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Going vegan......old style?!

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  • Murrell
    Murrell Posts: 520 Forumite
    Dinner
    Stir Fry with marinated tofu (just chop tofu and sprinkle with soya sauce and herbs/spices)
    Stew and dumplings made with or without soya mince (I prefer the frozen to the dry, its more of a meaty texture)
    ‘Chicken’ and leek pie with mash and broccoli, carrots etc
    Pasta, sauce and vegetables
    Chilli non carne
    Shepardless pie
    Spiced millet with potatoes
    Vegetable curry with rice
    Kitchari and vegetables
    Lentil dahl, veg and rice
    Homemade haggis with potatoes and veg
    Nut roast with stuffing, veg, gravy etc
    Bean casseroles/hotpots
    Spicy couscous (see recipe challange in weezls thread)
    Onion bhajis, samosa, pakora, rice, bombay potatoes etc
    Savoury crumbles such as pumpkin or courgette
    Vegan sausage casserole and mash
    These days it’s a lot easier to veganise any recipe if you use meat subsitutes, some are fairly new and only available from health food stores so are not cheap. Not exactly a OS option and not to everybodys taste but easy to use in the beginning if your used to cooking with meat. You can buy frozen subsitutes for chicken, sausages, beef and mince.
  • Murrell
    Murrell Posts: 520 Forumite
    Desserts
    Rice pudding/tapioca/semolina made with soya milk
    Homemade crumbles/pies/cobblers served with vegan custard (if using birds custard, half milk for thick and ¾ for thin custard. If you use same amount as per instructions for dairy milk, it won’t work.)
    Home made cakes/muffins – plenty on this site alone including the famous banana weetabix cake.
    Tinned, stewed or fresh fruit
    Bread puddings
    Pancakes
    Chocolate mouse (avocado, banana and cocoa mixed)
    Home made icecream/sorbet or just simply frozen banana or grapes
    Homemade blancmange
    Flapjacks/peanut butter bars
    Chocolate rice crispies/rocky road/fridge cake/Chocolate cornflake crunch
    trifle
    fools made with silken tofu
    homemade vegan cheesecake
    scones
    summer pudding
    chocolate log
    mince pies
    biscuits

    Hope these are of help to someone
    Will update with sandwich list later
    Sandra
  • Murrell
    Murrell Posts: 520 Forumite
    Banana
    On its own
    banana and jam
    banana & melted dark chocolate
    banana mashed & soft brown sugar
    banana & date

    Beetroot
    Sliced beetroot, thinly sliced onion and tomato and salad cream

    Fruit
    sliced apple and raisin
    jam and grated carrot
    Raisins or sultanas with chopped nuts and agave syrup
    Guacamole

    Houmous
    Houmous and grated carrot
    houmous and beansprouts
    Houmous and roasted peppers
    Houmous, salsa, grated carrot & red cabbage
    Houmous with mashed up ripe avocado
    Houmous and salad

    Marmite/vegemite
    marmite and lettuce
    marmite and grated carrot
    marmite, tomato, and plain crisps
    marmite and Avocado

    Mushrooms
    Fried mushrooms, onions and garlic

    Nutty Mushroom pate
    350g (12oz) closed cup mushrooms, chopped
    1 medium onion, peeled & finely chopped
    1 tbsp olive oil
    2 tsps mixed herbs
    1 tsp yeast extract
    400g (14oz) chickpeas, drained
    ½ lemon, juice only
    100g (4oz) mixed chopped nuts
    45ml (3 tbsp) fresh parsley, finely chopped
    Heat 1 tbsp of the olive oil in frying pan. Fry the mushrooms and onions together until soft. Stir in the mixed herbs and yeast extract. Remove from the heat and drain off any liquid. Place the mixture into a food processor with the chick peas and lemon juice to make a smooth paste. Transfer to a bowl and stir in the nuts and parsley. Season to taste. Cover and allow to stand at room temperature for about an hour before serving to allow the flavours to develop.

    Nuts
    Any nut butter can be substituted for the peanut butter.
    Peanut butter and jam
    peanut butter and cucumber
    peanut butter and raw onion
    peanut butter and beetroot
    peanut butter and banana
    peanut butter and vegemite
    peanut butter and sliced apple
    peanut butter and melted chocolate
    peanut butter and chocolate chip!
    peanut butter, vegan cheese and jam
    peanut butter and sultana's
    peanut butter and sliced tomato
    peanut butter and pickled onion
    Peanut butter & agave syrup/golden syrup
    peanut butter and salad

    Pulses
    There is so many bean pates that I would suggest searching on the net and seeing if you fancy trying any, there will be cannellini bean pate, kidney bean pate, houmous, mixed bean pate, red bean pate to name a few.

