vegan recipes: a list thread

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i made the sweet potato-tempeh stew mentioned way upthread. it's pretty good, but next time i'll just cook it with coconut milk instead of water and not bother adding yogurt at the end. i forgot how much i like tempeh. it's been ages since i last had it.

lauren, Wednesday, 19 November 2008 18:33 (fifteen years ago) link

i did this simple, boring soup last night (modified madhur jaffrey recipe to use stuff i had):

cooked some garbanzos, saved the water
chopped up a pound of spinach
14 oz. can of diced tomatoes (not drained)
like a teaspoon of sambal oelek

dump it in a pot w/ some salt, heat it up

saute one onion and 5 cloves of garlic until slightly brown, put that in the pot, stir, heat a few more minutes, eat it

was so good! recipe said to add celery but i didn't have it and don't like using it. it doesn't add anything (taste or nutrients) and can get pretty mushy after reheating.

bear of the teddy (harbl), Sunday, 23 November 2008 13:18 (fifteen years ago) link

this looks good: http://blog.fatfreevegan.com/2008/11/mushroom-lentil-and-wild-rice-timbales.html

though i enjoyed a huge burger when we went out for dinner on saturday, i managed to cooked some good vegan dishes this weekend to even things out. a huge pot of split pea soup (which i HATE if made with ham/pork - totally ruins the sweetness of the peas), and tofu with black bean sauce. i never realized how easy black bean sauce is to make. now that i've got a jar of fermented black beans, it's become a menu staple.

lauren, Monday, 24 November 2008 15:37 (fifteen years ago) link

ZOMG OMG OMG You guys!!

For dinner the other night, I had roasted garlic mashed potatoes (an easily veganized version of Emiril Lagasse's recipe), and I finally found THE tofu recipe that made my brain explode: Bryanna Clark Grogan's "Breast of Tofu" recipe, which can be found at http://www.everydaydish.tv/index.php?page=recipe&recipe=105 . I did the "Make crispy slices" method, but for the seasoned flour I used half flour and half panko. I am now so so excited about tofu--it came out so crispy and crunchy, and the flavor is supreme.

Nomi Malone and Her Bloodstains (Stevie D), Monday, 24 November 2008 19:09 (fifteen years ago) link

I must mention that libcrypt's upthread sweet tater soup is not only NOM++ but also gives you perfect bowel movements. It's perfect in every possible way.

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Tuesday, 25 November 2008 22:11 (fifteen years ago) link

Today for breakfast/lunch I had mirepoix cooked in lotsa soy garden over a bed of white rice made with a cube of Rapunzel veggie + herbs + sea salt boullion. Is delish!

Nomi Malone and Her Bloodstains (Stevie D), Wednesday, 3 December 2008 18:23 (fifteen years ago) link

the other day: trader joes soy chorizo w/gravy over rice + side of spinach = v.good

artdamages, Wednesday, 3 December 2008 18:38 (fifteen years ago) link

Ho. ly shit. Made another inCREDible vegan thinger that I'd been craving for weeks and hadn't gotten around to making: tomato pie (the pizza kind, not the pie kind). It turned out better than I ever could have imagined. Will post recipe if people actually want to make it.

Nomi Malone and Her Bloodstains (Stevie D), Saturday, 6 December 2008 19:56 (fifteen years ago) link

dirt

craig sager (eman), Tuesday, 9 December 2008 02:26 (fifteen years ago) link

helpful recipe thanks man see u

harbl, Tuesday, 9 December 2008 02:30 (fifteen years ago) link

Okay the crust was from:
http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/Jays-Signature-Pizza-Crust/Detail.aspx
you'll likely need much more than 3 1/3 cups flour, though

For the sauce, just make a good marinara: saute a bunch of cloves of minced garlic in olive oil a medium sauce pot (NO onion), and then add a can of crushed tomatoes and herbs and spices to your liking (I like lots of rosemary and some basil). Bring it to a simmer and simmer for about 20 minutes to thicken it up a bit.

26 Mixes Focaccia (Stevie D), Saturday, 13 December 2008 16:05 (fifteen years ago) link

one month passes...

lately made some roast tofu and sweet potato salad (dope) and aubergine, fennel and farfalle (not so dope but still ok)

cozwn, Thursday, 5 February 2009 00:37 (fifteen years ago) link

I finished my semester off and went back to college nad have been eating garbage. Nice things I've made:

Another vegan lasagna
Tofu/eggplant stirfry (yum!)
Falafel (which I now love making)
Vegan chili

Jomanda Lepore (Stevie D), Tuesday, 17 February 2009 16:30 (fifteen years ago) link

Oh oh!! I made a vegan epperoni bread with Yves pepperoni and Vegan Gourmet mozzarella. It turned out gross but with lots of room for potential (it was underdone, had too much cheese, and not enough pepperoni). Next time I will do better!

