Sunday, August 21, 2011

Veg Cuisine has moved!

Veg Cuisine has moved and been re-named Veggie Voyeur. Please update your bookmarks, or subscribe via the email feed or RSS.

Veggie Voyeur still contains all the juicy vegetarian dishes you get here, with a new focus on everyday vegetarian cooking. So go ahead...sneak a peek!

Cherry bomb peppers from Niagara, stuffed with cheese

Sunday, April 24, 2011

French Lentils for a Canadian Easter

My extended family gets together each year for Easter dinner. We're not tied to Sunday or Monday though - this year we got together on Saturday.

We’re not a traditional family when it comes to food – the host family usually cooks a ham or a turkey and the rest of us bring side dishes, appetizers, and dessert.

I always bring a vegetarian dish to add to the mix. This year, I wanted something different than the usual pasta casserole, ratatouille, or quiche recipe. Since I'm less about gourmet and traditional than I am about healthy and satisfying, I decided to make a warm lentil dish.

After arguing with Mike about what spices to use (I thought some kind of sweet and sour would be good, he was pushing curry) I decided just to use a recipe from the Veganomicon cookbook: Lentils and Rice with Caramelized Onions. But sans rice. And note: it's vegan.

I've made this dish before - but I forgot that it's one full of typos (cloves appears in the directions but not the ingredients list, for example). So this is a loose translation at best.

If I were to make it again, I’d add garlic and use more onions but cut the pieces smaller. Overall, it was pretty good but needed salt and pepper in a major way. Possibly some different spices too - I could see thyme and oregano working. Or even a slightly sweet version with maple syrup.

Instead of red lentils (too mushy!) I used French lentils. Partially because that’s what the store had and partially because I prefer my lentils to hold their shape.
French lentils

I love the extremely generous use of olive oil in the Veganomicon recipe. It makes this dish stand out.


Roasted French Lentils with Caramelized Onions
Ingredients:

For the onions
 
Onion rings doused in olive oil
  • 3 large yellow onions, sliced thinly into rings
  • ¾ cup olive oil
For the lentils
  • 2 scant cups French lentils
  • 2 cups water
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 3 dried cloves
  • 1 scant tablespoon cumin
  • Generous salt and pepper to taste
A close-up of the French lentils
Directions:
1.    Preheat the oven to 400F.   
2.    Slice the onions and toss them with the olive oil.   
3.    Roast in a roasting pan for 35 minutes, until golden brown and edges are starting to caramelize and blacken. 

Caramelized onions in generous amount of olive oil

4.    In the meantime, measure the water into a saucepan. Add the cinnamon stick, cloves, and cumin. Bring to a boil.   
5.    Add the French lentils and return to a boil.


Spiced liquid for cooking lentils

6.    Cook for 15-20 minutes, until French lentils are soft. If using green, brown, or red lentils, cook according to package directions.   
7.    When the lentils are done, all the water should be absorbed.   
8.    Remove the cinnamon sticks and cloves.   
9.    Fold the roasted onions into the cooked lentils. Sprinkle generously with salt and pepper.  
10.  Serve warm.

I'm not sure what's up with Blogger, but it keeps rotating my photos without permission. Here's a final (off-kilter) photo of the dish:



Monday, April 18, 2011

Weekly Wrap: The World of Veg Cuisine for April 11-17, 2011


Stay up-to-date with the latest recipe ideas and vegetarian news with Veg Cuisine’s weekly wrap.

Recipe Picks


In the News

  • VegNews meat photo scandal  and eventual apology
    The big story this week is that VegNews was outed by blogger Quarrygirl for using photos of meat in its magazine and passing them off as vegan. Since then, VegNews has apologized (half-heartedly), then decided they were maybe wrong after all and apologized again (for real this time). It took three days – an eon, given the story broke online.  They’ve promised a “vegan photo bank to assure the availability of vegan stock images” to be prepared in a matter of days. We’ll be watching to see if they can redeem themselves…
  • Toronto's Vegetarian Food Fair is changing its name
    It will now be known as the "Annual Vegetarian Food Festival". Mark you calendars – this year it’s September 9-11.
  • Bunny love
    A tasteful reminder: don’t buy pet rabbits for Easter gifts! Pets are not disposable. But, chocolate bunnies are. Try one of those instead. Or, read my 2008 article about celebrating Easter the vegetarian way.
  • Natalie Portman swaps vegan for vegetarian diet
    Natalie Portman – purveyor of fashionably uncomfortable-looking vegan shoes and the star of our favourite rap video of all time (search the uncensored version if you're feeling frisky) has swapped her vegan diet in favour of a lacto-ovo-vegetarian one. Is it odd her rationale comes down to “I was having cravings for pastries”? It is to me. But then again I’ve never have wild pregnancy hormones coursing through my veins. Side note: I’m slightly miffed that ABC News is still promoting the myth that vegans need to deliberately combine proteins. Your body does it for you. Easy peasy, fuggedaboutit.

