Taste of YSN Entry #2 (Buffalo Seitan with Vegan Ranch Dip)

Taste of YSN

I thought this dish turned out great, but I’m not sure how well-received it was. Those who tried it, seemed to like it. It also happened that it was placed right next to baked buffalo chicken, so who knows how that influenced things. The recipes that I wrote up for Taste of YSN were written for an audience of non-vegans, so feel free to skip right through the explanations.

This recipe really made me think about how the word “vegan” is perceived. I wanted people to know that my dishes were vegan, because I think it’s important. The word vegan kept a lot of people from trying the ranch dip however- which probably tasted better than any bottled ranch dip/dressing people have ever had. Seriously, I splurged and made it with Veginaise for that specific reason- usually I make it with silken tofu. Too bad, so sad for those who didn’t try it- all the more leftover dip for me!

A note of the buffalo sauce- I used sriracha, and added a tiny bit of brown sugar, corriander, and salt. It was delicious.

Buffalo Seitan with Vegan Ranch Dip

Seitan is sometimes called “the wheat meat.” It’s made by separating the gluten from flour and then simmering it in a flavored broth. Traditionally to make seitan, one needs to start with a high-gluten-content wheat flour and continually soak, kneed and wash it to separate the gluten from the rest of the flour. Fortunately, you can buy that final product, called vital wheat gluten, in the natural foods section of many grocery stores and Edge of the Woods to bypass this process. The seitan will take on the flavor of whatever you simmer it in, so you can play around with the broth seasonings to taste. If you really don’t even want to go to that trouble, you can buy prepared seitan at stores like Edge of the Woods or Whole Foods. Like most prepared foods, prepared seitan isn’t as good and costs a lot more, so you might want to consider making your own.

Veganaise is a vegan mayonnaise, as the name implies. It looks and tastes just like regular mayo, with just about all the fat and calories but none of the cruelty or cholesterol. If the fat/calories are a concern (or the sticker shock from the price is), you can use silken tofu instead. In a dish like this, it is far better to use the type of silken tofu that come packed in water as opposed to the tetra-packed variety, which has a stronger bean-y flavor. Make sure to drain the water thoroughly in this case, and additional lemon juice (or white vinegar) will probably be needed. If you go this route, you would use a blender to mix all the dip ingredients instead of a bowl and spoon.

To make the seitan:

1/2 Cup Vital Wheat Gluten
1/2 Cup water

Mix these together in a bowl. It will get too thick to use a spoon, so dig right in with your hands. Kneed for 5 minutes and set aside.

Broth:

2 Cups of water
1 Cup vegan “chick’n” broth (sold in natural foods stores for lots of money, or in a powdered form in many Asian markets for cheap)
1 tsp each: thyme, dried parsley, rosemary, oregano, onion powder
1 bay leaf
garlic powder to taste
ground pepper to taste

In a large saucepan, bring the broth ingredients to a boil, and reduce the heat. Pinch off small pieces of the gluten (slightly smaller than bite sized) and drop into the broth. Cover the pan, and simmer. It is important to make sure that the broth does not come to a boil, so you’ll have to keep a close watch. Boiling seitan makes it tough and chewy, which might be good for some things, but not these. You will simmer these for about 50 minutes, stirring once every 10 minutes or so while the broth reduced. If by the end of 50 minutes it looks like bite-sized pieces of brain floating in the broth, you’ve done good. Remove from heat, but leave in the broth until ready to use. You can even stick this in the fridge at this point if you’re not ready to turn them into spicy chunks of deliciousness.

Buffalo-ing them:

Preheat oven to 350F

2 Tbs Vegan margarine (such as Earth Balance)
2 Tbs Hot Sauce or Sriracha

Melt the above together in a small saucepan. Remove the seitan from the broth, and coat with the margarine mixture. Spread the coated seitan chunks out on a cookie sheet, and bake for 10 minutes. Remove to a bowl or serving platter, and pour any remaining margarine mixture over the seitan; toss to coat. Serve with Vegan Ranch Dip, recipe to follow.

Vegan Ranch Dip

1/2 cup Vegenaise
1/4 cup minced parsley
1 lemon, zested and juiced
salt, pepper and garlic powder* to taste

Add all ingredients to a small bowl and mix together. If lemon is particularly large or juicy, either consider yourself lucky or add the juice slowly until you reach the consistency you want. Less juice = more dip–like, more juice = more salad dressing-like. See introduction for lower fat alternative.

