Bountiful baskets Oct 30 2014 and mini vegan grocery haul – Video
Posted: November 1, 2014 at 9:57 pm
Bountiful baskets Oct 30 2014 and mini vegan grocery haul
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Bountiful baskets Oct 30 2014 and mini vegan grocery haul - Video
How to video: Make vegan chocolate orange nutrition drink! – Video
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How to video: Make vegan chocolate orange nutrition drink!
via YouTube Capture.
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How to video: Make vegan chocolate orange nutrition drink! - Video
My Healthy Raw Vegan Breakfast – Video
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My Healthy Raw Vegan Breakfast
Almond milk or water Chia seeds Date honey or raw honey Bananas Blueberries.
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Rosiestips on eating and living rawThe rest is here:
My Healthy Raw Vegan Breakfast - Video
Usher Found Vegan Diet Too Expensive – Video
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Usher Found Vegan Diet Too Expensive
Usher Found Being Vegan Too Expensive - http://www.ecorazzi.com/2014/10/27/usher-found-being-vegan-too-expensive/ I recently read an article about Usher ditching the vegan lifestyle because...
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Usher Found Vegan Diet Too Expensive - Video
4 yummy vegan foods found at the grocery store
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Are you a meat eater looking to make some changes in your diet and the world around you? November is National Vegan Month and now could be the perfect time to switch up whats on your plate.
Veganism is generally described as a lifestyle that eliminates the use and consumption of animal products including dairy, eggs, honey, meat, leather and anything else that tests on animals.
The Vegan Society boasts several reasons to try going vegan to improve your personal health, help developing countries, cut down the amount of waste produced from meat-related products and everything in between.
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Here are 4 yummy snacks and meal ideas to make the transition to dairy- and meat-free a little easier:
1. HNINA chocolates are a wonderful treat for vegans (and everyone else, too) as they are 100 percent raw and dairy-free. These dark chocolate truffles are high in protein, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants and nutrients. They are also kosher and GMO-, pesticide- and gluten-free. They come in several different flavors including Almonds+Hazelnuts, Macadamias+Pistachios and Walnuts+Cashews.
2. Nates Meatless Meatballs, a line of vegan and vegetarian meatballs, is perfect on top of spaghetti, in a sandwich or eaten alone. Made with protein-packed soy and in flavors like Classic, Savory Mushroom and Zesty Italian, these meatballs still have the texture and consistency of their meaty counterpart.
3. Fruigees is a certified organic fruit snack that is packed with healthy fruits and veggies. Fruigees is good for you: no GMOs, no added sugar, gluten-free, BPA-free and totally vegan! Flavors include Kalefornia Grape (apple juice, grape juice and kale juice), Nothing Beets Cherry (grape juice, beet juice, apple juice, cherry juice) and 24 Carrot Orange (grape juice, carrot juice, apple juice, orange juice).
4. Rhythm Superfoods Kale Chips are the evolution of the standard chip. Each 2-ounce bag of Kale Chips starts out as a whole bunch of garden fresh kale before it's mixed with hand-crafted dressings made from a perfect blend of fresh organic vegetables, seeds, juices, herbs and spices. Instead of baking or frying, Rhythm Superfoods Kale Chips are air crisped at a low temperature which maintains the raw living enzymes and maximizes nutritional potency. Gluten-free and USDA organic, these chips are available in delicious flavors including Zesty Nacho, Kool Ranch, Bombay Curry, Mango Habanero, Texas BBQ, Honey Mustard and Pineapple Coconut.
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4 yummy vegan foods found at the grocery store
Mpls. Siblings Raising Money To Open First Vegan Butcher Shop
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MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) A pair of siblings who began a vegan butcher shop at the Minneapolis Farmers Market is raising money to open their own kitchen.
Kale and Aubrey Walch, the Herbivorous Butchers, began selling vegan meats at the Minneapolis Farmers Market in June and sold out every week.
Our sign says meat-free meat, and a lot of people just see free meat,' Aubrey said.
Thats the biggest draw for us, Kale said.
While theyd love to make more, they literally cant because they dont have their own kitchen.
This is something thats been important to us all our lives, Kale said.
