Help Vegan Mashup (TV Show) and Food Blog South Recap

It looks like Spring but it's still winter...

I keep telling you how warm it’s been this winter and you can see some of the proof above.  Those usually come up in late February or March, not in January! It’s a mixed bag. On the one hand it’s awesome to be harvesting Swiss chard from my garden, but it leaves me wanting all the Spring produce instead of making turnip stews.

I got an email today about an online fund-raiser for a new vegan tv show – Vegan Mashup. The show features Terry Hope Romero, Toni Fiore and Miyoko Schinner cooking up some goodies in their kitchens and they’ll have surprise guests.

The are trying to raise funds and you can pitch in here. You can also see a video about the show there so take a look and give a little money. Even 10.00 would help and you know we all want a vegan show!

Last weekend I was at Food Blog South. The vegans in attendance were the minority, but we all managed to find each other. I had emailed with Heather Blackmon of Better with Veggies before the conference and we found each other via Twitter during the opening remarks. I was planning on meeting up with Susan Voisin of FatFree Vegan Kitchen since I hadn’t seen her since Vida Vegan and she found Katie Cain of Bistro Katie. I also got to finally meet Neysa King who runs the Key Ingredient blog that I write for every Wednesday.  You should take a peek at all their blogs and get some February inspiration.

The pre-party had pickled okra, but no other vegan options so it was good we ate dinner before just in case. There was also nothing vegan for breakfast – not even soymilk for coffee. It was good that a few of us had oatmeal at the hotel before going. Alabama wasn’t seeming as vegan friendly as I had hoped. But then Shindigs Catering had a great lunch for us plant-based folk, vegan veggie balls over spaghetti squash with sauce. I had to go up to them and tell them how amazing it was. (And it really was incredibly good!)

But I wasn’t there just to eat. Friday I attended a Media Skills workshop with Lisa Ekus and Virginia Willis. Both of them seem to be endlessly knowledgeable. Plus they supplied tips and tricks even I can remember. It was 4 hours long and I could have listened to them for at least 4 hours more.

They were 2 of my favorite speakers the next day too. Virginia talked about recipe development and Lisa was on the Brand panel with another fav of mine, Hanson Watkins of Indie Candy (allergy free and many vegan products too).

There were a few misses in the agenda but all in all I want to go back next year. Add to the vegan force and think about attending too!

Slow Cooker Speedy Baked Beans (Guest Post By Linda Watson and a Giveaway)

Text and photo © Cook for Good 2012, used with permission.

Thanks so much to Kathy for letting me share one of my new favorite recipes with you.

If you’ve been following my Cook for Good project, you’ve seen me use less and less dairy and eggs in 2011. In early December, I went full-fledged vegan. Was it reading The China Study again? Reading Eaarth? Weekly lunches with Kathy, queen of The Vegan Slow Cooker? Probably a combination of those forces.

I’d tried going vegan before, but gave up after three months. This time, it all seems so much easier. The vegan community is much larger, the resources are better, and I’ve already got a wealth of my own vegan recipes to draw on. Here’s one of my favorites: Slow-Cooker Speedy Beans.

Recipe: Slow-Cooker Speedy Baked Beans

Most recipes for baked beans use pork for flavor and long slow cooking to thicken the sauce. After talking about the physics of baking with my Taster, who is an engineer as well as a patient man, I tried to capture the creamy richness of baked beans faster and with less work. The quick and easy recipe below makes beans every bit as tasty as the ones I grew up with, using equal parts peanut butter and tahini instead of pork and a slow cooker instead of an oven.

Bean Physics. Water boils when it reaches 212° F and doesn’t get any hotter except under special conditions, such as in a pressure cooker. So my original thought of baking beans and bread at the same time was a bust: a big pot of beans will drag down the oven temperature. Even alone in the oven, the beans took forever to cook. Why? My Taster says transferring heat through the air, as in an oven, is much less efficient than transferring heat through physical contact, as on a stove or in a slow cooker. The acidity of the tomatoes and molasses makes a slow situation slower even slower by toughening the beans.

Speedy Beans. Beans can’t tell much difference between bubbling along in a slow cooker or an oven, but beans in the slow cooker cook faster. Instead of cooking the beans uncovered in the oven to boil away some of the water, I just added less water in the first place. Don’t let tomatoes and molasses put the brakes on the cooking time either; add them when the beans are already tender, then let the flavors blend overnight.

Slow Cooker Speedy Baked Beans

Active time: 15 minutes. Total time: at least 4 hours, preferably at least 12 hours. Makes 10 servings.