VegNews Scandal: Magazine Reneges, Apologizes

An update on the VegNews...news...from this past weekend.

After saying it's not their fault they used meat photos in their all-vegan magazine, VegNews has reneged and has now issued an apology. Good risk communication practice, that. And even better that people can get their grievances out as blog comments. When it comes to scandal, no ranting = no forgiveness.

Despite making people very, very, upset, it sounds like most are now ready to welcome it back with open arms.

I bet the VegNews folks are issuing one big *phew*. But we'll see if they suffer at all in the long-term.

It looks like they might even adopt my suggestion of adopting a vegan photo database...too bad my camera skills are still at the kindergarten level.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Breakfast Oats Can Float Your Boat...on a Weekday

Oatmeal is not the stuff of glamour and glitz. Its creamy beige colour and speckled, smooth texture are things few people get excited about. However, I’m an oatmeal advocate – I eat the stuff every day. Over the past few weeks, I’ve talked to people about it.

Almond steel-cut oats

Here's what I've learned. If you're a typical person, you:
  1. Are reluctant to admit you eat oatmeal. Like it’s out of fashion, or something.
  2. Don’t believe oatmeal can taste good. You've been scarred by a childhood full of overcooked mush with not enough brown sugar to offset the blandness.
  3. Don't realize oatmeal can be a weekday food and actually taste good.  
To be clear, I’m not talking about the pre-packaged stuff that’s loaded with sugar and artificial flavours. I’m talking about whole-grain oatmeal. Porridge. The kind you used to make on the stove.

But I cook my porridge on weekday mornings in just over a minute, in the microwave.

You might think oatmeal is old-fashioned. It’s not cool. It's not advertised during prime-time TV. Its price tag isn't a status symbol. (In fact, a $5 bag lasts me a month.) However, it is healthy, delicious, and fast to cook in the morning.

The basics of cooking oatmeal on a weekday
If you’re someone who has time to spare in the a.m., by all means, use the stove. The texture of your oatmeal will be slightly better, and you’ll get your Zen therapy by stirring for a few minutes.

But for those of us who run from bed to the kitchen to the office, use the microwave method instead.

For one serving: 

Measure 1/3 cup quick-cooking oats (oatmeal) into a large microwaveable bowl. Add 2/3 cup water.

If you have smaller dishes that hold only as much as the uncooked oatmeal, I would suggest switching to a small Corningware or baking dish. As the oatmeal heats up, it climbs up the side of the bowl – and, if you’re not careful – spills right out over the edge.

This bowl floweth over...with oatmeal

This bowl keeps oatmeal contained
Whatever size bowl, it’s essential to soak your oatmeal. I like to do this before I get dressed and do my hair. That gives me at least 10 to 20 minutes of soak time. If you’re using a big bowl, you don’t need to soak the oats as long – just 5 or 10 minutes.

After soaking, microwave on HIGH power for about 1 minute, 10 seconds. My microwave is pretty powerful. Yours might need a bit more time – but start here and work your way up.

Top your oatmeal with any variety of delicious, preferably seasonal, toppings. You can even add a touch of sweetener – brown sugar, honey, maple syrup...controlling the amount you eat. And making sure it’s fresh.

Basic Weekday Oatmeal Recipe
Weekday oatmeal with peanut butter, raisins & flaxseed
Here is my basic oatmeal topping recipe, although I’ve been known to skip the raisins and indulge in straight-up PB & J, too. 
  • 1 Tbsp. peanut butter
  • 2 Tbsp. raisins
  • 1 tsp. ground flaxseeds
  • Splash of milk or soy milk
If PB doesn’t float your boat, try one of my other oatmeal recipes, both of which can be vegan: apple cider oatmeal and banana bread oatmeal

Friday, April 15, 2011

VegNews Scandal: Try Helping Instead of Hindering

VegNews magazine has been very naughty. They’ve been using images of meat in their magazine and calling them vegan. For years, apparently. Read the full story on the QuarryGirl website, then have a think.

This is my take:

My all-veggie burger
Magazines and ads use food stylists all the time to make their dishes look irresistible. I use the word “dishes” purposefully because many times nothing on them is edible (like enhancing colour using lipstick) – or, it’s misleading (mashed potatoes standing in for ice cream because they look just as good but don’t melt.) You’ve been misled for years by food photos everywhere - not just those in VegNews. It’s common practice.

And then, it’s expensive to put together a print magazine. Especially in a niche market. Especially when your niche is vegan, soy-ink-using, recycled-paper-printing and responsible. I acknowledge that getting professional photos of every recipe and food featured in the magazine would cost a bundle and might not be feasible.

HOWEVER, in my opinion, neither of these are good reasons to:
a) Use photos that don’t reflect the recipes printed.
b) Mislead readers by showing images of meat instead of vegan products.

