Saturday, May 14, 2016

Carrot Cake

So, I am blogging this carrot cake because I made it and it tasted amazing and had a great texture. Since I don't want to lose the recipe, I shall blog it.

Vegan Carrot Cake

I followed this recipe but made some modifications. I didn't get a good pic of it because I didn't think to blog it until there was just this one tiny piece of it left. I used Laura's phone camera, which I'm not good at using.

Carrot Cake 

Wet Ingredients
2 tbsp ground flax
2 tbsp chia seeds
1/2 cup water
1 1/4 cups vegetable oil
2 cups sugar
2 tsp vanilla extract

Dry Ingredients
2 cups of flour
2 tsp baking soda
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
2 tsp cinnamon
3 cups grated carrot
1 cup chopped walnuts

Directions:
Combine the ground flax and chia seeds together with 1/2 cup of water and let set for 10 or 15 minutes until gelled and the texture of eggs. This is the egg replacement.

Mix wet ingredients in a bowl. Mix dry ingredients in a bowl. Mix wet and dry ingredients together. If it's too dry add water a couple tbsp at a time until it's the consistency you want, like cake batter. Mine was very thick and chunky, but pour-able.

Pour into greased and floured 9 x 13" pan and bake 1 hour at 350 degrees F. Let sit for about 15 minutes then transfer to a baking rack to cool. Transfer to a cake plate and frost when completely cool.

Icing

1/2 cup non-dairy butter, softened
8 oz non-dairy cream cheese, softened
4 cups icing sugar
1 tsp vanilla
1/2 cup candied walnuts

Mix butter, cream cheese, icing sugar and vanilla with beaters or mixer until fluffy. Spread of cooled cake and top with walnuts.

Reviews

Two people besides Laura and I tried this cake and they both loved it. One said she would not have known the cream cheese was non-dairy. She asked for the recipe and also said I needed to make it again...and again. The other one was my sister, who is allergic to eggs, so she would appreciate that they were replaced with something else. There was no frosting on her piece because of her soy intolerance so no review on the frosting, but she did post this on my FB timeline:


Saturday, April 2, 2016

Roast "Beef" Sandwich

I think I gave up beef about 5 years ago. I have not had a roast beef sandwich in a very long time. Now, it may be the case that I don't really remember what one is supposed to taste like, but I don't think that is the case. At all. In fact, I had a couple other people try this sandwich and they both agreed it was pretty darn close if not just like the real deal. Only again, no beasts were harmed.

Roast "Beef" Sandwich

Seitan Mushroom Roast

Laura made the seitan roast for Easter dinner. It was good although it didn't have an exact roast beef taste or texture. But, it was comparable.

Mushroom Seitan Roast recipe here.

Seitan Loaf

The next day, I had the idea to slice it thinly and use it to make a sandwich. And wow. It was the most amazing thing! The texture was very believable, the taste, with the mustard, was crazily similar to real beef, and I was in heaven to find another of my old favorites revamped to be enjoyed as a vegan meal.

Sandwich & Potato Salad

Was so good served with a scoop of potato salad!

Eggless Potato Salad

You might not think an egg-free potato salad would be as good, but you'd be surprised. I don't let many people try it because it's really too good to share, but any who have tried it absolutely loved it and three of them have asked for the recipe. And, since it's my favorite potato salad recipe now too, I thought I'd put it here.

Potato Salad

The Making of the Perfect Potato Salad

In this potato salad recipe you omit the eggs and use an egg-free mayonnaise, like vegenaise, which I love, love, love.

This recipe makes a pretty small salad. You may want to double it.

Mix in a large bowl:
8 potatoes, peeled and boiled
1 small onion, minced
1/4 cup minced red pepper
1 tbsp capers or minced green olives (optional, but not really)

Mix in a small bowl:
1 cup Vegenaise or Hellman's vegan mayonnaise
1/3 cup vinegar
2 or 3 tbsp sugar
1 tbsp dijon
1 tbsp yellow mustard
Sea salt and black pepper to taste

Add small bowl mixture to large bowl mixture - don't add it all at once, just add it until your salad is the consistency you like.  You know how potatoes come in many sizes. Combine well.

Top the salad with something to make it look pretty, or interesting, like pepper, paprika, or some extra capers or olives. Maybe a sprig of parsley.

