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My wife has decided that she wanted to do a 10-day vegan cleanse/fast. As a wonderful husband, I stupidly agreed immediately to join her. We are both Texas meat lovers and have no experience with this thing. She's got a recipe book where they are trying to recreate all my favorite foods but with veggies. :| To make matters worse, I hate beans. I know, I know, but it's true. I'm not picky about much eke, but that's a sticking point. So, I'm three days in and can't see how I'm going to make it, I'm coming to GWS for help. Any suggestions?
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 01:33 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 16:36 |
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http://www.seriouseats.com/2013/02/tips-for-vegans-eating-veganism.html http://www.seriouseats.com/2013/03/vegan-recipes-mains-soups-salads-breakfasts-sandwiches-appetizers.html http://www.lbveg.com/freebook.php
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 02:57 |
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so by vegan cleanse/fast pasta with loads of cheese is out? If I was in your situation I would subsist off of huge salads, those can be good with the right combinations. also portabellas I've done as meat substitute before, that can be good. Potatos are filling. Edit: Also, tip for cooking veggie saute, season with sugar, salt, pepper, & oil then cook. Works really good with carrots, broccoli (what the hell is broccoli anyways?), cauliflower, celery, etc ect ect. Use cast iron if you can. Allantois fucked around with this message at 03:16 on Jul 1, 2014 |
# ? Jul 1, 2014 03:04 |
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Dr. Pangloss posted:She's got a recipe book where they are trying to recreate all my favorite foods but with veggies. :| Don't try to do that, it never tastes anything like the original dish, and it is usually terrible. It's always better to just actually eat a roasted vegetable, or a dish that is designed to be made of vegetables, rather than doing weird poo poo to vegetables in order to try to make them taste like a meat somehow. Also, just make a bunch of different salads involving avocados.
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 04:30 |
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This might be a good time to have another look at beans. Different beans have different flavours and textures. Eat a chick pea. That said, it's a good time for produce, grab every vegetable that looks good, chop them up, eat them. Cold pasta salad is a nice thing for the summer, and with America Day coming up. Cook a pasta (a little less than sometimes) - chop up a bunch of vegetables, and put them into a colander you can put into a pot. Put water in the pot. Heat it. Dip the colander into the pot. Put the vegetables into the pasta in bowl. Dress it with chopped herbs and olive oil and vinegar/lemon juice. Let it sit for a bit to remember Jesus. Eat it.
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 04:40 |
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Thanks so much! Agree on not making things that are supposed to be other dishes. It just makes me hate it for not being that other dish. Brown rice is not a pizza crust and cauliflower florets isn't cheese... Forgot to mention that bread is out, too. I've been eating lots of roasted and steamed veggies, broccoli, cauliflower, asparagus, peas, green beans. Definitely need to make some hummus, though I guess I'm looking at carrots to eat it with instead of pita chips. After finishing day three I think I'm confident I'll "make it", but I need to be more thoughtful about t. Great ideas here, totally forgot about mushrooms, which I love and are a "meaty" vegetable. And avacados. I think I could live off those. Well, I know what I'm getting at the store tomorrow!
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 05:58 |
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What is she hoping to cleanse?
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 06:36 |
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Bob_McBob posted:What is she hoping to cleanse? ~~*^~ToXinS!~~^$~ of course Duuuuuuhhhhhhhh
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 07:13 |
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Bob_McBob posted:What is she hoping to cleanse? Hahaha. She has felt convicted that she's too obsessed with food and too reliant on easy food that's not good for us. She also thinks I'm food-obsessed, although I think I'm just particular about how food is made and that it's not much harder to make good food than bad food, so why not make good food? So, I think a large part of this is to force herself to eat stuff that she knows she doesn't like or wouldn't eat regularly, to prove to herself that she can and that some of it might actually be good. I'm coming to realize its more psychological than physical, although she's happy with any physical benefits that it might bring.
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 07:34 |
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Try some soup recipes also Guacamole is really good with carrots.
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 13:33 |
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Dr. Pangloss posted:mushrooms, which I love and are a "meaty" vegetable. I almost always eat meat, but pumpkin soup and cauliflower soup are both great, though I would generally eat them with bread. Pasta with a bunch of stuff thrown through it rather than a proper sauce is good too. Pasta sauces without meat always strike me as missing the vital ingredient, but if I take some pasta and mix it with some combination of olives, capers, peas, corn, capsicum, garlic, green beans and sun-dried tomatoes then that's quite acceptable. Also good is potatoes cooked up with kidney beans, tomatoes, corn, garlic, herbs, pepper and tobasco sauce.
