Well, I MEANT to post more food stuffs

I even had all the pictures ready and I promptly forgot to post them. Silly hockey getting in my way again.

ANYWAY!

First off is crisp dulse! Dulse is this awesome seaweed that sort of resembles bacon almost once it's been fried. Basically when you buy it, it's a little smooshy so you just put some oil in a frying pan, turn the heat to around medium, put the dulse in the pan and fry it until it's (a different shade) of brown. Takes a couple of minutes. I initially used the dulse with these twice baked potatoes (the recipe's from the Conscience Cook) but then I discovered that the dulse is still super awesome by itself. If quite salty.

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I also did this potato recipe which comes from SeasaltwithFood. (the link takes you to the recipe). Was super pleased to find out that you could boil and fry (erm, attempt to fry in my case) potatoes in the same pan!

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AND FINALLY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I'm a huge fan of smoothies (just not a huge fan of having to haul out all the ingredients to make it all the time). I made this one using cashew cream (another "recipe" from the Conscious Cook which involves blending pre-soaked cashews) and a bunch of frozen fruit I had in the freezer. SO GOOD. And such an easy way to down those otherwise mostly yucky nuts!

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The tale of the vet and the vegan

So I found a cat. I can't keep the cat 'cause everyone has allergies and I have a lot of non-cat compatible animals. Anyway, being the responsible person that I am when it comes to my animals, I took this cat (who I dubbed Anze after Anze Kopitar of the LA Kings) to a new cat near me. Now, I'm not exactly picky about my vets. I feel that I don't have to like them on a personal level a lot, but as long as they do an adequate job with my animals, I will keep going to them.

Well... when the conversation runs thus:

Vet: (after some lecture on how cats can't eat venison or salmon) venison tastes really gamey. I'm sure you know...?
Me: uh, I'm a vegan.
Vet: I live with a vegetarian and let me tell you, if she ever went vegan, I would kill her.
Me:  *sits and listens to a whole spiel on killing vegans whilst wondering if the vet is ever going to look at the cat*

... needless to say, I wasn't a happy camper after this conversation. I'm thankful the cat isn't staying with me so I won't have to deal with this vet ever again.

I get a little tired and irked by these lectures I get some people. Particularly people who have no business giving me a lecture about it. You're not my doctor, or my parents or anybody who should give a hoot about what I eat. If you want to eat meat, that's fine. I don't hate you because of it. I don't judge you because of it. I might judge you for acting like a jerk and charging me over $200 in mostly needless vet fees... But I'm not about to judge for your eating choices.

Vegetarians eating meat? Huh?

I saw this while zipping through my latest copy of Newsweek. I was surprised and interested to see that many people who called themselves vegetarians would go back to eating meat that they determined was "ethically raised". I'm not about to get on my soapbox about this. People are vegetarians for many different reasons, but this doesn't really help the cause of vegetarians who chose not to eat meat because they feel that it's wrong to eat another animal - regardless of how it's raised. 

No More Sacred Cows
By Jennie Yabroff | NEWSWEEK
Published Dec 31, 2009
From the magazine issue dated Jan 11, 2010

The latest cookbook by Mollie Katzen, author of vegetarian bibles The Moosewood Cookbookand The Enchanted Broccoli Forest, includes recipes for spinach lasagna and vegetable tofu stir fry with orange ginger glaze. It also includes a recipe for beef stew. No, not "beef" stew, in which some soy-based protein substitute is dressed and spiced to look (and sort of taste) like meat. Beef stew. With real beef. From a cow.
Considered one of the chefs most responsible for the mainstreaming of vegetarianism in the 1970s and '80s, and a vegetarian herself for 30 years, Katzen began eating meat again a few years ago. "Somehow it got ascribed to me that I don't want people to eat meat," Katzen said. "I've just wanted to supply possibilities that were low on the food chain."

For as long as people have been foreswearing meat, they've also been sneaking the occasional corn dog. The difference is, vegetarians used to feel guilty about their sins of the flesh-consumption. Now, thanks to the cachet attached to high-end meat, they are having their burgers without sacrificing the moral high ground.
The word "flexitarian," meaning someone who mostly eats vegetarian with the occasional cheesesteak thrown in, has been around for a while. But only recently have former vegetarians been so smug about their forays to the dark side. "There is something almost primal about it," writes lapsed vegetarian Tara Austen Weaver, describing her first meat-buying expedition in The Butcher and the Vegetarian. "I haven't actually hunted dinner myself, but I set my sights and claimed the prize I sought." The "primalness" of the meat-eating (or meat-purchasing) experience comes up a lot in these conversion narratives, which inevitably take place at a quaint, family-run butcher shop. Some of these shops are even run by former vegetarians and vegans, such as Fleisher's, the upstate New York store where Julie Powell (of Julie and Juliafame) learned to carve up a steer for her forthcoming Cleaving.

Buying only grass-fed, sustainably raised (and incredibly expensive) meat allows former vegetarians to maintain the same sanctimony they expressed with their old "I don't eat anything with a face" T shirts. In response to an article by Jonathan Safran Foer about his decision to give up meat, a Brooklyn meat moralist wrote, "lovingly raised meat is not as hard to find as [Safran Foer] seems to think—at least not if you have the good fortune to live near a farmers' market. Almost all the sheep and cattle and most of the pigs and chickens raised by the farmers who sell at those markets have spent their lives in the fields, free to run, graze and root as their natures dictate." This is the argument used by born-again carnivores like Katzen: eating meat is not ethically wrong. Eating ethically wrong meat (i.e., the cheap, mass-processed, hormone-stuffed burgers and steaks that constitute 80 percent of the meat sold in the U.S.) is wrong.

