World Vegan Feast–Your Passport to a World of Flavors

Pack your bags and grab your passports, intrepid food-lovers.  We’re settin’ sail for Flavortowns all over the planet!

If you’re going to tour the world—especially some of it’s less familiar corners—it’s essential to have an experienced guide.  And if that tour happens to be culinary, such a guide would be Bryanna Clark Grogan in the latest of her eight cookbooks, World Vegan Feast (Vegan Heritage Press, 2011).  Endorsements of this book’s quality read like a vegan Who’s Who.

Take your pick from an itinerary of 200 recipes from 50 countries, some as familiar to those of us in America as Italy and others, like Burma and Uganda, perhaps familiar only from travel magazines or even National Geographic!  All countries are listed in a handy index with page numbers for corresponding recipes and Bryanna navigates between them with the ease of a well-seasoned traveler.

And speaking of indexes, this book is full of them and other kinds of helpful lists and information, from Retail and Online Sources for ingredients, to US. To Metric Weight Conversions, to Functions of Egg Replacers (did you know there are 8?), and much more that will help provide smooth sailing on your trip around the globe.

The journey begins with “World Vegan Kitchen Essentials” which provides 11 recipes for basics, say homemade vegetable powder or seitan, that can be used in other recipes.  So, if you prefer not to purchase prepared products, you don’t need to.

Successive chapters are arranged as one would expect, save a couple of really nice departures (you did get that corny reference to travel, yes?).  We all know that not all main dishes are created equal.  So dividing those chapters into three—Comfort Foods, Beans Around the World, and “Meat of the Fields” (soy and seitan)—was such a nice decision and saves hungry readers time in getting to their destination: the dining table!

Similarly, desserts are divided into two chapters based on cooking methods, one baked, the other not.  All recipes, regardless of the chapter, are accompanied by an introduction, well written in the author’s warm conversational style which betrays her deep humanity and her broad-based expertise.

Within the chapters, the recipes cross-cross the globe in no apparent order.  But an index at the beginning of each chapter allows for a quick scan so that taste travelers can hone in on what appeals most.  I confess that I have not had time to cook a recipe from this expansive book yet—Vegan MoFo 2011 has kept me busy developing recipes and posting from my own new cookbook.  But after perusing World Vegan’s 250ish pages, including an 8-page insert of color photos, my first port ‘o call is likely to be Scotland, though it is a tough decision.

Finnan Haddie with Smoked Tofu calls out to my love of anything smoked and, though I was never terribly fond of fish even years ago when I was a “pescatarian”—it was a bone and texture issue—I did love seafood.  So the creamy golden sauce for this dish, which takes its briny flavor of the sea from konbu (seaweed), really appeals.

Bon Voyage!

Winner of The Blooming Platter (Vegan) Cookbook Announced

Congratulations to “Joy” for winning a copy of The Blooming Platter Cookbook:  A Harvest of Seasonal Vegan Recipes!

As many of you know, it was my pleasure to offer a giveaway of my brand new cookbook in recognition of the first week of Vegan MoFo 2011.  The deadline was midnight last night, and I just had the honor of choosing a random winner using Random. org.

Now the fun begins: responding to all of your wonderful comments!  I couldn’t “reply” prior to selecting a winner without throwing off the total number of responses needed for the “True Random Number Generator.”  But now I can, and I look forward to doing that this week.

Thanks to all for takng the time to participate and for your support of The Blooming Platter.  I hope you’ll come back often for a visit and share with your friends.  The more the merrier when it comes to community-building.

Happy Vegan MoFo!

Vegan Peanut Butter-Chocolate Layer Bars AND Blooming Platter Cookbook Giveaway Reminder

Yea, I know, I’m a seasonal vegan cook, and this recipe hardly fits that description… unless, like me, you consider chocolate to be a perennial food.

This recipe was inspired by a pan of dessert bars I spied in our administrators’ kitchen at school about a week ago.  Theirs had a thin chocolate crust topped by a thick peanut butter layer and another thin chocolate ganache layer.  They looked so good that I thought I would absolutely perish if I didn’t figure out how to make a vegan version and fast.

