with connections to the crown. Which is pretty exciting, wouldn't you say? And certainly worth digging into. Here's the list of surnames that could mean you're distantly relate to Prince William, Henry VII or someone else who has rocked a crown in their daily life/has a bunch of land/fancy title. A fairly obvious one, this has been the British royal family's surname since 1917 (prior to that it was the more German-sounding Saxe-Coburg-Gotha). The dynasty that brought us Henry VIII and Elizabeth I, two of the most famous British monarchs. A Scottish family who ruled England and Scotland during the 16th and 17th century. Not a super common surname, but one linked to the royal house that spawned Richard III. A French dynasty who were in charge between 987 and 1,328. The surname of Princess Diana, whose brother, Charles, is the ninth Earl Spencer. More than a biscuit and a type of booze, this European line saw rulers of France, Spain and beyond descend from it. A big-shot family during the Holy Roman Empire, just FYI. British royals like George I and Queen Victoria descended from this line. A branch of the Capet ruling house in France. Remember studying the Wars of the Roses in school? The Lancaster branch, descended from the Plantagenets, went up agains the House of York, also Plantagenet descendants, to bid for the crown during 1455 and 1487. Ultimately, the Tudor victory united the two factions. See above for more details. A great Scottish surname, linked to Robert the Bruce, a king viewed as a Scottish hero for restore the kingdom to an independent state and for winning on the battlefield. Rick will be buzzing! This noble surname has links to English peerage. This surname has connections to medieval nobility and landowners in both Ireland and England. Remember that French royal house we mentioned earlier, Valois? This is a spin-off branch. This powerful Italian family bore not only royalty but popes too. Double win! Not just the name of a posh London hotel, but also a family that once dominated swathes of France and Italy. Erm, can somebody get Gary on the phone? Not only is this surname connected to footballing royalty, but the Nevilles were a powerful English noble family during the medieval period. Another boujee English family who made major waves in British history. Another aristocratic family in England, this lot were Lords of the Manor of Eardisley for 500 years. Another wealthy and well-regarded English family, owning the title of Duke of Norfolk, and who produced one of Henry the VIII's wives, Catherine (number five of six). Jane Seymour was the third wife of Henry VIII, who produced his only male heir, Edward. The names is linked to the Dukedom of Somerset. History buffs will know the twisted tale of Lady Jane Grey, who was Queen for a mere nine days in July 1553, before being booted out by Mary I. This well-regarded English family has produced many an aristocrat, including Earls and Countesses of Essex. Orange-Nassau This is the Dutch royal family's surname – and is why orange-coloured carrots grew in popularity during the 17th century, as farmers tried to grow the brightest ones possible as a tribute to their monarch. Oldenburg This royal house encompasses members of the current Danish royal family. Glucksburg An offshoot of the Oldenburg clan, Glucksburg is also connected with both Danish and Norwegian royalty. Romanov The surname of the last imperial dynasty to rule over Russia. A name that can be traced all the way back to the medieval era, this family has a string of Earls of Arundel in its bloodline. The Russell family bore the Dukes of Bedford. With both English and French royal links, if this is your surname you're in with a double shot of being regal. Congrats! The Dukes of Rutland descend from the Manners family tree. The Cavendish family still holds the title of Duke of Devonshire. The current Duke is Peregrine Cavendish, who is the twelfth to bare the title having inherited it in 2004. This noble family name still holds the the Earldom of Shrewsbury. The current Earl of Shrewsbury is the casually named Charles Henry John Benedict Crofton Chetwynd Chetwynd-Talbot. Jennifer Savin is Cosmopolitan UK's multiple award-winning Features Editor, who was crowned Digital Journalist of the Year for her work tackling the issues most important to young women. She regularly covers breaking news, cultural trends, health, the royals and more, using her esteemed connections to access the best experts along the way. She's grilled everyone from high-profile politicians to A-list celebrities, and has sensitively interviewed hundreds of people about their real life stories. In addition to this, Jennifer is widely known for her own undercover investigations and campaign work, which includes successfully petitioning the government for change around topics like abortion rights and image-based sexual abuse. Jennifer is also a published author, documentary consultant (helping to create BBC's Deepfake Porn: Could You Be Next?) and a patron for Y.E.S. (a youth services charity). Alongside Cosmopolitan, Jennifer has written for The Times, Women's Health, ELLE and numerous other publications, appeared on podcasts, and spoken on (and hosted) panels for the Women of the World Festival, the University of Manchester and more. In her spare time, Jennifer is a big fan of lipstick, leopard print and over-ordering at dinner. Follow Jennifer on Instagram, X or LinkedIn.

