I wanted to share this delicious recipe from Sweet Peas and Saffron. Serve it on its own, or with crusty bread or cooked grains (millet, quinoa, brown rice, etc.). The original recipe is made in a slow cooker, but I experimented with it to cook it on the stovetop. Here are the changes I made:
Cooked it on the stovetop in a stock pot.
Heated 1 tablespoon canola oil over medium-high heat to saute the onions until light brown, about 5 minutes.
Added remaining ingredients (except peanuts) and cooked until sweet potatoes were tender and the stew was thickened, 20-30 minutes.
Used 8 chopped plum tomatoes (when in season) instead of canned tomatoes
Used 1 bunch chopped collard greens (or kale) instead of spinach and added along with remaining ingredients.
There are many variations of this recipe in various regions of African. Some are a thinner soup, but this one is a thicker stew. Other ingredients sometimes used include okra, chicken, or beef. This version is plant-based and can also be made in the slow cooker – just cook all ingredients except greens and peanuts, reducing broth to 3 cups, for 8 hours on low. After cooking, garnish with peanuts. It can also be frozen after cooking.
This chai tea mix makes a thoughtful homemade holiday gift. Just add the tea and spices to a jar and attach the simple brewing instructions! If available in a store near you, buy the spices in bulk to save some serious cash. For enhanced flavor, toast the spices in the oven at 350°F for about 5 minutes or until fragrant.
Each batch fills one small jar, about 4-8 ounces. Multiple this recipe to make as many jars as you'd like.
Course
Drinks
Prep Time5minutes
Servings12cups prepared
Ingredients
1/2cuploose black tea
1/4cupcandied gingercut into small pieces if large
2cinnamon sticks
2teaspoonscardamom podsabout 20-25
1teaspoonred peppercorns
1teaspoonwhole cloves
8star anise seedsoptional
2teaspoonsfennel seedsoptional
1teaspoonblack peppercornsoptional
1teaspooncoriander seedsoptional
Instructions
If possible, lightly crush the spices – break the cinnamon stick into pieces, split the cardamom pods slightly, and lightly crush the other spices using a mortar and pestle.
Alternatively, you can break the cinnamon stick and cardamom pods carefully using kitchen shears, a garlic press, or a nutcracker.
In a small jar, combine tea, spices, and candied ginger. Close the jar and wrap.
Include these instructions:
Steep 1 tablespoon of tea mixture in 1 cup hot water for 5-10 minutes. Strain. Add ½ cup milk or milk alternative and optional sweetener to taste.
Green Bean Casserole is a classic Thanksgiving dish, invented in 1955 by Dorcas Reilly. Her recipe utilized canned green beans, canned cream of mushroom soup, and fried onions. This recipe is like 3-in-1, you can make the whole casserole, or just the onion rings, or just the soup. You can also make traditional green bean casserole and replace one or two of the components with those in this recipe – it’s really up to you! Sadly, Reilly passed away on October 15, 2018 at the age of 92. Why don’t you make this casserole this year in her honor?
2 1/2cupsplain, unsweetened cashew or oat milk, dividedor other neutral flavored plant milk
1/2cupwhole wheat flour, divided
1cupwhole grain bread crumbs
1yellow onion, thinly sliced
2tablespoons canola oil or other cooking oil
1/4cupshallot, minced
2clovesgarlic, minced
2cupswhite and/or brown mushrooms, chopped
1vegetable bouillon cube or 1 teaspoon vegetable bouillon paste
16ouncesfrozen green beans, thawed
salt and pepper to taste
Instructions
Preheat oven to 425°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat.
In a medium bowl, combine ½ cup cashew milk, 1/4 cup flour, and a pinch of salt. Stir to combine. It should be the consistency of a batter that can coat the onion pieces. If it's too thin and runny, add a bit more flour. If it's too thick, add a bit more cashew milk or water. Place bread crumbs in a separate bowl.
Separate the onion slices into individual rings. Dip onion rings into cashew milk batter, letting excess drip off, then dip into bread crumbs to coat. Place onto baking sheet, repeating until all of the onion is used. Bake for 25 minutes or until golden and crisp, flipping onions halfway.
