Vida Vegan Con Day #1

Vida Vegan Con is now over. 🙁 But, since I didn’t blog on the days of the conference, you get to hear all about it now!

Official events on day 1 weren’t starting until late afternoon/early evening, so I started off my day exploring on my own. I ended up at Vita Cafe for breakfast:

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Funky little café!

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Sloppy Biscuit Sandwich- gravy, potatoes, biscuit, seitan and more! How can you go wrong?

As I was still feeling under the weather, I headed back to my hotel for a little while after this. Next up: a trip to the famed Vegan Mini-Mall! No, I did not get a tattoo, vegan or otherwise.

Food Fight, Herbivore, and Sweetpea Baking Company. Scapegoat Tattoo not pictured, as I was standing in front of it.

But I did see some Tofurkey Bologna, which I do not think I have seen before!

And I got a brownie! I didn’t eat it that day, though.

After the mini mall, I again returned to my hotel room. It was HOT this weekend. I mean, not really any hotter than it’s been in New York, but much hotter than I expected of the Pacific Northwest. I needed a shower. And to change, before going to the Cupcake and Champagne Reception that kicked off VVC!

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I had to vow to my fellow table mates that I would not reveal how many cupcakes I had.

After the reception, I headed to Homegrown Smoker, because you have to visit multiple food carts when you visit Portland.

MacNoCheeto. Tortilla stuffed with mac no cheese, beans and barbecued soy curls. I only got in a few more bites at that point. But it was good cold the next day!

Well, that was about it for Day 1 of VVC. I’m not sure if I’ll get to post about day 2 tomorrow, but hopefully soon. Tomorrow is my last day in Portland, and then I have a long night of travel ahead of me!

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Portland Pre-Vida Vegan Con!

I made it to Portland, OR last night for Vida Vegan Conference. I got in too late to do anything, and was so tired from all the travel. Today was filled with sight seeing and stopping at some of the vegan hotspots that I’ve read so much about in the past. I am still feeling under the weather so I have been pacing myself, and not doing quite as much as I’d like, but I had fun with what I did do today!

I started off with a trip to Voo-doo Doughnuts. I walked, as I did for may things today (but not all). It’s a good things, because I walked away with four doughnuts. Fortunately, I have not eaten them all yet!

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The infamous line! Really it wasn’t that bad. Plus the outside wall is sparkly!

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Look, there’s vegan doughnuts on the shelf!

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I don’t know, I think the voodoo doll is too cool to eat!

After wandering around the city (and heading back to the hotel for a quick shower- it’s surprisingly hot here right now), I took the bus over to Native Bowl, Julie Hasson’s food cart. I am shocked at the number of food carts in this city- it is crazy! I got the Mississippi Bowl– which was delicious. And the first time I’ve had Soy Curls! I bought them once, but but too weird out to ever eat them, and had to toss them eventually. They did not taste weird at all. 😉

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It’s the blue cart in the back!

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Mississippi Bowl- it was prettier before I mixed it!

This evening I went to a screening of Vegucated, which was awesome. I’ll be doing a post just on that next week. If you’re able, you should absolutely see it!

And of course tomorrow evening is the start of Vida Vegan Con!

1 Day to Vida Vegan Con! Or it’s here, depending on your time zone!

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Portland Tomorrow!

I’m leaving for Portland tomorrow! I won’t be arriving until late, but I am so excited! I was home sick today- but feeling better (you know, until the allergic reaction to a medication, but it’s all good now). I had wanted to take care of some produce I had hanging around this past Sunday, but wasn’t able to get around to it due to being sick. So today I had at it!

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Cucumbers, before turning them into pickles.

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Cucumber pickles!

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Blanched and shocked golden squash.

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Blanched, shocked and peeled tomato!

Fortunately, all that only took a couple of hours. Plus breaks, because I was tired. So I need to get to bed, so I will be well rested for tomorrow. And on Friday…

3 Days to Vida Vegan Con!

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Tempeh Temptations at NGI

The class I took this past Saturday at NGI was “Tempeh Temptations.” If you look over at my tags, you’ll see that I do use tempeh a fair amount of the time, but I use it in basically the same ways all the time. I like the ways that I’ve been making it, but I also wanted to broaden my horizons.

Is that dish not pretty?

The fact that we would learn to make tempeh from scratch absolutely sold me! I had seen a great video on making tempeh before, but you definitely get much more out of a live presentation than a video.