I mean, being able to do for a living, like he was saying, what youre passionate about and being able to help people and make a mild impact on the environment, it is really important to us, Aubrey said.
To help Kale and Aubrey build the first vegan butcher shop in the country, stop by Sisyphus Brewing near Loring Park from 5 to 9 p.m. Sunday.
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Mpls. Siblings Raising Money To Open First Vegan Butcher Shop
Want to go vegan for a day? Try these 5 tips for dishes even an omnivore will love
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What's the trick to cooking for people who love meat when you dont touch the stuff? Vinegar. Or nuts. Or a good charbroil. Vegan chef Chloe Coscarelli, the winner of Food Networks "Cupcake Wars," provided TODAY with some easy cooking substitutions and strategies that will have even the hungriest carnivore asking for seconds on that vegan dish. Try one of them out on World Vegan Day, November 1.
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Discover some secret ingredients:Vegan cooks are full of smart swaps, especially when it comes to baking. Coscarelli has a surprising trick for baking without butter or eggs: "One of my favorite secret ingredients is a little bit of vinegar. When you add some vinegar, it reacts with the baking soda and makes the cake really moist and fluffy. You dont need eggs and you cant taste the vinegar, I promise. Its delicious and no one will ever know."
Turn up the heat: When cooking vegetables like mushrooms (a great meat stand in), cook them until crisp and slightly charred. "You get that crispy texture and smoky flavor, and it doesnt really matter what the actual substance is," says Coscarelli.
Lance Booth/TODAY
Hit the sauce: Once you've got a nice char on those veggies, hit them with some sauce creamy, spicy, garlicky... you make the call. "If you put a delicious sauce on it, no one will really know what the actual protein is," says Coscarelli.
Go nuts:Coscarelli loves to use nuts to add heft and richness to vegan dishes. For example, she says cashews blended with water are a "great substitute" for dairy in creamy dishes such as fettuccine Alfredo.
Take the moo out of your milk: In many recipes, almond, rice or soy milk can be used in place of cow's milk. "Another one of my favorite substitutions is coconut milk, especially when youre baking," says Coscarelli. "It's kind of like nature's substitute for heavy cream and you dont need dairy."
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Want to go vegan for a day? Try these 5 tips for dishes even an omnivore will love
You Can Forget About Halloween Because Today Is World Vegan Day!
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Ready to celebrate a holiday you didn't know you needed?
Well now's your chance because today is World Vegan Day, a day where you can indulge in all things non-animal product!
Plus, this year's festivities mark a special occasion for vegans everywhere because it's actually the 70th anniversary of the word 'vegan' being a thing.
Who would have believed that veganism has been around for so long!? We thought it was still a pretty recent trend.
In order to help you celebrate the sacred holiday, we've put together a list of the 30 hottest vegan celebrities!
Our list includes Lea Michele, Ellen DeGeneres, Jessica Simpson and a whole lot more.
So what are you waiting for!?
CLICK HERE to view the gallery, "30 Of The Hottest Vegan Celebrities!!!"
CLICK HERE to view the gallery, "30 Of The Hottest Vegan Celebrities!!!"
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You Can Forget About Halloween Because Today Is World Vegan Day!
Me rambling about trying to become a Vegetarian – Video
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Me rambling about trying to become a Vegetarian
My life isn #39;t that exciting but I like to tell people anyway.
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Me rambling about trying to become a Vegetarian - Video
Vegetarian London: Ethos Restaurant Review
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1 November 2014 | Food | By: Sejal Sukhadwala
In this series, we review restaurants from an entirely vegetarian angle. While some restaurants will be specifically vegetarian, others will be mainstream. Well be tasting everything from veggie burgers, to posh meat-free menus. Along the way, well try to find out, as far as possible, whether chicken stock, cheese made from animal rennet, gelatine, fish sauce and so on are not lurking in the supposedly vegetarian dishes.
Aloo Scotch Egg
How long should one wait before visiting a new restaurant? This is a dilemma faced by all reviewers at some stage. Wed been eagerly awaiting the arrival of Ethosfor months after all, a new vegetarian venue opens in London only once every few years. According to reports, the entrepreneurial owner Jessica Kruger wanted a place that was deliciously different after being disappointed by vegetarian offerings on the high street: an attitude that matches our own experience. We were so excited we could barely wait. Then, after giving the self-service venue over a week to find its feet, we turned up one late afternoon only for several of the staff to rush over to the entrance and say: You cant come in! Weve run out of food! Eh?!