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 14:10 |
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Dr. Pangloss posted:My wife has decided that she wanted to do a 10-day vegan cleanse/fast. Start with salads. Mixed greens, tomato, radish, peppers, craisins, nuts, seeds, salad boosters, make your own dressing out of vinegar and olive oil Try a curry. Grill/roast all the vegetables and fruits you can. they're loving delicious. Peppers, onions, portabellas (again not vegetables), carrots, squash, turnips, brussels sprouts, asparagus. Sweet potato fries! Snack on olives and artichokes stuffed grape leaves. The greeks ate like kings.
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 18:15 |
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I actually went vegetarian a month or so ago and have some decent recipes to share. This is one I've made twice so far and it came out great both times: Vegan Gumbo 1/2 Cup Flour 1/2 Cup Oil - Yes, this roux is heavy as hell. 2 lbs fresh okra 16 oz corn 16 oz purple Hull Peas 16 oz mirepoix ~2 cloves garlic chopped 2 tbsp dry parsley (or several sprigs fresh) 1 1/2 tbsp Cajun seasoning (I use Slap Yo Mama, but you can use something a bit more mild) 4 quarts of vegetable broth (You can use a bit less and add water to get the consistency right) 2 tsp Salt 2 tsp File powder For the vegetables, I strongly recommend using fresh if possible, though it's critical to use fresh okra. Frozen okra has a terrible stringy texture and just falls apart after a bit of boiling. You can also add additional veggies of your choice, but stick with stuff that has a fairly neutral flavor like kale or turnips. Step 1: Make the roux. You'll find a ton of tips on how to make roux properly on the internet and I'm from New York so I'm sure you'll be able to work it out on your own. Just stay at the stove and constantly stir the oil and flour at a medium high heat until red. It should be about as dark as hot chocolate. Make sure you have all your veggies prepped ahead of time. Step 2: Add the mirepoix and parsley to your roux. Mix it around real good until translucent (really, you can't tell when they're covered in roux so I just guesstimate 2-3 minutes). Then, add the garlic and the okra and mix until everything is covered. Step 3: Add about 3/4 of the broth, stir to make sure the roux at the bottom isn't stuck to the pot, then bring to a boil. Step 4: Add the rest of the ingredients and the rest of the broth. If this is looking too "chunky" feel free to add some more water or broth to thin it to your preferred consistency. Bring back up to a boil and then bring down to a simmer for about an hour. Add additional salt to taste; serve with rice of your choice. If you're in Texas you should be able to get most of these ingredients fresh fairly easily. It depends on where in the state you are. Emerson Cod fucked around with this message at 21:58 on Jul 1, 2014 |
# ? Jul 1, 2014 21:53 |
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The POT BEANS thread has some tasty ideas.
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 23:13 |
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Why the hell did nobody call me? There's a vegan thread on these here forums. Also, if you're curious about Indian vegan cooking, let me know. I'm your guy. Also, if you want to soup, let me know. I've got your back.
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# ? Jul 6, 2014 01:28 |
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dino. posted:Why the hell did nobody call me? There's a vegan thread on these here forums. Also, if you're curious about Indian vegan cooking, let me know. I'm your guy. Also, if you want to soup, let me know. I've got your back.
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# ? Jul 6, 2014 02:45 |
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How about delicious Gazpacho soup?
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# ? Jul 6, 2014 03:25 |
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Allantois posted:Guacamole is really good with carrots. Hummus, too!
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# ? Jul 6, 2014 17:22 |
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Roast one or two eggplants for 45 minutes or so. Scrape out the flesh and put it into a bowl, then dice up 1/2 a tomato for each eggplant. Use your hands to mash the eggplant and the tomato together, breaking up some of the stringy fibers of the eggplant. Add salt to taste and set the bowl aside. Your spice mixture is a teaspoon or so each of: cumin powder, chile powder, coriander powder, and turmeric powder. Mix this up and keep it ready. Next you'll need to cut up about 1/2 a medium onion per eggplant, a bunch of garlic, and as many fresh chiles as you want. I like slicing the onion into half rings, but chopping it or whatever is ok too. Now heat up a bunch of oil in a skillet or wok until it's pretty hot. Add a healthy sprinkle of cumin seeds and fry them for a short time, then add the garlic and chiles. Fry this for a minute, then add the onions. Keep frying until the onions get soft and translucent, then add the spice mixture. keep stirring while you fry the spices for about a minute, then add the eggplant/tomato mixture. Fry everything together for a minute or two, then turn off the heat and stir in some chopped fresh cilantro. I like to serve it with plain rice. It's completely vegan as long as you use a vegetable oil for frying, and it tastes really good. You won't be missing meat at all.
