VeganMoFo2018: Angkor Soul, Altrincham

UPDATE: THIS RESTAURANT CLOSED IN 2020

Cuisine: Cambodian

Apparently, Manchester’s Angkor Soul restaurants are the only Cambodian eateries in the north of England – so imagine my excitement on finding that they have vegan options! The first branch is in Marple, which is a way from the city centre, but this year they opened a second branch in Altrincham, which is just a fairly short tram ride from my stomping ground. Dr HH and Mama HH were very excited to be involved in my VeganMoFo challenge, and, having both visited Cambodia before, did not need any persuading to accompany me here.

There were some very exciting options on the starters menu. I’m not sure that these avocado crispy rolls are particularly authentic Cambodian cuisine, but of course I was powerless to resist them. Truthfully, I’m not sure the slightly slimy avocado texture is that well suited to a spring roll, but it was fun to try at least.

The crispy Khmer rolls were both more authentic, and more satisfying! The peanutty sauce was an excellent accompaniment, and the rolls were as crispy as I had hoped. Eating spring rolls all the time is one of the great joys of visiting Asia, and I was happy to recreate that happiness here on my local turf.

And of course, who could resist Angkor cauliflower? Again, I’m not sure about the authenticity, but all three of us were raving about this sticky, spicy battered cauliflower dish. There’s nothing quite like a really exciting starters menu, is there? Even with the slight let down of the avo rolls, this was a very promising start to the meal!

Mama HH stuck with cauliflower for her main dish too – she got the vegan General Lon Nol, which was cauliflower and cashews in a sticky sriracha sauce. She couldn’t stop talking about it the next day, so we’ll call this one a success!

Dr HH ordered the vegan spicy lemongrass saute, which he thought wasn’t very strongly flavoured with lemongrass, while I thought it tasted of nothing but! He asked for it with tofu (seitan was also available), and found it delightfully seasoned and really special.

And I went for the battambang noodles, which no longer appear on the menu. It was such a hearty portion I couldn’t even finish it (the perils of filling up on starters!), but it made for tasty leftovers too. It contained flat noodles, well-seasoned tofu, and broccoli, which are three of my favourite things, so I was very happy with this.

It was a real treat to try a cuisine that I’ve never actually had outside of Cambodia, and apparently I’m not alone in thinking so – they were so busy on a Saturday evening that they were turning people away! There were also some vegans at the table next to us, and they definitely tout their vegan menu a bit on their website, so it seems like it should do decent trade from the plant-based community. And hurrah for that!

Has Cambodian food taken off in your neck of the woods?

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VeganMoFo 2018: Paprika, Prague

Cuisine: Middle Eastern

For vegans, it’s very easy to get sick of falafel, hummus, and chips. They seem to be the default options on many an uninspired menu, and every takeaway cafe in the UK seems to have a standard dry, chewy falafel wrap or sandwich on the menu. But still – is it possible to get sick of proper falafel? I mean fresh falafel cooked by someone who knows what they’re doing.

Deep fried, crispy, flavoursome falafel with smooth hummus is still one of my favourite meals – and if there are chips on the side, so much the better. For this dish alone, I might have to consider Middle Eastern cuisine amongst my favourites. (I couldn’t find any consensus on where exactly falafel originated, so I’ve stuck with a broad Middle Eastern label.)

I have had some top notch falafel in my time – most notably from Go Falafel in Manchester, and with honourable mentions to Dr Falafel in Vienna, Hummus Bar in Hungary, and L’as du Falafel in Paris. The Czech Republic is notoriously resistant to immigration, and as such there isn’t really a thriving falafel scene here (I genuinely believe that falafel is one of the greatest pro-immigration arguments – it’s right up there with human decency as one of the reasons we should welcome people in). So I was delighted when Paprika opened up in 2017.

It’s a teeny place with some indoor seating, but it’s probably better suited to takeaway, as it’s always jumping. They serve meat, but also have some great vegan options, including shawarma along with the standard falafel and hummus dishes.

