Archives

Food Alert.

Recall of a batch of frozen Hortex Zupa Wiosenna 9-Składnikowa due to the possible presence of glass fragments.

Alert Summary dated Wednesday, 11th February 2026.

Category 1: For Action
Alert Notification: 2026.07
Product Identification: Hortex Zupa Wiosenna 9-Składnikowa (9 Ingredient Spring Soup); frozen; pack size: 450g
Batch Code: LS0C1070925 2 T 080925 1117; best-before date: 03/2027.
Country Of Origin: Poland

Message: The above batch of Hortex Zupa Wiosenna 9-Składnikowa (9 Ingredient Spring Soup), is being recalled due to the possible presence of glass fragments. Recall notices will be displayed at point-of-sale.

Action Required: Caterers & Retailers:
Retailers: Same are requested to remove the implicated batch from sale and display recall notices at point-of-sale.

Consumers: Consumers are advised not to eat the implicated batch.

From Tipperary To The Capital – The Life Of Dr. Robert Emmet.

“Where Tipperary leads, Ireland follows” is attributed to Thomas Davis (1814–1845), a writer, poet, and prominent figure in the Young Ireland movement. He used this phrase in the 1840s in his “The Nation” newspaper, to praise the counties intense nationalistic spirit, earning it the title of “The Premier County”, thus highlighting Tipperary’s role in both political and social movements.

Dr. Robert Emmet M.D., the father of Irish Republican, orator and rebel leader Robert Emmet (1778 – 1803), was born in Tipperary town on November 29th 1729, the younger of two sons in a family where medicine was already a calling. While no biographical sources name a townland or house, a carefully researched account helps narrow the scene; his father’s Will referred to “the house where he resided in Tipperary”, with family interests tied to the town’s trade and market life. In other words, the Emmets belonged to the working, improving fabric of Tipperary town, not some anonymous dot on a map.

Left: Dr. Robert Emmet. Right: Executed Rebel Robert Emmet. Note the striking resemblance (around the mouth) in all Emmet family featured portraits.

His rebel leader son today has three towns in Co. Tipperary with streets named after him :
In Thurles: Emmet Street (L-4021) connecting Barry’s Bridge and Thomond Road, is most often incorrectly spelt, by Tipperary Co. Council, as “Emmett Street”. His rebel son is also commemorated on the 1798 memorial, visible standing in Liberty Square today, and locally referred to as the “Stone Man”.
In Tipperary Town: Emmet Street is one of the main streets laid out connecting Dillon Street, and it’s still an everyday address in use today.
In Clonmel: Emmet Street is a more central street (for example, Tipperary County Council lists its Civic Offices there, and An Post lists Clonmel Post Office as being on Emmet Street).

“Where Tipperary leads Ireland follows”.
That line, by Thomas Davis, fits him surprisingly well, because the Emmet story becomes a pattern seen again and again in Irish life; provincial beginnings, serious education, success in a southern city, and finally the pull of Dublin’s institutions and power.

A doctor, made in Edinburgh and shaped by Europe.
To study medicine properly in the 18th century was to look outward, and Robert Emmet did just that. He graduated at the University of Edinburgh, one of the then great medical schools of that era. A letter he wrote to a Cork newspaper, in 1763, even suggests time spent studying in Paris, the kind of continental polish ambitious doctors prized.

Thomas Addis Emmet.

By the time he returned to Ireland, he was not simply a local practitioner, he was the sort of physician who could move between worlds, rural and urban, Irish and European, private practice and public appointment.

Cork years: Reputation, Marriage, and a growing household:
Emmet settled down to practise in Cork, and it was here that his name began to carry weight. The board of Cork’s Charitable Infirmary would later formally thank him for “the great care” he took of patients, the kind of public endorsement that tells you a doctor was not merely competent, but trusted.

In November 1760, he married Ms Elizabeth Mason, linking him to another established family network (the Masons of Munster). Some of their children can be identified clearly in sources, and they anchor the family’s Cork chapter.
Christopher Temple Emmet, born in Cork in 1761. He married Anne Western Temple, daughter of Robert and Harriett (Shirley) Temple.
Thomas Addis Emmet, born in Cork on April 24th 1764. He married Jane Patten (1771–1846), a daughter of John Patten and Jane (née Colville) Patten, in 1791.

Emmet was also a man of projects. The Munster account shows him involved in property and land, advertising holdings and opportunities in the countryside, a reminder that professional families often broadened their income in practical ways, through farms, leases, and investments.

The turning point – Dublin and the post of State Physician:
Then came the step that changed everything. In March 1770, Emmet took up office in Dublin as state physician, after purchasing the office from the widow of the former holder for £1,000; a role that required presence in the capital and placed him close to the heart of administration. The move was abrupt enough that he was winding down Cork affairs and property as he departed; the record even notes the precise start, March 6th 1770.

Dublin was not just a new address. It was a new scale of life, bigger circles, bigger expectations, and a household that would become famous for reasons he could not control.

The sources are blunt about the family’s size and its sorrow; their son Robert was the seventeenth child, but only the fourth to ever survive. That single line captures both prosperity and loss; the realities of family life even among the comfortable classes in the 1700s.

Mary Anne Holmes, (née Emmet) and husband Robert.

