Showing posts with label Vegan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vegan. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Vegan Thanksgiving Recipes (PDF) Available from Nava Atlas

SoulVeggie: Vegan Thanksgiving Recipes (PDF) Available from Nava AtlasSoulVeggieFocused on vegan and vegetarian related issues, thoughts, articles, information, facts, activities, humor, and satire.AboutMy PhotoNovember 2010SunMonTueWedThuFriSat 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930    Blogs of NoteBryanna's Vegan Feast BlogFatfree Vegan KitchenFun with Your FoodGood Girl Gone VeganJourney of a New VeganKai VeganLive it Up Vegan!New Heritage CookingPost Punk KitchenPrimary ConsumerRobin Robertson's "Vegan Planet"Speed VeganSpice Island VeganToday FoodVeg-DC Patriot ActsVegan Blogs TrackerVegan CyclistVegan LunchboxVegan LunchcastVegan ReviewsVegDCVeggie TalkViva Le VeganWHAT Do Vegans Eat?Yeah, that Vegan S&%tZenpawnVeg'n Lists/Groups/NewslettersDaily GristFat Free Vegan RecipesGo Dairy Free NewsletterIVU News GroupMad Cowboy e-NewsletterNotMilk Daily ColumnVeg'n RecipesAll CreaturesFat Free Veg'n RecipesFatfree Vegan RecipesOver 10,000 Veg'n RecipesThe Vegan ChefVegWeb Holiday RecipesVegWeb RecipesVeg'n CookbooksBryanna GroganJoanne StepaniakNava AtlasRobin RobertsonFavorite Links2005 VegNews Awards!Ecological InternetGo Dairy FreeMeatFreeZone: Vegetarian MythsNOTMILKOCAPCRMThe Mad CowboyVegan Food PyramidVegan Health Study - 2005 Clinical SummaryKeep SoulVeggie Blogging
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2010.11.15Vegan Thanksgiving Recipes (PDF) Available from Nava Atlas

These recipes are great (can be adjusted for low-fat vegans), and all proceeds are donated to good causes.  How admirable of Nava!

Vegan-tgiving-300x250

"Dear friends in the veg/vegan media,

Once again Thanksgiving is around the corner and I'm promoting my e-book, A Bountiful Vegan Thanksgiving, as a resource for an animal-free holiday and to raise money for some of my favorite organizations. This year I'm donating the profits to Women for Women, International Justice Mission, Farm Sanctuary, and Oxfam. This is the same publication as last years, with recipes by yours truly plus some of the leading veg authors and bloggers. If you wish, please share this link in your site, blog, or social media pages:

http://www.vegkitchen.com/navas-books/a-bountiful-vegan-thanksgiving/

It also gives you a peek at my newly redesigned site, which has gone from In a Vegetarian Kitchen to simply VegKitchen and is now completely vegan, with lots of new features and more to come (once we work out the inevitable glitches). Here is the e-book for you so you know what it is that you're promoting!

Thanks and enjoy your compassionate Thanksgiving!

Nava"

A great deal for a $9 download... Check it out.

2010.11.15 at 09:24 in Cooking, Food and Drink, Recipe(s), Veganism, Vegetarian | Permalink

Technorati Tags:nava atlas, recipes, thanksgiving, vegan thanksgiving recipes, veganism, vegetarian

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Working... Recent PostsNew Mad Cowboy Newsletter Out - Msg. from Howard, & Mr. CluckyXtreme Eating 2010 Awards: Cheezilla, Sneaky Pizza, Pestocide, +Vegan Thanksgiving Recipes (PDF) Available from Nava Atlas"Faith-based" Nutritional Advice or "WTF?"Iron Chef America or "Barbarians at the Plate"Merging Q's: On Fat Pride & Life Quantity vs. QualityOT: Good Causes, the Battle, & Loving the ImperfectReview/Recipe: "Vegan Unplugged: A Pantry Cuisine Cookbook and Survival Guide"Article/Research: "Food Addictions to Fat, Sugar, and Salt" VIDEO: "PCRM'S New Anti-McDonald's Commercial - "Consequences""Favorite Posts from Soulveggie"Healthy Vegan" By The Numbers15 Reasons to Avoid Vegetable Oils15 Reasons to Eat MeatDairy = Liquid MeatDiet of Fruit & Veggies May Prevent 20% of All CancersEat More RainbowsEven One Fatty Meal Affects ArteriesHoward & Mark PhotosIdentify this Vegetable and Win Something!!!Mad Cowboy: The Trailer!Making Vegan Pizza VideoMy Vegan Tipping PointSilly Vegan MythsSimpsons Excerpt: "Meat & You" DocumentarySojourn to Burger KingCategoriesActivismAgricultureAnimal IssuesArthritisBooksCancerCartooncholesterolConservationCookingCurrent AffairsDairydiabetesDietEnvironmentEssayFactory FarmingFilmFood and DrinkGamesGardeningGlobal Climate ChangeGovernmentHealthHeart DiseaseHumorMusicNewsletter/GroupNutritionobesityOrganicPoliticsRecipe(s)RecommendedReviewsSatireScienceSportsStatisticsSustainabilityTelevisionTravelVeg'nismVeg-DCVeganismVegetarianVideoWeblogsWhat's Going On??Archives NoteSelect a "category" above for posts with that key word, select "Archives" below for complete monthly archives list links.ArchivesNovember 2010October 2010September 2010August 2010July 2010June 2010May 2010April 2010March 2010February 2010 document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + (document.location.protocol == "https:" ? "https://sb" : "http://b") + ".scorecardresearch.com/beacon.js'%3E%3C/script%3E"));COMSCORE.beacon({ c1: 2, c2: "6035669", c3: "", c4: "http://soulveggie.blogs.com/my_weblog/2010/11/vegan-thanksgiving-recipes-pdf-available-from-nava-atlas.html", c5: "", c6: "", c15: ""});

