Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Vegan French Toast and Vegan Omelet

I love breakfast food! The combination of sweet and savory is heaven. Smokey soy sausage and sweet maple syrup, drool. The recipe for the omelet is the same one from the breakfast sandwich from an earlier post, I just made this one slightly bigger and filled it with saute'd veggies and soy sausage. You can fill it with whatever you want (spinach, onions, tomatoes, olives, mushrooms, vegan cheese (have you tried daiya?), or just leave plain and enjoy as is.) The potatoes are just southern hash browns, potatoes cut into tiny cubes and quick fried in olive oil. The recipe that follows is for the french toast.



5-6 Slices of day old bread (I used sourdough but you can use whatever you have on hand)
3/4 cup Flour
1 cup to 1 1/4 cup cold soy milk (I used soy cream because I love decadence, use what you have on hand)
1/4 cup Nutritional Yeast
1 TBS Maple Syrup
dash salt

Preheat non stick skillet (cast iron is amazing!) over a medium heat. Whisk all ingredients, minus bread, in a shallow bowl (wide enough that your bread will fit in laying flat). Dredge both sides of bread slices in mix. Cook on each side for about 2 mins, till brown but not burnt, repeat on other side. Repeat process till all bread is gone. Smother in maple syrup and enjoy.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Praise Seitan!

Having a good basic seitan recipe is key. I used to be really intimidated by the idea of making wheat meat but it's actually really simple. The hardest part is waiting for it to simmer and cool before you can fry it up for wings or stir fry it with some veggies.

For the seitan:
2 cups Vital Wheat Gluten
1/2 cup Nutritional Yeast
4 TBS all purpose flour
1 1/2 cup cold Veggie Stock
1 TBS olive oil
1 TBS garlic
splash of lemon juice

For the broth:
12 cups cold Veggie Stock ( bouillon is the cheapest route here)

Mix all dry ingredients in a bowl. Mix all wet ingredients in another bowl. Mix the wet into the dry with a spatula. Once mixed, knead the dough till spongy and elastic. Allow dough to rest a few minutes. While it's relaxing prepare the broth in a large pot. Keep everything as cold as possible it'll help the seitan to set up.
Cut the dough into the shapes you desire, nothing too large tho'. Drop all your pieces into the cold broth and cover. Bring to a boil then reduce to a simmer. Let simmer for 1 hour. After this I just stick the whole thing, pot and all, into the fridge to cool overnight. It's important to let it cool all the way through. Once cool you can cut it up and do with it what you like. Batter it and deep fry for wings or eat cold in a salad.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Vegan Curry Tempeh Salad

I have to try to at least get one post a month. I no longer have any valid excuses. Although lately I've gotten into sewing quite a bit, but that is way way more frustrating than cooking. Tonight I watched Julie and Julia, so I'm a tad inspired.

And with summer fast approaching I find a chicken salad recipe appropriate. I've never actually written this one down so every time I make it, it seems different. But it's really simple and easily adaptable to suit your tastes.






1 package Tempeh
1/4 cup vegan mayo
3 TBS pineapple juice
1 tsp red curry paste
1 tsp garlic
about half an onion chopped
1/4 cup cashew pieces
1/4 cup dried cherries (or raisins, or currants, or apple chunks)
1 tsp lemon curry powder (optional, I just really like the flavor)
salt and pepper to taste
1 chicken style bullion cube or about 1 cup veggie or chicken style liquid stock


Crumble the tempeh into a small skillet, pour in your stock or 1 cup water and your bullion. Turn to med low and allow to simmer till all water is absorbed, stirring occasionally. Allow to cool. Then mix in all other ingredients, chill and enjoy on crusty bread or crackers. ( I said it was easy.)



Thursday, March 25, 2010

Vegan Pineapple Cashew Noddles

This is a pretty simple recipe but really delicious. It comes together easily, the only wait time is while the tempeh and noodles are cooking.





For the sauce:


1 cup Pineapple Juice
2 tbs Soy Sauce
2 tbs Rice Vinegar
1 tbs grated Ginger
1 tsp Lemon Juice
1/2 tsp finely chopped Garlic
1 tsp Wasabi
1 tbs Agave Nectar



Everything else:


1 cup Pineapple Pieces
1 cup Cashews
1 package Udon Noodles (or Rice Noodles if you want wheat free)
1 package Tempeh
Sesame oil for tempeh
Black Sesame Seeds for garnish (regular sesame seeds are fine too)




Whisk everything for the sauce together adjusting garlic and wasabi to taste. Prepare noodles of choice per package directions. Cut tempeh into cubes and steam, if you don't have a steam basket you could just boil tempeh in a small fry pan with about a cup of water with the lid on till all the water is absorbed. Then brown all sides of the tempeh in sesame oil. I left the pineapple and cashews raw but you could toss them in with the tempeh and stirfry them, you could also throw in some veggies like broccoli or kale if you like. Once everything is finished, assemble it all. Noodles then pineapple, cashews, tempeh, pour a little sauce over then sprinkle sesame seeds on top. Makes 4 average portions or 2 large portions.