I have read that people are cancelling their subscriptions, just like they cancelled their GoDaddy accounts after watching the video of CEO Bob Parsons shooting the elephant

But this is different – presumably you still support the vegan cause. You want there to be a magazine sitting next to “BBQ Meat Monthly” that reflects your values. You also want VegNews to respond decisively and say they won’t do it again (rather than apologizing but offering no action). 

Having crappy images taken by staff in the test kitchen won’t reflect well on the magazine, nor on vegan food. The magazine could fold and go online to reduce costs, but then it would lose much of its visibility and reduce its audience.

Here’s another solution: instead of boycotting VegNews, why not support its efforts to use all-vegan food in their pictures? Would you share your own photos. or donate them for free (with credit to you)? I’m not a photographer – obvious, if you’ve read my other blog posts – but I’d be happy to put forward a few of my good ones.

What do you think? Would you grant rights for VegNews to use your images?

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Weekly Wrap for April 4-10, 2011

Stay up-to-date with the latest recipe ideas and vegetarian news with Veg Cuisine’s weekly wrap.

Recipe Picks

On Veg Cuisine
Roasted vegetables recipe
  • Roasted vegetables are one of my favourite meals, period. We can polish off a whole pan of our favourites veggies (carrots, potatoes, Brussels sprouts, sweet potatoes, onions and garlic), but you can choose your favourites instead.
 Elsewhere
  • Steven and Chris: recipes for vegetarian delights
    Try a vegan squash soup that doubles as Pad Thai sauce, or a chocolate tofu pudding that has way more ingredients than my simple recipe (but dried cherries? Probably tastes better too). Recipes are by Celebrity Chef Jonathan Chovancek.
  • Martha Stewart and Biz Stone cook up some vegan seitan bouguignon
    How freakin’ cute is Biz Stone? As one of Twitter's co-founders, I've read plenty about him, but have never seen him speak. Turns out he's endearing and super-sweet. Possibly because he listens to his wife. In other Martha Stewart news though, she's featuring vegetarian and vegan recipes all over her network of websites and magazines: she's got quick vegetarian dinners on her Food homepage and a video "How to make tofu taste good" on her Whole Living homepage. Martha's keeping up with the times. And I'm glad to have her on board!  
Butter beans with tomatoes
  • Vegan Creole Recipes from the VRG
    I’m including these veganized Creole recipes partially because I want to remember to try them. We 've tried out hand at meatless gumbo a few times, with limited success. There’s no gumbo here, but there are butter beans, greens in peanut sauce and pralines.  Yum.




News and "not-quite" news 
Apparently the spring weather is making news reporter fancies turn to...cows. 
  • Sensational story! Cloned cows make human milk
    Hooray for the CBC who actually did some reporting, unlike other outlets that covered this story. However, the headline should read “Cloned cows produce one breastmilk protein”. I thought humans already did that - and then some. Scientists always think they can replicate what nature evolved to create, but we never quite measure up. Taking fibre is not the same as eating whole grains, and making breastmilk proteins is not the same as making breastmilk. Fail. 
Yogurt with flaxseed

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Roasted Vegetables Recipe

Red onions, broccoli, cauliflower, and carrots ready to roast
Roasted vegetables, in my opinion, should be one of those recipes everyone should know how to cook. On lazy nights, it’s a meal with some fresh bread. For company, add roasted caramelized tempeh and couscous.

Roasting veggies is a great way to clean out your fridge and pantry, too. Roast up whatever vegetables you have, and like. Throw in whole heads of garlic if you’re not planning to use them. It all comes together with some olive oil and a simple spice blend. Serve with whatever grains you have – couscous, brown rice, and quinoa are all good choices.

I should mention how flexible this recipe is. It’s:
  • Vegan (vegetarian)
  • Low-carb
  • Dressy enough for company
  • A great side dish for high-protein meats or veggie "meats"
We like to cook as many vegetables as fit in the pan, ramping up the spices and olive oil as necessary. Leftovers are scrumptious the next day.

Spicy Pepper Roasted Vegetables Recipe
Makes 4 generous servings
Preparation time: 20 minutes
Cooking time: 1 hour

Uncooked vegetables with olive oil and spicy pepper medley
Ingredients:
  • About ¼ cup olive oil (you can eyeball the olive oil)
  • About 4 Tbsp. favourite spice blend (homemade or store-bought – I like Clubhouse’s Spicy Pepper Medley)
  • 1-2 tsp. dried rosemary (optional)
  • 3 small potatoes, scrubbed
  • 1 large sweet potato, scrubbed
  • 1 yellow cooking onion, sliced into wedges
  • 1 red onion, sliced into wedges
  • 3 cloves elephant garlic, thickly sliced OR 1 head garlic, separated into cloves and peeled
  • 10 Brussels sprouts, halved OR 1/3 head cabbage, sliced into wedges
  • 2 cups cauliflower florets



