Showing posts with label veganism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label veganism. Show all posts

Sunday, October 9, 2011

The Vegan Experiment Day 8 - the finals

Ok, a little late, but here it is: day 8, the last day of my temporary veganism.
Since it is fall and there are pumkins everywhere I decided to try out two vegan pumkin recipes that I found on www.vegalicious.com.


I started the day with a pumkin banana orange smoothie for which I mixed 

1 cup (240ml) vanilla soy yogurt
1 cup (240ml) pumpkin puree, chilled
1 cup (240ml) orange juice
1 tablespoon brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon allspice
1 ripe banana
dash of ground cinnamon as optional garnish    

                                                                                     

You don't have to be too correct about the measurements. Just vary the ingredients however you prefer it! I think with real yoghurt it may taste a bit better. The soy yoghurt just doesn't do it for me.
But besides that, the smoothie was alright. Maybe a bit more allspice and cinnamon to bring out the pumkin flavour. 

For dinner I took the leftover pumkin purree from this morning's breakfast smoothie and made pasta with a nice pumkin pistacchio pasta sauce.



That's what you need for about two servings:


  • 1/2 onion, chopped fine
  • 1/2 red bell pepper, chopped fine
  • 1 tablespoon oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 cup pumpkin puree
  • 1 vegetable bouillon cube
  • 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • dash of red pepper flakes
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 3-5 fresh sage leaves (optional)
  • 1/2 lb. penne, fusilli or other pasta
  • 3 TBS. minced fresh parsley leaves as optional garish
  • 1/3 cup finely chopped pistachios
Directions:
                                              Saute the onion and red pepper in a small frying pan.
    When the onion becomes soft and glassy, add the garlic and lightly saute it also.
    Place the pureed pumpkin in a pot and add the sauteed vegetables.
    Add the vegetable bouillon, red pepper flakes, nutmeg and water.
    Optionally add the sage leaves if desired.
    Cook the mixture until it is warmed.
                                          Puree he mixture once again to form a smooth consistency.
    Season to taste with additional salt and pepper.
    Meanwhile, bring a large pot of lightly salted water to boil.
    Add the pasta and cook until it is al dente.
    When the pasta is ready, drain and return to the pot.
    Mix 1/2 the pumpkin mixture into the pasta and stir to evilly coat the pasta.
    Serve the pasta garnished with pistachio nuts and optionally minced parsley leaves.
    Serve the other 1/2 of the sauce in a “gravy boat” for people to add on top of their serving.
    Optionally if you would like a creamier flavour you can add soy cream.


    I added a dash of each cinnamon and allspice to the sauce, as well. It tasted pretty good, but still a little bland. Next time I think I might add something more acidic to it, such as lemon juice, white wine or vinegar. I could also imagine to mix in some carrots to the puree to add more flavour to it and the juice of one orange.

    Cooking these two wonderful dishes on the last day of my experiment certainly helped me to forget about my dairy/egg/meat cravings for a while. I actually managed to stay vegan one day longer.
    But I ate all the leftovers. so there nothing new to tell you.

    On the 10th day Wil and I celebrated with two nice pieces of Entrecote and a glass of decent red wine. Boy, that meat tasted so good! And I can assure you it came from a happy cow!


    My final conclusion to this experiment is, that being a vegan is not even that hard these days. There are plenty of options and organic stores offer a lot of alternatives to meat and dairy products, whether those are good or not as good... I didn't feel better healthwise, which I thought was weird. I kind of thought I would sleep better, have an excellent digestion (no lactose) and feel more awake and energetic during the day. But nada. Everything was normal. Maybe I am just healthy already...
    I did get a lot of inspiration for more vegetable based dishes. we have been eating a lot of red meat lately. It's just very easy to prepare and you get so much flavour! 
    But hey, there are good reasons to eat less of it, environmentally and from a health perspective.
    We have been more conscious about where our meat/eggs and dairies come from already. Still I think we can improve on that. It just makes you feel better to know that you are eating something for which no animal had to suffer or go through unnecessary pain.
    I will not become a vegan or a vegetarian in the near future, that's for sure. But I have big respect for people who decide to dedicate their life to these kind of diets. I wish some of them would stop being so damn militant about it, though. Veganism is simply not for everyone and it's also not about joining the latest and hippest club. Sorry, but that's often the impression I'm getting. 
    I think it is more important to figure out ways to consume less but therefore better and ethically unquestionable animal products from preferably small local business.