*Powdered garlic works much better than raw minced garlic here. If you feel up to it, a couple of roasted mashed garlic cloves work even better.

Posted in Recipes | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Taste of YSN Entry #1 (Vegan Chocolate Cookies n’ Cream Cupcakes)

Taste of YSN

It’s hard for cupcakes, vegan or not, to compete in a contest against really rich, decadent dishes. These didn’t win, but everyone who tried them liked them, and everyone thought they were adorable. There were a few left over, so I brought them over to the school and put them in the kitchen area. They didn’t last long after class this morning!

Vegan Chocolate Cookies n’ Cream Cupcakes

Adapted from Vegan Cupcakes Take Over the World, by Isa Chandra Moskowitz & Terry Hope Romano

Did you know that regular Oreos are vegan? It’s true, in the US right now. I prefer to use the Newman’s Organics variety for a number of reasons, but as on the writing of this recipe, Nabisco Oreos sold in the US jut happen to be vegan.

Some people might wonder what you have to do to replace eggs in a baked goods recipe- the answer is, sometimes eggs are just superfluous. The gluten content of the flour combined with the wet ingredients is absolutely sufficient to bind the batter and produce a fine crumb. You could also substitute whole wheat pastry flour for half of the unbleached flour this calls for; adjustments would need to be made and the texture would probably be altered if you were to use other types of flour.

Some pieces of advice: get yourself an oven thermometer. Chances are, whet you set your oven to is not the temperature that you’re actually getting. Oven thermometers are inexpensive and when used will greatly improve the quality of your baked goods. Make sure you preheat the oven and prepare your cupcake liners before you start, or at least before you mix the wet and dry ingredients. Also, don’t open the oven while the cupcakes are baking. They may fall slightly if you do. And last, frosting warm cupcakes is the work of fools! Let them cool, or don’t say I didn’t warn you! And when you’re cooling them, take them out of your pan and place them on a cooking rack for best results.

Makes 12 Cupcakes

Preheat oven to 350F.

Ingredients

1 Cup soymilk
1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
3/4 cup granulated sugar
1/3 cup canola oil
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4 teaspoon almond extract
1 cup all purpose flour
1/3 cup cocoa powder
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 Cup coarsely chopped vegan chocolate cream-filled sandwich cookies, such as Newman-O’s (4-5 cookies)

Whisk together the soymilk and vinegar in a large bowl; set aside for a few minutes to curdle. Add the sugar, oil, and vanilla and almond extracts and beat until foamy. In a separate bowl with a clean and dry whisk, mix together the flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder and salt. Add in two batches to wet ingredients and beat until no large lumps remain. Gently fold in the chopped cookies. Fill 12 cupcake liners (in the pan) evenly with the batter.

Bake 18-20 minutes, until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Remove cupcakes from pan to a cooling rack. Frost when cooled with following recipe.

1/4 cup vegan margarine
1/4 cup vegetable shortening
2 cups confectioner’s sugar, sifted if clumpy
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 tablespoons plain soymilk
1/4 cup finely ground chocolate cookie crumbs
6 vegan chocolate cream-filled sandwich cooked, cut in half

Beat the shortening and margarine together until well combined and fluffy. Add the sugar and beat for about 3 more minutes. Add the vanilla and soymilk, beat for 5-7 minutes until fluffy. Gently fold in with a rubber spatula the ground cookie crumbs. Pile frosting on cupcakes generously; top each cupcake with 1/2 of a cookie.

Eat, enjoy, and be happy that you have made some of the best cupcakes you’ll ever eat!

Posted in Recipes | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Taste of YSN

I don’t have time for a full update, pictures or recipes right now (big exam on Tuesday), but my Black Bean and Quinoa Salad was a winner in the Taste of YSN (Yale School of Nursing) cooking contest this evening. My prize was a gift certificate to Ahimsa, a vegan restaurant here in New Haven. Very exciting!

Tagged , | Leave a comment

Even better than oatmeal-

I came home today and found that I accidentally got a second order of Teese!

Don’t worry, I’m all honest and stuff- I emailed to let the Teese guys to let them know. But now there are like 5.75 pounds of Teese in my fridge…

Tagged | Leave a comment

:(

I dropped my breakfast on the floor as soon as I got to class. I am sad there will be no apple cinnamon oatmeal this morning.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | Leave a comment

So, so good. Did I mention good?

So after my Teese arrived this afternoon, I had a few minutes, so I threw together some pizza dough before heading out the door to work. When I got home, I made up some pizza sauce and sliced up some Teese. I had read in a couple of blogs to go easy on the amount, so I tried.