Roasted vegetables
Directions:
  1. Preheat the oven to 450°F.
  2. Pour a thin layer of olive oil on the bottom of the pan. Dump in about a third of the cut vegetables. Drizzle generously with olive oil. Sprinkle with about a Tablespoon of spice blend, and rosemary, if using. Stir.
    Repeat until no more vegetables are left. Stir gently, as your pan is likely to be overflowing. Don’t worry – the vegetables cook down and take up less space as they do.
  3. Roast in the oven at 450°F for 1 hour, stirring every 20 minutes.
  4. Serve hot.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Weekly Wrap: The World of Veg Cuisine for March 27-April 2, 2011

Photo by Sandra Cunningham

Recipes on Veg Cuisine
  • Homemade vegetable stock
    Stock is traditionally made with meat bones, while broth is made with chunks of meat. This recipe uses vegetables and optional seasonings. Is it a broth or a stock? I guess it's neither. But it's delicious, freezes well, and can be made into soups, stews, and vegetarian gravies. Clean out your crisper today.

News and “But-is-it?” News
  • Pub-goers diss vegetarian food
    Despite this story from the UK being poorly written, the comments are telling. A meal without meat? That we have to pay for? Heck no! Are people really thinking “If we eat one vegetarian meal, they’ll think we’re sympathetic to their cause?”
    Story: Meat’s off the menu as pub goes vegetarian
  • Adventures in almond milk
    I loved thie post because it's rare to see the struggles that go on behind the scenes in a cook's kitchen before they reveal the finished product. Learn what not to do when making almond milk from scratch.
    Story: Crying (and cursing) over spilled milk
  • Vegan parents charged for neglect in baby’s death
    In an extremely sad story, a vegan family in France has been charged with “neglect or food deprivation” because their 11-month-old baby died. The baby had been exclusively breastfed and was malnourished. However, it’s nice to see that not everyone is immediately blaming the parents’ veganism – this thoughtful Guardian.co.uk article: What is French for a vegan? is a refreshing take. Remember the Dietitians of Canada still believes a vegan diet can be appropriate at every age and stage, if planned well:
    Well-planned vegan and other types of vegetarian diets are appropriate for all stages of the life cycle, including during pregnancy, lactation, infancy, childhood, and adolescence." - Position paper of the American Dietetic Association and Dietitians of Canada:
    Vegetarian Diets 

Homemade Indian Pakora Recipe


Spicy Indian pakora are the perfect appetizer or side dish for a cold night. They're battered, deep-fried, richly seasoned and slightly spicy.  They're also a bit of work. If your cupboard isn't already stocked with Indian spices, this is your excuse to make a trip to the Indian grocery store.

Since we're trying to use up vegetables we have a spring clean our kitchen, we used cooked eggplant slices, raw zucchini, and raw onions.  However, you can use whatever vegetables you have lying around - try cauliflower, broccoli, potatoes or sweet potatoes. 

Serve pakora with almost any kind of spicy dipping sauce, sweet-and-sour sauce, chutney, or plum sauce.


Eggplant needs to be salted and sweated before using. If using raw eggplant (i.e. not cooked leftovers from another dish), cut it first and set it to sweat (instructions below) before chopping the rest of the vegetables.

Homemade Indian Pakora Recipe
Time to prepare: 30 minutes (not including the eggplant)
Time to cook: 15 minutes
Serves: 4

Vegetable ingredients:
  • 1 small eggplant, sliced into rounds (salted and sweated for about an hour)
  • 1 small zucchini, sliced into spears
  • 1 cooking onions, thickly sliced
 Or other vegetables such as:
  • Potatoes
  • Sweet potatoes
  • Cauliflower, broken into florets
  • Broccoli, broken into florets
Batter ingredients:
This batter recipe will cover about 3 cups of vegetables.
  • 1 cup chickpea (gram) flour
  • ¾ cup water
  • ½ Tbsp. dried ground coriander
  • ½ Tbsp. ground cardamom
  • 1 Tbsp. turmeric
  • ½ Tbsp. garam masala (an Indian spice mix)
  • 1 (scant) Tbsp. fenugreek
  • ½ Tbsp. powdered ginger
  • ½ Tbsp. ground cumin
  • ½ tsp. salt
  • Pinch cracked black pepper
  • Vegetable oil, for frying
Directions:
  1. Cut the vegetables into uniformly sized pieces: cut the eggplant and onion into discs no thicker than ½-centimetre (¼-inch) thick; cut zucchini into quarters lengthwise to make spears; cut potatoes into large cubes and keep cauliflower in florets.
  2. If you haven't already sweated the eggplant, do it now: sprinkle eggplant slices generously with coarse salt and let drain for at least 30 minutes. Rinse and pat dry before using.
  3. Make batter: sift the chickpea flour into a bowl. Using a fork to mix as you go, slowly add the water. Add the spices: coriander, cardamom, turmeric, garam masala, fenugreek, ginger, cumin, salt and pepper.
  4. Heat a large shallow skillet over medium heat. Before adding vegetables, test that the oil is hot: add a drop or two of batter. The batter should sizzle and start to cook immediately.
  5. When the oil is hot, shallow-fry the vegetables for several minutes on each side, until light golden brown.
  6. Drain vegetables on paper towels. 
Sifting chickpea flour for pakora

