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Vegan community thread - Give Peas a Chance

Finally got to try the Impossible Burger at Saxon & Parole in NYC. It was really, really damn good. Hope they expand to more locations soon!

img_3488_1-8397daa5f5a65bb13ae2ba32fb6927b7eacf395e-s900-c85.jpg

That one looks better than the one I had at Momofuku Nishi about a year ago. I gotta have another Impossible Burger, and that Saxon & Parole burger is the one I want.
 
Cut out all meat and dairy, then worked on making my diet as vegetable based as possible. Very minimal oils, fruit, refined carbs or sugar.

It was rough for two weeks, then i began to really like it.

I hope I catch up.

37 and after two weeks of omitting what I feared was the root cause of my weight problem, I now know it must be a lifestyle adjust for me going forward I definitely. No dairy, no bread and lots of water have helped me shed 7 lbs in two and a half weeks.

I'm typing this while working the will power to not open the fridge and have left over pizza that the wife and kids had earlier. Gonna nuke a veggie bowl from Costco instead.
 

Man God

Non-Canon Member
Don't fear fruit if you're eating vegan. Embrace it. It's one of the best parts of being vegan. Just keep your calories in range.
 

ShyMel

Member
What are the best faux foods at Whole Food? Really like the Beyond burgers.

I know they have various kinds of Seitan, which I enjoy. They also stock the vegan Quorn spicy "chicken" patties. Can't remember if they have Gardein, but I would recommend just about every Gardein product.
 
What are the best faux foods at Whole Food? Really like the Beyond burgers.

You hit on the most exciting faux meat to become available nationwide at Whole Foods already with Beyond Burgers. Beyond Meat products in general are great. I'll second everything ShyMel mentioned, but warn (if you're vegan) that Quorn isn't an all vegan brand. Assume their products have egg and dairy in them unless you see a large vegan label on the packaging. Here's Quorn's list of vegan items. gardein is all vegan. I'd add Field Roast as another great vegan brand - sausages, deli slices, roasts and the best cheese slices. Primal Strips (meatless jerky) makes for a nice faux meat snack.

Are you just looking for faux meat recommendations, or faux everything?
 

sam12

Member
In love with Soy creamery cherry chocolate chip ice cream from Trader Joe's. One of the best ice creams I have had.
 
The gardein fish filets are so good and probably the first item that completely matches my memories of the real thing. Of course the real thing is cheap, greasy fish and chips but those are wonderful.

And I meant faux meat esqe products. Really have enjoyed a lot of them, while vegetarian I never bothered as I cook from scratch often but a lot of them are legitmentally great.
 
C

Contica

Unconfirmed Member
Anyone tried making their own vegan cheese? My mom said you can do it with cashews :eek:

My wife makes an absolutely amazing mozarella that we use on everything. It's with cashews, nutritional yeast, aqua faba and some spices.
 

louiedog

Member
Anyone tried making their own vegan cheese? My mom said you can do it with cashews :eek:

I made a 7 layer dip including a cheese layer made with cashews and nutritional yeast. It came out well. I don't have the recipe anymore but just another vote for "yes, it can be good."
 

Kwhit10

Member
We make a mac'n'cheese sauce that is pureed cashews with boiled potatoes, carrots, and onions with nutritional yeast.

Just this week my wife tried making her mozzarella, I think using the miyoko recipe. While it had the taste it was way softer than the real thing.
 

Kinokou

Member
Anyone uses quinoa? I'm reading about it and I'm thinking of replacing my rice with it.

I'm not the best person to answer as I'm barley vegetarian but I did try quinoa for a bit, then I got introduced to cous cous and preferred it over both due to the quick preparation.
 

Octavia

Unconfirmed Member
I've had no luck with vegan cheeses for pizza. Melted mozza on pizza had a very unique texture and taste that just isnt possible with substitutes. Daiya is alright but its a different topping basically because it isnt the same taste/tecturewise. I've tried some other premades and again, not comparable to real cheese. Cashew mozza is like a thin gak than a melty cheese and I wasnt impressed the few different variations I made. I havent tried sauerkraut culture cheese yet but Im not holding my breath.

It's the one thing I miss most.
 

moggio

Banned
Anyone uses quinoa? I'm reading about it and I'm thinking of replacing my rice with it.

We know what David Lynch thinks:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11p0y9z1XOU

Also, yes, Quinoa is great. I pretty much use it (and also Cous Cous) as a rice replacement.

I've had no luck with vegan cheeses for pizza. Melted mozza on pizza had a very unique texture and taste that just isnt possible with substitutes. Daiya is alright but its a different topping basically because it isnt the same taste/tecturewise. I've tried some other premades and again, not comparable to real cheese. Cashew mozza is like a thin gak than a melty cheese and I wasnt impressed the few different variations I made. I havent tried sauerkraut culture cheese yet but Im not holding my breath.

It's the one thing I miss most.

Just embrace the superiority of cheeseless pizzas.