Ingredients

  • 1 pound dried pinto beans
  • 5 cups water
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 onion
  • 1/2 cup unsulphured molasses (such as Wholesome Sweeteners’ Organic Molasses)
  • 1/4 cup tomato paste
  • 2 tablespoons mustard (such as Whole Foods Market’s 365-brand Organic German Mustard)
  • 1 tablespoon peanut butter
  • 1 tablespoon tahini

Method

  1. Pick over and rinse pinto beans (see my recipe and video on Cooking Dried Beans). Put beans in a slow cooker with water and cover. Optionally, allow beans to soak for up to 12 hours to reduce cooking time and improve texture.
  2. Stir in salt and turn slow cooker to high. Cook beans covered until tender, about 3 hours if soaked and about 4 hours if not. Stir beans if they peek up above the water line, adding hot water if needed to keep them barely covered.
  3. When beans are nearly tender, chop onion and stir into beans with remaining ingredients. Continue cooking covered on high until beans and onions are tender.
  4. Serve immediately or, better yet, pour into another container to speed cooling, let cool for up to two hours, and then refrigerate overnight so the sauce flavors works their way through the pintos. Reheat and serve over rice, baked potatoes, baked sweet potatoes, toast, or as a side dish.

Tips and Notes

  • Try these mild beans for breakfast, especially if you can’t enjoy a hot lunch. I first enjoyed beans for breakfast, along with pan-fried tomato slices, in many English B&Bs.
  • If you like this recipe and would like to get a delectable and affordable vegan recipe every week, sign up for the free Cook for Good newsletter.
  • And please check out my book, Wildly Affordable Organic: Eat Fabulous Food, Get Healthy, and Save the Planet–All on $5 a Day or Less. It’s all vegetarian with a lot of vegan recipes, including an index to vegan recipes in the back. The front half of the book will help you make the best use of your time and money through the whole food-preparation cycle, from planning and shopping to cooking, cleaning, and storing.

Recipe originally published as Vegetarian Un-Baked Beans.

Enter to win a copy of Linda Watson’s Wildly Affordable Organic. As she mentions it is not a vegan book, though it is vegetarian and she even has a list of the Vegan recipes to make it easier to find. You will definitely find some tips and tricks that will make your yummy vegan life easier and cheaper.

To enter the giveaway do one or more of the following. You must leave a separate comment for each one you do to get the extra entry! The winner will be announced Friday.

Good luck!

Vegan Holiday Kitchen by Nava Atlas is Amazing!

First I have to disclose that I’ve been a fan of Nava Atlas since her first cookbook. I met Susan Voisin of fatfreevegan.com at Vida Vegan in August and she did all the beautiful photography for Vegan Holiday Kitchen. Her photos are amazing!

A few months ago Nava let me know that she was doing a reading for The Literary Ladies’ Guide to the Writing Life in Durham. It was one of those things that was just meant to be. Cheryl and I met her for coffee and we immediately hit it off. I’m starting to believe all vegan cookbook authors are just super nice people.

With all that said, I wouldn’t give this book a glowing review unless it deserves it and believe me it is a winner.

Three Sisters Stew - I made this for New Year’s day along side of my southern style greens and some black-eyed peas. My guests went nuts over this stew of corn, winter squash, and beans. (Yes, they liked it more than my black-eyed peas. But I’m not holding that against you Nava…) I even cheated and made it in the slow cooker so I made my beans from scratch and skipped the cans.

Smokey Cheddar Cheese Spread - This was made late one night when we needed a snack, so we ate it before it was chilled and it was still great. Yesterday it was my afternoon snack and it’s going to be a staple at my house. It’s very creamy from the cashews and I used liquid smoke in place of the mesquite seasoning because that’s what I had on hand.

This spread would be a great on a burger or as a bagel schmear. And I can’t wait to try it on a panini. Yum!

This is the Cranberry-Carrot cake with Maple-Cream Cheese Frosting. Susan’s photo is about a million times better than mine. (But I got to eat mine before and after this picture was taken!)

You should buy this book if only for this one gooey low-fat cake –  only 2 tablespoons of oil in the whole cake. But trust me, this cake doesn’t taste low-fat. It’s incredibly moist with bursts of cranberry, carrot, and spices all topped with a delicious vegan cream cheese frosting.

My verdict is that you need this book. Unfortunately, I don’t have one of these to give away, but you can buy a copy through Nava’s site, Veg Kitchen.

I have at least a dozen more recipes marked to try and I expect that each one will be as good as these were.

The Complete Guide to Vegan Food Subs – Review and Giveaway

Since you have already entered the Hearty Vegan giveaway and the Love Your Library giveaway – here’s one more chance to win a cool cookbook to start your new year off right. (If you haven’t entered the others there is still time!)

This book, The Complete Guide to Vegan Food Substitutions, is more than simple substitutions for meat, eggs, dairy, soy, gluten, and sugar though it gives you that too.

