The Blooming Platter Cookbook–Author-Hosted Giveaway

This book could be yours!

The beginning of a new season seems like the perfect time to offer a giveaway of my brand new cookbook: The Blooming Platter Cookbook: A Harvest of Seasonal Vegan Recipes.

So, in celebration of the official beginning of summer on Tuesday, June 21, the “summer solstice,” I will be announcing one winner.

Since there are three “Big Burgers of Summer” recipes in the book–My Big Fat Vegan Burger; The Big Easy Burger; and The Big Kahuna Burger–I thought it would be fun for contestants to enter with their favorite vegan burger toppings for summer barbecues.  Basic or beyond, we want to hear about it!

Here’s all you need to do to enter:  Click on the link above and “like” the book on Amazon (“look inside” and read reviews); then add a comment to this post mentioning that you’ve “liked” the book AND sharing whatever your favorite burger topping happens to be.

Spread the word!  The contest ends at midnight on June 20.  And it starts…now!

Tami of Vegan Appetite Hosted a Give-Away of The Blooming Platter Cookbook Asking Contestants to Name Their Favorite Flower

Photo Credit: Tami, Vegan Appetite

Thanks to Tami of Vegan Appetite who launched a generous give-away of my Blooming Platter Cookbook. It began on May 18, my dear papa’s birthday, and the winner was announced following week, my birthday week.

I would have notified you “Platterists” sooner, but somehow my “Google Alerts” didn’t pick it up…or I inadvertently missed it.  However, 51 other people didn’t (!),  miss it, that is.

Tami asked that interested readers enter the contest by sharing their favorite “bloom.”   Every flower that was named is a favorite of mine too.

No, we vegans don’t think alike, but we do have great “taste.”  <wink>

The Blooming Platter Cookbook Stacks Up as One of Robin Robertson’s Recent Favorites

Photo Credit: Robin Robertson

Prolific vegan cookbook author and highly-regarded expert on all things vegan, Robin Robertson, who blogs at Vegan Planet, recently found a reprieve from work on her next big project when storms blew her power out.

With her computer and stove “powered down,” she deciding to wade into the rising swell of books awaiting her attention and highlight a few in her “So Many Books, So Little Time” post.

I am so honored that The Blooming Platter Cookbook rose to the top of the pile to “stack up” with the others pictured here.

Thanks, Robin; your words of endorsement mean so much!

The Blooming Platter (Vegan) Cookbook Launch Party a Blooming Success!

Betsy, Sheila & Sebastian at the Signing Table + a Sliver of the Crowd

Recipe for a Smashing Launch Party:

1 generous and visionary gallery owner and her sales associate son (Sheila Giolitti and Sebastian Stant)

1 industrial-chic gallery space (Mayer Fine Art Gallery, Norfolk)

20+ gifted artists

A large handful of members of the press (Hampton Roads Magazine,Virginian-Pilot, VEER and more)

An”SRO” crowd of beautiful, vibrant and generous guests (and a signing line out the door!)

28 dozen vegan cookies (courtesy of several good friends + me), 4 dozen pieces of vegan Coconut-Cream Almond Fudge, 3 lbs. of vegan spicy-rosemary cashews, a fruit bouquet, crackers, and plenty of wine

1 beautiful “blooming” arrangement (courtesy The New Leaf, Norfolk)

1 talented “indy” publishing company (Vegan Heritage Press)

1 brand new cookbook (see below)

1 very grateful and joyfully overwhelmed cookbook author (that’s me!)

Combine all ingredients, blending well, and you have “Incredible Edibles,” the fabulous launch party, book signing, and food-in-art exhibition for my brand new cookbook, The Blooming Platter: A Harvest of Seasonal Vegan Recipes.

I am completely “plattered” by the community embrace of this occasion.  Many stars glittered that night and I am so honored to have been among them.  A heartfelt, but completely inadequate, thanks to all.

For lots of photos that will give you the “flavor” of the event, see The Blooming Platter Cookbook Signing Party photo album on my Facebook page and visit Mayer Fine Art also on FB.