However, I couldn’t get started on them as quickly as I’d hoped because, after I went to the  store, I came home to put the groceries away and could not find my (honey-free) graham crackers anywhere.  Figuring that I must have stuck them somewhere really odd, I looked in places like the freezer…and the washing machine.  No luck.  So, I went back a couple of days later, bought another box, and made them on Sunday for my students’ National Art Honor Society meeting last Monday.  A hit!

After just a little research, I put a couple of recipes together and fell head over heels for the result.  They are FAR better than my memory of Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups.  And they are very well-behaved, slicing beautifully.  They do need to stay refrigerated, but that’s a small price to pay for creamy perfection!

Yield: 24 bars

Crust:

1 3/4 cup finely crushed vegan graham crackers (Nabisco brand “original” are honey-free), that’s one wrapped package within the box

1/2 cup vegan butter, melted (I like Earth Balance)

1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder

Filling:

2 1/2 cups natural creamy peanut butter (crunchy is fine, but the mixture is processed and ends up creamy anyway)

3/4 cup vegan butter

1 tablespoon vanilla

3 cups powdered sugar

Ganache:

1/4 cup soy creamer

11 ounces vegan chocolate chips

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  In a medium bowl, stir together all crust ingredients.  Press the mixture into the bottom of a 9 x 13″ pan.  I like to use the bottom of a glass to help with this task.  Bake for 10 minutes, remove from the oven, and cool completely.  Once partially cool, I like to place the pan in the freezer for the crust to finish cooling.  (Avoid placing a hot pan in the oven as it might raise the temperature of the compartment to a potentially dangerous level.)

In the bowl of a food processor, combine all filling ingredients and process just until smooth.   Add 2 cups of the powdered sugar and process until combined, pulsing if necessary.  Add the remaining cup of powdered sugar and do the same.  Dollop the mixture over the cooled crust and pat evenly to cover.  Cover the pan and refrigerate until the ganache is cool enough to use.

In a 1-quart saucepan, bring  soy creamer to a simmer.  Remove the pan from the heat, add chocolate chips, and stir or whisk until mixtures is smooth.  Let it cool to room temperature and then spread thinly over the peanut butter layer.  It will look like there might not be enough ganache, but there is the perfect amount (if you don’t eat too much of it while frosting the bars!).    Cover and refrigerate for 2 more hours.  Slice into bars and serve.  Store any leftovers–leftovers, yea, right–in the refrigerator.

This recipe was adapted from Midwest Living (Eagle Ridge Inn and Resort).

 

Just 2 days left in my Blooming Platter Cookbook giveaway!  Go here for the details and simple directions on how to enter and win!

 

Only 3 Days Left to Enter The Blooming Platter (Vegan) Cookbook Giveaway!

In honor of Vegan MoFo 2011, as many of you know, it is my pleasure to offer a giveaway of my brand new cookbook, The Blooming Platter: A Harvest of Seasonal Vegan Recipes.  It’s simple to enter.  Just go here for all the tasty details.

And to entice you into entering and, oh, I don’t know, purchasing a few copies as Christmas gifts, following is a photo and an excerpt from one of many generous reviews on Amazon:

“I am seriously impressed with the recipes in Betsy DiJulio’s new book THE BLOOMING PLATTER COOKBOOK.

“These are some of the most elegant and impressive recipes I have ever seen collected between two covers yet each one is easy doable by any cook.”   ~Terri Merritts

Vegan Grilled Tempeh Over Sauteed Baby Spinach with White Wine Pan Sauce and Roasted Thyme-Scented Grapes

This recipe was inspired by a recipe for a side dish of roasted grapes in a current issue of a home and garden magazine.  My recipe is slightly altered, including that it makes use of the lovely grape drippings in a silky pan sauce in which grilled tempeh is bathed before being served on a bed of bright green baby spinach under a tumble of the thyme-scented roasted grapes.  The result is perfect to tuck into when you’re starved or to enjoy smaller portions, almost like tapas, when noshing is more the order of the day.

