Showing posts with label veganomicon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label veganomicon. Show all posts

Friday, November 26, 2010

Thanksgiving 2010

Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday.  I love planning the dishes, I love cooking and chopping and measuring and peeling and stirring all day with friends or family, and I love sitting down to a spectacular meal and being thankful for such a blessed life.  I do not love the clean up, but I am not above ignoring the mess until someone else takes care of it...

This year was my first vegan Thanksgiving.  I bought a Field Roast Hazelnut and Cranberry Stuffed Roast, and made mashed potatoes with Tofutti Better Than Cream Cheese and soy milk, green beans with mustard sauce, the Mushroom Gravy from Veganomicon, and this chestnut soup from C'est la Vegan--we roasted the chestnuts in the oven and spent about half an hour peeling them...!  Mom made Cranberry Sauce Made Easy and Sweet Potatoes with Apples and Walnuts from vegweb.com and some sweet corn.  Mom of course made pies--a vegan pumpkin pie (it didn't make it into the pic above!) and a not vegan apple pie.  They were delicious, as usual, though I think the best vegan pumpkin pie recipe is still waiting to be discovered.

Mom, the pie expert:



Stand outs were the chestnut soup and the sweet potato bake.  The chestnut soup (I used a couple tablespoons of Earth Balance instead of the soy cream) was silky and rich and the sweet potatoes had a crunchy, sticky coating that was delicious.  All three of us loved both these dishes.  I also loved the Field Roast, though I want to make one myself next year.



(There's the pumpkin pie!)

It's been quite a while since I've had Thanksgiving with my parents, and we had a great time and a great meal.  It was really sweet of them to do a vegan meal with me, though they were a little disappointed, mostly, I think, because a couple of the dishes were too strongly flavored for them.  For instance, they liked the seitan part of the Field Roast, but not the stuffing in the middle. Though none of us were crazy about the Mushroom Gravy, which I felt was too bland.

Here's Dad, looking a little sad...I hadn't noticed he wore a Thanksgiving Day running t-shirt for the occasion...

The dogs were busy playing around most of the day, but begging at the table was a highlight...




I hope your Thanksgiving was lovely and you have a restful, long weekend!

Friday, April 9, 2010

Veganomicon mistakes

I had a less-than-stellar couple weeks in my Veganomicon cook-through, though that streak is broken with the Butternut Squash Rice Paper Rolls I will blog about shortly.  Here are some notes about Double Pea Soup, Chickpea Cutlets, and the Grilled Yuca Tortillas.

I'm not sure why I try to make split pea soup as often as I do.  I don't really like it.  But I guess I have a feeling that there is a way to cook anything to make it taste good, so I just keep trying!  So the odds were against Double Pea Soup with Roasted Red Peppers from the beginning.  To be fair, it is the best split pea soup I've ever eaten...the tarragon, sweet peas and red peppers lent it a freshness it doesn't usually have.


On the other hand, the wheatberry dish I had on the side was awesome.  I don't remember what I did exactly, but I had cooked wheatberries in the freezer and I heated those and added them to lots of sauteed mushrooms.  It was flavored with red miso paste stirred into some hot veggie broth and probably a little fire oil.

Chickpea Cutlets are one of the signature recipes in Veganomicon, which is why I wanted to make them right away!   There are many reasons I should have loved them...



...but I did not.  It's possible I had the heat on too high while pan-frying them, because I didn't leave them on as long as the recipe recommended--they were getting too dark.  But the texture in the middle was unpleasant to me--sort of gooey and stringy.  I have used vital wheat gluten before to much better success (Vegan Dad's excellent Tempeh Burgers), though, and I think I will give this recipe another chance.  I also made the Mustard Sauce from Veganomicon (I would thin it out more next time), and served it with green beans from the freezer.


I was also a little disappointed in the Grilled Yuca Tortillas, cheese-less quesadillas with root vegetable and garlic filling.  I'm glad to know of a new-to-me vegetable, though--the yuca--but next time will take very seriously the warning to remove the fibrous core.  My yuca was very thin, and I couldn't see it (I'm guessing it's more obvious in the thicker, older yuca), so I didn't worry about it, but I had to remove a piece from almost every bite...blech.  That was my fault.  But I also found them a little bland and dry, especially as leftovers, though they were pretty satisfying the first day.