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Vegan Cupcakes to Die From

SoulVeggie: Vegan Cupcakes to Die FromSoulVeggieFocused on vegan and vegetarian related issues, thoughts, articles, information, facts, activities, humor, and satire.AboutMy PhotoNovember 2010SunMonTueWedThuFriSat 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930    Blogs of NoteBryanna's Vegan Feast BlogFatfree Vegan KitchenFun with Your FoodGood Girl Gone VeganJourney of a New VeganKai VeganLive it Up Vegan!New Heritage CookingPost Punk KitchenPrimary ConsumerRobin Robertson's "Vegan Planet"Speed VeganSpice Island VeganToday FoodVeg-DC Patriot ActsVegan Blogs TrackerVegan CyclistVegan LunchboxVegan LunchcastVegan ReviewsVegDCVeggie TalkViva Le VeganWHAT Do Vegans Eat?Yeah, that Vegan S&%tZenpawnVeg'n Lists/Groups/NewslettersDaily GristFat Free Vegan RecipesGo Dairy Free NewsletterIVU News GroupMad Cowboy e-NewsletterNotMilk Daily ColumnVeg'n RecipesAll CreaturesFat Free Veg'n RecipesFatfree Vegan RecipesOver 10,000 Veg'n RecipesThe Vegan ChefVegWeb Holiday RecipesVegWeb RecipesVeg'n CookbooksBryanna GroganJoanne StepaniakNava AtlasRobin RobertsonFavorite Links2005 VegNews Awards!Ecological InternetGo Dairy FreeMeatFreeZone: Vegetarian MythsNOTMILKOCAPCRMThe Mad CowboyVegan Food PyramidVegan Health Study - 2005 Clinical SummaryKeep SoulVeggie Blogging
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2010.09.25Vegan Cupcakes to Die From

"Meatless Mondays" is a great concept, but it's really disappointing to see a recipe promoted for this event that is just plain awful, and the young female chef is promoted as having done something really good (e.g., mainstream recognition).  But, I did the math.  It ain't pretty.  Here's the link to the recipe:

http://meatoutmondays.org/emails/10-09-27.htm

Okay, 5 cups of sugar is 3870 calories and around 1000 grams of sugar.  1 cup of coconut is 552 calories and 57 gms of fat.  1/2 cup of vegetable oil is 900 claories and 100 grams of PURE fat.  1/2 cup of coconut oil is 900 calories, 100 grams of fat, 94% of that SATURATED fat.

Strawberries, refined flour, chocolote, and immense amount of sugar and pure fat.  What does that work out per serving?

FAT:  over 20 grams  (Esselstyn/Ornish daily recommendation, 14 to 24, Feds, 30 grams)

SUGAR:  over 80 grams per serving.  (American Heart Association recommendation for adult woman PER DAY, is around 24 grams of sugar)

CALORIES:  around 500.  A third to a fourth of what most people need PER DAY.

Is this recipe really worth promoting as vegan?  It has an entire day's worth of fat per serving, a ton of saturated fat, and over three times the recommended sugar per day for a woman, somewhere around twice for a full grown adult man.  PER SERVING.  By conservative American Heart Association recommendations, it's bad for your heart on TWO counts:  sugar and fat.  By those who've reversed heart disease through diet, it's even worse.