    Thursday, October 6, 2011

    The Vegan Experiment Day 7 - the big withdrawal

    At day 7 of my vegan experiment the big withdrawal hit me. Nothing could really satisfy me that day.
    I wasn't craving meat, but something rich, creamy and fatty, that is not oil, but butter, cream and cheese. Or simply REAL milk.

    I still had one bag of "vegan chicken nuggets" with sesame oil and was kind of suspicious on whether those will be any good. Especially after my vegan convenience food shock of day one...


    But to my surprise they tasted pretty good. The consistency was kind of rubbery but I didn't mind that too much. It didn't taste like chicken at all. Rather like some sort of savory dough? I sprinkled some sweet soy sauce over the nuggets which added a nice flavor to it. 

     

     Maybe it's just because I'm getting used to the whole non meaty stuff and don't taste the soy anymore.
    But later that day I pretty much inhaled the rest of the vegan cookie dough ice cream, searching for satisfaction, and, as mentioned, that didn't work...

    Earlier that day I had a vegetarian/vegan wantan soup at the one Asian place my colleagues always go to at lunch break.  There is a lot of Asian dishes that are vegan or at least vegetarian. So, if you decide to become a vegan you will always find something to eat there. Careful wth Indian food, though. They often add cream and gee (clarified butter) to their dishes.



     There is only one more day of my experiment left and, since it is fall here, 
    it will be all about pumpkins!

    Wednesday, October 5, 2011

    The Vegan Experiment Day 6 - The best chocolate-cherry muffins ever! And they happen to be vegan...

    Having had pretty mediocre and bad vegan cakes, muffins, ice cream and chocolates in the past days I decided to take on the challenge and make sweet baked goods that actually taste yummy and not like "the vegan version of...". Therefore I searched the internet for cakes that happen to be vegan, but were not necessarily intended to be vegan (you understand what I mean?). 
    Again Epicurious.com was the website were I was lucky to find this fantastic recipe! 

    They are so dark, it's even hard to photograph them!

    I modified it a bit and made probably the best chocolate-cherry muffins in the whole wide world! Seriously! I will definitely make them again. So, so good!
    They are so easy and quick to prepare, and you probably have (almost) all the ingredients at home already. The dough is incredibly moist and almost creamy. 
    It's rich. It's dark. It's how a good chocolate cake has to be like.
    What is interesting is that, except for maybe eggs, a lot of cakes don't even need animal products like milk or butter. Don't get me wrong, I love butter. But butter  burns quicker and makes cookies, cakes & co turn out crispier. I learned that in order to get a moist and soft cake, you're better to use margarine. The best results I had so far were with oil, though.
    Eggs are responsible for the density in a cake. They add flavour and color and are part of the maillard-reaction, as well. But it won't make the dough rise or anything. That's what you use the baking soda,  baking powder or yeast for. 
    There can be dough without eggs.

    And here is the proof!

    ...and they were so soft that it was tricky to remove them from the pan without having them fall apart.


    All you need for the basic recipe is:
    • 2 1/4 cups (270g) organic all-purpose flour
    • 2 cups (450g) organic cane sugar
    • 1 cup (120) organic unsweetened cocoa powder
    • 2 teaspoons baking soda
    • 1/2 teaspoon salt
    • 1 tablespoon organic vanilla extract
    • 2/3 cup (160ml) organic canola oil
    • 2 teaspoons organic white vinegar
    • 2 cups (480ml) cold water - I  the juice of canned morello cherries instead and added the cherries to the dough, as well.

    Preparation
    Preheat the oven to 350°F/180°C. Grease two 8- or 9-inch round cake pans, or place liners in 2 muffin pans for 24 cupcakes. Set aside.
    In a large bowl, sift the dry ingredients together. Set aside.
    In a medium bowl, mix the vanilla extract, oil, vinegar, and cold water.
    Slowly whisk the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients, being careful not to overmix. 
    The mixture will be quite wet, but this is okay.
    Pour the batter into the prepared pans and bake until a tester inserted in the center comes out clean, about 30 minutes. 
    For cupcakes, the baking time is 24 to 26 minutes.
    Cool in the pans for 10 minutes, then invert onto a wire rack to cool. 