Chill.

Potato Salad

Potato Salad

You are welcome.

Lemon "Chicken"

I made a big batch of cauliflower "chicken" today (178 pieces) using 2 heads of cauliflower, which was on sale at Atlantic SuperStore for $2.49/head. I did all the breading and baked them, then Laura used about 18 of them to make Lemon "Chicken". So amazing!

Lemon Cauliflower 

We served the cauliflower with basmati rice and green beans. It was truly delicious, and really does have a boneless wing or popcorn chicken sort of texture, without the need to devour any animals.

Lemon Sauce recipe


Here is the process:



Prepare the Cauliflower
1. Cut cauliflower into bit-sized pieces.
2. Soak in 10 parts water to 3 parts vinegar for 15 - 20 minutes to clean it well. Any insects that were missed in the cutting step will come out as well.
3. Dry the pieces on paper towel.

Coat the Cauliflower
(this is the time-consuming part of the process if you're doing a lot of them at once)
4. Mix equal parts flour and water in an enormous bowl. I used 5 cups of each since I made a huge amount. Like I said, 178 pieces.
5. Place about 15 pieces of cauliflower in the bowl and stir to coat each piece completely with the batter.
6. Dump a bag of panko bread crumbs into another large bowl.
7. One piece at a time, remove the cauliflower from the batter, shake off excess batter and place into the crumbs. Roll around until completely coated.
8. Place a sheet of parchment on a baking sheet.
9. Place each piece of breaded cauliflower on the parchment, spaced so they don't touch each other.

Bake the Cauliflower
10. Bake 15 minutes on 400 degrees F.
11. Turn over.
12. Bake another 15 minutes on 400 degrees F.

Saturday, March 26, 2016

Lentil Salad


Lentil Salad

Ingredients

1 1/2 cup green, brown or black lentils
3 cups water
4 or 5 green onions
1 lemon
6 tbsp olive oil (psst: sometimes I only use 2 - 3)
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tsp dried thyme
sea salt

Garlic, scallions, lentils, lemon

Directions

Cook lentils in the water about 20 minutes, then drain. Set aside to cool. Add the green onions and garlic and stir.

Squeeze the lemon. Mix the lemon, oil and thyme and add to lentil mixture. Salt with the sea salt to taste.

Cold plate featuring lentil salad

Sunday, March 20, 2016

General Tso’s Vegan Chik’n

The fajitas were the best thing I ate all year...until this. This beats the hell out of anything I've eaten this year. Or last year. Or maybe every year. I've seen recipes for "cauliflower mock chicken wings" as they circulate around the internet, and have been curious to try them, and I guess this recipe is pretty much the same thing.

General Tso’s Vegan Chik’n

General Tso’s Vegan Chik’n

Cauliflower replaces chicken in this recipe and it does a pretty darn good job of it. It's amazing! It's served with rice, green beans and red peppers and we topped it with more of the General Tso sauce, sesame seeds and raw cashews. A bit high in sodium, but not all that unhealthy. The cauliflower is baked, not fried, so there is no oil at all in the recipe. You just wash, dry and bread bite-sized cauliflower florets then bake them. Then add the sauce.

Cauliflower Discected

General Tso’s Vegan Chik’n recipe here

Like Chicken, But Better

The roasted breaded cauliflower gets re-baked in the General Tso sauce and the result is very similar to boneless chicken wings. It doesn't have a chicken flavor, but the sauce provides the flavors you're looking for and the cauliflower has a great texture. When you bite into one of them it's very much the same as having boneless chicken. You know when you bite into a chicken wing and you sometimes get a mouthful of chicken fat? Some might enjoy it, but I used to spit it out and pretend it never happened while trying to continue to enjoy my meal. Well, with the cauliflower, you never get a bite like that! You can sink your teeth in and know there is no fat, vein, gristle, bone or cartilage to impede your chewing pleasure. S'all good, and that's a quality about eating veg that I really appreciate. So, when I say this is better than eating real chicken wings, or real chicken balls, I mean that wholeheartedly! They taste as good, they have a better texture and there is no mental "I'm eating an animal" barrier preventing me from 100% enjoyment.