The Blooming Platter Cookbook Featured Again by Veggie Girl

Back Cover, The Blooming Platter Cookbook

Dianne “Veggie Girl” confesses on her blog that, although she usually doesn’t feature the same cookbook twice in her “Cookbook Project” series, my vegan Carrot Cake Pancakes with Cream Cheese-Orange Sauce inspired her to break with tradition and feature The Blooming Platter Cookbook for Project 19 and 20.  Thank you, Diane!

I commend her substitution of Spelt flour for the whole wheat.  I do that myself sometimes and am a fan!

This week, she chose to prepare a total of four recipes from The Blooming Platter Cookbook: A Harvest of Seasonal Vegan Recipes.  I trust it will always give me a thrill to see my recipes prepared by someone else!

In fact, I would have loved to have eaten at Dianne’s house this week as this was such a busy one for me that my dinner one night was my Vegan Cheddar “Cheese” Spread on Melba toast and nothing at all last night!

This week included, in addition to a two hour appointment after work on Tuesday to have my braces removed and a beautiful closing exhibition reception for my students and their artwork at Old Dominion University’s Virginia Beach Higher Ed Center on Thursday, lots of cooking for the “Incredible Edibles” cookbook launch party that is tonight (so excited!).

So while I practiced poor nutritional habits, at least at night, Veggie Girl, in addition to my carrot cake pancakes, whipped up a batch of my Zucchini-Stuffed Shells with Blooming Marinara Sauce, my Caramelized Onion and Spinach Quesadillas (with White Bean Cheese) and my “White Cheese” Pizza with Kale and Sun-Dried Tomatoes.

Her addition of a pinwheel garnish of avocado slices on the quesadilla was gorgeous (but, sadly, I’m allergic to them).  And her addition of Shitake mushrooms and red onion to the pizza  looked like the delicious confetti that I’m sure it was.

It’s barely 5:25 a.m. and my mouth is watering for Italian and Southwestern food!

Vegan Baking for All Seasons: Vegan Italian Chocolate-Nut Thumbprint Cookies

I am a seasonal cooking devotee as you can see from The Blooming Platter Cookbook.  But I love perennial ingredients like chocolate year-round.

In this photo from the current issue of VEER Magazine, I’m holding one of my newest sweet treats: Vegan Italian Chocolate-Nut Thumbprint Cookies.  We wanted to include a photo showing that vegans don’t only eat vegetables, so we shot some of me with this cookie.

The inspiration for the recipe is bittersweet, as it came from a tray of cookies that was delivered to my sister-in-law’s house on the occasion of my mother-in-law, Terry’s, passing.  (People were so generous: you have never seen so much food in your life!)  I had to sample this particular non-vegan cookie for research.  It looked beautiful and I needed to know what it tasted like so that I could try to hit the mark….sorry!

The first batch went down the disposal, literally.  I hated to be wasteful, but they were a disaster.  My next riff wasa big hit at the Vegan Virginia Beach Bake Sale (as was everything that members brought, especially various cupcakes!).  So I made them again recently for our wonderful administrative assistants at Princess Anne High School.  I put 2 or 3 in tiny Chinese carry-out containers as gifts for all of them during “Administrative Assistants Week.”

One of the women, Susan Barnes, even asked for the recipe to share around.  She likes the cookies crumbled up in her yogurt(!).  But she made me promise that there was no tofu in them.  We have a running joke about tofu; it’s not her favorite.

I plan to make a batch of these cookies for the “Incredible Edibles” book-signing and launch party on Saturday night.  If you’re in the local area, come taste test!  If not, whip up a batch for yourself and be prepared to have a new favorite!