    The ones on the top are the coffee muffins, the ones on the bottom are with cherries.
     
    PS: 
    Instead of the two cups/480ml of water, you can use whatever liquid you want. This time I used cherry juice. But I also tried it with strong coffee, which turned out really good, as well.
    Or how about orange, cranberry or banana juice? Or even red wine? Yum.


    Tuesday, October 4, 2011

    Vegan Experiment Day 5 - Mushroom-Walnut Burger

    As I already mentioned in my previous post, I searched the internet for some vegan recipes. I wanted to cook something that is not too crazy ingredients-wise, but also not too common, like pasta with tomato sauce. It had to be something I wouldn't normally cook, or let's say, I haven't cooked yet.
    I did find a lot of vegetable based burgers and patties. 
    This seems to be a very popular thing when cooking vegan.
    The reason is probably that those burgers are quite savory and substantial. You actually eat something that fills you up, whereas just salad as a main dish can be quite unsatisfying.


    On epicurous.com (a great recipe-website!), I found this recipe for Mushroom-Pecan Burgers.
    They turned out pretty well , even though I had to adjust a couple of thing.
    I didn't have sage, hoisin-sauce and pecans.
    Therefore I decided to leave out the hoisin sauce and took a bit more soy-sauce instead. No sage but I decided to add dried thyme instead. I also added some chopped up rosemary (needles of ca 4 twigs) to the parsley mushroom mix, since rosemary is always a good choice when cooking with mushrooms. 
    Oh yeah, and I replaced the pecans with walnuts. You won't really taste the nuts in the end anyway. They just add a nice crunch. You could probably also try it with other kinds of nuts or seeds.

    Last but not least, I have to say that after frying the patties for 3-5 minutes at medium heat from each side the inside was still very soft and creamy, or one could say "medium rare". If you like that, fine. I thought it was a little groce. Therefore I cooked them in the oven afterwards for another 20 more minutes at approx. 160°C, and ate them "well done".

    I served them with a salad of arugula, tomatoes, radish, cress and figs. 
    The figs added a nice subtle sweetness to the rather savory burger patties.


    Anyway, here is the full  original recipe!

    Ingredients:
    • 1 1/2 pounds (685 g) cremini mushrooms
    • 1/2 cup (30 g) fresh parsley
    • 2 tablespoons (30 ml) olive oil, divided
    • 2 large-size yellow onions, finely chopped
    • 3 large-size garlic cloves, minced
    • 1 1/2 to 2 cups (165 to 220 g) bread crumbs or cracker meal
    • 3 tablespoons (45 g) tahini
    • 2 tablespoons (30 g) hoisin sauce
    • 3/4 cup (85 g) toasted pecans or walnuts, chopped
    • 3 tablespoons (45 ml) tamari soy sauce
    • 1 teaspoon (2 g) dried oregano
    • 1/2 teaspoon dried sage
    • salt and ground pepper, to taste

     Preparation: 

    In a food processor, mince mushrooms and parsley. Remove and set aside.
    In a sauté pan over medium heat, warm 1 tablespoon (15 ml) olive oil and cook onions and garlic for 5 to 6 minutes. Transfer onion mixture to a large-size bowl, and combine with minced mushrooms and parsley, bread crumbs, tahini, hoisin sauce, chopped nuts, tamari, oregano, sage, salt, and pepper.
    Place mixture in refrigerator for at least half an hour. Mixture will be soft, but you should be able to form patties. Add additional bread crumbs or tahini, if needed.
    Create patties using your hands. In a sauté pan, warm remaining 1 tablespoon (15 ml) oil, and fry patties over medium heat for 3 to 5 minutes on each side, until lightly browned and crispy. 
    Be careful to keep patties intact.


    For dessert I had a vegan version of chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream.


    I didn't like it at all. The soy milk flavour is very dominant, the cookie dough bits are mushy and don't taste very good either, and the chocolate tastes like cheap chocolate. The ice cream itself is not creamy at all and is completely lacking the richness that you would want in ice cream.


    Completely disappointing!


    Saturday, October 1, 2011

    Vegan Experiment Day 3&4

    Two days passed, and I still haven't eaten animal.

    Day 3

    Day 3 started with my beloved vanilla soy coffee (yak) and a pink grapefruit.
    So far so good.


