Vegan Quote

‘But surely the most crucial point of all is that if someone doesn’t want to eat meat, the chances are they don’t want their dinner
to look like it either. You wouldn’t dream of presenting your Jewish guests with fish carefully manufactured to look like a pork chop.
So why wave replica meat in front of someone who clearly doesn’t want to see it?’
Nigel Slater - author - Eating for England
Showing posts with label cabbage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cabbage. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 January 2020

Not Really Korean Kimchi Soup

This soup requires several specific Korean ingredients that I didn't have so this is my version of the kimchi soup that I love. Watch the kimchi as it can have shrimp in it.

WW blue or purple: 2 pts for the entire soup



Ingredients

4 cups vegetable stock
1 sheet of nori
2 cups cabbage kimchi, shredded
1 cup shredded cabbage
1 package of enoki mushrooms
1 block of tofu, sliced, your choice of firmness
1 cup green beans, fresh or frozen, cut in half
2 tbsp shiro miso (or any miso you have)
1 hard boiled egg per person (optional)
salt and pepper to taste

If the beans are fresh, parboil them to soften them and add the tofu to simmer for a few minutes before cutting the tofu into cubes.

Heat the stock and crumble the sheet of nori into the stock. Add the cabbage and allow to cook for five minutes.

Add the mushrooms, tofu and green beans and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to low and stir in the miso. Once the miso has dissolved, stir in the kimchi and allow to heat through but don't bring it to a boil.

Place a peeled egg in each bowl and ladle the soup overtop. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

You can play with the amount of kimchi that you want to add - we added another small scoop of kimchi to our bowl of soup. Great for your gut health apparently!

Saturday, 18 January 2020

Quick InstaPot Teriyaki Tempeh

This is a great quick dish - 30 minutes max from start to finish.



2SP on WW blue or purple. Makes enough for 2 - 4 people depending on what you serve it with. 2 of us finished it over rice.

I recommend poaching your tempeh first for about 5 minutes but if you prefer a firmer and stronger flavour, skip the poaching.

1 pkg tempeh (I used black bean tempeh)
1/4 cup tamari or soya sauce
1/4 cup water
1 tsp cornstarch
1 tsp roasted sesame oil (or olive oil)
1 tsp maple syrup
1 tsp minced ginger
1/2 head chopped cauliflower (you could use broccoli)
1 chopped onion
1 cup chopped cabbage (if you have any or other vegetables like carrot, celery or other firm veggies)

Fill a frying pan half full of water and bring it to a boil. Add the block of tempeh and let it poach 5 minutes.

At the same time, put the water, soya sauce, cornstarch, oil, maple syrup and ginger into the instapot and stir together.

Add the cauliflower and cabbage.

Remove the tempeh from the boiling water and cut into cubes - no smaller than 1/2" or else the tempeh will fall apart in the cooking. Add to the instapot.

Stir everything together. Put on the lid. Set the valve to sealing and press manual. Adjust to high and set the timer for 5 minutes.

When it is done, turn the valve from sealing to venting making sure you don't burn yourself with the steam. Once it has all vented, open the lid, give it a stir and enjoy!


Monday, 19 March 2012

Awesome Kale!

Kale is an awesome leafy green that can be added to anything from soups to stews to smoothies. My step-sister chops and freezes it then adds it to her morning protein smoothies. I usually add spinach to mine but Jan swears by kale. I'll try it one day and let you know.

Here is a great article about the advantages of kale by www.organicauthority.com entitled 7 Reasons Kale is the New Beef.

While on our trip, thee was no opportunity to eat vegan unless we had an undressed salad (a rather rude salad but not as rude as these vegetables are...) so we opted for vegetarian as much as we could. If I had really thought about it this would not have come as a surprise as we were just north of Mexico and on the Pacific Ocean where seafood is king. Everything is coated in cheese and creamy sauces. Luckily we walked about 20km per day! We did get vegan food at Disneyland though! We found a cart with hummus and crackers, mango slices, pineapple, giant pickles, and dried fruit and nut mix. It was like a little piece of heaven in a sea of "toxic edibles." We ate, we enjoyed, and we are now thrilled to be back to our plant based diet.

Back to kale!

When we were in the airport in Portland, I found a wrap that proudly advertised that it was vegan so Corey and I shared one with another pot of hummus and crackers (I need to find those here - they are great even if they do produce a lot of waste. Handy to have when I suddenly need a snack on the go! let me know if you ever see these.) The wrap was delicious. More filling than wrap (my mother's complaint about wraps is that they are always more wrap than filling) and very tasty! The filling was: kale, cabbage, broccoli, pea shoots, red grapes, apple, and hazelnuts all chopped small so that you wouldn't pull big chunks out when you bit into the wrap. The filling was mixed with a soy dressing like Little Creek but it wasn't wet and drippy; only enough dressing to add a bit of moisture. Yum! I think I'll make it as a salad.

When I was growing up, we ate borecole (the dutch word for kale but for us it was the whole dish) which consisted of boiling potatoes with an onion and steaming chopped kale and a sliced rookworst on top at the same time. The juices from the sausage would drip through the kale and into the boiling water to flavour the potatoes. The potatoes and onion were mashed and the kale and rookworst mixed in to make a single dish. Apparently a dish used during hard economic times because one sausage could be used to feed a large family with cheap potatoes and kale. Obviously I don't make borecole anymore because I really don't like meat flavoured artificial sausages but the mixing of kale, onion and potato is delicious as a side dish.

And here is the real recipe for the post...

Egyptian Lentil Soup (adapted from The Accidental Vegan by Devra Gartenstein)

8 cups veggie stock
2 tsp sea salt
2 cups brown/blue/green dried lentils (not red or yellow or else it will be mush)
2 tomatoes, chopped
1 onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp dried mint (don't omit this or else it's not Egyptian)
1 bunch kale, remove the middle stem and chop the leaves
1 tbsp lemon juice

Check the lentils carefully for rocks or other debris. Trust me - I've seen beans and rice being dried on the side of the road in China - you don't want to skip this step. Combine the veggie stock, salt, lentils, tomatoes, onion, garlic, cumin, and mint in a pot. Bring it up to a boil then reduce the heat and simmer, uncovered, for 30-40 minutes. Add the chopped kale. Stir the greens in and let the soup simmer another 20 minutes. Add more stock if needed and stir often near the end of the cooking time to prevent burning. Check that your lentils are cooked. Stir in the lemon juice and serve hot.