Jomanda Lepore (Stevie D), Tuesday, 17 February 2009 16:32 (fifteen years ago) link

one month passes...

if i had a vegan friend over, what's a vegan entree i could make to go with roasted fingerling potatoes?

Ømår Littel (Jordan), Tuesday, 14 April 2009 18:07 (fifteen years ago) link

one year passes...

I've just started dating a vegan. Oh yay. As someone who hardly eats meat myself, the general dishes I'd structure are fine already but the idea of having to adapt to things that dont use eggs, cheese, cream etc (or MUSHROOMS HOW CAN HE HATE MUSHROOMS ARGH) is doing my head in. So this thread has been a great help already.

Concubine Tree (Trayce), Tuesday, 5 April 2011 07:13 (thirteen years ago) link

The main problem for me is I really dont like to resort to prepackaged foods as a way of getting around the problem. I'm proud of making things from the base ingredients. All those Sanitarium soysages and whatnot look disgusting.

Concubine Tree (Trayce), Tuesday, 5 April 2011 07:14 (thirteen years ago) link

and honestly, as someone who is a terrible and unimaginative cook, if i can cook vegan 24/7 with v few problems, you're gonna be fiiiiine. there are plenty of recipes out there for pseudo-meats from scratch.

eg:

Vegan "Chicken" Style Seitan

“Chicken” Seitan Dough:

1 cup Vital Wheat Gluten
1 cup Water mixed with 1 tsp Better Than Bouillon® No Chicken Broth Paste
1 1/2 TBSP MimicCreme

“Chicken” Seitan Broth:

8 cups Water mixed with 9 tsp Better Than Bouillon® No Chicken Broth Paste
1 cup MimicCreme
7 Whole White Button Mushrooms
1 tsp Shallot Powder
1/2 tsp Onion Powder
1 tsp Roasted Garlic Powder
2 Bay Leaves
Pinch of Celery Seeds

First, take all of the Seitan Broth ingredients, and mix them together in a very large pot. Bring to a boil.

While the broth’s starting to heat up, make your Seitan Dough by mixing and kneading the vital wheat gluten, water/bouillon blend, and MimicCreme until it’s completely mixed. It will be a little more wet than most seitan doughs. Squeeze out the excess liquid, and form the mixture into a ball. On a cutting board, flatten the ball out, and use a sharp knife or kitchen shears to cut into six pie wedge “Chicken Breast” shaped pieces. Before putting in boiling broth, flatten each part down by pressing it firmly between your hands, then drop each part into the pot.

Cover the pot, reduce heat to simmer, and let the seitan cook for about an hour, stirring every 10-15 minutes.

Don’t throw out the broth! Use a slotted spoon to remove each “Chicken Breast,” and place into a colander to drain. Let both the “Chicken Breasts” and the broth cool. Allow the “Chicken Breasts” to marinate in the broth until ready to use, if time allows you. Drain again before using.

just1n3, Tuesday, 5 April 2011 13:56 (thirteen years ago) link

two weeks pass...
nine months pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CeZlih4DDNg

tehresa, Wednesday, 1 February 2012 00:15 (twelve years ago) link

five years pass...

being vegan is not a big deal

calstars, Sunday, 19 February 2017 20:18 (seven years ago) link

seven months pass...

There are four tricks to hummus. One, the proper name is hummus bi tahini. The tahini is equally important, and should be in at least a 1:6 ratio with the chick peas. Enough tahini, and olive or other oils become unnecessary. Two, the creaminess comes from the emulsion of the sesame oils from tahini with lemon juice/water. Don't add other ingredients until these have the consistency of a creamy salad dressing. Three, food processors aren't great for this, and like normal blenders are a pain to clean. Immersion blenders are the ideal tool here (as in most kitchen blending tasks). Four, the base is always the same. Other ingredients (I've tried sambal oelek, Italian gardineria or olive salad, chopped cilantro/coriander + jalepeno pepper, and Jordanian za'atar, all with good effect) can all be optionally stirred in or used as toppings. Basic hummus:

1/2 cup tahini, 1/4-1/2 cup lemon juice, water as needed: blend to a creamy emulsion, preferably with an immersion blender in a wide and tall sided storage container/serving vessel.
28 oz can chickpeas (drained), 1 large clove garlic, 1/2-1 tsp salt (less if not adding other salty ingredients): add at once, and blend in with a bit of chomping with the immersion blender.