Yield: 2 servings (easily doubles)

Roasted Thyme-Scented Grapes

1 1/2 pounds of seedless green or red grapes, or a combination (I like a combination for both color contrast and more a of a sweet-tart contrast in flavor; you will have grapes left over)

1 scant tablespoon olive oil (about 2 teaspoons)

Sea salt to taste

Approximately 1 tablespoon very loosely packed fresh thyme leaves

Freshly ground black pepper to taste

Grilled Tempeh Over Sauteed Baby Spinach with White Wine Pan Sauce (recipe follows)

Preheat oven to 450 degrees.  Place grapes in a metal roasting pan, drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with a generous pinch of salt.  Toss to coat.  Place the pan in the center of the oven and roast for 5 minutes.  Open the door, give the pan a gentle shake, close the door, and roast for 3 more minutes.  Remove the pan from the oven, drain off and reserve as much liquid as possible.  Sprinkle the grapes with the thyme and black pepper, gently stir, and return the pan to the oven for another 4 minutes or until the grapes are lightly roasted but still hold their shapes (it’s fine if a few split open).  Remove the pan to a wire rack to cool slightly.  Serve the grapes immediately or store covered in the refrigerator.  Allow them to come to room temperature or heat them gently before serving.

Minnie the Moocher

Grilled Tempeh Over Sauteed Baby Spinach with White Wine Pan Sauce

1-6 ounce package of tempeh, cut crosswise into 8 slices

Approximately 1/3 cup reserved grape drippings

1/3 cup dry white wine

1 cup water

1 tablespoon powdered vegetable base or 1 bouillon cube

1/3 cup plain soy creamer

Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

1-2 teaspoons olive oil

4 loosely packed cups of fresh baby spinach

Garnish: sprigs of fresh thyme

While grapes are roasting, heat an oiled grill pan over medium-high.  Add tempeh slices and grill approximately 2-3 minutes on each side or just until nice grill marks develop.  Meanwhile, in a large skillet over medium-high, heat grape drippings, white wine, soy creamer, and salt and pepper to simmering.  Simmer until thickened, about 5 to 6 minutes.  Add tempeh slices, turn to coat in the sauce, which will be quite reduced, and heat for about 1-2 minutes.  Meanwhile, in another skillet, heat olive oil over medium-high, add spinach, and saute for about 30 seconds or until slightly wilted and bright green.  Divide spinach between two serving plates.  Arrange 4 slices of tempeh on top of each bed of spinach.   Drizzle with remaining sauce if there is any.  Top each with a spoonful of grapes and a sprig of fresh thyme.  (Store remaining grapes, covered, in the refrigerator.)  Serve immediately.

For a celebration of 150+ additional recipes, I invite you to check out The Blooming Platter Cookbook: A Harvest of Seasonal Vegan Recipes. 

Blooming Platter Cookbook Giveaway Reminder PLUS Vegan Chickpea Sausages with Roasted Apples, Onions, and Jalapenos with Cashew Cream & Pomegranate Molasses Drizzle

This Mediterranean riff on sausage and sauerkraut is perfect for Oktoberfest.  A fresh take on its forebear, my version will perfume your kitchen with warm North African spices when its cool outside.  And the presentation is so special, yet simple, that you can turn dinner into a dinner party.

Yield: 4 servings

Note: you will need to make the Cashew Cream a day in advance.

Cashew Cream

You will have lots of leftover, but you’ll be glad you do!

2 cups raw cashews, divided in half

2 cups water, divided in half

Sea salt to taste.

In a covered bowl, soak 1 cup cashews in 1 cup water overnight in the refrigerator.  Rinse and drain.  Process the cup of soaked cashews with the additional cup of raw unsoaked cashews and the remaining cup of water in a food processor for several minutes, or until smooth, scraping down the sides of the bowl as necessary.  Add salt to taste, process just to combine, and store covered in the refrigerator.