    For lunch I had a fried lentil-pastry roll which was pretty delicious, I have to say. Nicely spiced and crispy.
    I also bought one of my favorite vegetarian/vegan spreads "Allos Classico Gourmet Pastete". That went on a pretzel roll and tasted expectingly good, as well.

    Allos Gourmet Pastete Classico tastes a bit likeliverwurst...
    ...just without the liver and the wurst
    But the best part of the day was definitely dinner. I sauteéd some vegetables and had some rosemary crispbread  (it's new from WASA and I can highly recommend it!) with a white bean spread. My friend Ingrid who had been a Vegan for a few years in the past gave me some tips on what to cook and how to keep yourself motivated, and the white bean spread was one of the recipes she gave me.
    Hell, that was delicious!

    Sorry bout the crappy photo. But it was dark outside
    and I only had my iPhone and some bad lamp to use as a spot.
    But I'm sure you get an idea...

    It's so easy to make. Just buy a can of white beans, strain them and collect the marinade/juice in a separate bowl. Put the beans in a mixer and mix them with 1-2 garlic cloves, olive oil and lemon juice. Season it with salt, pepper and a dash of sugar and if it's not creamy enough add some more olive oil or the white bean marinade/juice. Be careful with the garlic. I used two garlic cloves for half the amount and it was a little too much. The spread is a little bit like hummus but milder and easier to make. I find making good hummus quite a challenge. The steps are the same as with the wite beans but seasoning it is a little trickier because the chickpeas flavour, especially when using canned chickpeas, is much more dominant than with white beans.

    Day 4

    On day 4 I met up with lovely friend Anna and drank tons of latte macchiatos with soy milk. 
    I'm definitely getting used to the taste of soy milk, so strange.
    Anna and I had lunch at Maya's Deli, a small vegan bistro on Pappelallee in Prenzlauer Berg, Berlin.
    While Anna picked an Avocado sandwich I decided to try the warm tempeh sandwich. 


    Both came with sourdough bread and were really good. I was surprised by the tempeh, a soy product, made by fermented soybeans formed to some sort of cake. It reminded me a little bit of Nattō, just not as strong.


    Very tasty!

     For dessert we tried their home baked cakes. 
    Anna chose a chocolate cream cake I went for the red currant crumble.


    Unfortunately the chocolate cake didn't taste like chocolate at all.So that was quite disappointing. My crumble cake was good. I think the crumbles contained oatmeal, as well, which has a nice flavor when roasted. 
    I only missed the butter in the crumbles. 
    They are just so much richer and satisfying with butter than with margarine!
    And the whipped soy cream was...strange.


    My dinner was pretty unspectacular and not worth mentioning. It was vegan, after all.
    But get prepared for the next days. 
    I digged out some recipes and will try to bake a vegan cake and some mushroom-nut balls/burgers...

    So exciting!

    Thursday, September 29, 2011

    The Vegan Experiment - Day 2

    Day two of my vegan experiment is over. I feel pretty good, so far. Still no withdrawal symptoms.
    I cannot say that I feel like re-born or something. But things are normal.

    I started the day with a vanilla soy milk breakfast. Yeah, that's correct. Since I have it at home, I had to give it another try. I actually like vanilla soy milk. Just not in drip-coffee...

    I made a shake that I have made before and which already is almost vegan.
    You mix a banana with 200-250g of yoghurt and vanilla soy milk (200-300ml). It tastes delicious! Of course, this time I used soy yoghurt. The result was not as good as with normal yoghurt. But still good. Also, I don't know if I'm being too harsh about this. I wonder if I would taste a difference with this drink at all if I didn't know it was with soy yoghurt instead of with the nomral one. A good side-effect was, that after drinking the shake, I didn't taste the soymilk in my coffee anymore.

    Improvement, wohoo!





    For lunch I had pretty much the same as the day before. Avocado-tomato bagel with roasted pine nuts.
    Only that I added some vegan cheddar cheese to it. The cheese itself isn't that impressive. In combination with other things, for example on a sandwich, it's fine and adds a tiny little bit of sort-of cheese flavor and texture to it. Even though it's much more crumbly than normal cheddar.








    I went for this oatmeal-chocolate-energy bar
    as dessert, which wasn't that bad either.
    At least it tasted like what it was -
    oatmeal with a hint of dairy-free chocolate.
    And it totally satisfied my needs and got rid
    of the sugar craving!