Dr HH and I love to share the vegan plate. It consists of hummus, shawarma, tahini, fries, bread, falafel, and salad. The shawarma has a great texture, and is really well seasoned – the best vegan shawarma in Prague by a mile. And the falafel, chips, and hummus are all absolute perfection (in fact, the chips are also the best in Prague).

Oh, and did I mention the bread? It’s so soft and pillowy – sheer perfection!

On less indulgent days, I’ve also been known to simply grab a falafel pita. Again, it’s hard to go wrong with this.

One of my most used phrases in this VeganMoFo is probably going to be: “I know chips don’t really belong to X cuisine, but still…” I mean, look at those chips. Beautiful!

VeganMoFo friends, do you ever suffer from falafel fatigue? And where’s your number one falafel spot?

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VeganMoFo 2018: Nosteagia, London

Cuisine: Hong Kong

When I first started this blog many moons ago, I was living in Hong Kong and working in a language centre directly above a bubble waffle place. Every day I would smell that sweet batter cooking away, and peer curiously at its bubbly shape, wondering exactly what it was. I wasn’t even vegan at the time, yet in my two and a half years in Hong Kong I never once tried a bubble waffle.

Enter Nosteagia!

This is a little bubble tea and bubble waffle takeaway place in Boxpark Shoreditch. I’d been ogling them on Instagram for a few months before finally getting the chance to visit. London vegans had revealed that there’s a weekly vegan special, but I couldn’t see any vegan info on their website, so I was a bit anxious.

I needn’t have worried – most (if not all) of their bubble teas can be served vegan, and they have a separate vegan bubble waffle menu. The waffle dishes there don’t come with ice cream – you either have to ask for some to be added in or go for the special. One of the vegan ice creams is chai, which I’m a bit disappointed I passed up on. But not too disappointed, of course…

How could anyone be disappointed with this?! This was the vegan weekly special: bubble waffle, vanilla coconut ice cream, hazelnut chocolate sauce, Oreos, peanut butter, and coconut. I’m sure you don’t need me to tell you that this was delicious.

Fortunately, the staff provided some tips on how to tackle this beast: don’t let go of the napkin around the bottom of the cone, use a spoon for the ice cream, and start eating the waffle from the highest point at the back. Nevertheless, it was messy. I ended up with chocolate and ice cream all over my chin, nose, and chops, while Dr HH, who has a resplendent beard and moustache, didn’t make a drop of mess – apparently he’s so used to eating ice cream cones with extreme care that he didn’t make any rookie mistakes.

It was a great novelty, and I’d recommend it for that reason, but truthfully I’d probably prefer to eat a regular waffle with similarly extravagant toppings, using a knife and fork.

With all those decadent toppings, it might not be entirely traditional Hong Kong fare, but I’m not complaining!

Have you tried a bubble waffle yet? How much mess did you make?

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VeganMoFo 2018: The Cedar Tree, Dublin

Cuisine: Lebanese

I’m no connoisseur of Lebanese food, but when this place popped up on Happy Cow while we were in Dublin this Easter Dr HH was beside himself, enthusing that Lebanese food is the perfect blend of falafel, hummus, and Mediterranean treats. That turned out to be the case! The Cedar Tree was a very popular and friendly little place, just around the corner from Trinity College. There was a vegan mezze on the menu, €52 for two, and we decided to splurge.

The “starter” occupied the entire table, which is always a welcome sight. There were a few warm dishes, which we scoffed first: some expertly seasoned potatoes; little spinach pastries (samosa-style, but a little bland as they only contained spinach); and two big, beautiful falafels.

We also had two salads: fattoush (which had a slightly bitter dressing, but those crispy bits were delicious!), and tabbouleh (fresh, light, and flavoursome). There were some pickles and olives, perfect for picking at, and stuffed vine leaves with a delicious filling.