I splodge hummus about as it has some cheese-esque flavour notes.
 

yonder

Member
I've had no luck with vegan cheeses for pizza. Melted mozza on pizza had a very unique texture and taste that just isnt possible with substitutes. Daiya is alright but its a different topping basically because it isnt the same taste/tecturewise. I've tried some other premades and again, not comparable to real cheese. Cashew mozza is like a thin gak than a melty cheese and I wasnt impressed the few different variations I made. I havent tried sauerkraut culture cheese yet but Im not holding my breath.

It's the one thing I miss most.
For me it was just a matter of getting used to the taste of vegan cheeses. Now that's just how pizza tastes to me and it is delicious. You could also try pizzas without cheese, but with other fatty spreads. I sometime make a cream with with artichoke hearts, herbs, garlic and a ton of olive oil and use that instead of tomato sauce. Or try a lot of sundried tomatoes. And lots of goof olive oil. As long as it's fatty and salty, it'll be satisfying even though there's no cheese.
 

Famassu

Member
Quinoa is great, but why replace rice completely? Variety is the spice of life. :)
Rice is pretty bad for the environment. Maybe the worst one ecologically when it comes to stuff like rice, couscous, quinoa, oat, potatoes & other shit that you can put on your plate alongside sauces and meat-like things or other sources of protein.
 
Rice is pretty bad for the environment. Maybe the worst one ecologically when it comes to stuff like rice, couscous, quinoa, oat, potatoes & other shit that you can put on your plate alongside sauces and meat-like things or other sources of protein.

huh, the more you know.
 
I found some Ripple Half & Half, and it's up there with soy coffee creamers for me. It tastes like Ripple milk does. It's extremely creamy (the most velvety vegan creamer I've ever had) while simultaneously having a pleasant hint of graininess to it. My only nitpick is that the product does seem to settle if you let your coffee sit for a while.

I also really appreciate Ripple releasing an unsweetened version of their vanilla milk - it's perfect for smoothies. Now I'd just like to see them cut some sugar out of their chocolate milk (my guilty pleasure).
 

Famassu

Member
OhgodwhathaveIdone.

Just published my next week's vegan pop up restaurant event on Facebook. D: Kind of late but I've had a writer's block when it comes to the description of the event. :D
 
How do you avoid getting annoyed with people virtue signaling about global warming/the environment when they refuse to even reduce their consumption of meat?

It's pointless to point out because then you'll be met with "Perfect IS the enemy of good", "WeLl VeGAniSM ISnt GoOD foR the EnvIRonMeNT EiTHer", or "preachy vegan lol"
 

ShyMel

Member
How do you avoid getting annoyed with people virtue signaling about global warming/the environment when they refuse to even reduce their consumption of meat?

It's pointless to point out because then you'll be met with "Perfect IS the enemy of good", "WeLl VeGAniSM ISnt GoOD foR the EnvIRonMeNT EiTHer", or "preachy vegan lol"

Yes, it's a very difficult thing to avoid when discussing the environment. When some people hear that we should reduce animal product consumption, they take it as a personal attack on themselves.
 

Famassu

Member
How do you avoid getting annoyed with people virtue signaling about global warming/the environment when they refuse to even reduce their consumption of meat?

It's pointless to point out because then you'll be met with "Perfect IS the enemy of good", "WeLl VeGAniSM ISnt GoOD foR the EnvIRonMeNT EiTHer", or "preachy vegan lol"
I try to go with the "people should at least try to lessen meat/dairy consumption & drop animal produts where possible, have a day or two per week of not eating meat for start & try not to buy fur/leather/wool products, go from there with maybe an aim of dropping meat consumption to once a week/two weeks/month little by little" + "no need to be 100% vegan (immediately), it's better to have a vegan life style 70-99% of the time with some relapses than 0% vegan days". Throw in some slight passive aggressive insults if the person is being a moron/asshole about veganism.
 
Anyone have any good seitan recipes that manage to mask the taste of the raw gluten? I love the stuff and make it regularly, but I can't get my SO to eat it with the recipes I use now, as she has trouble with the gluten flavor. But the store bought stuff doesn't usually havr that flavor, so I know it can be reduced.
 

Famassu

Member
Anyone have any good seitan recipes that manage to mask the taste of the raw gluten? I love the stuff and make it regularly, but I can't get my SO to eat it with the recipes I use now, as she has trouble with the gluten flavor. But the store bought stuff doesn't usually havr that flavor, so I know it can be reduced.
How do you usually prepare seitan?
 
Anyone have any good seitan recipes that manage to mask the taste of the raw gluten? I love the stuff and make it regularly, but I can't get my SO to eat it with the recipes I use now, as she has trouble with the gluten flavor. But the store bought stuff doesn't usually havr that flavor, so I know it can be reduced.

It's kind of wintery, but I'd say that seitan in red wine/mushroom sauce might be your best bet. Pair it with mashed potatoes, and it's incredible (though, again, very much suited to the winter).

I'm also a fan of grilled seitan, but I've been eating it so long that I have no idea whether it tastes gluten-y.
 

Owari

Member
Anyone have any good seitan recipes that manage to mask the taste of the raw gluten? I love the stuff and make it regularly, but I can't get my SO to eat it with the recipes I use now, as she has trouble with the gluten flavor. But the store bought stuff doesn't usually havr that flavor, so I know it can be reduced.

I made some with Japanese curry sauce and rice last night, it was pretty bomb.
 
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