IMHO, FARM should be embarassed to promote this recipe at all.  Just because it's vegan, doesn't mean it's healthy.  This is the kind of fat and sugar-ladden quasi-food products that are killing people on a massive scale in this country.  Doesn't matter that it's vegan.  It's toxic. Nutritionally a waste of time and it caters to fat/sugar taste addictions.

Furthermore, it's a travesty to the tasty, antioxident rich strawberries.  Do they really need to wrapped in fat, flour, and sugar to be savored?

Chef Chloe, just like "fat is flavor Chef Tal" deserves no praise for creating and promoting such intrinsically unhealthy food mixtures under the "but it's vegan" conceptual umbrella.  This is, well, crap.  You may save an animal, but you will certainly contribute to the higher probability of killing a human prematurely from any number of chronic disorders.

Apparently, FARM doesn't care.  In their zeal to protect the animals, they seem to have forgotten that, SURPRISE! humans are animal, too.  And recipes like those of Chloe and Tal are deadly... to human animals.  These Chefs should be admonished for promoting such unhealthy food mixtures instead of using their celebrity status to spread the word about truly health low-fat vegan meals.

We're sometimes like people who've just had a breakup and are so excited that anyone would be interested in us that we lower our standards and will go out with anyone who is even close to the former.  We get so excited that "a young pretty vegan chef is getting recognized on cable" that we forget, it's not just "vegan."  It's what's healthy vegan that matters.  We don't need to be that desperate.  Over 500,000 people die from heart disease each year in this country, and the research of Esselstyn and Ornish clearly shows it's the added fat that is a primary cause.

Sugar, non-food fat, flour, and a handful of strawberries, just isn't all that impressive as a recipe. I admire FARM's goals to promote vegan food, but let's get real and promote healthy vegan food.  It's not the 60s.  We know how to reverse Type II diabetes and heart disease:  no-added fat vegan food.  Promoting anything else in the vegan realm is hypocrisy... or ignorance.

2010.09.25 at 05:39 in Activism, Food and Drink, Heart Disease, Nutrition, Recipe(s), Statistics, Veganism | Permalink

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Comments Christianna Pierce

Mark, I found myself nodding in agreement at your sentence,"We're sometimes like people who've just had a breakup and are so excited that anyone would be interested in us that we lower our standards and will go out with anyone who is even close to the former." So true!

When I am counseling new vegans or people in transition, I sometimes find myself so eager to encourage them in baby-steps, no matter how small, that I sometimes lose track of the big picture. And that is a ultimately doing them a disservice.

Thanks for the excellent reality check.

[And thanks for your feedback and, well, encouragement. It's a tough issue to advocate: many vegans tell me "it's okay if they do the fatty faux cheese," etc., as they are transitioning.

But the more important problems, the taste addiction to fat, salt, and or sugar, aren't being addressed. As I've been blunt about, we may, in theory, save more animals, but we're still going to see humans dropping in what are literally epidemic numbers (and at what an emotional/financial cost) whether they are vegan or not, if they continue to consume so much unnecessary fat, oil, salt, and sugar.

I'm lucky in that I believe firmly in the research of Ornish, Esselstyn, and Barnard, let alone, that the concept of oil NOT being real food makes a helluva lot of sense to me. After over 3 and a half years, I love not being addicted to the taste of the aforementioned unholy trio.

I've no problem with the first transition, say, to vegan (with, say, fatty Daiya cheese), but there's need to be a second. Why waste the time and potential deterioration of one's cardiovascular system?

I'd rather take the, ahem, bull by the horns: rid myself of the taste addictions for fat, sugar, and salt.

It's going to be a tough and protracted battle, but those of us who can demonstrate, through our own health and persistence of the facts, that a no-added fat vegan diet is the best for our longevity will eventually be proven right.

I admire the raw vegan foodists, only must note that so many of their recipes have SO much fat in them. But that's another matter.

Again, thanks for your feedback and you've a nice website!