General Tso’s Vegan Chik’n on Basmati Rice

General Tso Sauce

3 garlic cloves, minced
1" ginger, minced
1/2 cup Hoisin sauce
1/4 cup rice vinegar
3 tbsp soy sauce
4 tbsp brown sugar
1 tsp red pepper flakes
1 tsp sriracha

Until Next Time

I'm not even kidding, both times we've had these I've eaten until stuffed and still kept going. Ugh! But, they're so good! Missy, who was here for dinner, agreed they would be good with any sauce you would serve on chicken: barbeque, orange or lemon sauce, sweet & sour, teriyaki, honey garlic, etc. We don't rate our meals anymore, because these are pretty much all favorites, but Missy gave it a 9. I say 10, personally.

We made a double batch and froze the other half for another meal. Hmmm....Lemon Chicken, maybe?

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Dairy Substitutes

Vegans don't eat dairy, but finding recipes that don't require dairy is often unrealistic, so there is sometimes a need to find a substitute. Lactose-intolerant people, same thing. I am both. I do not tolerate milk or milk-based products well. The point is, there are plenty of options for people who choose not to or aren't able to tolerate dairy. And, some of them are fantastic! Wine and cheese anyone?

Cheeseball with French Bread

Erin's Opinion


I've said I'd give my honest opinion about the dairy substitutes I've tried, so I will. I won't be glossing over anything to make it sound better, or more viable or less disgusting than I think it really is. However, remember that these are only my opinions, and you very well may not agree. After all, I don't even like bananas, which is weird, right? Also worth noting, that Laura and I don't agree on many of these products either.

Nay

Yay!

Almond Milk

As soon as I have milk in my mouth, my throat and ears begin to itch. I also get gastro effects from it, which can make me ill enough to spoil my day. So, even before I thought of becoming vegetarian or vegan, I was replacing dairy milk with almond milk for my cereals and beverages. Almond milk, to me, even tastes way better than dairy milk with the added benefit of not having to block out any knowledge associated with milk production. I won't get into that here. Almond milk has a nuttier flavor (go figure) than dairy milk, but is otherwise very similar in both taste and texture, especially the unsweetened ones. I think all almond milk is better than dairy, and my favorite brand is Earth's Own. I especially love almond milk on porridge and cereal, but it's fine to use for cooking as a milk substitute for most recipes, and I even use it to make cream soups, etc. I also use cashew milk sometimes, which is a bit richer and thicker. We've made both almond and cashew milk here at home as well, but with the price of nuts, you're not saving money, just wasting time, really. It's the same as the store kind.

Earth's Own Almond Milk

Earth's Own almond milk is about $.50 to $.75 more than regular milk. Silk has a cheaper version, but Laura doesn't like it as well. I think Silk's is fine, but I do prefer Earth's Own. There are also a lot of other brands available now, especially in comparison to just 5 years ago, when they only carried Earth's Own and would be out of stock more than they we in stock. I'm thankful for all the options they have now, including various flavors like vanilla, sweetened, unsweetened and chocolate.

Earth's Own Almond Milk $4.69

Earth Island Vegenaise

This stuff here is a godsend. I started using it a few months before going vegan, just to test the waters and was amazed that it was actually delicious. It's a bit lighter in texture than mayonnaise or salad dressing, but the texture is okay and it tastes really, really good. I love it on cucumber or tomato sandwiches and it makes for fantastic potato salad. I love a vegan product that doesn't contain soy. Downside is that it's pricey at 7.99 a jar...a small jar, at that. So, we go a little easier on the "mayo" than we used to, but this is probably the 5th jar I've bought.

Earth Island Vegenaise

There are different types of vegenaise, but we've only tried the grapeseed one. We like it, so I'm hesitant to try other kinds, even though they're cheaper ($5.99).

Grapeseed Vegenaise 7.99

Hellman's Vegan Mayo

So, Hellman's has finally decided to tap into the vegan market and has come up with a product I like even better than the Vegenaise grapeseed product. I've used it for potato salads, tomato sandwiches and cucumber sandwiches and it's delish!

Hellman's Vegan Mayonaisse

Earth Balance Margarine

This  is good too, for margarine. I can't say it tastes better than butter, but it's as good as any margarine. Plus, it has a soy free version and also comes in sticks or blocks for cooking.