Meanwhile, heat canola oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add shallots and cook until they start becoming translucent, about 2-3 minutes. Add garlic and cook for 30 seconds or until fragrant, stirring often.
Add mushrooms and cook until tender, about 5-7 minutes, stirring occasionally. Sprinkle 1/4 cup flour over the mushrooms and cook for 1 minute, stirring occasionally. Carefully stir in remaining 2 cups of cashew milk, then add bouillon. Stir often for about 5 minutes until the mixture thickens to resemble a thick, creamy soup. Add water or more cashew milk as needed if it is too thick. Add salt and pepper to taste.
Stir in green beans. Add ½ baked onions, then pour into a casserole dish. Bake for 20 minutes. Top with remaining onions and bake for another 5 minutes or until the top is golden brown.
Recipe Notes
This recipe has lots of room for substitutions. You can top the casserole with just bread crumbs rather than making the baked onions. You can also use traditional green bean casserole ingredients in place of some of these components made from scratch to save time
This recipe was adapted from Delicious Everyday. It is a nutritious and balanced meal that contains lots of vegetables, some protein, and whole grains. Despite its rich and creamy texture, it is completely plant-based and contains no dairy products. And to top it off, it can all be made in one pot! Cooking time varies by pasta type with thinner pasta (spaghetti) of course cooking faster than other types such as linguine.
This hearty one pot meal is rich, creamy, and super savory, but still full of vegetables, whole grains, and protein. It also is completely plant-based!
Heat a stock pot over medium high heat and add 2 tablespoons olive oil. Add half the mushrooms and cook for about 2 minutes, until they start to cook down. Add remaining olive oil and mushrooms and cook until they start to brown, about 3 minutes. Pour off any excess water that has accumulated.
Add shallots, garlic, and rosemary. Cook until shallots start to brown, stirring frequently to prevent burning, about 2 minutes.
Add milk alternative, beans, nutritional yeast, miso, and salt. Stir to combine.
Once it reaches a simmer, add the pasta and stir. Reduce heat to a low boil and cook according to pasta instructions, plus about 20% more time. This should be about 14 minutes for whole wheat spaghetti. If necessary, continue cooking until pasta is cooked, adding a little more water (no more than 1 cup) if necessary to prevent it from sticking to the bottom of the pan. By the time the pasta is done cooking, you want to have a thickened creamy sauce, not as thick as a gravy or alfredo sauce, but not so thin that it doesn't stick to the noodles. Serve warm.
This is a simple roasted vegetable recipe that doesn’t really need a recipe, but you can use this as guidance on cooking time. You can roast many vegetables following this general format – Brussels sprouts, broccoli, carrots, cauliflower, green beans, kale, and much more. Denser vegetables just take longer to cook, but in general, if you can pierce them fairly easily with a fork and they are somewhat browned on the outside, they are ready and will be delicious.
For a punch of flavor and to reduce bitter flavors, squeeze lemon over the asparagus after it is cooked. This also works well with broccoli, as well as kale – but add the lemon juice before cooking if you want to make crisp kale chips.
Toss asparagus with olive oil, garlic, and a pinch or two of salt. Spread in an even layer on a baking sheet, ideally a flat cookie sheet without rims (reduces steam and makes the asparagus crisper).
Bake 10-15 minutes until tender and lightly crisped, slightly shriveled, and very lightly browned on the outside. Cooking time will depend on thickness.
Transfer asparagus to serving dish and use a flat spatula to scrape off any garlic that is stuck to the pan and sprinkle it on top as a delicious garnish.
This recipe is not quite as simple as typical recipes on Guess Who’s Cooking, but it can be adapted/simplified in a few ways:
Make the pudding as a simple stand-alone dessert
Make the pudding without the soy milk and use it as a simple stand-alone mousse, or use it as frosting for any cake
Make the chocolate cake and frosting (pudding without the soy milk) and make cupcakes, a sheet cake, or a round layered cake
Make just the cake and frost it with your favorite frosting
You may not believe that a dessert with this much tofu would be good, but it actually took first place in the Northern California Soy and Tofu Festival 2018 dessert competition.