Best regards, Mark

Posted by:Christianna Pierce |2010.09.29 at 19:18

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Working... Recent PostsNew Mad Cowboy Newsletter Out - Msg. from Howard, & Mr. CluckyXtreme Eating 2010 Awards: Cheezilla, Sneaky Pizza, Pestocide, +Vegan Thanksgiving Recipes (PDF) Available from Nava Atlas"Faith-based" Nutritional Advice or "WTF?"Iron Chef America or "Barbarians at the Plate"Merging Q's: On Fat Pride & Life Quantity vs. QualityOT: Good Causes, the Battle, & Loving the ImperfectReview/Recipe: "Vegan Unplugged: A Pantry Cuisine Cookbook and Survival Guide"Article/Research: "Food Addictions to Fat, Sugar, and Salt" VIDEO: "PCRM'S New Anti-McDonald's Commercial - "Consequences""Favorite Posts from Soulveggie"Healthy Vegan" By The Numbers15 Reasons to Avoid Vegetable Oils15 Reasons to Eat MeatDairy = Liquid MeatDiet of Fruit & Veggies May Prevent 20% of All CancersEat More RainbowsEven One Fatty Meal Affects ArteriesHoward & Mark PhotosIdentify this Vegetable and Win Something!!!Mad Cowboy: The Trailer!Making Vegan Pizza VideoMy Vegan Tipping PointSilly Vegan MythsSimpsons Excerpt: "Meat & You" DocumentarySojourn to Burger KingCategoriesActivismAgricultureAnimal IssuesArthritisBooksCancerCartooncholesterolConservationCookingCurrent AffairsDairydiabetesDietEnvironmentEssayFactory FarmingFilmFood and DrinkGamesGardeningGlobal Climate ChangeGovernmentHealthHeart DiseaseHumorMusicNewsletter/GroupNutritionobesityOrganicPoliticsRecipe(s)RecommendedReviewsSatireScienceSportsStatisticsSustainabilityTelevisionTravelVeg'nismVeg-DCVeganismVegetarianVideoWeblogsWhat's Going On??Archives NoteSelect a "category" above for posts with that key word, select "Archives" below for complete monthly archives list links.ArchivesNovember 2010October 2010September 2010August 2010July 2010June 2010May 2010April 2010March 2010February 2010 document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + (document.location.protocol == "https:" ? "https://sb" : "http://b") + ".scorecardresearch.com/beacon.js'%3E%3C/script%3E"));COMSCORE.beacon({ c1: 2, c2: "6035669", c3: "", c4: "http://soulveggie.blogs.com/my_weblog/2010/09/vegan-cupcakes-to-die-from.html", c5: "", c6: "", c15: ""});

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Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Review/Recipe: "Vegan Unplugged: A Pantry Cuisine Cookbook and Survival Guide"

SoulVeggie: Review/Recipe: "Vegan Unplugged: A Pantry Cuisine Cookbook and Survival Guide"SoulVeggieFocused on vegan and vegetarian related issues, thoughts, articles, information, facts, activities, humor, and satire.AboutMy PhotoNovember 2010SunMonTueWedThuFriSat 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930    Blogs of NoteBryanna's Vegan Feast BlogFatfree Vegan KitchenFun with Your FoodGood Girl Gone VeganJourney of a New VeganKai VeganLive it Up Vegan!New Heritage CookingPost Punk KitchenPrimary ConsumerRobin Robertson's "Vegan Planet"Speed VeganSpice Island VeganToday FoodVeg-DC Patriot ActsVegan Blogs TrackerVegan CyclistVegan LunchboxVegan LunchcastVegan ReviewsVegDCVeggie TalkViva Le VeganWHAT Do Vegans Eat?Yeah, that Vegan S&%tZenpawnVeg'n Lists/Groups/NewslettersDaily GristFat Free Vegan RecipesGo Dairy Free NewsletterIVU News GroupMad Cowboy e-NewsletterNotMilk Daily ColumnVeg'n RecipesAll CreaturesFat Free Veg'n RecipesFatfree Vegan RecipesOver 10,000 Veg'n RecipesThe Vegan ChefVegWeb Holiday RecipesVegWeb RecipesVeg'n CookbooksBryanna GroganJoanne StepaniakNava AtlasRobin RobertsonFavorite Links2005 VegNews Awards!Ecological InternetGo Dairy FreeMeatFreeZone: Vegetarian MythsNOTMILKOCAPCRMThe Mad CowboyVegan Food PyramidVegan Health Study - 2005 Clinical SummaryKeep SoulVeggie Blogging
Subscribe to this blog's feed« Article/Research: "Food Addictions to Fat, Sugar, and Salt" |Main| OT: Good Causes, the Battle, & Loving the Imperfect »

2010.10.17Review/Recipe: "Vegan Unplugged: A Pantry Cuisine Cookbook and Survival Guide"" Vu_cover_7-7-10 What?? You're not worried about food spoiling in your refrigerator?"  I can still see and hear the surprise in my former neighbor's voice when, after three days of no power from a ice storm-induced blackout, she'd come over to chat and was quite shocked that for me it was no big thing.  "I'm vegan," I told her.  Since there was no dairy, eggs, or meat in my refrigerator, worse-case scenario, I might have some vegetables or fruit going bad, certainly not enough to cause me any illness, though.  I don't have to treat my kitchen like a biological warfare laboratory.