And of course, some bread and dips! The baba ganoush was very smoky, but not especially auberginey, which was a shame. There was a broccoli and cauliflower dip, which was unusual and very exciting, and also a red pepper and walnut one, which was almost like a nut butter. And of course, hummus! The hummus was perfect. Absolutely perfect.

This was a huge, hearty spread and we both thoroughly enjoyed it. It’s always such a treat to try lots of different dishes, and really get to explore a cuisine in this way. I barely had room for a main dish after that, so I was glad to see a relatively light portion coming our way. This was magmour: a chickpea, tomato, and aubergine stew, which was very sweet and flavoursome, with a rich sauce and melty aubergine chunks. It was a little strange to have a heavier starter than main, but I enjoyed it very much.

I would recommend this place, despite the cost – it’s got a great central location, which never comes cheap, and we left feeling extremely well-fed. I didn’t even ask about desserts, I was so stuffed! Clearly Lebanese food is something I need to be having more of.

Have you ever had a starter this humongous? What’s your favourite Lebanese dish?

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VeganMoFo 2018: Cat Tuong, Berlin

Cuisine:  Vietnamese

Vietnam has a special place in my heart, as I lived there for two and a half years when I first started teaching English. And so too does Vietnamese food. Although I was only vegetarian at the time, most of the food I ate in restaurants was vegan by default, as it’s more in keeping with the people’s Buddhist leanings: my local friends took me to Buddhist restaurants attached to temples, or invited me to their family meals when they had their plant-based days at certain points in the lunar calendar. I’ve really missed the food since moving away.

There is a huge Vietnamese community in Prague, but no vegan Vietnamese restaurants, which is a real shame.  As usual, Berlin leads the way!  A few years ago I ate at Quy Nguyen, and, when we visited Berlin in October 2017, I was determined to tick off another of the all-vegan Vietnamese establishments.

This time it was Cat Tuong’s turn.  We popped along at about 6pm on a Sunday, and to our surprise it was absolutely heaving!  Who goes out on a Sunday evening?!  We managed to squeeze in to the last table (it’s a small place, but they’ve got as many tables in as possible), and everyone arriving afterwards had to wait outside at the picnic tables until space became available.

The menu was pretty tempting:  an array of starters, including summer rolls (but not fried spring rolls, more’s the pity) and these dim sum. The filling was fairly nondescript vegetable slivers, but the dumpling itself was good, and there was plenty of flavour in the dipping sauce. I’d never had dumplings quite as long and floppy as these, but they were still very good.

For my main, I went for the caramelised tofu dish, which came in a hot pot.  This dish had oyster mushrooms, seitan shreds, rice and veg, alongside caramelised tofu – I was hoping for sticky cubes of tofu, each side caramelised and delicious, but in fact it was thinly sliced so there wasn’t much edge on offer.  It was a little disappointing, but the dish as a whole had so many warming, delicious flavours that I can’t complain too much. The mushrooms were especially good.

Dr HH was less satisfied with his dish, which he chose from the specials board.  It was billed as green curry with soya balls, tofu, auberinge, coconut milk, veg, herbs, peanuts and onions.  There was one soya ball in the whole dish. One!  Obviously he was disappointed, though the curry itself was flavoursome.

We decided to give them a chance to redeem themselves with some dessert!  There were only two options, and we got the banana in sticky rice with coconut cream.  At first I was baffled as to where the rice was, but actually it was packed around the banana!  The coconutty custard was really good.  (The picture makes it look pink, but it was definitely all yellow.)  This dish got an enthusiastic thumbs up from both of us!

And Dr HH treated himself to a Vietnamese coffee, complete with sweet, thick milk.  He deemed it a proper Vietnamese coffee!

Overall this place was a bit of a mixed bag. I’d definitely go back and see if the other dishes ticked the boxes a bit more – there were some very exciting noodle-dishes being devoured! The flavours were so good that I suspect there’s a reason this place was so popular, even on a rainy Sunday evening.

Is going for Vietnamese food on a Sunday evening a trend I’ve missed out on? And does anyone prefer summer rolls to spring ones?