 Frying eggplant pakora


Completed eggplant pakora

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Homemade Vegetable Stock

Last week I opened my cupboard only to be plunked in the head with a bottle of yeast. This week, I’m working on clearing out the winter pantry staples to make room for spring! What better place to start with comfort food than smooth, veggie-rich broth made on your very own stovetop?
Mike is the master of all things slow-cooked; I don’t have the patience for stuff like this. But I get to come home and reap the rewards of his work!
Why make your own vegetable stock?
  • It’s cheap
  • It uses up the veggies rotting in your fridge
  • It’s free from MSG (check your stock cubes or powder - most do contain it)
  • It’s delicious
  • It’s as low in salt as you want it to be
When we cook, we throw the vegetable scraps into a plastic container in the freezer. Then, when the container is full of potato peels, carrot stubs, and onion ends, we make stock. Then we turn that stock into delicious vegetable soup – generally minestrone, lentil, or barley.

Cooking vegetable soup stock
Homemade Vegetarian Vegetable Stock Recipe
Preparation time: 15 minutes
Cooking time: 1 hour
Ingredients:
  • Onion ends
  • Potato peelings
  • Carrot stubs and peelings
  • Celery tops
  • Garlic
  • Leftover tomatoes (optional)
  • Going-bad mushrooms (optional)
  • Other vegetables, as desired
  • Herbs (if desired, depending on what you’ll use the stock for)
  • Salt and pepper, to taste

Directions:
  1. Chop the vegetables into pieces of uniform size, if not already done.
  2. Optional step – sautĂ© the onions, garlic, celery, and carrots in a touch of olive oil until golden brown.
  3. Put the vegetables into a large soup pot.
  4. Add water in a ratio of about 1 ½ parts water to 1 part vegetables (for example, if using 2 cups vegetables, add 3 cups water)
  5. Heat over high until it reaches a boil.
  6. Reduce heat and simmer for about an hour.
  7. Remove from heat.
  8. Strain stock through a fine sieve or colander. Discard vegetables and use stock for soup.

Cooking vegetable stock
Straining the vegetable stock



    Looking for homemade soup recipes?

    These are some of our favourites, which also happen to be vegan:
    Cooked veggies left over from stock-making

    Sunday, March 27, 2011

    Weekly Wrap: The World of Veg Cuisine for March 18-25, 2011

    Recipes

    On Veg Cuisine

    Lazy lasagne recipe
    • Lazy Lasagne Recipe
      It's ricotta-spinach lasagne but without the pain-in-the-tushie layering. 

    Elsewhere on the interwebs

    • 6 vegetarian lasagna recipes (Homemakers.com).
      Add this to our lazy lasagne recipe and you have enough lasagne choices to last you through to next winter!

      News and “but-is-it” news

      On Veg Cuisine

      • Spring Cleaning the Kitchen
        I’m cleaning out the cupboard with a last round of vegetarian comfort food recipes before the good weather (and spring produce) hits. Send me your favourite recipes!
      • A Century of Meat
        The amount of red meat Americans eat is going down, but the amount of chicken is going up. Egg consumption is going down too. Canadians eat only about half of the American amount of meat. Hooray! But the New York Times writer who made this infographic Internet- famous feels bad for eating plants, too.
       Elsewhere
      • Sabre-toothed Brazilian veggiesaurus skeleton found
        The remains of an ancient sabre-toothed vegetarian creature were found in Brazil. I’m not sure I agree with using “vegetarian” in this context – did the animal choose not to eat meat? I’d be more inclined to call it an “herbivore”. But either way, these dog-like animals were apparently bad-ass, using their teeth to fight each other instead of to kill prey. Kinda reminds me of those big beefy athletes (the UFC’s Mac Danzig, anyone?) who subsist on plants.
        Story: Remains of ancient saber-toothed vegetarian found in Brazil (CTV News)
      Airline food
      Photo credit: mailtobee, sxc.hu
      • Vegetarian flicks crappy food at flight attendant
        It’s not really news, but for some reason the blogs are all over this one. Those vegetarians are just plain crazy. Probably due to a lack of protein.
        Story: No peas and Q's for raging in-flight veg gal (New York Post)
      • Tasty iPhone apps for vegetarians
        I wish I had an iPhone so I could test these apps out and tell you which are the best. But for free or a small fee, you can find out yourself. I can especially see the usefulness of pulling up a list of non-vegetarian ingredients to help you grocery shop. But what’s wrong with a website? Do iPhones not “do” actual websites? Websites are free.
        Story: Tasty iPhone apps for vegetarians (Appolicious)
      • Tofurky Tuesdays
        As if there aren’t enough days and weeks to remember (yesterday, tomorrow…no wait, more like Meatless Mondays, Veguary, Soup Sundays…) Tofurky is jumping on the wagon with Tofurky Tuesdays. Who else is sick of other people telling us what to eat? By the way, check out the Veg Cuisine blog for some tasty dinner ideas ;)
        Tofurky.com’s web page: Tofurky Tuesdays
      • Are vegetarians smarter?
        I don’t see any references with this The Jakarta Post article, but it’s an interesting perspective nonetheless. Ignore the boring headline and skim down to the part where they talk about IQ’s.
        Story: Teenagers going vegetarian (The Jakarta Post)