This trifle has three main layers, and believe it or not, every one of them is made with tofu! It is decadent, rich, tender, silky, moist, creamy, and not overly sweet. Juicy cherries provide a pop of flavor in every bite. This recipe also happens to be completely plant-based, as long as vegan dark chocolate (and sugar) is used. People will have no idea it’s vegan or made with tofu!
Course
Dessert
Prep Time40minutes
Cook Time35minutes
Total Time1hour15minutes
Servings12
Ingredients
32ouncessilken tofudrained
1 3/4cupcake flour
12ouncesfrozen cherriesthawed, juice reserved
1 1/2cupdark chocolate chips
1cupsugar
3/4cupcocoa powder
1/2cupcanola oilplus 1 tablespoon for greasing pan
1/4cupagave syrupdivided
2tablespoonsvanilla extractdivided
1tablespoonlemon juice
1ouncedark chocolate bar
1 1/2teaspoonsbaking soda
1 1/2teaspoonsbaking powder
1/2 + 1/8teaspoonsalt
Instructions
For the cake
Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease 8x11” baking pan with 1 tablespoon canola oil and line the bottom of the pan with parchment paper.
In a medium bowl, sift together flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, baking soda, and ½ teaspoon salt. Whisk to combine.
In a food processor, puree 12 ounces tofu until very smooth. Add sugar, ¾ cup soy milk, ½ cup canola oil, and 2 teaspoons vanilla extract and puree until well combined.
Pour tofu mixture into dry ingredients and whisk until smooth.
Pour batter into prepared baking pan. Bake for 30-35 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Let cool for 20 minutes, then remove from pan and let cool completely on a wire rack.
For the chocolate pudding
In a food processor, puree 12 ounces tofu until very smooth. Add ½ cup soy milk, 2 tablespoons agave syrup and 2 teaspoons vanilla extract and puree until well combined.
Melt chocolate chips in a small bowl by microwaving for 30 seconds at a time, stirring, and repeating until melted (about 1 ½ minutes).
Pour melted chocolate into tofu mixture and puree until smooth. Refrigerate until needed for assembly.
For the vanilla cream
In a food processor, puree 8 ounces tofu until very smooth. Add 2 tablespoons agave, lemon juice, 2 teaspoons vanilla, and 1/8 teaspoon salt and puree until smooth. Refrigerate until needed for assembly.
To assemble the trifle
Cut cake into 1-inch cubes. Cut thawed cherries in half and place reserved juice in a shallow bowl.
Dip one side of the cake into reserved cherry juice. Place 1 layer of cake cubes into serving dish, dipped side up. Spoon a light layer of cream on top of the cake. Add a sparse layer of cherries. Top with a fairly generous but not solid layer of pudding.
Repeat steps above. Use a vegetable peeler to shave dark chocolate on top as a garnish. Serve cold.
Cold brew coffee is all the rage these days. This method brings out the delicious coffee flavor while leaving behind most of the acidity and bitterness. This recipe takes advantage of certain properties of cold brew to make a deliciously non-traditional version of Thai iced coffee that is smooth, rich, dairy-free, and sweet while using much less sugar.
If you’re making this for yourself, make one batch, drink one serving, then save the other serving in a jar for the next day. Or you can scale up the recipe and make several day’s worth! Cold brew will keep in the fridge for 1-2 weeks. Simply brew the coffee as directed, strain into a large container, keep refrigerated, and use the coffee as needed!
Traditional Thai iced coffee is often very sweet - this recipe uses only 1/2 teaspoon sugar per serving because the cold brew process brings out the natural sweetness of the coffee, and makes it less bitter so less sugar is needed to counteract the bitterness. You can also leave out the sugar completely! Coconut milk is used in place of sweetened condensed milk to make this recipe lower in sugar, dairy-free, and vegan.
Ingredients
1/2 cup coarsely ground coffee
1 teaspoon brown sugar or to taste
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 cup coconut milk
1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom (optional)
Note
Cold brew coffee can have a lot of caffeine. Try using 1/4 cup regular coffee and 1/4 cup decaf to reduce the caffeine.