Vegan Chickpea Sausages

1 1/2 cups chickpeas, rinsed and drained (1-15.5 ounce can)

2 cloves garlic, minced

1 cup vegetable broth

1 tablespoon olive oil

1 teaspoon vegan Worcestershire sauce or Bragg Liquid Aminos

1 1/2 cups vital wheat gluten

1/2 teaspoon sea salt

Pinch of sea salt

1 teaspoon ground coriander

1 teaspoon ground cumin

1 teaspoon smoked paprika

Freshly ground black pepper or white pepper to taste

Roasted Apples, Onions, and Jalapenos (recipe follows)

Accompaniment: 8 cups of very lightly packed fresh baby spinach lightly barely sauteed in about 4 teaspoons of olive oil over medium high heat for about 30 seconds to 1 minute

Optional Garnish:

Cashew Cream (recipe is above)

A drizzle of Pomegranate Molasses (available at Mediterranean and Middle Eastern Markets)

Tear off 4 sheets of foil about 6 inches wide. Place a steamer basket in a 4-quart saucepan and fill with water just to the bottom of the steamer. Cover the pan and bring the water to a boil over medium-high heat. Reduce the heat to a simmer.

In a medium bowl, mash the chickpeas and garlic until creamy. A few small pieces of beans may remain. Stir in the vegetable broth, olive oil, and Worcestershire sauce, and set aside. In another medium bowl, whisk together vital wheat gluten, salt, coriander, cumin, paprika, and pepper.  Pour the bean mixture into a well in the center of the dry ingredients and, using a fork, stir the dry ingredients around the edge of the bowl into the wet center until all of the ingredients are completely combined.

Divide the dough into four equal parts. Place each part on a sheet of foil and shape into 5 to 6-inch long logs about 1 1/2 inches in diameter, pressing mixture together fairly firmly. Lay each log along one long edge of the foil and roll snugly, bending up the foil at the ends. Place the logs into the steamer–either  vertically or horizontally, two on the bottom and two on top of them–and steam for 40  minutes, adding more hot water to the saucepan
if necessary to prevent it from evaporating completely.

Remove the sausages from the steamer and unroll them when cool enough to handle. Be careful that you don’t burn yourself with escaping steam. At this point, I like to split the sausages lengthwise and grill for 2-3 minutes on each side on my stovetop grill pan.  Serve the sausages on a bed of the lightly sauteed spinach topped with the roasted apples and garnished with a dollop of cashew cream and a drizzle of pomegranate syrup.  While the sausages steam, make roasted apples.

Roasted Apples, Onions, and Jalapenos

1 tablespoon olive oil

2 gala apples (or your favorite sweet-tart variety), stemmed, cored, and cut into 8 wedges each

1/2 of a large Vidallia or other yellow onion, cut into 1/4-inch slivers

1 jalapeno, stemmed, cored, seeded, and cut into 1/8-inch slivers (you can use two if you choose, but that makes for a really spicy dish!)

Sea salt

Preheat oven to 450 degrees.  Pour olive oil into a large metal roasting pan.  (If the ingredients are crowded, they will steam instead of roast.)  Add remaining ingredients and toss to coat with the oil.  Roast for 20 minutes, stirring after 10.  Remove the pan from the oven and serve as described above.

 

Blooming Platter Cookbook Giveaway

For more than 150 additional mouthwatering recipes to celebrate all year long, I invite you to check out The Blooming Platter Cookbook: A Harvest of Seasonal Vegan Recipes.

Enter to win you very own copy by clicking here.  Deadline is Saturday, October 8 at midnight!

Blooming Platter Cookbook Giveaway AND Vegan Pumpkin Pie Espresso (with REAL pumpkin puree)

First, don’t miss my cookbook giveaway by going here.  Deadline is next weekend.

And, second, it is Day 3 of Vegan MoFo and, Starbucks, you know I love ‘ya, but you can’t touch this!…

In recognition of this season of vegan eating and drinking, it is my pleasure to offer you my brand new breakfast beverage that is quick enough for a hurried weekday morning.  But it’s also perfect for a weekend morning when the first nip of fall is in the air.

