Chef

A screenshot of Celebrity chef Antony Worrall Thompson's website. (www.awtonline.co.uk)

  • Also
  • Statement of apology Photo: Statement of apology
  • More odd news headlines >>
  • Odd in photos Photos: Odd in photos
  •  

    • 1. Minor leaguer traded for 10 baseball bats

      • A. True

      • B. False

    • 2. Texas teens tell police they converted skull into bong

      • A. True

      • B. False

    • 3. Lost parrot hitchhikes home

      • A. True

      • B. False

    • 4. Man orders father murdered to get his job

      • A. True

      • B. False

    • 5. Unicorn found in Italian nature preserve

      • A. True

      • B. False

    • 6. Wis. woman accused of placing dead spider in restaurant food, demanding $500,000 in hush money

      • A. True

      • B. False

    • 7. Golden retriever adopts tiger cubs at Kansas zoo

      • A. True

      • B. False

    • 8. 26 football players rescued from crammed elevator

      • A. True

      • B. False

    • 9. Eagle captures, eats baby whale

      • A. True

      • B. False

    • 10. Cat survives being walled in under bath for 7 weeks

      • A. True

      • B. False

A British celebrity chef says he's sorry for mistakenly recommending a deadly plant as a tasty salad ingredient.

Anthony Worrall Thompson says he meant to suggest using the weed fat hen, a member of the spinach family whose leaves are edible. He instead told Healthy and Organic Living magazine for its July edition that henbane could be used in salads.

Henbane, whose name means "killer of hens," is a toxic plant that can cause hallucinations, drowsiness and disorientation if ingested. Large doses can kill.

The magazine issued a correction Monday on its Web site. Worrall Thompson told reporters he's sorry for the mix-up, which he called "a bit embarrassing."