Vegan recipes: Cabbage with caraway

Cabbage with caraway
Cabbage with caraway

Vegan recipes: Cabbage with caraway


A simple cabbage side dish, packed with goodness and low-fat to boot!

Number of Serves: 4
Time for preparing: 10 mins
Tim for cooking: 10 mins

Cabbage with caraway - Ingredients


- 1 Savoy cabbage, cored and shredded
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 1 onion, thinly sliced
- 2-3 tsp caraway seeds

Cabbage with Caraway - Method of cooking


Cook the cabbage in boiling water for 3 mins until tender, then drain. Heat the oil in a frying pan. Add the onion and cook for 2-3 mins until starting to soften and turn golden. Sprinkle over the caraway seeds and cook for a further 2 mins until fragrant. Stir in the cabbage and heat through.

article source: BBC Good Food

5 Tips To Maintain A Healthy Vegan Diet

5 Tips To Maintain A Healthy Vegan Diet
5 Tips To Maintain A Healthy Vegan Diet
Being a vegan is becoming trendy these days. More and more celebrities are jumping on the vegan wagon to promote their own lifestyle or on behalf of animal charities. Many people believe that going vegan and buying foods labelled suitable for vegans are automatically healthier than other foods. But do you really know what is contained in those dairy-free cookies or those vegetarian sausages

Regardless of whether or not it contains animal-based products, most pre-packed and processed foods that contain a long list of ingredients are unhealthy. What a lot of health conscious vegans are unaware of is that extremely unhealthy additives designed to mimic the original flavours and textures can be found in many vegan-friendly products.

For instance soy-based sausage and meat-free pies are typically marketed as being a healthy alternative for people trying to avoid meat-based products. But soy-based meat substitutes are not only loaded with highly-processed soy, which typically comes from genetically-modified (GM) soybeans, but they are also filled with other flavouring and preservative chemicals like modified starches, various derivatives of monosodium glutamate (MSG), artificial colourings (to make them look like actual meat), synthetic vitamin fortifiers and other chemicals.

Processed foods aside, some vegans tend to indulge in vegan 'junk food' such as doughnuts, cookies, milkshakes, cakes, chips, candies, chocolates etc. These days you can get tons of vegan versions of your favourite desserts or snack on the market. Better still, the internet is overflowing with vegan recipes of indulging, not so healthy vegan foods. So you can make loads of them and eat to your heart's content. Just because they are vegan does not mean they are to be eaten as part of your daily meals. Careful planning and discipline is the key to stay healthy.

So here are 5 tips to maintain a healthy vegan diet


1. Eat unprocessed foods. Make sure you mix in some raw with cooked food.

2. Cut down on oil and vegetable fat during cooking or on salads. Steam your vegetables instead of frying.

3. Eat smaller portions as overeating will put on the pounds and make you unhealthy in the long run. You will gradually get used to eating smaller portions and actually take time to savour the taste. It is alright to indulge in your favourite dessert but take smaller mouthfuls.

4. Do not overcook your food as minerals and vitamins will be lost. Choose foods rich in iron, vitamins and minerals to substitute for meat products.

5. Cut out sugar especially refined. If you have to use sugar, go for raw. Replace sugar with maple syrup or agave nectar in some recipes.

For optimal health, stick to unprocessed, whole foods. Raw or cooked.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Begreen_Dee

For more vegan tips, go to: The ultimate vegan guide

Vegan recipes: Peanut Butter Chocolate Bars

Peanut Butter Chocolate Bars
Peanut Butter Chocolate Bars

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peanut Butter Chocolate Bars



Makes 12 to 18 squares

Necessary ingredients

- 2 cups crispy rice cereal, crushed
- 1 1/2 cups peanut butter
- 2 cups confectioners’ sugar
- 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons nondairy butter, such as Earth Balance, melted, divided
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1/2 cup nondairy semisweet chocolate chips

Cooking Method

Generously oil a 9 x 13-inch baking pan. In a large bowl, combine the crushed crispy rice cereal, peanut butter, confectioners’ sugar, 1/2 cup of the nondairy butter, and vanilla. Press the mixture into the prepared baking pan. 

In a small saucepan (or double boiler), melt together the chocolate chips and the remaining 2 tablespoons of butter, stirring constantly. Remove from the heat. Spread the chocolate mixture over the top of the peanut butter mixture. Set aside for 1 to 2 hours to set. 

From The Joy of Vegan Baking by Colleen Patrick-Goudreau.
www.compassionatecooks.com

Some nice tips for tasty vegan cooking

Some nice tips for tasty vegan cooking
Some nice tips for tasty vegan cooking















Some nice tips for tasty vegan cooking


This is a chapter with notes on how to make food tasty, interesting and varied. Some of them are notes on general cooking, some on meal planning and variation, some on making leftovers interesting. 

Use oil well to maximize flavor

 

It is the oil in foods that carries much of the taste, and that gives much of the satisfied feeling after eating.

If you skimp too much on your oil, you will probably find your cooking unsatisfying and not very tasty. It does no good to cut down on oil in cooking and then be craving fatty foods like milk and cheese to compensate. While you don’t need to use large amounts of butter or lard as in some older cookbooks, you can use a reasonable amount of healthy oils like olive or peanut, or some butter for flavor mixed with canola to make it lighter, and come out with food that is very tasty, satisfying to eat, and healthy for you.

Part of the reason you need to allow for sufficient oil is that good soups, stews and sauces, depend on this cooking ‘secret’ - get your seasoning flavors, your spices and your condiment vegetables like garlic, ginger, onion, bell peppers and celery, cooked in the oil before adding the flavored oil to your cooking water or sauce. 