While it's true that sustainably raised, grass-fed beef may be better for the consumer, it's hard to argue that it's ultimately better for the cow. What these steak apologists seem to be missing is that no matter how "lovingly" the cow was raised, no matter how much grazing or rooting he did in his life, he gave up that life to become their dinner. Carnivores who only ate the flesh of animals that had died of natural causes at the end of long, satisfying lives might have a claim to moral superiority, but what to call them? Corpsevores? And if these organic farm animals have such great lives, isn't the more humane thing to eat a cage-raised, industrially processed chicken? At least we'd be putting it out of its misery.

Find this article at
http://www.newsweek.com/id/228720
© 2010

Still inspired to cook!

Yesterday I still felt super inspired to cook so I made a few things...

First up was this random soup thing. I sautéed shallots, garlic and ginger. Then I added the vegetable broth and Korean chili paste (I bought some for kimchi. Will have a post about that once it's all fermented and ready to actually eat). I then put in reconstituted mushrooms (reconstituted in soy sauce), normal mushrooms, broccoli and cabbage. After a minute or so I added the noddles.

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Around 4:30 I got really hungry so I just threw some tofu into the oven.

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This is supposed to be like fried tofu only it's baked to make it healthier. Just pre-heat the oven to 400C, cut the tofu into squares, toss it in a bowl with some oil (I used peanut oil) and a bit of salt then put it on a pan in the oven. Flip them over after 10 mins and wait another 10 mins and then presto! Serve with soy sauce.

Now actually, I kinda lied. I was going to make couscous for dinner and I thought the tofu would be great with the couscous. only, the tofu finished cooking first and I left the couscous until later when I was following one of my multiple hockey teams.

THE COUSCOUS

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(I promise i'll get better at plating my food before I take a picture of it. I'm still not used to making it actually look presentable)

What I used

1/3 cup veggie broth
1/3 couscous

Cut up veggies (red onions, red peppers, broccoli, mushrooms in my case)
minced garlic
cayenne
lime juice

olive oil for frying the veggies

Start off by cooking the couscous. It's very quick. Boil veggie broth. When it's boiled put the couscous in. Turn off the burner, put the lid on the pot and leave the pot on the burner until we need the couscous later.

While the couscous is sitting there soaking up all that veggie broth, fry the veggies (and the garlic). I really like the veggies not-mushy so I cook them at a fairly high heat until the veggies are quite brown. Add the cayenne at some point in there. Once there veggies are pretty fried, add the lime juice. Fry another min or so.

Once done, take your couscous, fluff it up a bit, put in a bowl and add the veggies on top. Voila.

Oh hey, I'm feeling industrious again

Yup. Apparently I was still feeling industrious this morning so I set off to cook something. Or several somethings actually.

First up I made this soup thing for my dad. He's got a cold and I figured he could do with something super spicy. I fried up some onions, ginger and garlic then added some vegetable stock. Next I shredded some red cabbage (hence the red colour) and carrots. After that I added some hot pepper seeds, ground cayenne and a bit of chili oil. And finally, I added some cilantro (fresh coriander) after I put it in the bowl.

I'm told it was good. I didn't actually really eat any (aside from taste-testing it before) but apparently it was good!

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And after that......... I was still feeling like cooking! I made a crappy lunch of soup using one of flavored packages things you can buy. It was pretty awful so I then made a baked potato in the microwave. I swear chives were invented so I could put them on a baked potato. YUMMY.

And AFTER THAT! I made vegan tokoyaki! I have never heard of this before despite nomming on quite a bit of Asian food in my lifetime (vegan and not vegan). The original is deep fried squid in this batter. The not vegan version uses mushrooms. I got the recipe from The Vegan Ronin. I don't have a picture of them because everyone ate them before I could find my camera (it's okay, they didn't look as pretty as the ones by Vegan Ronin). The only changes I made to it was I used a normal onion I had left over from earlier and I added garlic powder by accident instead of ginger powder (I added ginger powder as well after I realized my mistake).

I had some problems getting the batter to cover the mushrooms (maybe because the mushrooms were wet?) and then because I don't have a pan for deep frying I had some minor issues getting the balls to keep their shape while frying them. But the important thing is they tasted amazing. I didn't have any of the condiments to go with it but they were so awesome in their own. Next time I think I might actually cook them in a Yorkshire pudding tin (apparently in Japan, they actually have special molds to cook them and when I saw a pic, they reminded me of Yorkshire pudding tins). If they weren't so unhealthy, I would definitely make these again tomorrow :D

Corn Chowder Soup/Stew

Whoa... haven't posted here in a while. Believe it or not, I have been eating. Believe it or not, I  haven't been particularly creative with regards to food lately.

I finally felt like making something worthy of posting here though.

I've made this corn chowder soup from Isa of the Post Punk Kitchen's "Vegan with a Vengeance" book before (I love that cookbook. Most awesome ever). Today after battling through the wind and cold that is Canadian winter, I decided I could really use some of the awesome soup again.

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I don't have the recipe on hand, but it involves carrots, onions, potatoes, corn (obviously) and some yummy spices like thyme and rosemary (and cayenne!). I left out a few things from the original like maple syrup and lime juice and bell peppers. It was super quick and easy to make.

As you might be able to see from the picture, it turned more into a stew than a soup. Which made it even nicer to eat after I came in from freezing my fingers off watching a pile of kids play shinny hockey outside.

Oh and being still hungry afterwards, I hunted through the fridge and found some leftover angel-haired pasta. I just tossed it with some olive oil, garlic and dried basil. Not as nice as the soup, but not bad either :D

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