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VeganMoFo 2018: Rifugio Romano, Rome

Cuisine: Italian

When I was looking for food tips ahead of my trip to Italy last summer (my theme for last year’s VeganMoFo) and our weekend in Rome this winter, I found some very distressing advice.

“Order a pizza marinara!”

“You can get spaghetti with tomato sauce anywhere!”

“There are so many fruit sorbets!”

I don’t know who these losers are, but I don’t go on holiday to eat plain pizza and pasta followed by a boring old fruit sorbet. I want some real food! And that is exactly what I got at Rifugio Romano, an omni restaurant with an extensive vegan menu covering about 4 A4 pages of starters, primi, secondi, and pizzas.  They even have vegan desserts and labelled vegan wines! This place is close to Termini train station and was extremely popular with tourists, but it wasn’t overpriced or tacky.

There were some very tempting starters, but we only had eyes for the fried rice balls! I got the suppli vegan, and Dr HH tried the vegan arancino.  I’m not sure what the difference is between suppli and arancino (the shape?), but they were similarly crispy and delicious, and both stuffed with rice.  Mine contained rice in tomato sauce and little cheesy pockets, while Dr HH’s was rice dotted with peas and mushrooms. We were both satisfied with these.

I have never seen a four cheese vegan gnocchi on a menu anywhere, so I was compelled to try this.  Actually, it didn’t quite live up to my expectations – I was expecting more depth of flavour from four different cheeses, but it tasted like my regular mac and cheese sauce which is only made with nooch. Maybe the four cheeses they used are too similar?  It was nice, but not the flavour explosion I was hoping for.

Dr HH definitely won with his main dish: bucatini with smoked seitan and tomato and chilli sauce.  I believe he only ordered this because one of his favourite quotes from Master of None is: “That ain’t spaghetti, that’s bucatini! It’s a thicker noodle, you dummy!” Whatever the reason, it was a great choice: those thicker noodles were perfectly cooked to retain a bit of bite (whereas my gnocchi were a bit too soft), the chilli provided a good kick, and the smoked seitan was delicious.

He managed to leave room for his favourite Italian dessert: tiramisu. It was extremely creamy, which he said was a big plus. He told me it wasn’t strongly coffee-flavoured, but I can confirm that this was a malicious lie to trick me into trying some (even a hint of coffee is too much for me).

I ordered the dumplings with vegan nutella, which would have been ideal for sharing – it was far too much for one person!  I feel like this speaks for itself. Look at it. It was amazing!

With a wealth of veganisable Italian dishes, let’s never settle for a boring tomato sauce and fruit sorbet ever again!

What’s your favourite Italian dish? Could you have managed that entire portion of dessert dumplings?

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VeganMoFo2018: Vegan’s, Prague

Cuisine: Czech

If you’ve never been to the Czech Republic, you’ve probably never tried Czech cuisine. I’m not sure that there’s much international demand for it – the traditional dishes are all quite meaty and stodgy, and you definitely couldn’t eat them every day. (Of course, the Czechs still have the cheek to claim that British food is awful. Pfft!) Before I moved to Prague, I’d certainly never tried any Czech dishes, but after three years I’m something of a (vegan) svíčková expert.

This traditional dish pops up quite frequently on the daily lunch menus in places like Incruenti and Moment, but if you want to try this Czech classic , Vegan’s (formerly LoVeg) is the place to go.  We had it on our first trip to Prague when we were just scoping it out as a place to live, and have been back for it again several times since. It’s one of those dishes that’s never going to be particularly refined: it’s just big, hearty food, and not the kind of thing you could eat particularly regularly.  But it’s good when you’re in the mood for it, with the big dumplings, slabs of tempeh, a root veg sauce and a dollop of cranberry sauce.