The staff then went on to say that the restaurant only serves lunch until 3pm and dinner after 6pm, so wed missed the boat. Its website clearly states that it serves food from breakfast through to lunch, dinner and everything in between. (Subsequently two other food writers told us that Ethoss food supplies were dwindling when they visited outside peak hours, with only watery salads at the bottom of the bowl and leftover-looking dishes left). Our second visit, nearly a month later, didnt start well either. We waited a long time by the entrance to be seated, eventually flagging down a staff member and asking if it would be okay to just go in and grab a seat. This time wed arrived at the tail end of the lunchtime peak, and the place was buzzy.
Located in a side street between Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road tube stations, Ethos launched at the end of September. Its certainly a beautiful looking space: bright, light and sparklingly contemporary. Theres a striking mini-forest of silver birch trees in the centre, sleek black and white marble-topped tables, shiny marble floors, large picture windows, and those pretty glass pendant lights that you see everywhere these days. Attractive bowls of food are placed on service pods to one side, with several dishes marked as vegan and gluten-free; and theres a dining area to the other, with charcoal and blue leather banquettes around circular dining tables, plus smaller tables at the back separated by retro glass screens.
While helping ourselves to the food, a waiter suddenly materialised and asked if we understood the concept the concept being that you, er, help yourself to the food. Then you take your plate to the payment counter at the back to have it weighed. Dishes cost 2.50/100g at lunch and 2.70/100g at dinner (takeaway prices vary). Theres nothing original about this idea: even before Tibitspopularised it a few years ago, some of Londons older vegetarian restaurants (now closed) had been doing it for decades. Neither is the idea of serving vegetarian dishes from around the world much-hyped in the trade press anything new: vegetarianism isnt a separate cuisine with its own cultural heritage so this is, in fact, what most veggie restaurants do.
So, then, after an unpromising start, we were relieved to find that most of the food was actually very good. Modern panzanella is a British take on the classic Tuscan salad, made with beautiful multi-coloured tomatoes, croutons and baby capers with a bright flavour and the distinct celery-like taste of lovage. Puy lentil salad with cooked kohlrabi and caramelised shallots also has a lively flavour that benefits from a punchy lemony dressing. Ribbons of green and yellow courgettes with crumbled feta taste fresh and vibrant. Butternut squash, baby spinach, feta and crunchy toasted pumpkin seeds is another winning combination like many of the salads, a great marriage of colours, flavours and textures. The quality of good olive oil shines through.
Among the cooked dishes, loubieh Lebanese-style green beans in roasted cherry tomato sauce with cinnamon and cumin has a good, rich taste. Seitan ribs spice-rubbed barbecue-smoked slabs of wheat gluten that are, to be honest, a little too large for self-service dining have a good meaty, non-chewy texture. Theyre enrobed in a wonderfully spicy, smoky tomato sauce. Thai sweetcorn fritters have an insistent flavour of lemongrass, lime leaves and red curry paste that might be too eye-wateringly hot and spicy for some, but theyre tastier than the bland specimen in many Thai restaurants. We also like the soft, fluffy grated courgette and feta cakes.
Dengaku nasu, pretty slippers of Japanese miso-glazed aubergines speckled with sesame seeds and mild red chilli slices, has a sweet, earthy flavour. The aubergine flesh is falling-off-the-fork tender, but the skin is leathery. Like many other self-service restaurants, no attempt seems to be made here to keep the hot dishes hot. Instead they languish under brightly lit lamps hanging down on them too close, so although aesthetically the dishes look good, they may eventually dry out. The signature aloo scotch egg a veggie take on the classic Hyderabadi nargisi kofta is the only (savoury) item separately priced at 2.50. Boat-shaped, bread-crumbed potato and pea cutlet with a soft-boiled egg in the middle looks attractive, but is completely lacking in flavour. The accompanying spicy-sweet fresh tomato ketchup improves it a little.
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Vegetarian London: Ethos Restaurant Review