Each chapter starts off with a reference table with detailed substitutions. These are perfect for new vegans and a great quick reference for more seasoned ones.

The next thing Joni and Celine do are to dissect a traditional (non-vegan) recipe and show you where to change it to use the substitutions that they gave you. It’s a great way to get ideas to redo old family favorites. Joni and Celine are all about veganized comfort food and  their recipes are perfect to serve to people who aren’t quite sure about vegan food. (What is it they think we put in food anyhow?)

The very best part of the book comes after that with their tasty original recipes. I made their Eggs Benedict with Ham for Cheryl. She is not a vegan, though trying to eat less eggs and dairy for her health, so her love of this dish proves that it goes beyond a typical vegan recipe. I didn’t make the ham from scratch since I had some vegan ham to use up in the fridge. But the Hollandaise is the highlight of the dish for me (and Cheryl too).

Photo by Celine Steen

The other recipe I tried was the BBQ beans. I slow cooker-ized them and they turned out great. I loved the balance of flavors. I opted to use ketchup instead of tomato paste. They give you a choice in the recipe. Next time I would use the tomato paste because I think I would like it better slightly less sweet. The liquid smoke, mustard, molasses, balsamic, and other sauce ingredients meld together for a bold bean dish you really need to try.

The only downside in the book is that the recipes are organized by the kind of substitution they are using. This just means it will take a little longer to find something on the fly. But with Celine’s beautiful photos you really want to go through it a few times just to take it all in anyhow. I sat with my copy and bookmarked about 10 recipes in my first look through.

The variety of the recipes alone makes it worth the money. Breakfast, baked goods, stews, soups, burgers, ribs, vegan cheese, and more can be found in the pages of The Complete Guide to Vegan Food Substitutions. This book is a perfect gift to someone who wants to eat less meat but is afraid they will miss out on all their favorite foods.

To enter the giveaway do one or more of the following. You must leave a separate comment for each one you do to get the extra entry! The winner will be announced January 1.

More beautiful pictures from Vegan Subs. These were taken by Celine Steen.

Marinated Tofu Mozzarella, Baked Macadamia Brie, and Nutty Pepperjack

PB & J Waffle

Sushi Rolls

Salted Caramel Treats

Amaretti


Hearty Vegan Meals for Monster Appetites – Review and Giveaway

Last week I promised you book reviews and here they are this week. Better late than never right? I’m not sure why but my to do list is growing quicker than I can do anything!

Today I want to share one of Joni Newman’s and Celine Steen’s books, The Hearty Vegan. I was fortunate to meet Joni at Vida Vegan this year. She is sweet and good-natured and cooks up some mad comfort food. I’ve gotten to know Celine better the past few weeks and she’s awesome too.

I just wish I lived closer to these awesome cooks so I could “happen by” around dinner time. They are both so inventive and make recipes that you can feed your whole family. Even Grandpa couldn’t turn down their Beefy-Cheesy Mac.

I can testify that my picky eater,Cheryl, would jump at the chance to eat Joni and Celine’s food on a daily basis. At least, until they started making her eat more veggies just like I do!

Photo by Joni Newman

So back to that Beefy-Cheesy Mac, I think it’s the most indulgent meal we’ve had in months.

On first glance, I had my doubts about the seasonings called for in the recipe. But I didn’t meddle at all and it came out perfect. It really was a bowl full of nostalgia and cheesy goodness!

Cheryl had a hard day at work and was super-excited to come home to vegan helper. I also had some guests who all thought it tasted great too!

Granted, it’s not going to be a beauty queen, but neither are a lot of the recipes that come from the slow cooker.

Joni and Celine are on our slow cooker wave too. Hearty Vegan Meals includes Slow Cooker Corn Chowder, Slow Cooker Russian Chick’n, and Slow Cooker Cocktail Weenies. Also many of the recipes can be slow-cookerized if you want to experiment with them.

The other recipe I made out of this was the homemade vegan Polish Sausage. You’d think since I make my own seitan I wouldn’t blink an eye at the mixing, rolling, and steaming involved. But until this recipe I’ve actually avoided link making.

Joni and Celine held my hand through their detailed recipe. So, if you’re a novice your first batch is bound to come out great. Cheryl is Polish and loved the sausage. I have the extras in my freezer waiting to go in my pierogi experiment at some future date.

To enter the giveaway do one or more of the following. You must leave a separate comment for each one you do to get the extra entry! The winner will be announced January 1.

More mouth watering pictures from Hearty Vegan. These were taken by Celine Steen.

And the Goodie Bag Giveaway Winners Are…

Today is filled with good news. First, I just won a Mofie for my Pumpkin Spice Cheap-o-cinno at this year’s Vegan Mofo!

The giveaway winner are:

Andrea of Andrea’s Easy Vegan Cooking

and

Cara of Fork and Beans!