There’s another traditional Czech dish on the menu there too – the old Bohemian feast, which is a mishmash of a few different things. How well those things go together is debatable, though.  As you can probably tell just by looking, this was a dry plate.  There was steamed buckwheat with spinach, plain polenta, puffed barley, baked millet casserole, and one other thing that was not listed on the menu and that I really couldn’t identify.  The buckwheat, polenta and barley weren’t particularly flavoursome, and I wouldn’t order this again. Stick with the svíčková!

The traditional Czech dessert is much better:  these plum dumplings are just beautiful!  In the past I’m pretty sure they came sprinkled with icing sugar which was great for my sweet tooth, but they were still nice without that extra touch.

As if things couldn’t get any more Czech, just look at the view from the balcony! Yeah, that’s Prague Castle up there. It’s always worth booking ahead and requesting a table out on the balcony (weather permitting, obviously – it gets pretty cold here!).

Have I sold you on Czech cuisine? Would you brave the svíčková?

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VeganMoFo 2018: Midland Hotel, Manchester

Cuisine: English

Is there anything more civilised than an afternoon tea? It’s such a quaint and fancy affair, and if it turns out not to be English, then I don’t want to know! Regular readers will know that I am always on the lookout for a good vegan afternoon tea, and I’d heard several glowing reviews of The Midland Hotel in Manchester, so it seemed like the perfect option for a family treat on my birthday back in April.

Afternoon tea is hosted in the Tea Room, where everything is simple and classy – no mismatched crockery here. Vegan champagne is provided if you wish to upgrade to the fancier version, and there are several teas to try, including a Victoria sponge inspired one and another with a hint of whiskey.

There are five varieties of vegan sandwiches, served on white or granary bread. We all found the avocado, radish and bean sprout one the least exciting (not many bean sprout fans in the house), while the mushroom duxelle with walnut was absolutely sensationally flavoursome. The other three (jerk-spiced chickpea hummus with courgette; heritage tomato, black pepper, and olives; fried aubergine caviar with roasted red pepper) were all very good too, and more exciting than some of the standard vegan afternoon tea fare. Not a cucumber in sight!

The scones are kept in the “scone warmer” (so we were told) and only brought over to the table when it’s time to devour them. How fancy! There’s one plain and one fruit scone per person, which I honestly believe is one too many – you need to save room for cake! The scones were very good though, warmed to perfection (as you’d expect, in their specific scone-heating device) and well-baked. They were served with soy cream, which looked quite unappetising, but was fine, and a choice of three jams: strawberry, raspberry, or gooseberry. The staff come around with the jam and plonk some on your plate as requested, which is certainly fancy, but it would be nice to judge for yourself how much you’d like.

And then the cake plate. Oh, the cake plate. It was the stuff of dreams. Just look at that meringue! It was so sweet and crumbly, and the raspberries made for a suitably tart filling. I’d happily eat one of these every day!

The pistachio cheesecake wasn’t much of a traditional cheesecake – it was a very decadent, creamy log coated in pistachios. It was tasty, but there was perhaps a bit too much of it. The dark chocolate and cherry delice was equally indulgent, but more manageable somehow – rich, without being overpoweringly so. The cinnamon and orange polenta cake was the only disappointing one of the bunch, as it was quite dry and crumbly. The flavour was lovely though.

All in all, this was a thoroughly classy affair, and the service and ambience were spot on as well. I didn’t feel like we’d been shafted with the vegan option – everything was creative and well thought out. I’ve had a fair few afternoon teas, and this was the most traditional one in terms of service and menu, so if you ever want to get that classic English experience, this is the place for you.

Are you a fellow vegan afternoon tea aficionado? Where should I try next? And, most importantly, should I invest in a scone warmer?!

Posted in Afternoon tea, Travel, Vegan Mofo | Tagged , , , | 16 Comments

VeganMoFo 2018!

It’s the most wonderful time of the year: VeganMoFo! The Vegan Month of Food starts tomorrow, and I’m very excited to be participating for the fourth time (and helping to organise it for the third year in a row).