3 great iPhotos

After baking in a 475 degree oven:

3 great iPhotos

Sliced:

3 great iPhotos

This stuff is so good. It’s good melted, it’s good just sliced and eaten, it’s just good. In fact, it’s so good, I kinda of hope it doesn’t get sold too close to me- because I will eat it constantly. Good for the makers of Teese and stretch pants, not so good for me!

Tagged , | Leave a comment

My Teese Came!

I had to jump on the Teese wagon, after seeing all the delicious looking pizzas that people have been making. Of course, right now the shipping is ridiculously expensive, so I figured I’d buy the biggest package (3 lbs), because that would make it the best value, right? Ah, learned behaviors from childhood, completely ingrained. I’m pretty good at passing up the wholesale stores like BJ’s, because I can actually see how much of a product I’d be getting. It didn’t occur to me just how much 3 lbs of Teese really is. In case anyone’s wondering:

HPIM0524.JPG

That’s a lot. So if anyone is looking to eat some (hopefully) tasty vegan pizza any time soon in the New Haven area, I suspect I’ll be making a lot of it. Lasagne, too. I do like to share…

Tagged | Leave a comment

An experiment in bokashi, part 2

Interesting. It seems that “bokashi” is one of the more popular searches that brings people to this blog, so I figured I should update on how my bokashi experience is going. Last time, I had just finished with my first bucket of bokashi. I do have more going. As far as that goes, I have learned that adding a piece of cardboard to the container to cover the compost makes a huge difference in the amount of white mold you’ll see. Between that and being sure to drain the compost tea regularly, smell hasn’t been nearly as much of an issue when I open it to add more scraps. I’ll post more about that when this batch is ready to be done cooking.

I was left with the problem of what to do with the pickled compost, since I live in an apartment with no outdoor space to plant. I do have the option at some point of bringing some of it to a friend’s to add to an outdoor compost pile, but I’d like to be able to use some of it myself. So I came up with an idea, that may or may not be useful. The verdict is still out, but I’ll show you what’s happening so far.

My idea was to get a plastic bin with a cover, some unfertilized potting soil, and bury my bokashi in the comfort of my own studio apartment. I can already see that this won’t work for all of the pickled compost I accumulate, because of space limitations. As far as I can tell, it will allow me to use some of it, and the rest can go to a friend’s.

This is what it looked like when I opened it up, about a month later:

food and dirt

I had a take-out container from Whole Foods that was compostable, so I ripped it up and added it to the top. There’s a bit of white mold on top as well.

This is what happened to the pickled compost that’s buried about halfway into the container:

food and dirt

It’s a completely different composition that what it was when I transfered it into the container. Interesting.

I ended up just taking some of the soil from the top (sans the take out container, which hadn’t been in there very long) and around the bokashi, mixing the rest up, and adding more unfertilized potting soil to the top.

All better:

food and dirt

I’ve found that I have absolutely no problem with odor coming from the bin, except when digging up the bokashi, which was again just the sweet/sour smell, not a rotting smell.

I put the now (hopefully) fertilized soil into a window planter, and let it sit for over a week (I got too busy to deal with it). Today, I added more water to the soil as it had dried out, and planted some basil, parsley and scallion seeds. I have no idea if scallions will work in a container, but I figured it couldn’t hurt to try.

I’ll post an update when and if the seeds start to sprout!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | 8 Comments

RIP

ringpnut

Peanut
December 14, 1993 – April 3, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Teff Muffins

After buying The Vegan Lunch Box, I fell in love with the recipes for Split Pea Alecha and Injera. I went out in search of Teff Flour, but was disappointed to find that at the only place I could find it, it was ridiculously expensive. I’m all for supporting local business, but I draw the line at paying almost twice the average price of an item. I did buy it at the time, but after I used it up I ordered it in bulk from Amazon. Of course, how often can one make injera?

On the back of the packages is a recipe for Teff Muffins. I don’t buy the brown rice flour that it calls for, so I subbed whole wheat pastry flour and did a flax egg replacer for the eggs (and note to Bob’s Red Mill: please make your recipes vegan. You can advertise even MORE of your products that way. Thank you). At any rate, they need some work, so I’m not posting a recipe yet. However, they’ve been a very filling breakfast this week!

food

All together.

food

Opened and spread with Earth Balance. I decided I also like Strawberry Preserves on these, as well. They’re not particularly sweet on their own.

Tagged , | Leave a comment