Earth Balance Margarine

Again, the downside is the price. It's like paying butter prices for margarine. However, to vegans, the price is worth paying and if it's not affordable, then it's used as a treat, when not having butter for toast is just not an option.

Earth Balance Margarine $5.49

Tofutti Better Than Sour Cream

Like I've mentioned before, it's better than no sour cream, but not as good as dairy sour cream. Sometimes you just want a fajita, you know? Or a baked potato. And you want it the way you've always had it, with a dollop of sour cream and chives.

Tofutti Better Than Sour Cream

This sour cream substitute costs about $1.30 more than regular brand name sour cream and about $2.00 more than the no names. We don't care because we're using it less; we're really not spending that much money on sour cream anymore in the grand scope of things. I'll tell you where we're spending a lot of money: produce. And boy, has the price of produce gone up. But I digress.

Tofutti Better Than Sour Cream $4.29

Tofutti Better Than Cream Cheese

Nope. It's not.

Tofutti Better Than Cream Cheese

Tofutti's products aren't all soy-based, but most are. Some are better than others, but they went astray while flavoring this cream cheese somehow.

Daiya Cheese

The Daiya cream cheese is even worse than the Tofutti stuff. Mind you, we have not tried the plain kind yet, only the chive & onion and strawberry kinds. Ate most of the chive & onion kind on bagels. Not inedible, but not delightful, either.

The provolone was used for oven subs and it was okay, but suffers in comparison to actual provolone. Overall, we're not big fans of Daiya.

Daiya Cheese Substitutes

Daiya cream cheese subs are a bit more expensive than Philadelphia cream cheese, too, by about $1.50.

Daiya Cream Cheese Substitutes $5.99

***UPDATE ON DAIYA CHEESE***
Ohhh, how things change. I am a big believer in that if you try a food enough times you will begin to like it. Now I like Daiya cheese slices, especially on grilled cheese sandwiches. So good! We haven't tried some of the other products again yet. but we've gone through several packages of this sliced "cheddar" stuff. So there you have it. Daiya isn't all bad. :)

Daiya Pizza

We don't enjoy Daiya cheese substitutes, but still thought this frozen pizza looked like a viable option for dinner one night. It really wasn't. Neither of us finished it and it was a waste of $8.99.

Don't get me wrong; I don't hate the brand, in fact, I really appreciate that they make dairy substitutes available. I know of people who like their products and a couple people who love them. I read some reviews from people who really love them. Just not a huge fan of them myself.

Daiya Pizza

Daiya Frozen Pizza

Homemade Vegan Parmesan

There is still hope for pizza! This vegan parm substitute is one of the best things I've ever had. It just takes a couple minutes to whiz some up and the recipe only calls for a few simple, easily-obtained ingredients: raw almonds, nutritional yeast, garlic powder and sea salt.

Recipe here!

Almond Parmesan on Pizza

I can't say enough about this stuff. We love it soooooo much. We put it very liberally on pizza, pasta, garlic bread, and whatever else we think it would be good on. We've let some friends sample it and some of them are hooked as well. Honestly, even if real parmesan wasn't animal-based, I don't know that I would go back to it in place of the almond parm. The best part is, of course, the taste, but it's also completely nutritious. How do you overdo it on almonds, garlic and nootch?? You don't! That's the beauty. And, it's actually NOT more expensive than real parm.

Cheeseball

The cheeseball in the top pic was amazing. Laura made it on the weekend and I love, love, love. I ate way more of it than she did. She didn't like the coconut undertone, but I did, I thought it was perfect. It was rolled in these amazing organic cranberries that I bought at Boyce Farmer's Market in Fredericton a few weeks ago.

Here is the recipe!

Tofutti Frozen Treats

We've tried a number of frozen treats by Tofutti and they're all pretty awesome. They are by far my favorite Tofutti product so far.

Tofutti "Marry Me" Bar

Tofutti "Marry Me" Bar in Deep Freezer

I think these were $6.99. We definitely don't get them very often, maybe once every month or two we'll get a box. Sometimes you feel like having a treat, though, so these are available, along with a lot of other kinds, like Cuties which are "ice cream" sandwiches and Black Gold, a soy fudgsicle.

Cuties

Black Gold

Stay Tuned

Check back sometime down the road for updates. I plan to keep adding to this blog post as we try new products and recipes. I'll probably also come back and elaborate on the existing ones.