While there are daily prompts and weekly themes that MoFo participants can follow, I always prefer to choose my own theme. Back in 2015, my posts were all about breakfast, the most important meal of the day. In 2016, every day I posted about a place to eat and a thing to do in a different town or city. And last year, I took you on a culinary tour of Italy.

This year, I’m taking you around the world in thirty different cuisines! Every day I’ll post a review of a restaurant which serves a different cuisine. There are a couple of places I’ve reviewed before, but it’s all new content – and some wholly new (to me) cuisines. I’ve got a host of exciting dishes to share, from traditional Czech dumplings here in Prague, to a veritable feast from the only Cambodian restaurant in the north of England.

So please read along, comment away, and let me know about the vegan dishes from these cuisines that you’ve tried too!

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Cookbook of the Month: The Main Street Vegan Academy Cookbook

It’s the end of the summer holidays here in Prague, and you know what that means – Dr HH is heading back to work and hanging up his apron after his month at the helm in the kitchen. I’ll let the man himself tell you how he got on this summer.

Hello! I’ve spent another summer month shackled to kitchen worktops to provide a post filled with vegan nomming delights.  I was tasked with finding my own cookbook, and, after ditching some for looking too complicated and others for looking a little dull, I settled on The Main Street Vegan Academy Cookbook.  I don’t know much about the academy itself, it looks like it’s run by some vegan lifestyle coaches who offer training courses to others.  The book is a collection of recipes from various people associated with the academy.  It seems to be aimed at newer vegans, with a a few chapters with tips about living a vegan lifestyle, and various coaching tips distributed throughout the books with some extra nutritional information about ingredients and some cooking tips.  The recipes are grouped into sensible chapters, so let me take you through them.

Good Morning and Great News: There is Life After Bacon

The idea of a jam sandwich is enough to make Ms HH run for the hills; add in the concept of mixing the jam with peanut butter, and she might actually just explode.  So she was certainly sceptical when I told her I was going to serve the aforementioned affront in smoothie format.  You’ll be pleased to hear that the PB&J sammie smoothie was a roaring success!  Without a slice of bread in sight, this made for a tasty filling smoothie that was quick to throw together.  I used raspberries rather than the recommended blueberries, which are also on Ms HH’s banned list.

Here at HH HQ we are quite the porridge connoisseurs, by which I mean we eat a lot of it.  I took the chance to make our regular porridge breakfast a little more exciting by making  Victoria’s victorious oatmeal parfait.  I had no idea what a parfait was going in to this, so I had to learn on the job.  I made a few swaps in the recipe, using walnuts rather than Brazil nuts, and there were no berries as I couldn’t find any in the shops or markets that didn’t come in a plastic punnet.  It was a tasty porridge and looked rather fancy (as much as porridge can look fancy) but I’d rather cut out all the fiddly layering and just top a regular bowl.

The breakfast burritos were next up and they made for quite the breakfast feast.  We’ve been trying hard to avoid buying anything in plastic, so I had a little extra work to do for this dish, making my own tortilla wraps and mozzarella as well as cooking up my own sausage crumbles from a packet of smoked tempeh.  I did a lot of the prep work the night before as I didn’t want to make a hungry Ms HH wait for her breakfast. I value my life too much to do that.  The end result was a magnificent breakfast: nicely fried onions and peppers, savoury sausage crumbles bursting with flavour, a good eggy chickpea flour scramble, creamy and oozy mozzarella, and, finally, roasted potato chunks, an addition that elevates any meal.  This went down as the biggest hit of the book, but be warned it’ll take you a while if you’re not working from packet ingredients.

I don’t think I’d ever really dabbled with using chickpea flour as an egg replacement, but after the breakfast burrito success I was at it again with the crazy spicy Spanish omelet. I’ve never cooked with eggs, having not really eaten them since my teens, so this was my first ever attempt at an omelette and it was all a bit disastrous.  My attempt to cook one side and then flip it out on to a plate resulted in a large quantity of batter and oil finding its way on the worktops.  I managed to shovel it all back in and cut the omelette up into quarters so it was easier for me to manoeuvre the pieces.  Eventually I won my battle, and I was underwhelmed by the final result.  For something called crazy spicy, I found this rather bland and in need of a lot more seasoning, I settled for a drizzle of sriracha to pep it up.  The textures were good and Ms HH reported hitting a potent pocket of paprika at some point but I don’t think I’ll be rushing to make another Spanish style omelette any time soon.