I smiled when recalling this after reading through the latest book from Jon and Robin Robertson, "Vegan Unplugged:  A Pantry Cuisine Cookbook and Survival Guide."  Even more ironic was receiving the book for review just before Hurricane Earl was preparing to take a sideswipe at the Outer Banks and Virginia Beach, which was the same kind of event that prompted the Robertsons to not only eventually re-locate from that area, but write a book about what they learned from the experience. 

This is NOT just a cookbook.  It is a comprehensive, well-documented and researched survival guide on what to do in the even of a disaster that forces you to "Shelter-in-Place" (SIP) as the government puts it.  You must live off your larder and may not have any electricity and/or running water.  If you haven't stocked up or planned for such an event, it won't be easy.  To help you plan in advance, Jon has put together, in one book, quite the array of advice and resources.  From a "Five Day Menu Box" that costs around $70 to assemble and would feed four people for 5 days without electricity. to a detailed pantry list, how to handle water issues, ideas for cooking food without electricity, an Emergency Preparedness Guide, Animal Survival Planning, and even a full section on "How to Handle the Stress"  this book is more than just clever and useful vegan recipes.  It's a tremendous centralized source of how to prepare for and manage most emergency situations.

Not to ignore the recipes though... as usual, Robin's creativity (and wit) shines throughout this array of tasty "Pantry Cuisine" concepts.  Laugh at adversity with "Shiitake Happens Mushroom Soup," give a finger to a Hurricane with "Last Resort Lasagna," challenge a power outage with "Texas Twister Caviar," thumb your nose at a snowstorm with "Ginger-Walnut Rum Balls," spin a little "Thaiphoon Tofu Stir-Fry" and take control with bowl of "Emergency Gazpacho."  Recipes not needing heat are also listed separately, and again, there's much advice on tools for heating food without electricity.

"Vegan Unplugged" is an outstanding contribution not only to the vegan community, but to people of any dietary preference as a methodical and meticulous guide to survival.  This unique book from "Vegan Heritage Press" raises the bar, not only in terms of the practical recipes, but also in the comprehensiveness of the survival advice.  Way to go, Jon (and Robin).  I was touched, too, by the last two sentences of the book, which I've excerpted below.  It's this kind of desire to serve and help others that is pervasive in all the Robertson's works.  Quite inspiring...


"Hurricane Isabel had given us another benefit, because it led to this book --- a humble volume writte by people who figured out a way to maximize comfort and eat impossibly good vegan meals after circumstances had rendered us powerless.  We herewith pass this wisdom on to you."


Here's a link to Jon's "Vegan Unplugged" Blog (with recipes and preparedness tips), and to Vegan Heritage Press.


"Pasta with Creamy Pumpkin Sauce and Walnuts"


"Pasta tossed with creamy sage-infused sauce sprinkled with walnuts is good enough to make you forget this is Pantry Cuisine.  If water is at a premium, scratch the angel hair past in favor of pouring a small amount of boiling water over a few ramen noodle bricks (drain and proceed with recipe)."

Ingredients:

1 (15-ounce) can solid-pack pumpkin

1 cup water

1 teaspoon vegetable broth base

1 teaspoon ground sage

1 teaspoon garlic powder

1/2 teaspoon onion powder

12 ounces angel hair pasta or cappelini

1/2 cup chopped toasted walnuts

Method:

1. In a sacepan, combine the pumpkin, water, broth base, sage, garlic powder, and onion powder.  Cook over medium heat until smooth and hot.  Season with salt and pepper to taste.  If the sauce is too thick, add a little water.  Set aside.

2.  Cool, the pasta in a pot of boiling salted water until tender, 3 to 4 minutes.  Drain and return to the pot.  Add the reserved sauce and toss to combine.  Serve sprinkled with the walnuts.

Makes 4 servings.

(The above recipe ©2010 by Jon Robertson)

2010.10.17 at 17:50 in Books, Cooking, Food and Drink, Global Climate Change, Recipe(s), Reviews, Veganism | Permalink

Technorati Tags:emergencies, FEMA, hurricanes, pantry cuisine, power outtages, preparedness, recipes, shelter-in-place, SIP, survival, Vegan, Vegan Heritage Press