This class was taught by cookbook author Myra Kornfield, who also taught the first class I took at NGI. I must say, she makes the prettiest dishes I’ve ever seen, hands down.

In both of the classes I’ve taken with her, there have been three things that you learn that are worth the price of admission (the same in both classes, but I needed repeating on two of them).

  1. Slicing a bell pepper.
  2. Chopping ginger.
  3. Cutting citrus really fancy.

You’ll have to take a class to learn how to do them, but they are definitely neat tricks. This time there was also a helpful pointer on slicing onions for different purposes, too. 🙂

If you’ve been reading the last few days, you know that I have a nasty cold- and it started on Saturday. I think I may have looked a little needier than usual because of this (and I also messed up a couple of really simple things- not disastrously, but my head was not in the game). Anyway, I say this because I learned another really good resource in this class: the Chef’s Training Program (CTP) students.

They CTP students are always there, running around getting you everything you need and cleaning up after you. In past classes, I haven’t interacted with any of them very much, beyond asking (politely) for things that I need- and now I realize that this was a mistake. There’s nearly as many CTP students as there are public class students (maybe the numbers are the same; I’ve never actually counted), and they can give you some individual attention where the instructor isn’t able, just due to the size of the class. So here’s some props for the CTP students!

Disclaimer: I actually thought I was just having allergies when I got up on Saturday, not that I was sick with a viral illness. I’m pretty good with the hygiene, but I sincerely hope that I didn’t spread my germs to anyone else in the class!

But of course, you came here because you wanted to see the food, right?

Tofu is made by making the soybeans into soy milk first, then curdling it and pressing the curds together. Since you don’t get most of the bean in the end product it is not a whole food- though it is tasty, and has other health benefits.

Tempeh is awesome, because unlike tofu (which I also love), tempeh is a whole food. It’s also a fermented food, which has its own benefits. You can buy tempeh in most any grocery store (cheapest at Trader Joe’s- $1.69 for an 8oz package), but it is definitely a different experience to eat homemade.

There are two important things that you’ll need to make your own tempeh, besides the soybeans.

  1. A starter.
  2. A way to keep the fermenting tempeh at 85F-90F.

Two good sources for buying a tempeh starter can be found here and here. Coincidently, at both you can also buy a tofu coagulant, so if that’s on your list of things to try, you might as well get both. 🙂

People have some pretty innovative ways of incubating tempeh. But it is fairly forgiving, as long as you don’t let it get too hot, and it will eventually start making its own heat and let you off the hook.

One last note before I move onto the food: there really is something to steaming the tempeh first. Packaged or frozen tempeh needs moisture and fat. It’s not because I’m picky that I don’t like tempeh straight out of the package- it’s a real thing. 🙂

Here’s the menu for the class:


Tempeh Mushroom Burritos with Black Bean-Avocado Topping
Golden Curried Tempeh with Coconut Milk and Mango
Chile-Orange Baked Tempeh
Indonesian-Style Fried Tempeh with Sweet and Sour Glaze, served with Jasmine Rice and Snow Peas
Homemade Tempeh Reubens with Caramelized Onions

Tempeh Reuben with Caramelized Onions. One of the fanciest sandwiches I’ve ever had!

Golden Curried Tempeh with Coconut Milk and Mango (left) Chile-Orange Baked Tempeh (right)

Tempeh Mushroom Burritos with Black Bean-Avocado Topping. I liked this, and I hate mushrooms!

Indonesian-Style Fried Tempeh with Sweet and Sour Glaze, served with Jasmine Rice and Snow Peas. This one was made with the homemade tempeh!

And can you believe it?

4 Days to Vida Vegan Con!

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Watermelon-Cucmber Salad

I mentioned on my Facebook Page earlier today that I’m sick- just before Vida Vegan Con! That is why I didn’t post yesterday. I am doing this quick post right now, and I have a post to give you about the class I took at NGI yesterday, but that will have to wait. I’m resting up so that I can be in good shape to fly on Wednesday!

I’ve been making Watermelon-Cucmber salad for a few weeks now. Vegan Boyfriend came across this recipe a while back, but I made a few changes. Often salt will help to preserve food, but in this case I leave it out. Salt will cause liquid to precipitate out of cucumber, and I’d rather avoid this here. I make a up a big batch at the beginning of the week, and then eat it over the rest of the week- it keeps just fine.

I would also recommend making sure that your watermelon is very ripe. My most recent batch just wasn’t quite as good, as the watermelon was a little under ripe.