14 hours ago
Family reunited with beloved dog after 6 years apart
A Florida family was reunited with their beloved dog after six years apart this week and said the whole experience has been "a dream come true." Lisa Nicholson, her husband, and two of her children traveled over 200 miles from St. Cloud, Florida, to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to reunite with their beloved German shepherd Bella again. "Bella was microchipped. And so anybody out there that does not believe that they work, they truly, truly work," Nicholson told ABC News. "That was how [the police] were able to locate us, through the microchip, because they had all of our information." Bella was picked up by Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue firefighters on Aug. 5. Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue public information officer Frank Guzman told ABC News that first responders received a 911 call Tuesday about a "loose dog who had been roaming around [and] ended up in a canal and couldn't get out." "Our firefighters from Engine 47 arrived on scene and made contact with the dog. She was very docile and obviously exhausted," Guzman said. After firefighters brought Bella back to the firehouse, Guzman said Fort Lauderdale police determined the dog had a microchip and had been adopted out of Broward County Animal Care in 2018. Police then worked to track down the family, he said, and eventually located Nicholson, a mom of six. Nicholson told ABC News she and her family had to give Bella to a friend months after she was adopted, after a house fire forced them to move. "We lost everything. We lost our clothes. We lost everything that the house had inside of it," Nicholson said. "And so, we had to live in a hotel for a period of three months, and during that time, that's when we had to decide where Bella was going to go, and so we decided to let Bella go with a friend." Nicholson said after a while, they learned the friend -- whom she said they considered a family member -- had given Bella away, and they lost contact with Bella altogether. But earlier this week, Nicholson said her 18-year-old daughter Liberty told her she had a dream about Bella, and then she received a phone call from the Fort Lauderdale Police about Bella. "I just said, 'This has got to be God here,' because … my daughter has a dream, and then all of a sudden the dog appears after about six years? Like, it's a dream come true," said Nicholson. Now, Nicholson said she's hoping to give "sweet" Bella the world. "I feel like she's been through so much and I feel like this is like a second chance at life," said Nicholson. "She'll be treated just like us. When we get steak, she's going to get steak. When we get a new shirt, Bella is getting a new outfit." She added, "I want people to understand that when people are able to get their dogs back [after] any situation, don't think bad of them, because we suffered too. We were heartbroken too, but now our hearts have been mended."
Yahoo
19 hours ago
- Yahoo
Body of missing father found on melting glacier 28 years after he vanished
The family of a missing man whose body was discovered on a melting glacier in Pakistan after 28 years said Thursday its recovery had brought them some relief. The body of 31-year-old Nasiruddin was spotted by locals near the edge of the shrinking Lady Meadows glacier in the Kohistan region of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. His family said he and his brother had fled to the mountains after a dispute in their village in 1997 when he fell into a crevasse. His brother survived. "Our family left no stone unturned to trace him over the years," Malik Ubaid, the nephew of the deceased, told AFP over the phone. "Our uncles and cousins visited the glacier several times to see if his body could be retrieved, but they eventually gave up as it wasn't possible." Nasiruddin, who went by one name, was a husband and father of two children. His well-preserved body, still carrying an identity card, was found on July 31 by a local shepherd and buried on Wednesday. "The body was intact. The clothes were not even torn," Omar Khan, a local resident who found the remains, told BBC Urdu. Hi family expressed gratitude after the discovery. "Finally, we have got some relief after the recovery of his dead body," Ubaid said. Kohistan is a mountainous region where the outer reaches of the Himalayas stretch. Pakistan is home to more than 13,000 glaciers, more than anywhere else on Earth outside the poles. Rising global temperatures linked to human-driven climate change, however, are causing the glaciers to rapidly melt. Bodies exposed by melting glaciers in recent years As glaciers increasingly melt and recede around the world, there has been an increase in discoveries of the remains of hikers, skiers and other climbers who went missing decades ago. In July 2024, the preserved body of an American mountaineer was found 22 years after he disappeared while scaling a snowy peak in Peru was found. The month before that, five frozen bodies were retrieved from Mount Everest— including one that was just skeletal remains — as part of Nepal's mountain clean-up campaign on Everest and adjoining peaks Lhotse and Nuptse. In 2023, the remains of a German climber who went missing in 1986 were recovered on a glacier in the Swiss Alps. In 2017, Italian mountain rescue crews recovered the remains of hikers on a glacier on Mont Blanc's southern face likely dating from the 1980s or 1990s. Just a few weeks later, the remains of a climber discovered in the Swiss Alps were identified as a British mountaineer who went missing in 1971, local police said Thursday. That same year, a shrinking glacier in Switzerland revealed the bodies of a frozen couple who went missing in 1942. Police told local media that their bodies were discovered near a ski lift on the glacier by a worker for an adventure resort company. In 2016, the bodies of a renowned mountain climber and expedition cameraman who were buried in a Himalayan avalanche in 1999 were found partially melting out of a glacier. Sneak peek: The Strange Shooting of Alex Pennig Quadruple murder suspect captured in Tennessee, officials confirm Neil deGrasse Tyson weighs in on plans for a moon-based nuclear reactor Solve the daily Crossword