 

As a pre-vegan child, I was never much of a breakfast eater, especially on weekdays.  Getting out the door to school–which I actually loved–was enough of a challenge.  So, my nourishment of choice was Carnation Instant Breakfast.  Always Chocolate.  Remember those?  It was (and I guess still is?) a vitamin and mineral-fortified powdered mixture that is whisked into milk.

Turns out that the most important meal of the day (though there is now some debate about that) is still not my favorite on weekdays.  On the way to school, now as an art teacher, I whip into Starbucks and grab a venti Green Tea Soy Frappuccino to go–hold the classic syrup and, of course, the whip–in one of their insulated travel cups.   (An aside: my neighbor, Joe Pitt,  who “tricks out” high-end custom motorcycles is making a bracket so that he can attach a cup holder to my Vespa!)

On weekends, though, I love to make, especially, pancakes a zillion ways, but also French toast and other fruit pastry type dishes (you’ll find many on this blog and more in my cookbook.)

However, after one of my favorite SB baristas told me about an apple cider and soy concoction, I decided to try to make one at home.  It was a miserable failure.  The soymilk curdled the apple.  I’ll have to find out her secret.

In the meantime, still craving a warm and comforting beverage of some sort–and with some pumpkin puree on hand–I created Pumpkin Pie Espresso which I hope might become a staple in your home. It’s quick, delicious, nutritious, fragrant, and super-satisfying.  The real pumpkin puree lends just the right of body so that it is still very sip-able, but with a lusciousness about it.

Minnie in the Morning--when food is involved, Minnie is never very far away!

Yield: 1 1/2 cups (that’s a single serving for me!)

1/4 cup pumpkin puree

Sweetener of your choice: agave or maple syrup, natural sugar, Stevia, Splenda (eek!), etc.

Pumpkin pie spice, to taste (or a combination of small pinches of cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves–go lighter still on the cloves–etc.)

1 1/4 cups unsweetened, plain or vanilla soymilk

1 rounded teaspoon of instant espresso (about 1 1/8-1 1/4 teaspoons)

1 cinnamon stick

Saucer garnish: a star anise pod

Optional: Rosemary-Caramel Sauce to drizzle (I love the rosemary, but if that sounds odd to you, just follow the recipe but omit the rosemary)

In a microwave safe 2-cup measure or a 1-quart saucepan, whisk together pumpkin puree, sweetener and pumpkin pie spice to taste.  When you have it just right, whisk in the soymilk and espresso powder.  Drop in the cinnamon stick and either microwave for about 2 minutes on high–watch closely so it doesn’t spill over–or simmer for approximately the same amount of time over medium to medium-high heat.  Remove the cinnamon stick to a mug and then pour in the pumpkin-espresso mixture.  Serve with a star anise on the saucer.  [I love the way these look–so organic and autumnal, but they aren’t to be eaten, so when I’m finished, I just pop it back into the jar (with clean hands) and use it again.]

To make this beverage ultra-decadent, serve it with a caramel drizzle.  Mine isn’t formulated to float on top like Starbucks is, but mine also isn’t dairy!  And since it sinks, it adds flavor, but it’s also about the overall presentation.  A little bowl of caramel sauce and a pretty silver spoon just looks so inviting sitting on the table.

 

For more than 150 additional mouthwatering recipes to celebrate all year long, I invite you to check out The Blooming Platter Cookbook: A Harvest of Seasonal Vegan Recipes.

 

Blooming Platter Vegan Cookbook Giveaway AND Baked Apples Baklava with Cider Sauce

In celebration of the first day of the first full week of Vegan MoFo 2011, I wanted to offer a cookbook giveaway for all you MoFos out there.   On the block is my brand new cookbook, The Blooming Platter Cookbook: A Harvest of Seasonal Vegan Recipes, published in May 2011 by the good folks at Vegan Heritage Press.

It’s simple to enter!  Just add a comment to this post on one of two topics: 1) either share how you “MoFo” (do you blog, subscribe to MoFo headquarters rss feed, read more blogs than usual, cook more than usual, etc.); or 2) share your favorite way to enjoy apples in the fall.