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Working... Recent PostsNew Mad Cowboy Newsletter Out - Msg. from Howard, & Mr. CluckyXtreme Eating 2010 Awards: Cheezilla, Sneaky Pizza, Pestocide, +Vegan Thanksgiving Recipes (PDF) Available from Nava Atlas"Faith-based" Nutritional Advice or "WTF?"Iron Chef America or "Barbarians at the Plate"Merging Q's: On Fat Pride & Life Quantity vs. QualityOT: Good Causes, the Battle, & Loving the ImperfectReview/Recipe: "Vegan Unplugged: A Pantry Cuisine Cookbook and Survival Guide"Article/Research: "Food Addictions to Fat, Sugar, and Salt" VIDEO: "PCRM'S New Anti-McDonald's Commercial - "Consequences""Favorite Posts from Soulveggie"Healthy Vegan" By The Numbers15 Reasons to Avoid Vegetable Oils15 Reasons to Eat MeatDairy = Liquid MeatDiet of Fruit & Veggies May Prevent 20% of All CancersEat More RainbowsEven One Fatty Meal Affects ArteriesHoward & Mark PhotosIdentify this Vegetable and Win Something!!!Mad Cowboy: The Trailer!Making Vegan Pizza VideoMy Vegan Tipping PointSilly Vegan MythsSimpsons Excerpt: "Meat & You" DocumentarySojourn to Burger KingCategoriesActivismAgricultureAnimal IssuesArthritisBooksCancerCartooncholesterolConservationCookingCurrent AffairsDairydiabetesDietEnvironmentEssayFactory FarmingFilmFood and DrinkGamesGardeningGlobal Climate ChangeGovernmentHealthHeart DiseaseHumorMusicNewsletter/GroupNutritionobesityOrganicPoliticsRecipe(s)RecommendedReviewsSatireScienceSportsStatisticsSustainabilityTelevisionTravelVeg'nismVeg-DCVeganismVegetarianVideoWeblogsWhat's Going On??Archives NoteSelect a "category" above for posts with that key word, select "Archives" below for complete monthly archives list links.ArchivesNovember 2010October 2010September 2010August 2010July 2010June 2010May 2010April 2010March 2010February 2010 document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + (document.location.protocol == "https:" ? "https://sb" : "http://b") + ".scorecardresearch.com/beacon.js'%3E%3C/script%3E"));COMSCORE.beacon({ c1: 2, c2: "6035669", c3: "", c4: "http://soulveggie.blogs.com/my_weblog/2010/10/reviewrecipe-vegan-unplugged-a-pantry-cuisine-cookbook-and-survival-guide.html", c5: "", c6: "", c15: ""});

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Sunday, November 28, 2010

Review/Recipe: "American Vegan Kitchen"

SoulVeggie: Review/Recipe: "American Vegan Kitchen"SoulVeggieFocused on vegan and vegetarian related issues, thoughts, articles, information, facts, activities, humor, and satire.AboutMy PhotoNovember 2010SunMonTueWedThuFriSat 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930    Blogs of NoteBryanna's Vegan Feast BlogFatfree Vegan KitchenFun with Your FoodGood Girl Gone VeganJourney of a New VeganKai VeganLive it Up Vegan!New Heritage CookingPost Punk KitchenPrimary ConsumerRobin Robertson's "Vegan Planet"Speed VeganSpice Island VeganToday FoodVeg-DC Patriot ActsVegan Blogs TrackerVegan CyclistVegan LunchboxVegan LunchcastVegan ReviewsVegDCVeggie TalkViva Le VeganWHAT Do Vegans Eat?Yeah, that Vegan S&%tZenpawnVeg'n Lists/Groups/NewslettersDaily GristFat Free Vegan RecipesGo Dairy Free NewsletterIVU News GroupMad Cowboy e-NewsletterNotMilk Daily ColumnVeg'n RecipesAll CreaturesFat Free Veg'n RecipesFatfree Vegan RecipesOver 10,000 Veg'n RecipesThe Vegan ChefVegWeb Holiday RecipesVegWeb RecipesVeg'n CookbooksBryanna GroganJoanne StepaniakNava AtlasRobin RobertsonFavorite Links2005 VegNews Awards!Ecological InternetGo Dairy FreeMeatFreeZone: Vegetarian MythsNOTMILKOCAPCRMThe Mad CowboyVegan Food PyramidVegan Health Study - 2005 Clinical SummaryKeep SoulVeggie Blogging
Subscribe to this blog's feed« "Follow Your Heart" Products & Corporate Spin |Main| Article: "The [Sleazy] Hard Sell on Salt" »

2010.05.24Review/Recipe: "American Vegan Kitchen"

NewAVKforTamsBlog In my early years as a vegetarian, times when tofu was only obtainable at some seedy "Import Store" I would have died and thought I'd gone to heaven purchasing a copy of Tamasin Noyes' "American Vegan Kitchen."  When the publisher, Jon Robertson of "Vegan Heritage Press" sent me the book, I have to admit, skimming through the many comfort food recipes had me salivating with memories of what it was like to drive long distance across the United States many years ago and experience so many "highway counters" and so many interesting (but always really tasty) "homespun" meals.  This was well before the rise of "fast food restaurant" standardization that directly caused the demise of many "Mom'n'Pop" local cafes, "Blue Plate Special" truck stops, and the unfortunate loss of a lot of dynamic regional diversity in the art of cooking.