        (Also related: Born to be vegan on Asia One Health follows a similar line, describing how meat is toxic. I don’t think most North Americans would take well to reading that in their morning paper). 
      58Z7SF72X8B9

        Thursday, March 24, 2011

        Spring Cleaning the Kitchen

        I’m not Martha Stewart. I don’t give my house a top-to-bottom clean in the spring…or ever. But my kitchen is a different story. I can’t cook unless I can find my ingredients.

        Over the course of the winter we’ve accumulated layers of canned and packaged comfort foods, ready to become healthy and warming winter meals.

        We have dried peas and beans out the wazoo. Soup mixes that’ve been there for years. And rice noodles of every shape and size. 

        My baking cupboard is getting to the point where I am forced to duck and cover every time the door is opened, or risk getting plunked in the head by a bottle of quick-rising yeast.
        (edit: my bad <3 Mike)


        Overstuffed baking goods cupboard

        In terms of the fridge, well…have you ever seen so many sauces?
        So many sauces

        Some would call this a well-stocked kitchen. If I had a pantry like Chef Michael Smith, I might agree (and I wouldn’t be writing this post). But the reality is I have a small city kitchen and a fridge in need of a good clean. But first I need to be able to see the shelves.
        Canned goods cupboard

        So, over the next few weeks I will be trying my best to embrace the coat-tails of winter and cook up some comfort food to get us through to spring. I know it’s technically spring already, but here’s what I woke up to yesterday morning:

        Snowy front yard
        Snowy deck
         


















        If you have any comfort food recipes that rely on pantry staples, feel free to send them my way. I have to clean this stuff out before the spring veggies come into season, or there will be no looking back to winter.

        Monday, March 21, 2011

        Lazy Lasagne Recipe

        Who has time to make proper lasagne? Or rather, who has the patience to make proper lasagne? Not us. So we deconstructed the typical vegetarian lasagne and made it into a baked pasta casserole – no layering, no broken noodles, and no frustration. Just mix and bake.

        You could add more vegetables to the spinach mixture in this lasagne, but personally, we think the simpler this recipe stays, the better. If you want more veggies in your meal, try a side dish: maybe a matchstick carrot salad or vegetarian Caesar salad (the Caesar recipe is Mike’s, and it’s pretty much the most delicious recipe ever).

        You’ll need a large casserole dish for this recipe, or two smaller ones. If you’re cooking for one or two, try freezing half the recipe. We have lightweight Corningware dishes with freezer-friendly lids for this purpose.

        Gooey cheese tops off vegetarian lazy lasagne
        Lazy Lasagne Recipe
        Makes 6 servings
        Preparation + cooking time: 1 hour

        Ingredients:
        • 1 Tbsp. olive oil
        • 1 medium cooking onion, chopped
        • 2 cloves garlic, minced or pressed
        • 1 (454 gram) box whole wheat pasta shapes, like penne
        • 1 (24 ounce) can plain pasta sauce
        • ½ Tbsp. sweet paprika (substitute hot if sweet paprika is not available; use only a few pinches instead)
        • 1 tsp. oregano
        • 1 tsp. basil
        • Salt to taste
        • 1 tsp. black pepper
        • ½ tub ricotta cheese
        • 1 (10 ounce) box frozen spinach
        • 1 ½ cups grated mozzarella cheese

        Directions:

        Put on a large pot of water for the pasta before starting the sauce. When it boils, cook pasta according to package directions. Cook until slightly firm (al dente).