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# ? Jul 7, 2014 07:44 |
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Steamed french beans with garlic Roasted broccoli with lemon zest, pinenuts, olive oil and grated parmesan (just as good without if you are going vegan) Roasted sprouts are good too
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# ? Jul 7, 2014 09:18 |
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I tried out various vegan recipes for a time just out of curiosity and despite not liking most of them I came across a simple snack you might consider: tofurky lettuce wraps. I'm a bit iffy about tofurky but it's not that bad wrapped in a lettuce leaves with any other assorted veggies or your choice. I add a little bean sprouts, cucumber, tomato, some spicy mustard, or sometimes I'll just add a dab of siracha and jalapeno slices. It's no Phillipe's French dip roast beef sandwich that's been left out in the California sun and fused to the concrete, but in addition to both looking like a black woman's vagina, the tofurky has a similar taste and smell.
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# ? Jul 8, 2014 00:34 |
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Good lord. This is becoming everything the vegan thread wasn't. If your recipe relies on something that is better identified by its brand name than by what kind of food it actually is, I'm not saying it's a terrible recipe, but there are probably better ways to cook vegetables. Nobody has ever referred to a vegetable by a brand name and there's no reason to gently caress that up. This is a good (free) cookbook about how to think about cooking vegetables. It's a nice sort of "palette cleanser," so to speak, for someone who has grown up (as many of us have) thinking about meals as "something you do to a piece of meat to make it taste better." Once you're out of the habit of having a piece of meat (or a piece of tofurkey...) at the center of your meals, being a vegetarian/vegan becomes much easier.
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# ? Jul 8, 2014 00:42 |
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shades and a soda posted:I tried out various vegan recipes for a time just out of curiosity and despite not liking most of them I came across a simple snack you might consider: tofurky lettuce wraps. e: shades and a soda posted:http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3647044&pagenumber=1#post431879956 Elizabethan Error fucked around with this message at 01:19 on Jul 8, 2014 |
# ? Jul 8, 2014 01:16 |
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It's the end of the 10 days!!! So, I survived and actually enjoyed some meals, which I was not expecting. I'm actually really glad that I did this. Some of my favorite meals were: Grilled portabellas Avacado, roasted corn and tomato salad Roasted poblano pepper stuffed with veggie mexican rice These are in addition to the stuff that I already loved, like roasted cauliflower, steamed broccoli, hummus, curry, and roasted potatoes. That said, tomorrow will start with eggs and sausage, lunch with a burger and dinner will be sausage and pepper pizza. Tomorrow will be a good day.
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# ? Jul 8, 2014 06:23 |
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MeramJert posted:Roast one or two eggplants for 45 minutes or so. Scrape out the flesh and put it into a bowl, then dice up 1/2 a tomato for each eggplant. Use your hands to mash the eggplant and the tomato together, breaking up some of the stringy fibers of the eggplant. Add salt to taste and set the bowl aside. Thanks for this, I have already made preparations to make it tomorrow.
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# ? Jul 23, 2014 19:21 |
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dino. posted:Why the hell did nobody call me? There's a vegan thread on these here forums. Also, if you're curious about Indian vegan cooking, let me know. I'm your guy. Also, if you want to soup, let me know. I've got your back. This man knows what he is about. His cookbook is a staple in my kitchen. Listen closely to him and follow his advice.
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# ? Jul 23, 2014 20:45 |
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Errant Gin Monks posted:This man knows what he is about. His cookbook is a staple in my kitchen. dino. is never wrong.
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# ? Jul 23, 2014 20:54 |
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Dino's veggie stuff is always point on, and mushrooms should be your friend if you're going veggie. Portabellos are fantastic.
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# ? Jul 28, 2014 06:06 |
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pandaK posted:Thanks for this, I have already made preparations to make it tomorrow. Did you try it?
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# ? Jul 28, 2014 09:07 |
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I used to be pretty terrible with eating veggies, I would do a pantry/fridge rehaul every once in awhile and go buy a ton of healthy stuff that I wound up not eating/going bad. My boyfriend at the time also did not want to try eating healthier so I had to still get all the crap food he wanted to eat. Instead of just completely changing everything I tried one dish at a time, slowly changing out recipes or finding new recipes that I liked (Pinterest helped a lot with recipes) Since I started doing that and giving myself time to adjust instead of slamming myself with a ton of new stuff at once I have kept up with eating better. I wouldn't recommend swapping your favorite dishes with healthy alternatives, you will probably just think the unhealthy version is more delicious.
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# ? Jul 28, 2014 13:44 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 16:36 |
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MeramJert posted:Did you try it? Yeah the first time I don't know what was up with the spices but I used way too much. Maybe because I used smaller Japanese eggplants for that one, but the whole thing just tasted of spices. Tried a second time with larger eggplants and less spice and it came out amazing.
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# ? Jul 28, 2014 19:25 |