The four surviving children are identifiable:
Christopher Temple Emmet, born Cork, 1761, and a distinguished barrister and poet, who died aged 27 years, in 1788, followed some months later by his wife.
Thomas Addis Emmet, born Cork, April 24th, 1764 and a leader of the United Irishmen, before being forced into exile and later becoming a renowned lawyer in New York city.
Mary Anne Holmes, (née Emmet) writer and poet, wife of barrister Robert Homes, former born in Dublin, on October 10th, 1773.
Robert Emmet, (Executed Rebel in 1803), born March 4th, 1778 at 109/110, St Stephen’s Green, Dublin.
The family’s Dublin story is inseparable from that address: a prosperous, educated household in the capital, and the cradle, ultimately, of one of Ireland’s most remembered names.

Final years and death:
Dr. Emmet lived long enough to see his children grown and their talents emerging, and long enough, too, to sense that Irish politics were shifting underfoot. He died on December 9th 1802, and accounts of the period record his burial in the Churchyard of St Peter’s Church, Aungier Street Dublin.

He did not live to witness the family’s most dramatic and tragic chapter, that came less than a year later, when his youngest surviving son Robert junior, stepped into Irish history. It was on his death, that rebel Robert, using the £2,000 left to him by his father, laid preparations for a failed rising against what he described as “the cruel English government and their Irish ascendancy”, on July 23rd, 1803.
Chief Justice Lord Norbury sentenced the rebel Emmet to be hanged, drawn and quartered, as was customary for conviction of treason. On September 20th, 1803, Emmet was executed in Thomas Street in front of St. Catherine’s. He was hanged and then beheaded once dead. Today, his actual burial place is still unknown, thus inspiring the phrase, “Do not look for him. His grave is Ireland.”

Still, step back from the legend and the Emmet story comes into sharp focus; a birth in Tipperary, a medical education in Edinburgh, professional success in Cork, a state appointment in Dublin, and a family whose “only four surviving” children would go on to shape Irish public life, literature, law, and rebellion.

Death Of Marian Ryan-Martin, Formerly Of Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

It was with great sadness that we learned of the death, today Thursday February 12th 2026, of Mrs Marian Ryan-Martin (née Crowe), Glenough, Rossmore, Cashel, Co. Tipperary and formerly of Mitchel Street, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

Pre-deceased by her parents Jack and Lily, sister Noreen, brothers-in law John and Paul, sister-in-law Nora and her nephew and godson Nigel; Mrs Ryan-Martin passed away peacefully.

Her passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her sorrowing family; loving husband Jerome, daughters Mary (Ryan S), Catherine (Cryan) and Siobhan (Fogarty), son John, brother John, sisters Breda and Teresa, cousin John, sons-in-law Mike, Kevin and Mark, grandchildren Danielle, Shauna, Stephen, Dylan, Brody, Kasey, Abi, Seanie and Joey, sisters-in-law, brothers-in-law, nieces, nephews, extended relatives, neighbours and friends.

Requiescat in Pace.

Funeral Arrangements.

The earthly remains of Mrs Mrs Ryan-Martin will repose at Hayes’ Funeral Home, Clonoulty, Cashel, (Eircode E25 DX26), on Friday afternoon, February 3th from 5:00pm until 7:00pm.
Her remains will be received into the Church of Jesus Christ Our Saviour, Rossmore, on Saturday morning to further repose for Requiem Mass at 11:30am, followed by interment immediately afterwards, in the adjoining graveyard.

For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mrs Ryan-Martin, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.

The extended Ryan-Martin and Crowe families wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.

Food Allergen Alerts.

Undeclared hazelnuts in a batch of Homebake Cakes 6 Luxury Assorted Cupcakes.

Alert Summary dated Wednesday, February 11th 2026.

Allergy Alert Notification: 2026.A06.
Allergen: Nuts (hazelnuts).
Product Identification: Homebake Cakes 6 Luxury Assorted Cupcakes; pack size: 450g.
Batch Code: 6864; best before date: 20/03/2026
.

Message: The above batch of Homebake Cakes 6 Luxury Assorted Cupcakes contains nuts (hazelnuts) which is not declared in the list of ingredients. This may make the batch unsafe for consumers who are allergic to or intolerant of nuts (hazelnuts) and therefore, these consumers should not eat the implicated batch.

The affected batch is being recalled.

Thurles Planning Alert from Tipperary County Council.

Application Ref: 2660088.
Applicant: Orsted Onshore Ireland Midco Limited
.
Development Address: In The Townland Of Brittas , Near Thurles , Co. Tipperary.
Development Description: The further continued use of an existing temporary 80m high meteorological mast and associated instruments in the townland of Brittas, near Thurles Co. Tipperary. The mast was erected on site as exempted development pursuant to Class 20(A), Part 1, Schedule 2 of the Planning and Development Regulations 2001 (as amended) which was extended for two years under Planning Ref 2460421. Permission is sought to extend this permission for a further period of two years.
Status: N/A.
Application Received: 06/02/2026.
Decision Date: N/A.
Further Details: http://www.eplanning.ie/TipperaryCC/AppFileRefDetails/2660088/0.

Application Ref: 2660087.
Applicant: Thomas and Sean Moore
.
Development Address: Mitchel Street, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.
Development Description: The demolition of the existing light industrial buildings on the site, for the construction of 1 no. detached two storey dwelling, 1 no. detached bungalow and 6 no. semi-detached bungalows. Permission is also sought for new entrance, connection to services and all associated site works.
Status: N/A.
Application Received: 05/02/2026.
Decision Date: N/A.
Further Details: http://www.eplanning.ie/TipperaryCC/AppFileRefDetails/2660087/0.