Yield: 36 Cookies

Cookies:

1 cup vegan butter (I like Earth Balance)

1/2 cup confectioner’s sugar

2 tablespoon natural sugar

2 tablespoons cocoa powder

Pinch sea salt

1 teaspoon vanilla

1/4-1/2  teaspoon almond extract

1 tablespoon water

2 cups white whole wheat flour

2 cups finely chopped pecans

Preheat oven to 325 degrees.  Line1 or 2 baking sheets with Silpat.  In the large bowl of an electric mixer, cream together butter and both sugars.  Beat in cocoa powder, salt, both extracts, and water.  Beat in flour, one-half cup of flour at a time, beating only enough to incorporate.  Avoid over- beating.  With the mixer on low speed, blend in nuts.  Scoop by 1 tablespoon of  dough onto prepared baking sheets.  Flatten into a disk with the bottom of a glass.  Press your thumb into the center of each cookie twice, side by side, slightly overlapping, to make a fairly large depression.  Bake about 16 minutes.  If using two baking sheets on two racks, switch after 8 minutes.  Remove from oven and cool completely on wire racks as soon as they are firm enough to handle.

Frosting:

1/2 cup vegan butter (I like Earth Balance

3 tablespoons cocoa powder

1 cup + 3 tablespoons confectioner’s sugar

1/4 teaspoon vanilla

1/8 teaspoon almond extract

In the bowl of an electric mixer, cream all ingredients together until well-combined and fluffy.  Using a small spoon, divide the frosting evenly among the cookies, filling the depression.  Store in the refrigerator in an airtight container.

Vegan Cookbook Author Featured on Cover of VEER Magazine

With “Incredible Edibles,” the official launch and signing party of The Blooming Platter Cookbook just days away, I am thrilled and humbled to be the May “cover girl” for VEER Magazine, Hampton Roads’ alternative source for news, arts, culture, entertainment and dining information.

My beloved publisher (I am the arts writer for VEER), Jeff Maisey, describes the magazine’s mission as bringing “fresh perspectives to covering the diverse arts and culture community in Southeastern Virginia through print and online.”  And we try hard to do just that.

The print edition hit the stands over the weekend, so if you live in Hampton Roads, be sure to snag a copy at a Harris Teeter grocery store or any one of a number of other locations.  My travels took me all over Norfolk on Saturday, and there were copies at  four of my stops.

The talented Kathy Keeney shot the front cover photograph that you see here.  We had a really enjoyable photo shoot, but it is hard work, mostly for her, especially since I have a great face for radio and had to smile with my mouth closed to hide the dreaded braces!

That we needed a “blooming platter” was obvious.  So Kathy supplied the many pounds of gorgeous veggies that I held aloft.  But it was also her idea to give a subtle nod to Julia Child with the white collared shirt and pearls (my husband and I host an annual Happy Birthday Julia Child party each August).

The similarly talented Kristen Kirk wrote the feature story.  We had a  fun phone interview, and I always love to read how Kristen translates what she sees, hears and thinks into words.  But this time, I was overwhelmed.  How she managed to seamlessly weave together so many of my passions–my husband, friends, art, students, teaching, entertaining and more–into one cohesive story with vegan food running through it all, I will never know.  The picture she painted was incredibly generous.

If you live outside the area, you can read her story online by clicking the link above, but you won’t be able to see Kathy’s inside photos, so I’ll post them in a day or so.  You especially won’t want to miss Minnie, the Miniature Great Dane’s 15 minutes of fame: “Portrait of Minnie with Blooming Platter.”

Jeff, Kathy and Kristen, as my dear friend Iona would say, “I bow in your directions.”

Vegan Cookbook Author, Betsy DiJulio, of The Blooming Platter (Vegan) Cookbook, Interviewed on Veg Cookin’

Jill of Veg Cookin’ recently contacted me to inquire about whether I would be willing to be interviewed for her wonderful website.

Boy, would I?!

I let her know, and last Friday she emailed me 5 insightful questions that were really fun to answer–not your typical interview questions–and posted our “conversation” on her website today.

In fact, when I received the questions, I emailed her back asking for a deadline.  But by the time I heard from her–which wasn’t much later–I had already answered all of the questions and sent them off, as I found them very engaging.  Hope you do too!

Read the interview here!  Thanks, Jill!

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...