I completed my breakfast chickpea flour hat-trick with the besan pudla. We actually had it for our dinner, but I’m not letting you take my hat-trick ball away from me on a technicality.  These were chickpea pancakes with some Indian seasoning and chopped tomato, pepper, and coriander in the batter.  My batter started out a little too thin so my first pancake was turned into a scramble, but after the addition of more chickpea flour my batter was just right.  This was a delicious dish both in scramble and pancake form, the seasoning in the pancakes was great, and I added a little more pep to it with a tamarind chutney.

The Social Vegan: Omni-Pleasing Small Plates, Snacks, and Hors d’Oeuvres

I didn’t really dabble with the party food section much but  the 3-P pesto caught my eye. That’s right, a blended combination of garden peas, mushy peas, and sugar snap peas: pea lovers rejoice! Sadly, Ms HH is not a pea lover.  This pesto was actually a delicious combination of peas, pistachios, and parsley.  The dip was rich, creamy and bursting with flavour, even Ms HH came back for a second little taste of it so I’m calling this a success.  It was great with crackers and bread and I made a delightful summer lunch when putting it on toast with some mozzarella slices.

Salad Days and Soup for Supper: They’re not Just Starters Anymore

 

I dipped into this section when looking for inspiration for packed lunches for Ms HH to take to work with her.  I was quite excited by the zucchini beany salad as it included lots of ingredients bursting with flavour olives and capers.  The dressing was a little too sharp, a little less lemon juice would have been better, but overall it was a tasty salad.  It didn’t feel very filling, it needed some bulking up with either some more chickpeas or some other sort of filling grain.

 

The quinoa bruschetta salad looked to be a pretty standard salad affair, cooked quinoa and vegetables tossed with olive oil and balsamic vinegar.  I had an extra sweet potato lying around so thought I’d roast that and add it in, but in the end I roasted all the vegetables to try and make things a bite more exciting.  It was a solid but unspectacular solid and I never did serve it with any bread.

There were a few soup recipes, and I decided to go ahead and give them a try even though it was unbearably hot outside.  The easy cheesy broccoli soup was pretty easy to throw together.  The recipe called for a blended base of cooked cauliflower and peppers with 6-8 cups of broccoli florets added afterwards.  First of all, I had absolutely no idea how much broccoli I needed to fill the required 6-8 cups. Measuring chopped vegetables in cups is always a source of frustration for me.  I settled on a large head of broccoli and blended about half of it in to the soup, I also added an onion to the recipe for a little extra flavour.  The soup was delicious, sweeter and a lot less green than broccoli soups I’ve had in the past, and it was even better when topped with a potato rosti.

The sweet potato miso soup sounded like a combination that was too good to pass up.  Sadly the soup didn’t hit the dizzying flavour heights I was hoping for.  I didn’t get my flavour balance right and there wasn’t enough of a miso hit in there. My blender also didn’t do a great job with the chopped ginger, so occasionally everything was overwhelmed with a massive hit of ginger.  It was certainly better when I stirred an extra teaspoon of miso into the bowl before reheating.

Set it and Forget it: One-Pot Meals for All

Our lack of slow cooker/insta-pot resulted in me just skipping over this section

Main Street Mains: You Won’t Miss the Meat

My first foray into the mains section was the lemon-Dijon tempeh and mushrooms and it was not the best of starts.  I substituted the Dijon mustard for whole grain and I think i was just a little heavy handed with seasoning, resulting in a dish that was both too salty and too lemony. I wasn’t a big fan of the mustard flavour in here either.  I think this could have been quite a good dish if I’d got my seasoning right.