This recipe easily makes more. I base it on half of a small watermelon (or 1/4 of a large one), as I usually buy one that’s pre-cut/wrapped (I can’t eat a whole one by myself!). This can be easily doubled, tripled or more!

Watermelon-Cucumber Salad

  • One medium cucumber, seeded, or one English cucumber
  • 3 cups cubed seeded watermelon (if you end up with the white immature seeds, that’s fine)
  • 1 lime, juiced and zested
  • 1 inch of ginger, grated or chopped
  • a sprinkle of cayenne pepper, to taste
  1. Peel and cube cucumber.
  2. Remove from rind and cube watermelon, de-seed if necessary.
  3. Toss both in a bowl together. Add lime zest, lime juice, ginger and cayenne.
  4. Toss and serve!
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Tasty! And Healthy! I could eat this stuff by the gallon.

By the way, if you were looking for the CNN Documentary “The Last Heart Attack” this evening (Sunday, 8/21/11), it will be airing on Saturday, 8/27/11 at 8PM and 11PM instead, due to coverage of the developments in Libya. It’s the documentary where President Bill Clinton talks about his vegan diet!

But I won’t be able to watch it, because I’ll be at Vida Vegan Con!

5 Days to Vida Vegan Con!

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Weekly Roundup & Vegan Bodega Shout-out

Earlier this week I saw VegNews mentioning a new vegan funding campaign for Vegan Bodega. I think that this sounds like such an awesome project- and makes me so happy because I only live a short train ride from Manhattan!

I don’t know that it would really be any cheaper for me to take the train in to go shopping versus ordering items online (so don’t worry, online vegan stores), but it would be really nice to be able to go into a store and just browse around, seeing all the different products out there available through a store front. If you’re in a position to donate, please do!

So what else is happening in vegan news this week?

And on my blog…

Wow- by this time next week, VVC will have begun!

7 Days to Vida Vegan Con!

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Healthy Japanese Cooking at Natural Gourmet Institute

On Saturday, I’m taking another class at NGI! I’ll post about the next class this weekend, but for now, I will post about my last!

Back in June, I took a Healthy Japanese Cooking Class at NGI. This one was a partial participation class, so a little different than most of the others I had taken. I missed not being able to be busy and working during the class, but I must admit, it was nice to just be able to sit and watch. 🙂 The menu was as follows:


Cold Sesame and Cucumber Miso Soup with Harusame Noodles
Suno-Mono (Seaweed, Radish and Shiso Salad) with Homemade Ponzu Sauce
Roasted Age-Bitashi
Kinpira-Gobo (Sautéed Shredded Burdock Root and Carrot) with Homemade Warishita Sauce and Sesame Seeds
Pan-Fried Tofu Steak with Grated Daikon Sauce
Naturally Pink Vegan Sushi Roll
Wagashi: Shiro-Goma-Mizu-Yokan.

When I last sat down and booked a few classes to take, I was determined to focus on healthy classes, which is why I ended up choosing this one. I don’t mean to imply that NGI has unhealthy classes (they don’t), but I had a focus. I was a little nervous about this one. Seaweed is one of those things I really hate, and there would be a lot of it here- but guess what?

I didn’t taste it in most of the dishes!

In fact, the only thing I did taste it in was the sushi.

Speaking of sushi, it was the only thing that we students really did- roll sushi. Look at it, though!

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I rolled sushi with rice on the outside!

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The neatly cut ones are mine. 🙂

I definitely got a lot out of rolling the sushi in class. First off, I didn’t know that you could use brown rice for that purpose- I always assumed it wouldn’t be sticky enough. Plus, I didn’t think I would be neat enough to do it! Oh, and the teacher said I had good hands when she was my sushi rolls!

The class was taught by chef Hideyo Yamada. If you ever get a chance to take a class with her- do it! She’s awesome. And really funny. I really enjoyed the class!

You can also check out the previous classes I took at NGI here, here, and here!

And I am so excited I can’t stand it…

eight 7 Days to Vida Vegan Con!

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Chili Lime Corn on the Cob and Buffalo Tempeh

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Served on greens, this makes for a reasonably healthy meal! Use spiced up/thinned out tomato paste instead of ketchup if you’d rather avoid the sugar in ketchup.

I’m not a great planner when it comes to my weekly grocery shopping. I often have an idea of what I want to have, and then just kind of wing it. Sometimes it works, and sometimes it doesn’t. Fortunately, this week it did. I picked up some local corn over the weekend, and boiled a cob today. I had some limes in the fridge, and I never lack for Earth Balance or spices. I had greens on hand, and I always have a block or two of tempeh. “Buffalo” sauce is pretty easy (I cheat), as is a vegan ranch dressing, if you have Veganaise on hand.