Tamasin has done a wonderful job of not only recreating much of the unique cultural aspects of many of the local cuisines and dishes from our childhoods (and indeed, American history), she's managed to do it with considerable creativity and fun.  Such recipes as "Sweet and Crunchy French Toast, "Three-Chile Hummus," "Seitan on a Shingle" (ask your grandfather!), "Cajun Pot Pie," and "Lime-Avocado Cream in Puff Pasty," demonstrate an impressive spectrum of ability and recipes, let alone, one that's vegan.  Providing plenty of helpful tips such as basic recipes on making seitan, spice blends, a page of cooking resources, she even identifies which vegan beers are appropriate IN some of her recipes!

Written with a fun style, it's clear that Tamasin loves what she's doing and the enthusiasm is infectious.  There's even a two page list of unusual holidays (like, "National Oatmeal Day") where she playfully suggests one of her recipes for each to help in the celebration.

I don't want readers to think that all the recipes (and there are over 200) are exotic.  Ms. Noyes also covers many of the basic comfort foods like hamburgers, pot pies, fruit cobblers/pies, creamed corn, tuna casseroles, slaws, and even gyros.  Heck, if you chose to cook a meal for friends using some of her recipes, they may imagine that they are in a Daily Diner and ask you for the check...

Those interested in more of Tamasin's work should definitely check out her blog (here).  Even though I'm not as much into comfort food as I once was, I still find her recipes most interesting and worth exploring.  People with special dietary preferences, say, low fat, will have to adjust some recipes or use baking instead of frying, but I wouldn't for a minute suggest that such should keep you from checking out a fine addition to the vegan cookbook universe.  Another star has shown up.

Here's a recipe that reminds me of the periodic meatloaf my mother or grandmother would make for me, only Tamasin gives it a Southwestern sensibility.  Just reading it was enough to bring smile to my face, and that's always welcome.  Thank you, Ms. Noyes!

"SOUTHWESTERN WHEAT-MEAT LOAF"
(serves 4)

1/2 cup texturized vegetable protein granules
1/2 cup hot water
8 ounces Savory Seitan
1 chipotle chile in adobo
1 tablespoon olive oil
3/4 cup minced onion
1/2 cup minced green bell pepper
1 tablespoon minced jalapeno
2 close garlic, minced
2 teaspoons dried oregano
2 teaspoons ground cumin
1 teaspoon chili powder
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon smoked paprika
1 teaspoon browning sauce, optional
2 teaspoons soy sauce
1/2 cup corn kernels, fresh or frozen, thawed if frozen
1/2 cup vital wheat gluten
1/3 cup ketchup

1.  Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.  Lightly oil a baking sheet.  Combine the hot water with the texturized vegetable protein to rehydrate.  Set aside for 10 minutes.

2.  Combine the seitan and chipotle in a food processor.  Process until ground.  Transfer to a large mixing bowl.

3.  Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium heat.  Add the onion.  Cook 3 to 4 minutes.  Add the bell pepper, jalapeno, garlic, oregano, cumin, chili powder, coriander, and smoked paprika.

4.  Cook about 5 minutes, or until the vegetables are soft.  Transfer to the seitan bowl.  Add the remaining ingredients, and the reserved rehydrated texturized vegetable protein.  Knead the ingredients together well, squeezing and kneading, for about 5 minutes.

5.  Transfer to a baking sheet and shape into a 4x8 inch oval loaf.  Bake for 1 hour.  After 30 minutes, check to see if it is browning too much.  If so, cover with foil for the remaining baking time.  Let sit 5 minutes before serving.

Note:  this recipe is ©2010 by Tamasin Noyes.
2010.05.24 at 17:00 in Books, Recipe(s), Veganism | Permalink

Technorati Tags:amercian vegan kitchen, comfort food, cookbook, recipes, Tamasin Noyes

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Friday, November 26, 2010

Book Review & Recipe: "Vegan on the Cheap"