Special Egyptian Guest Star (Sanpaku), Sunday, 24 September 2017 19:53 (six years ago) link

yeah, Sanpaku, i agree that aerating the tahini first is absolutely key, as is using a good amount. i do think olive oil is a key flavor component though. one thing that bothers me in the wild is hummus pronounciation. in Hebrew there is no short "u"-sounding vowel. and i'm certain the same is true w Arabic. it's hoo-moose, not an organic component of soil. not sure why it bugs me so much

freedom is not having to measure life with a ruler (outdoor_miner), Monday, 25 September 2017 13:38 (six years ago) link

five months pass...

hey can we not have this thread on something called "The Cheese Board"?

had (crüt), Saturday, 3 March 2018 01:12 (six years ago) link

Dried chickpeas are best for hummus. Questioning whether those instruction above accidentally left off taking the chickpea skins or you don't believe in it. I can't deal with using an immersion blender for hummus.

Yerac, Saturday, 3 March 2018 02:40 (six years ago) link

two years pass...

I've been binging Sauce Stache's YT channel, and its mostly applying "molecular gastronomy" techniques to making faux meat/cheese from absurd things (daikon bacon!). And if you're past the faux animal products stage, not so useful.

But it did introduce me to something I always walked past at the Asian grocer: mushroom seasoning. Basically dried shitake powder, salt, and mushroom "extract", sometimes other ingredients like E627, and it is great. I may never buy Marmite, Better than Bullion, or MSG ever again. Its found its way into two soups this week, I'm looking forward to making a faux-loaf with it this weekend, and its just plainly a better source of general purpose umani than other things I've tried over the past decade. Hooray Taiwan and the Singaporean and Vietnamese knockoffs.

Sanpaku, Thursday, 8 October 2020 03:11 (three years ago) link

that seasoning sounds interesting. what's in yer faux-loaf? did you make the daikon bacon? i've made rice paper bacon before and it was a little tricky to work with. seitan bacon is so far my fave homemade one. second is tempeh, but for some reason that has vanished from shelves recently :(

scampos sacra fames (outdoor_miner), Thursday, 15 October 2020 14:19 (three years ago) link

xxp I'm with you on the immersion blender in a tall sided serving vessel thing but would quibble over your ratios (half a cup of lemon juice??!!)

One, the proper name is hummus bi tahini

In Arabic, yeah. But I'm pretty sure it's just "hummus" in Hebrew. So my question for outdoor miner or whoever else is: how does the Hebrew language distinguish between chickpeas ("hummus") and hummus ("hummus"). Is it all context or what?

Questioning whether those instruction above accidentally left off taking the chickpea skins or you don't believe in it.

Yerac really dealing with the elephant in the room right there, I mean take a fucking stance.

Deflatormouse, Thursday, 15 October 2020 16:35 (three years ago) link

how does the Hebrew language distinguish between chickpeas ("hummus") and hummus ("hummus"). Is it all context or what?

i would say context. like in Japanese ( i believe) the word rice (gohan) can mean either "meal" or "cooked rice". (i don't speak Japanese, but i know inflection has a lot to do with meanings, so this may not be a perfect analogy?)

scampos sacra fames (outdoor_miner), Thursday, 15 October 2020 17:09 (three years ago) link

Thx, guess i was wondering about situations where it could go either way. Say you're in a supermarket in Israel and you ask for "hummus" (or a can/container thereof), and the shopkeeper isn't sure whether you want chickpeas or hummus. What would be the conversation that follows? How would it go...

Deflatormouse, Thursday, 15 October 2020 18:22 (three years ago) link

I always take the chickpea skins off for houmous (no idea why we spell it this way) but two days ago I forgot and it made zero difference and now I don't know what to think. A lot of effort, but it's best with homemade tahini which somehow tastes way less acrid than shop-bought stuff.

tangenttangent, Thursday, 15 October 2020 18:42 (three years ago) link

xp deflatormouse:

Never the skins. I've done the whole raw chickpeas in a pressure cooker with baking soda, followed by removing all the skins, a couple times, and it turns a 5 minute task into a two-hour task. Fine (and to be expected) in a restaurant setting, but cooking for 1-2, I can't justify the effort. Canned chickpeas (at least the Middle Eastern brands I buy) come skinned, its one of their principle advantages.

Having joked about offerings to Ọya this hurricane season, I'm planning on making some of the traditional offering akara (black eye pea fritters). That will be the next time I remove legume skins by hand.

