Categories
Food Blog

Emily C. on Instagram: “Celebrating makeup Thanksgiving/birthdays/general winter holidays today with a nice vegetarian tapas menu, everything homemade…”

Tapas menu:

Main course:

Dessert (inspired by Briony’s vegan showstopper from GBBO!)

  • Chocolate hazelnut cake and ganache (I added instant coffee to both the cake and the icing)
  • Candied hazelnuts (subbed coconut oil for the butter & skipped cinnamon)

  • Raspberry preserves filling (storebought); fresh and freeze-dried raspberries to decorate

Emily C. on Instagram: “Celebrating makeup Thanksgiving/birthdays/general winter holidays today with a nice vegetarian tapas menu, everything homemade…”

Categories
Food Blog

Multi-purpose pesto drizzle

I signed up for Vegan MoFo, so maybe I will post more. Not that anyone follows me…which is all well and good, really. But for that, I really ought to bother to take pictures of my food. So more more plain text monstrosity.

This one’s easy: pesto dressing.

  • basil leaves – like, a handful
  • walnuts – also something like a handful
  • garlic – five or six cloves
  • olive oil – just poured some in
  • nutritional yeast – as much as it took
  • lemon juice – fresh squeezed, most of one
  • salt – just a pinch
  • water – to thin it out for blending purposes

Put in blender. Blend. Blend some more. Let sit.

We ate this with baked tofu + tomato slices, mixed greens and spinach, and brown rice. But it would work with any number of things, because pesto. Yup. That’s it.

Categories
Food Blog

Two-fer

On Sundays, I pick up two cubes of fresh, locally made tofu at the farmers’ market. This comes in a baggie and does not last long, so I’m always making different tofu dishes on Monday/Tuesday evenings. And on weeknights, the boyfriend and I discuss dinner via text–today’s suggestion was tofu and soba noodles. A good combination.

So I made:

  • Baked tofu in homemade spicy teriyaki marinade
  • Shredded raw vegetable salad with cashew-sesame dressing
  • Soba dressed simply with chives and toasted nori

That’s two sauces, with a splash of things in noodles that isn’t really a sauce.

First, the teriyaki tofu.

Marinade (which I did not actually measure, so this is approximate):

  • Two cloves garlic, microplaned
  • 2" piece of ginger, microplaned
  • One tablespoon of toasted sesame oil
  • Two tablespoons soy sauce or tamari
  • One tablespoon mirin
  • One teaspoon agave nectar or maple syrup
  • One teaspoon hot sauce

Other ingredients:

  • About half a cup of thinly sliced red onion (I used a leftover half of a large onion, sliced into quarter moons)
  • Half a pound of fresh tofu, sliced to fit in your baking dish (I put mine in an 8" glass square dish, which fits four thick slices perfectly)
  • Black sesame seeds to cover

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Mix the marinade in the bottom of the baking dish, then toss in the onions to cover with sauce. Move aside the onions and dredge the tofu slices so each side is covered and place them in the baking dish, with the saucy onions gently layered on top. Sprinkle with black sesame seeds. Bake for about 20 minutes, flip, and bake another 20 minutes.

Shredded vegetable salad is up next.

You can make this with any vegetables you like, though firmer ones hold up better–more crunch, less wilt. This is the balance I had:

  • Red cabbage, about ¾ of a medium head (it’s what I had sitting around) – thinly shredded
  • Half a long cucumber, julienned to the core (I tossed out the seeds)
  • One carrot, julienned
  • One red bell pepper, seeded, quartered, and sliced thinly

Dressing (again, all approximate, because I’m a degenerate):

  • Quarter cup raw cashew butter (toasted would add too much of a strong flavor–soaked and pureed cashews would do instead)
  • Tablespoon seasoned rice wine vinegar
  • Teaspoon toasted sesame oil
  • Splash soy sauce or tamari
  • Water to thin out to desired consistency

I just whisk this all together in a little bowl and pour over the shredded vegetables, then use tongs to combine.