 The recipe for roasted red pepper cutlets caught my eye early on and I heeded one of the suggestions that you could turn pretty much anything into cutlets, so I ended up making aubergine cutlets one night and tofu cutlets the next, both served with potato wedges.  These dishes were great, the crumb coating of oats, nooch, and herbs was really flavoursome, and I even made an attempt at using some aquafaba as an egg replacer to stick everything together – it worked to some degree but wasn’t totally successful.

Mama Day’s beefless stew made a good filling meal when served with rice.  It consisted of chunks of seitan, carrot and potato cooked up with a beef flavoured stock cube.  It wasn’t the most exciting combinations but it was good and hearty.

 

The vegan cheesy beefy penne bake was a lovely rich and creamy pasta bake.  I used a packet of smoked tempeh for the beefy element and swapped out the penne for macaroni.  I made my own marinara sauce and mozzarella too, but this could be thrown together very quickly if using jars and packets of things.

I’ve mentioned earlier that we’ve trying to reduce our packaging here and one step in that direction has been to buy dry beans from our local zero waste shop.  It takes a little more planning and effort, and I found it can be a bit of problem when I was cooking the arroz con no-pollo.  We’ve not got many pots and pans in our kitchens so cooking rice, beans, and the vegetable base for this dish made for a bit of a juggling act.  It was all worth it in the end for a tasty rice dish. I used seitan as my chicken alternative and pinto beans over black beans as that’s what I could find.

The idea of a quesadilla always sounds exciting and appealing but I normally feel a bit let down when I do actually order one. I was undeterred by this, and decided to go ahead and make the mushroom and pepper quesadillas.  This was pretty easy to make, the cheese sauce was simple and tasty. I cooked some peppers in with my mushrooms rather than the suggested addition of roasted peppers, and I managed to roll out and cook my tortillas whilst this was all going on.  The end result was a delicious and well filled quesadilla.

The easy-peasy mac ’n’ cheezburger was the last thing I cooked from the book, and once again I was up against the strict publishing deadlines of Ms HH.  I just about managed to sneak it in before the deadline, and it made for a tasty and hearty meal. I used some rye pasta shapes rather than macaroni, and double the recommended amount so it’d last us for a few meals.  The cheese sauce was tofu based and packed plenty of flavour, the bread crumbs baked on top gave it a nice crunch, but the soya mince I used in the filling got a bit lost, maybe I needed more of it or maybe something a bit chunkier.  The baked variation was nice but it won’t be replacing our regular mac and cheese.

Chocolate and Other Pleasures: A little of What you Fancy Does you good

I didn’t really go into the sweet section of this book, as we’ve been trying to eat fewer sweet things, but Ms HH requested a baked good to wow her colleagues and I couldn’t say no.  I opted for the chocolate crinkle cookies as they were described as having a brownie-like texture.  From the recipe I couldn’t really picture how they were supposed to look and cursed the lack of pictures in the book, but I managed to track down the blog for the person who contributed the recipe and that helped me put it all together.  They were supposed to be rolled in icing sugar before baking, but I didn’t spot it in the cupboard so settled for granulated sugar alone and coconut on a few at the end after I was struck by inspiration.  These were easy to make and delicious, firm and crunchy on the outside and with that advertised brownie-like texture on the inside.

 

That’s the end of my August cooking odyssey for another year.  This certainly wasn’t my favourite cookbook and I don’t think I’d really recommend it.  As it’s a collection of recipes from different contributors it doesn’t really have a unified voice. Some recipes call for things to be made from scratch, whilst others seemed to be little more than throwing a lot of things from a packet into a bowl.  I was also disappointed by the lack of pictures in here. I feel that if you’re aiming your book at relatively new and inexperienced vegans you need more pictures to guide you.  I made some tasty food, but I don’t know if anything will sneak its way into my regular cooking rotation. [But what about the breakfast burrito?! And the penne bake? AND THE COOKIES? I thought these three dishes were truly excellent. – Ms HH]

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