On day 3 of the leftovers, I gave up on the yuca-dillas and made soup from the yuca mixture and salsa, and it was wonderful (though I was still removing those inedible fibers...).  I had it for three more days!

Friday, March 5, 2010

Spicy Peanut and Eggplant Soup

Here's my second recipe from Veganomicon.  I picked it because the only ingredients I had to buy specially for it were the fresh veggies.



It was another unmitigated success.  Creamy and spicy and satisfying, with smoky, chewy chunks of eggplant and sweet carmelized shallots.  I don't know if it was the salting before cooking that they recommend or the long saute, but the eggplant had a particularly nice, rich flavor.  And I love eggplant, anyway.


Spicy Tempeh Nori Rolls

I've decided to cook all the way through Veganomicon!  I'm so excited about this book.  Every single recipe sounded wonderful to me (with the exception of one casserole with a sauerkraut filling.....not a big fan of sauerkraut, anyway, but baked in the center of a casserole....???), so before I even made it to "Soups" on a read-through, I knew this would be my cook-through book!  I'll go recipe by recipe starting from the first page, with one recipe per pay period (twice a month).  But I'll use other recipes to fill in my menus as they work out seasonally or according to my whim...!

Recipe number one in the first chapter, "Snacks, Appetizers, Little Meals, Dips, and Spreads" is Spicy Tempeh Nori Rolls.



This was a terrific first impression.  I was so surprised by how good the tempeh filling tasted.  It was just as savory and satisfying as spicy tuna, but without the slightly repulsive (though oddly refreshing) raw fish texture.  It was not as spicy as spicy tuna rolls I've had, so I could have added more chili oil (the recipe calls for "hot chile-sesame oil" which I don't have or know of, so I used equal parts "fire oil" chile oil and toasted sesame oil).  I ate it with a simple miso soup with scallions and sauteed mushrooms.



I've made sushi rolls twice before.  In Ann Arbor, my friend from Japan had me over for a sushi tutorial.  Our making of the rolls almost kept up with our eating them!  We made something like five different fillings, and they were wonderful and beautiful.  We even did inside-out rolls and hand rolls.

Then, more recently (though still quite a while ago!), in Manahattan Beach, my friend Heather and I attempted a big plate of sushi rolls for a party.  They were so ugly, everyone was afraid to eat them!  But those of us who did eat them had a treat, because they tasted excellent.  So there you scaredy cats...

So, I'm not exactly an expert, but I've had a little experience.  These turned out quite pretty as well as tasty.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Vegetarian again

I've been considering it for a while, but I've quit eating meat, as of a few weeks ago. What really made me finally go ahead and do it was watching Food Inc.  Of course, it's nothing we all don't already know about how terrible factory farms are for both animal and farmer, but it felt like a call to action for me.

I rarely cooked with meat products, anyway, though I usually used chicken broth, and I occasionally used bacon or sausage.  But I almost always ordered something meaty when eating out, and I ate anything offered me by anyone!  I had been on a ham and cheese sandwich kick for a while, and I suppose that's what I'll feel nostalgic about for a while.

Speaking of cheese, I'm aspiring to eventually become vegan this time.  I will have to have in place a suitably decadent cheese substitute, since being without the real thing seems almost like an insurmountable challenge to me.  So I'll probably phase in veganism first by cooking vegan at home and only eating dairy and eggs socially--at restaurants and when it's offered me (I worked with a vegan once who said he only ate "free cheese"--hi, Ryan!).  I am also considering making exceptions for humanely acquired dairy and eggs.

I was a vegetarian for about five years in high school and college, but I'm certain I'll be better at it this time.  I subsisted mainly on different combinations of bread, pasta, cheese and tomato sauce back then!  My friend Heather recently reminded me, too, of my fondness for Campbell's Vegetarian Vegetable Soup sprinkled with Kraft Parmesan--I actually did a homemade version of it the other day for old time's sake.  She's given up meat recently, too!

I'm excited about this new adventure.  I've only used vegetarian cookbooks for about 5 years, now, so I recently bought my first vegan cookbook, Veganomicon, and I'm sure you'll see some dishes from it here shortly!

In the meantime, here is a vegetarian "shepherd's" pie I made shortly before I made the big switch.  I used this recipe from one of my favorite blogs, Cheap Healthy Good. (Click on the picture to see a larger version--it actually looks tastier close up...)