        For the sauce:

        1. Heat a large frying pan over medium-high heat. Add the olive oil.
        2. When the oil is hot, add the chopped onions and stir well.
        3. Sauté the onions for a few minutes, adding more olive oil if the onions start to burn. Add the minced garlic.
        4. Sauté until the onions are translucent and soft. Add the oregano, basil, sweet paprika (use a few pinches of regular paprika if sweet paprika is not available).
        5. Add the tomato sauce.
        6. Bring the sauce to a boil; add pepper and add salt to taste.
        7. Defrost the spinach in the microwave (if frozen) and add to the sauce.
        8. Heat through, then remove from heat.
        9. Gently pour the sauce into the casserole dish (or split between two dishes, if that’s what you’re doing). Add the pasta (or half the pasta) and stir. Then add the ricotta cheese (or half the ricotta), breaking it up into very small chunks with a fork as you go.
        10. Top with shredded mozzarella cheese.
        11. Bake at 350 degrees Celsius for 30 minutes, or until top is just started to brown.

        A Century of Meat

        Infographic: A Century of Meat from NYTimes.com.

        How does your meat consumption stack up? Based on this graph, it looks like the typical American eats nearly 200 pounds of meat per year. That's as much as you'd get from an entire full-grown man.

        Think Canadians are better? We are: according to statistics from StatsCan, Canadians ate 42.26 kilograms (about 93 pounds) of meat, poultry, and fish in 2009. (However, this number is adjusted for spoilage and other losses.)

        What is telling about this graph is how the graph doesn't even blip in most categories during war times. It's a stark contrast to Canada - our first "food rules", as predecessors to the Food Guide, were developed as a "focal point" for nutrition during World War II. Food during the war was scarce and people were poor. The food rules created in 1942 recommended only one serving of meat per day, noting that serving could be substituted with beans, peas, eggs, nuts, or cheese.

        And for those of you who saw the link to the infographic but missed the full article, here it is: No Face, but Plants Like Life Too.

        Tuesday, March 15, 2011

        A St. Patrick's Day Menu For You

        St. Patrick's Day food can be summed up in three words:
        • Beer
        • Green
        • Potatoes
        Luckily, there are plenty of vegetarian beers, plenty of green vegetables (skip the food dye, please) and plenty of meatless potato recipes. Celebrate with this Irish-themed menu, perfect for a weekday dinner.

        Vegetarian St. Patrick’s Day Menu
        Lentil Loaf
        Leeks for Colcannon
        Emerald soup recipe
        While others are mowing down on corned beef, you can enjoy some of the green-speckled potato dish called colcannon. Round out the meal with a tasty lentil loaf (or faux meat of your choosing), emerald soup, and a festive green side dish or two (nothing too onerous – think green peas or salad). 

        If you want to save some time on St. Patrick’s Day (eve), cook the lentils and potatoes the night before.

        If you're out of cabbage (or just don't like it) substitute kale, leeks, or Savoy cabbage in the colcannon.
        The recipes:
         

        Saturday, March 12, 2011

        Pancake Tuesday: Join Us in Being Late

        Mike's chocolate chip oatmeal pancakes
        We nearly forgot it was Shrove Tuesday last week. We're not religious, so I wasn't upset because of any oustanding obligations related to the day. But any time you have a excuse to eat pancakes for dinner, hey, you shouldn't miss it.

        So after our workout - about 10 p.m. - Mike set about making some of our famous chocolate chip pancakes.

        It's so easy to make pancakes I always wonder why people use a boxed mix. Our recipe is so much more flexible, nutritious (shhhh...it has oatmeal in it) and you control exactly what goes in.

        The recipe backbone comes from an old Milk cookbook my mom's had for as long as I can remember. However, I've substituted just about everything possible into (and out of ) the recipe.

        Chocolate chip pancakes - the unhealthy version
        If you're wiggling in your seat wondering where you can get your hands on this recipe, it's on our recipe site - Vegetarian Cuisine at Suite101.com: Oatmeal Pancakes Recipe.

        You can make this recipe:
        • Whole wheat: I've successfully used 100% whole wheat flour with the oatmeal. The 'cakes get darker but they taste is still good.
        • Vegan: Substitute egg replacer or applesauce for the egg and use soy/non-dairy milk instead of cow's milk. Use non-dairy margarine or oil instead of the butter. The taste difference is imperceptible, but the texture will be heavier.
        • Sinful: throw in a handful or two of chocolate chips.
        • Healthy: Use whole-wheat flour and substitute applesauce or mushed banana for half the butter. Add blueberries and top with applesauce, juice-sweetened syrup, or jam.
        Some people eat pancakes for breakfast. We eat them often - as a snack, breakfast, brunch or dinner. If there are leftovers, I pack them in my lunch with a small tub of syrup for dipping. They keep for a few days, but rarely last that long.

        Pancake Tuesday is a great excuse to eat pancakes - but who really needs an excuse?

        Wednesday, March 9, 2011

        Vegan Bucket List - Our Score...and Some More

        This month's issue of VegNews contains a vegan bucket list - 99 things you must do, eat, and see. We're not vegan, but we've accomplished 17 of these items - well, at least our version (in red).