     After work I bought a bunch of vegetables, potatoes, sweet potato, leek, purple carrots, turnip, red peppers, red onion, pumpkin and garlic. I chopped everything up into bite-szed pieces, added a pieces of apple, rosemary, cinnamon and nutmeg and seasoned it with salt, pepper, sugar and balsamico.
    I threw everything into a greased (olive oil) baking pan and cooked it in the oven for about 30-35 minutes at 180°C. I sprinkled some of the vegan cheese over one part of the vegetable mix.
    Unfortunately the cheese didn't melt.





    Everything still tasted pretty good.
    Probably because I cooked instead
    of eating another one of these shitty
    ready-made vegan meat substitutes.

    Wednesday, September 28, 2011

    The Vegan Experiment - Day1

    It's day one of my vegan experiment. 
    For all of you who haven't heard about it, yet: 
    !!!For about a week I will try to only eat vegan food!!!
    Given the fact that meat&chocolate is my favorite food, this means quite a challenge to me. 
    I can totally imagine not eating meat for a week. Really, that's fine with me. 
    The worst is to not consume dairy products such as butter, cheese, milk or yoghurt 
    and food that contains egg. Chocolate usually contains milk, as well, at least the chocolate I like.
    So this is going to be a tough call for me.

    The reason why I'm doing it is first of all to challenge myself.
    But I also want to find out more about the vegan diet and if it is really that hard to be a vegan. 

    Let's be honest, I actually struggle with these kind of movements.
    Not because I think it's bullshit to only live of "salad and grains".
    What I dislike are militant activists who insist of convincing me of their healthier, better lifestyle while constantly rubbing "I'm better and smarter than you and you don't have a clue" under my nose.
    I think we all know that the conditions in slaughterhouses are dire. This really is no news to me.
    But I love to eat. Indulging in good food makes me happy and is a major part of my life.
    I love to try stuff and to have choices, and yes, I love eating meat, cheese, eggs & co
    (at least as much as I like to pet animals), and at this point I cannot imagine not eating those things anymore...

    ...oh well, for the next few days I guess I have to, if I want to fulfill my mission.
    I will try to experience the whole spectrum. Therefore I will try some of the meat substitutes, as well as cooking and baking at home and eating at restaurants and cafés.

    Will Julia turn into a vegan activist herself? Will she feel better than ever? Or maybe worse?
    Will she turn into a bad-tempered monster?

    We'll find out soon...

    So here is the first day!

    Breakfast started for me with a fruit smoothie (only fruits!) and vanilla-soy coffee, which I think is pretty disgusting. I'll try to get used to it...maybe skip the vanilla soy milk and use plain soy milk instead.

    Later this day I had a pumkinseed bagel with sliced avocado, cherry tomatoes, roasted pine nuts and balsamico date essence. And no surprise: this was expectingly good.

    Thumbs up for bagel with avocado and tomatoes!

    After that I tried a bit of the soy vanilla yoghurt...man, that stuff really isn't very pleasing. 
    It's not really bad. But there is something - some weird flavour that makes me cringe. 
    I don't know if I can eat this again.

    But hey, the bagel was good!
    (It was actually a hommage to Harriett and Aimee, 
    the lovely non-militant vegan/vegetarian ladies of The Bright Young Twins)

    Dinner was quite a disappointment. I had these breadcrumbed and fried mushroom cutlets that were DISGUSTING! Far too salty and the flavor was unbearable.

    NO!

    NO, NO, NO!

     As for dessert I had a little chocolate cupcake with peanut butter icing. It was moist and soft but
    far too sweet (and I usually cannot get enough sugar) and there was this weird soy flavor again.
    It did not satisfy my needs at all.
    The whole thing lacked the richness that you would find in cream and eggs.

    Looks are deceiving: this wasn't good, at all.
    To sum up the first day:
    I didn't really have any withdrawal symptons.
    But all of the ready-made food tasted really unpleasant.
    The food I prepared myself with fresh bread and vegetables on the other hand (the bagel) was delicious. So I guess, I'll try to cook more myself.
     I can tell you that, it will definitely cheaper.
    for only a few tiny things (that pretty much all didn't taste good) I spent 23€.
    That's ridiculous.