That’s the reason why the usual meat-based bean soup and bean recipes use a ham hock, bacon or sausage to cook with - they are all sauces of strongly flavored salty oil. That is also why most oilfree soups are so bland, and why spices that are just thrown into cooking water for soups are often flavorless.

Sauteing Onions


Cook onions very slowly and they become smooth, sweet and rich tasting. Cook them on a higher flame and they are less sweet and have more of an edge, sometimes with a slightly scorched taste. The tastes have different uses. The rich, sweet taste is good for rich soups, stews and gravies. Onions cooked more quickly with more of an edge are good in tomato sauce, and with stronger tasting veggies and beans, especially with Mediterranean style spices. 

Cooking grain with oil


Adding the oil and spices to grain before it is cooked, gives a milder, subtler and more pervasive taste than if oil and spices are added after the grain is cooked, where the flavor coats rather than permeating the grains. 

Varying tastes and textures


In meals with more than one dish you generally want the tastes and textures to complement rather than be too similar. For example, a rich wet stew is best complemented by a dry grain dish. Or, a very spicy rice dish could be complemented by a sweet and smooth tasting soup or stew, or vice versa. 

If you think of tastes as being in 5 major categories - salty, sweet, sour, bitter, pungent - it’s a good idea not to have the same taste dominant in all your dishes - so, a spicy sour stew with a sour cabbage salad and rice cooked with lemon juice would not work. 

Salty or sour dishes are complemented by mildly sweet dishes - and grains and most vegetables and beans are basically very mildly sweet. 

Salty and sour in the same dish intensify each other - you will see them together often in the recipes. Using lemon juice or vinegar in your cooking lets you use less salt. Salty and sweet tend to complement or balance rather than intensify each other. A little bit of sugar added to a dish with a primarily salty taste, like soy sauce, will mellow and smooth out the flavor a bit. 

Hot dishes, those using peppers or chilis,are best complemented by bland grain dishes, and by smooth creamy side dishes like yogurt.

Varying Leftovers


This becomes very important when you are cooking ahead a lot, and making stews or rice dishes to last for 3 to 5 days. Here are some suggestions.

· Vary the side dish. If you have a bean and vegie stew, have it with plain rice one day, with toast another day, over rice another day.

· By the 3rd day, vary or ‘perk up’ your leftover by adding a little extra seasoning - a little extra salt and lemon to make the taste a little sharper often helps. An extra touch of cayenne or pepper can also liven it up. Or, add a garnish like seeds, nuts or grated cheese.

· For a rice and veggie dish you can make a half-new dish by sauteing some veggies with spices and adding the leftovers to that. A cold rice salad can be turned into a hot rice and vegetable dish with a little extra oil, cooked onion and spices.

· If you cook ahead with whole beans, say for a stew, make enough beans that you can keep some of them plain, to be mixed in vegie and rice quick sauteed dishes.

· Keep an interesting bean dip around to have as a snack with bread, or as a complementing side dish with a plain grain dish.

· When you make rice for a meal, cook your rice plain and make extra, so that you have it available as an ingredient to stir into a fresh dish.

· If you are planning a week’s worth of meals, make Tuesday or Wednesday your ‘Eat Something Else’ day as a change of pace, and do a quick cooking meal with a convenient food like mock duck, or pre-cooked beans with rice and veggies with a different spice pattern.

Pasta also makes a good change of pace. You might also consider having a soft cooked cereal like cream of wheat or rice, either sweet like a breakfast cereal or cooked with soft vegetables and spices.

· Use a topping, dip or relish as a side accent to vary the taste of dishes.

Expand your thinking about appropriate foods, especially for breakfast or dinner. For instance, I often like to start the day with a vegetable soup for breakfast, and cooked cereal makes a onderful and warming quick dinner.
article source: Charles Obert / LBVeg

Vegan recipes: Low Oil Omelette

Low Oil Omelette
Low Oil Omelette

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Low Oil Omelette


For today's cooking lesson, we have one of the easy to cook recipes. It is an omelet with a little oil. If you want a quick and easy vegan meals, then this recipe is definitely for you.

Necessary ingredients


- 2 1/2 cups tofu (mashed)
- 2 tbsp nutritional yeast
- 1 tbsp Bragg’s liquid Aminos
- 1 tsp Spike
- 1/2 tsp turmeric
- 1/4 tsp sea salt
- black pepper to taste


Method of cooking

 
Cooking this omelet is no different from cooking most famous omelettes. In a bowl, mash all the ingredients together. Place mix into a lightly oiled fry pan and pat down. Cook on one side, then flip. 

Batter will get firm and golden colored. 

    

Vegan recipes: Best Vegan Macaroni and Cheese Ever

Vegan recipes: Macaroni and Cheese
Vegan recipes: Macaroni and Cheese

 

 

 

 

 




Vegan recipes: Best Vegan Macaroni and Cheese Ever


When it comes to vegan cooking, then this is one of the easiest and best recipe for macaroni. It's easy and quick to cook, and the flavor is fantastic. If you are a beginner vegan, then this is the ideal meal for you.

Serves 6

Preheat oven to 350 degrees
- 1 1/2 cups plain soymilk
- 1 cup water
- 1/3 cup tamari or soy sauce
- 1 1/2 cups nutritional yeast
- 1 tablespoon paprika
- 1 tablespoon garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 3 ounces firm tofu
- 1 cup canola oil
- 1 1/2 pounds macaroni noodles
- 2 teaspoons mustard (optional)

Boil water in a big pot for macaroni noodles. Put all other ingredients in a blender to create the cheeselike sauce. Once noodles are cooked, drain and put in a baking pan and pour sauce over the noodles. Bake until the top of the pasta looks slightly browned and crispy – about 15 minutes.