        While most of their suggested activities sound fun (or worthwhile), I disagree with number 33: :"Join Twitter and Facebook, follow or friend a bunch of your non-vegan acquaintances, and send along great recipes, videos of cute farm animals, and timely vegan news."  That's sure to annoy your friends and get people to "un-follow" you.

        Our additions to the bucket list:
        Sipping soup at Moosewood Restaurant
          1. Make a pilgrimmage to the Moosewood Restaurant in Ithaca, New York. We road-tripped to Moosewood last year, and it was great. (Not to mention, the scenary is fantastic.)

          2. Go on  vacation to a vegetarian resort (or at least a vegetarian-friendly one). Nothing makes me more miserable than being on a nice vacation but having to eat crappy food (ahem, Greek all-inclusive). I don't really care where we go, but I'd prefer somewhere warm.



            Now onto the VegNews list:

            5. Eat a veggie dog from a street cart in Vancouver, BC.  
            Does Toronto work? I think so. Except we call it "street meat".

            9. Perfect a signature tofu scramble.
            Done - my version is yum yum yum.

            12. Splurge on a beautiful Matt & Nat bag that you can carry with pride for many years to come.
            I have two, in fact. Consider them an investment.

            19. Veganize your grandmother’s favorite chocolate chip cookie recipe. Then share with everyone.  
            Done! most of the cookies we make are vegan, and no one is the wiser. Eggs and milk are wasted in cookies anyway.

            22. Become a vegan myth-busting machine—even if you never need to bus vegan myths.  
            Who doesn`t need to bust vegan myths?

            23. Attempt to work out as hard as Brendan Brazier, Kenneth Williams, Tonya Kay, Robert Cheeke, or Scott Jurek.
            Done! But haven't reached the same level of competitive success, unfortunately.

            26. Give fun vegan gifts such as cookbooks, baked goods, Vegan Etsy jewelry, and wine every chance you get.  
            Done - for Christmas I gave my friend Rebecca some vegan body treats from Lush.

            29. Try vegan ethnic food, such as Filipino, Korean, or Sri Lankan.  
            Have you seen our website? Korean dak galbi is one of our favourite dishes. Not to mention Mexican, Chinese, Thai...

            30. Inspire at least one person to become vegan.
            I'm going to go ahead and modify here. I'd like to take credit for helping at least one person go vegetarian...but I've helped a heck of a lot more move closer to a vegetarian diet by seriously cutting down their meat eating.

            31. Trek to Toronto in September for the annual Vegetarian Food Fair. ...for five years running!

            38.  Don’t judge meat-eaters. They’ll just stop listening to you.  
            So true. That is, if they ever listened to you in the first place.

            42. Help the environment by opting for a bicycle or running shoes over a car - not sure what this one has to do with vegetarianism...but...I'll take it.

            46. Start a balcony herb garden Done! Thougth we've since graduated to a deck.

            49. Rekindle your childhood love of PB&J. I eat PB & J in my oatmeal several days a week.

            50. Create something that helps humans feel compassion for animals: a video game, children’s book, ‘zine, novel, movie, or blog will do! uhmm...ahem.

            64. Become a vegan hostess extraordinaire by throwing holiday parties, brunches, bonfires, barbecues, fondue nights, and so on.  
            Yes! I don't cook meat at any of my get-togethers. Last week we had some friends over for dinner - roasted veggies with tempeh (instead of tofu), couscous, bread, cheesecake...uhm, no compalints there!

            92. Attend (or, even better yet, have!) a vegan wedding. We got married last year and had a totally vegetarian wedding - butternut squash soup, roasted veggie stacks with goat cheese, curried lentils, anchovy-free Caesar salad, and apple tart.
             

            Sunday, March 6, 2011

            The New York Times Vegetarian Blog: Why Temporary?

            I've just been over at The New York Times "The Temporary Vegetarian" column, penned (or typed?) by Elaine Louie.

            I scrolled through mouthwatering photos of bean dishes, eggs, potatoes, and burritos. The photos are excellent; the recipes simple and enticing. I'll be keeping my eye on this blog.

            What I couldn't locate was its raison d’ĂȘtre: why the "temporary" vegetarian? Anyone who tries out these recipes can't possibly be intimidated by switching to a "full-time" vegetarian diet. Elaine - go for it!

            Thursday, March 3, 2011

            The New Home of Veg Cuisine

            Hello all,

            To make blogging about vegetarian food easier, I've moved my blog from Suite101.com's Vegetarian Cuisine section to Blogger. 

            The Blogger interface is easier to use, and hopefully, easier to find.

            I tend to post once or twice per week about current events/news in the world of vegetarianism; new recipes; book reviews; and my own thoughts. I don't judge or condescend to others who don't share my food views. All are welcome here!


            Please feel free to send me your comments and feedback. Please subscribe to get Veg Cuisine updates by email or via RSS feed.