Use light or regular coconut milk, not the thinner coconut beverage found in the milk alternative section of the refrigerated case. Light coconut milk works just fine, but use regular coconut milk to make it extra creamy. You can also make this drink more traditional and use sweetened condensed milk.
Directions
Step 1
Combine all ingredients except coconut milk in a French press or other container with a lid. Add 2 cups water and stir.
Step 2
Refrigerate for 12-24 hours.
Step 3
If using a French press, push down the filter. If using any other container, lay a cheesecloth, thin cloth towel, or a coffee filter over a bowl or large (2 cups or more) liquid measuring cup. Pour the coffee mixture over the cloth to strain.
Step 4
Pour the strained coffee into 2 glasses with ice. Top with about 1/4 cup coconut milk, give or take a little bit to reach desired creaminess.
Make your own healthier microwave popcorn with just popcorn kernels and a paper bag! This allows you to control the ingredients and avoid potentially harmful chemicals in prepackaged microwave popcorn.
Making microwave popcorn using just a paper bag and some kernels is fun, affordable, and can be healthier when you control the ingredients. Microwave popcorn bags can be lined with questionable additives, so it's better to play it safe and use a plain bag.
Ingredients
1/4 cup popcorn kernels
Directions
Step 1
Pour about 1/4 cup popcorn kernels into a lunch-bag sized paper bag. It doesn't have to be exact. Fold the bag over 2-3 times to loosely close it.
Step 2
Microwave the bag on high for 3 minutes. Be careful to watch the microwave - don't get distracted and walk away. The chances are slim but since you are heating paper, there is a chance it could burn or catch on fire. Once popping slows to 2-3 seconds between pops, turn the microwave off. Allow to finish popping, then remove from microwave.
Step 3
Top with optional toppings - a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil and some seasoning salt is divine! You can also use other oils and other seasonings such as chili lime seasoning, or a mixture of nutritional yeast, salt, and garlic powder.
These bars make a fun and healthi-er gift. They are very easy to make – all you have to do is melt chocolate and stir in cereal. They can be made vegan and/or gluten-free if you check the ingredients on the chocolate and cereal. If these need to be made gluten-free, be extra careful to check the cereal as some rice cereal is sweetened with malt syrup, which is made from barley, a gluten-containing grain.
These 2-ingredient candy bars are very easy to make and can be made vegan and gluten-free. They make a great edible gift!
Ingredients
1 1/2 cup dark chocolate chips
1 1/2 cup crisped brown rice cereal
Directions
Step 1
Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and set aside.
Step 2
Melt the chocolate in a double boiler, stirring constantly until melted. Alternatively, heat the chocolate in a microwave-safe bowl in 30 seconds increments, stir, and repeat until melted.
Step 3
Gently stir in cereal and mix until all of the cereal is coated.
Step 4
Pour the cereal mixture onto the prepared baking sheet and spread into a square in an even layer. Chill in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes or until firm.
Step 5
Place the parchment paper and bars on a cutting board. Cut the square in half and then cut into smaller bars. Store in an airtight container at room temperature.
There are many options for ingredients that you may use, but if you’d like to know the exact brands used in these photos, see below.
I used Barbara’s Organic Brown Rice Crisps cereal, which was labelled vegan and gluten free (“Verified to contain less than 20 ppm gluten”) at the time I bought it. It contained 1g sugar per 1 cup serving and was sweetened with organic fruit juice concentrate (pear or apple).
For the chocolate, I used Pascha Organic Dark Chocolate Chips, 55% Cacao, Semi-Sweet. It was “allergen-friendly,” vegan, and gluten-free.
I wanted to share this recipe from Minimalist Baker, an amazing recipe resource. People that dislike both tofu and eggplant have said they liked this recipe. You will be amazed how much the tofu tastes like ricotta. This recipe is much healthier than typical lasagna, which is made with refined grains (noodles), lots of dairy (cheese), and not much vegetables. With this recipe, you get at least a couple servings of vegetables along with some plant-based protein. It is also easier to make (and eat) rolls rather than a whole layered eggplant lasagna.