Chili Lime Corn on the Cob

Makes as many as you like- based on one serving

  • 1 ear of corn, shucked
  • 1/2-1 tbs Earth Balance (EB) vegan margarine (you won’t use it all)
  • juice of 1/2 a lime
  • a sprinkling of cayenne, and cumin, if you like
  • salt to taste
  1. Place ear of corn in a large pan of water and bring to a boil. Once boiling, remove after 5-7 minutes (or more or less, depending on how soft you like your corn).
  2. Put Earth Balance on a clean plate. Put cooked ear of corn on top.
  3. EB will start to melt immediately- turn corn in this.
  4. Squeeze on lime juice, sprinkle on spices and salt. Toss corn in all this until it is throughly coated.
  5. Repeat for any other ears of corn, though you’ll need less EB the second and any subsequent time around.

Buffalo Tempeh

serves 1, easily doubles and quadruples

  1. Cut tempeh into strips or triangles (slice in half width-wise, cut in half, then cut halves into triangles). Place in a shallow covered microwavable dish in a small amount of water, and microwave (covered) for 4 minutes.
  2. Place ketchup and sriracha in a small pan on stove, mix and heat until warm. Thin with water as needed.
  3. Remove tempeh from dish. Sear on each side in a hot well-seasoned cast iron pan (or non-stick).
  4. Dip tempeh in ketchup-sriracha mixture.

Serve with vegan ranch dressing!

This whole meal comes together in less than 30 minutes. It’s super easy, filling and tasty!

And a week from today I leave for Portland!

9 Days to Vida Vegan Con!

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Chow Down

Shortly after I posted my review for Forks Over Knives, one of the producers of Chow Down contacted me and asked if I might watch and review the film, which was available for free on Hulu (it’s also available without commercial interruption on Amazon). Of course I said yes! And then got busy and forgot. Shame on me! But, I remembered the other day, and now I have watched it.

So, first thing I see: Dr. Katz, who was my nutrition teacher at Yale. (Disclaimer: it was a big class. He has no idea who I am, but it was cool seeing him first in the film anyway!). So that set the tone for me, which was pretty positive.

Chow Down is not a vegan-focused movie, though there is plenty of mention of a “plant-based diet.” Much like FOK, Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn and Dr. T. Colin Campbell are featured. There are many nutrition experts featured, such as the aforementioned Dr. David Katz, as well as vegan superstars like Dr. Neal Banard and Dr. Joel Fuhrman. The information is solid.

The movie is not just a re-hash of FOK. It spends a tremendous amount of time discussing the political influence of the Standard American Diet. You have to see the scene where a woman who worked for the USDA talks about her committee’s recommendations for making fruits and vegetable the foundation of the food pyramid.

If you look through the documentaries section on Netflix streaming these days, you will find quite a few documentaries about our food system and the politics behind it. This one is set apart with a cast of real experts, in addition to the story of people changing their diets. There are a lot of similarities to FOK, but I think it’s a nice companion piece. I’d definitely recommend seeing this!

10 Days to Vida Vegan Con!

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Peppers and Onions

Have you ever had what you thought was a really good idea for a recipe, but it just didn’t work out to your expectations? Tonight’s dinner was one of those.

Yesterday vegan boyfriend sent me home with cubanelle peppers, red onions, and new potatoes from his CSA share. I got stuck in traffic driving home, and had a long time to smell those peppers and onions. So I came up with a way to use them: sautéed with a bit of garlic and seitan. With potatoes thrown in. I wasn’t sure what I would do for a sauce, but I was leaning towards something tomato-ey.

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My well-imagined, but not well thought out dinner.

I had some pesto in the freezer, so I threw a cube of that in as well. I also had tomato paste in the fridge, so I thought that would work. And it did… but it was still under-seasoned, and I’m not sure what else I would have done (other than a lot more salt). I served it with ketchup, and it was perfectly fine. It just didn’t live up to my expectations. Maybe it would have been better with a fancy ketchup!

I would definitely try this again, but I think I might make a separate tomato sauce to go along with it. If that’s well seasoned, everything else will be, too.

Many of my friends have commented to me that everything I post looks so good… and that it must be nice to be able to cook like that. Well, I mess up sometimes too! How about you?

11 Days to Vida Vegan Con!

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