    Lentil Pate (adapted from weezls recipe)
    75g red lentils
    ½ pt water or vegetable stock left over from last time you boiled or steamed any veg
    1 medium onion
    1 cloves garlic
    1 tablespoons vegetable oil
    1 1/2 tsp dried mixed herbs
    2 slices whole wheat bread crumbs

    Wash lentils, drain, and place in a saucepan. Add the water or stock, bring to a boil, reduce heat to medium, and simmer, covered, for 20 minutes. Drain any excess water. Chop the onions and the garlic very finely. In a large frying pan, heat the oil. Add the garlic, onions, and herbs and saut! over medium heat, stirring, for about 10 minutes, or until the onions and garlic are brown. When the lentils are done, stir them thoroughly to mash, add the onion mixture with the bread crumbs.

    Falafels with houmous and salad in a pitta bread.

    Vegan subsitutes
    Cheese –cheezly, sheese with all the usual combinations.
    Meat slices such as redwoods ham, sage & onion, turkey, chicken and beef with all the usual combinations.
    Redwoods also do a roast turkey or beef joint which can also be sliced for sandwiches.
    I use the joint to make turkey and stuffing with apple sauce

    Vegetables
    roasted vegetables. On there own or roasted and then put in a food processor with chickpeas and olive oil to make a pate.
    Pesto (can be made with peanuts rather than pine nuts), cherry tomato and avocado.
    tomato and salad cream sandwich.
    green olive tapenade ( I think weezl had a recipe for this).

    Things to add to your sandwiches
    Cucumber
    Pickle
    salad
    sprouted pulses
    grapes
    salad cream, or dressings
    Coleslaw
    crisps







  • Cat72
    Cat72 Posts: 2,398 Forumite
    Wow great thread- thanks so much for starting it twinkle.Really brave of you to jump right into to being vegan.:beer:
  • Wow! Thanks Murrell - i'm going to spend the rest of the evening sitting and copying all that down into my new vegan notebook (I see you have been patronising the mushroom-uk site too!).

    I used to keep an exericse book in the kitchen where I'd note down recipes I wanted to try or things I had tried that were really good so that my OH knew where to find all the basic recipes in one place. He couldn't cook much beyond a fishfinger sandwich before we met so he wasn't going to sit and go through big cookbooks looking for the recipe for spaghetti and meatballs that I'd taught him the week before so he now just goes and looks in the 'almanack of total cooking knowledge' as he dubbed it. Now my diet has changed I'm transferring (and veganising) some recipes and adding all the yummy new ones that I'm finding.

    I've also been giving some thought to why people get put of the vegan diet either before they try it or after giving it a go for a while as I have never previously thought I'd be able to be vegan (thanks for the praise Cat72). Some think they'll miss meat/eggs/milk too much, others think its too much effort and some feel restricted by all the things they can't have.

    I think the problem is partly the old-fashioned images of veganism (beans and bran and lots of grey mush) and also simply not knowing what to begin by cooking. Personally, I got very disheartened looking through a vegan cookbook I got from the library that had a lovely modern cover with cupcakes on and lots of praise and when I opened it the recipes were yucky and boring. The book was actually from the early 80s and only cover had been updated. Now, no offence to the writer, the recipes simply weren't my cup of tea, but I think the more modern books are often way more appealling to new vegans and the internet is by far the best resource. Veganforum.com is a great discussion place for vegans and has lots of threads with titles like 'I just ate the greatest...', 'favourite foods at the moment', 'dinner ideas' etc. So if I'm ever stuck for what to make I just have a quick look there or on the numerous lovely vegan blogs. I also loved the PostPunkKitchen - way to make vegan rock! You can watch the shows online and then get the books!
    Hope some of that plus Murrell & Doom_and_Gloom's ideas can inspire a few more would-be vegans or vegan-doubters that it can be yummy and fun!
  • Gaia
    Gaia Posts: 446 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 100 Posts Combo Breaker
    As it is B12 is a bacteria so the only reason it is in animal products at all naturally is IF the animal eats some kind of food with it in it. It should be in the soil but levels of any kind can not be significantly proven due to the high levels of factory farming and pesticides which I do find rather ironic as it was seen as the way forward for generations to come when introduced years ago. Even organic fruit and vegetables can not be relied on for B12 due to the depletion of B12 in the soil due to humans.

    Er, no, B12 is not a bacterium, it is a water soluble chemical biosynthesised by bacteria. Actually, to be precise, B12 is the name of a class of chemically related compounds, all of which have some vitamin activity.

    Ok, scientist coming off soap box now :p
    "Never argue with an idiot. They drag you down to their level then beat you with experience." Anon.
  • I was vegan for many years (but veggie now) and one of my favourite recipe books is 'how it all vegan' http://www.amazon.co.uk/How-All-Vegan-Irresistible-Recipes/dp/1906502072/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1233864277&sr=8-1

    There are some super cakes which I bake more often than those with eggs etc.
    The authors have also written one other book together and Sarah Kramer another alone. (She also has a good website)
  • I'm enjoying this thread! Thanks to all the vegans (and others) who are posting such great and inspirational tips! :D
  • https://www.puredairyfree.co.uk

    there is some great recipes on this site also!! if you click on recipes then vegan.

    hope this is of help.
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