SoulVeggie: Book Review & Recipe: "Vegan on the Cheap"SoulVeggieFocused on vegan and vegetarian related issues, thoughts, articles, information, facts, activities, humor, and satire.AboutMy PhotoNovember 2010SunMonTueWedThuFriSat 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930    Blogs of NoteBryanna's Vegan Feast BlogFatfree Vegan KitchenFun with Your FoodGood Girl Gone VeganJourney of a New VeganKai VeganLive it Up Vegan!New Heritage CookingPost Punk KitchenPrimary ConsumerRobin Robertson's "Vegan Planet"Speed VeganSpice Island VeganToday FoodVeg-DC Patriot ActsVegan Blogs TrackerVegan CyclistVegan LunchboxVegan LunchcastVegan ReviewsVegDCVeggie TalkViva Le VeganWHAT Do Vegans Eat?Yeah, that Vegan S&%tZenpawnVeg'n Lists/Groups/NewslettersDaily GristFat Free Vegan RecipesGo Dairy Free NewsletterIVU News GroupMad Cowboy e-NewsletterNotMilk Daily ColumnVeg'n RecipesAll CreaturesFat Free Veg'n RecipesFatfree Vegan RecipesOver 10,000 Veg'n RecipesThe Vegan ChefVegWeb Holiday RecipesVegWeb RecipesVeg'n CookbooksBryanna GroganJoanne StepaniakNava AtlasRobin RobertsonFavorite Links2005 VegNews Awards!Ecological InternetGo Dairy FreeMeatFreeZone: Vegetarian MythsNOTMILKOCAPCRMThe Mad CowboyVegan Food PyramidVegan Health Study - 2005 Clinical SummaryKeep SoulVeggie Blogging
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2010.09.07Book Review & Recipe: "Vegan on the Cheap"The "octomom" of vegan cookbook writing has totally demolished the myth of vegan food being more expensive than conventional alternatives with an amazing new cookbook, "Vegan on the Cheap," that really is, as claimed on the back cover, "The ultimate vegan budget cookbook --- easy recipes for delicious food that costs no more than $2 per serving [note a considerable number of them are are around 50 cents per serving]!"  150 recipes...wow.  Take that morning news and cable cooking shows, who beam with pride of four servings of really lousy food for a total of $10 to $30.

In this latest masterpiece of creativity (she just keeps getting better and better), Robin Robertson isn't resting on her laurels just putting out recipes.  Nope, she provides a wealth of ideas and suggestions, on everything from saving money and time, stocking your kitchen, shopping and preparation tips, making your own convenience foods (plus meat analogs), and even breaks down many store-bought products in a cost comparison chart. 

This isn't to minimize the high value of her recipes.  Even the seasoned vegan cook will learn some new strategies from this book.  Envision a rich "Great Northern Apple Cake" using Northern Beans (< $.50 per serving), put your money down on a "Pepperoni-Mushroom Pizza" (< $1.00 per serving, AND with a "Great Stick Pepperoni" recipe), then invest in the "Tropic of Tempeh" (< $2.00 per serving), and finally, check out the CASHew flow of "Blushing Alfredo Fettuccine" (<$1.50 per serving).

One can't add it up any other way, and there's no accounting for missing this great addition to vegan cuisine.  With "Vegan on the Cheap," Robin has provided a one-stop shopping experience of resources (offline and online), methods, basics, the stats, and the recipes for anyone wishing to maximize the use of their time and money.  However, she isn't a miser (!) and occasionally offers ideas for "splurging" once in awhile, eating at restaurants, and comprehensively noting what you shouldn't "skimp on."

Too often the phrase "on the cheap" is misinterpreted with negative connotations, when in fact, the actual definition is "at minimum expense."  Given the current state of our economy, this book's solid approach to inexpensive vegan food is not only a blessing to those who are on hard times, but also for the animals, your health, and our environment.  A truly innovative guide that desires a place in your cookbook portfolio.

CHEAPAMOLE
(makes about 3 cups, < 50 cents per serving)

"...As a bonus to being cheaper than regular guacamole, this version also contains less fat and more protein. ."

2 garlic cloves, minced
1 1/2 cups frozen peas, thawed
1 cup cooked or canned white beans, drained and rinsed
1 (4-ounce) can diced green chiles, drained
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 teaspoon ground cumin
2 tablespoons minced red onion
2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro
Salt and black pepper

1. In a food processor or blender, combine the garlic, peas, beans, and chilesand blend until smooth.

2. Add the lime juice, oil, and cumin and blend until well combined. Use a rubber spatula to scrape the mixture into a medium bowl. Stir in the onion and cilantro. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

3. Cover and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes to allow flavors to blend.


This tastes best if used on the same day that it is made. Use it as a dip for chips or cut vegetables or any way you would use regular guacamole.


[Note: this recipe is © 2010, by Robin Robertson.

[Visit Robin's blog & website for more recipes, info, and purchasing her books (disclaimer: I designed Robin's global vegan kitchen website):
http://veganplanet.blogspot.com/
http://www.globalvegankitchen.com/

2010.09.07 at 17:11 in Books, Cooking, Food and Drink, Recipe(s), Reviews, Veganism | Permalink

Technorati Tags:book review, cheap, cookbook, inexpensive, recipes, resource, robin robertson, Vegan, veganism

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