I’d also love it if you checked out the book on Amazon, read one or two of the very generous reviews and, if you like what you see, “like” the book while on the Amazon site.

A winner will be chosen at random (using www.random.org–very cool site), next Sunday, October 9.  Deadline to enter is midnight (wherever you are in the world), Saturday, October 8.  Make sure your email address is accessible through your comment.  The winner will be notified privately via email to provide me with your mailing address.

A quick note: I will respond to the comments at the end of the contest because if I respond as I receive them, it will throw the numbers off for the random calculation of a winner.  So, I want you to know in advance that I appreciate you, and don’t want you to think I am being rude by not acknowledging your time and effort!

That’s all there is to it!  Please spread the word.  But first, check out this sneak preview recipe from The Blooming Platter Cookbook.  I love re-imagining one dish as another, and my Baked Apples Baklava is a perfect and perfectly tasty example of that.  And, though the presentation is elegant, the recipe is as simple as can be, provided you purchase the phyllo dough.  If you decide to be an over-achiever and make your own, that’s on you!

Baked Apples Baklava with Cider Sauce

Yield: 4 servings

Baked apples are one of the wonders of autumn. In this dessert, tender stuffed apple halves are wrapped up like a beautiful package in buttery phyllo dough. They are as scrumptious for breakfast or brunch as they are for dessert.

Apples:

1/2 cup finely chopped walnuts

1 tablespoon natural sugar

1/4 teaspoon apple pie spice

2 teaspoons agave nectar

2 large McIntosh or other sweet-tart red apples, stemmed

Juice of one lemon

1/4 cup vegan butter

1/4 cup olive oil

1 teaspoon natural sugar

16 sheets phyllo dough, thawed

 

Cider Sauce:

3/4 cup apple cider

3/4 cup sugar

1/2 cup agave nectar

1 tablespoon lemon juice

1 cinnamon stick, halved

 

Optional Garnish:

Cinnamon stick halves

Walnut pieces

 

1. Apples: Preheat the oven to 350ºF. In a small bowl, combine the walnuts, sugar, apple pie spice, and agave nectar and set aside. Cut the apples in half lengthwise.  Using a melon baller, remove the core of the apples in two scoops to make a generous void for the filling. Rub the cut surface of the apples with lemon juice. Press one-fourth of walnut filling into each hollowed out void.

2. Combine the vegan butter and olive oil in a small bowl. Unroll the phyllo dough and cover with plastic wrap and a damp towel. Remove one sheet of dough to a flat work surface and brush lightly with butter-oil mixture. Repeat with three more sheets, stacking them.

3. Place the apple half, filling side up, in the center of the stacked phyllo. Bring up one corner of the dough over the filling, then the opposite corner. Repeat with the remaining corners, smoothing as you go, to make a tight package.

4. Brush on a little more butter-oil mixture and place the apples, flat side down, on a baking sheet or stone. Brush the top with a little more of the butter-oil mixture, smoothing down the edges of the dough. Repeat with remaining apple halves, filling and dough. Sprinkle each with 1/4 teaspoon of sugar. Bake for 30 minutes.

5. Cider Sauce: In a 1 quart saucepan, combine all ingredients. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to medium and simmer 15 minutes. Cool slightly to serve. Remove the cinnamon stick halves before serving or use them as two of the garnishes.

6. To assemble: Arrange the baked apples on dessert plates drizzled with the Cider Sauce and garnished with cinnamon sticks and walnuts, if using.

From My Blooming Platter to Yours: Sweet Potatoes Caribbean

Even though the weather is (finally!) turning cool,  you can put a tropical twist in your fall feasts with my Sweet Potatoes Caribbean.  Though this recipe is featured in my new Blooming Platter Cookbook, I was pleased to share it with the good folks at AltDaily.com who are graciously publishing a Blooming Platter recipe to usher in each new season.

Click here for the recipe, as well as the skinny about my next book-signing on October 15 at the wonderful Old Beach Farmer’s Market here in VA Beach.  For out-of-towners, you will also find alternative purchase information.

Can you believe it’s almost time to start thinking about holiday gift-giving?!

 

 

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