Please don't mention The Event (Sanpaku), Thursday, 15 October 2020 18:48 (three years ago) link

I've done the whole raw chickpeas in a pressure cooker with baking soda, followed by removing all the skins, a couple times, and it turns a 5 minute task into a two-hour task. Fine (and to be expected) in a restaurant setting, but cooking for 1-2, I can't justify the effort.

same

Deflatormouse, Thursday, 15 October 2020 18:52 (three years ago) link

it made zero difference and now I don't know what to think

blasphemy!!

srsly tho it's a much smoother and creamier consistency without the skins.
i think removing the skins is associated more with "Israeli hummus" while leaving them on results in something more like "Arab hummus" so there may be identity politics in play here, which is why i said that about Yerac's post, picking a side.

I leave the skins on mainly because laziness.

Deflatormouse, Thursday, 15 October 2020 19:00 (three years ago) link

(i was joking, to be absolutely clear)

Deflatormouse, Thursday, 15 October 2020 19:06 (three years ago) link

I'm sure I'd have noticed the difference if I was eating the two types side by side, but I was simply very hungry so I noticed nothing. The recipe first instructing me to remove the skins was for Turkish hummus.

Best flavour of houmous besides the original? I almost always make it with red peppers, but there was a pea version once that turned out great.

xp haha I know

tangenttangent, Thursday, 15 October 2020 19:10 (three years ago) link

Fine (and to be expected) in a restaurant setting, but cooking for 1-2, I can't justify the effort.

This makes zero sense to me. A restaurant isn't gonna have like 6 people that do nothing but peel garbanzos all day every day. used to make hummus in nice, famous vegetarian restaurant in sf before. beans were cooked in pressure cooker and industrial sized immersion blender were the tools involved

scampos sacra fames (outdoor_miner), Thursday, 15 October 2020 19:22 (three years ago) link

I've often thought that's why the food at Iranian restaurants seldom compares to homemade. They would have to employ like 6 people to do nothing but stalk herbs all day every day.

Deflatormouse, Thursday, 15 October 2020 19:33 (three years ago) link

Instead they do the sensible/economic thing of using dried herbs wherever they can possibly get away with it

Deflatormouse, Thursday, 15 October 2020 19:35 (three years ago) link

last time i went to a Persian spot and tried to order sabzi khordan off the menu the server basically said 'no, we can't be bothered'

Deflatormouse, Thursday, 15 October 2020 19:37 (three years ago) link

Persian cuisine is very long-winded. even just all that pomegranate husbandry must be tiring

here comes the hotstamper (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 15 October 2020 20:11 (three years ago) link

Deflatormouse, i asked a Israeli friend who said if you want the dip you typically ask for "hummusim" (the plural of hummus), or "gargeeray hummus" (no idea what this translates to. when i tried putting it into a translating machine how i think it may be spelled the meaning comes out "grain" ::shrug::)

scampos sacra fames (outdoor_miner), Thursday, 15 October 2020 20:40 (three years ago) link

wait i **cked that up. "Hummus" refers to the dip and the other two refer two just chickpeas. LOL, that makes sense now

scampos sacra fames (outdoor_miner), Thursday, 15 October 2020 20:41 (three years ago) link

woah you rule. thank you so much for finding this out, my curiosity is now well satisfied. hummusim makes more sense for chickpeas- idk any Hebrew really but sounds like a plural form of hummus :)

Deflatormouse, Thursday, 15 October 2020 20:55 (three years ago) link

Xps seriously, why is there a tempeh shortage right now?? It’s been weeks.

just1n3, Friday, 16 October 2020 00:37 (three years ago) link

According to Yotam Ottolenghi, soaking dried chickpeas overnight, draining them off and sautéing with baking soda BEFORE simmering in water, does some of chemical magic that breaks down the skins so you get a smoother consistency without having to peel

just1n3, Friday, 16 October 2020 00:42 (three years ago) link

My tj's and local Sprouts has been sans tempeh for weeks. Cld be a opportunity to learn how to make, but we go from too hot in summer to freezing in winter so I just don't wanna bother with learning curve rn

scampos sacra fames (outdoor_miner), Friday, 16 October 2020 03:22 (three years ago) link

four months pass...

Hi dere, I'm technically a vegetarian but am an accidental vegan most weeks. Anyway, Rainbow Plant Life has yet to steer me wrong, and this stew is next on my list: https://rainbowplantlife.com/vegan-west-african-peanut-stew/#wprm-recipe-container-5657

I don't actually have peanut butter but I'll probably substitute with tahini.

RZA Minnelli (Leee), Saturday, 27 February 2021 18:41 (three years ago) link

Made this for the second time again: https://rainbowplantlife.com/wprm_print/5540

Absolutely a keeper -- the nut butter gives it an excellent smoky taste.

RZA Minnelli (Leee), Wednesday, 10 March 2021 01:34 (three years ago) link


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