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Vegan cuisine to surprise skeptics

2024-02-11T04:56:03.068Z

Highlights: In recent years, bookstores have echoed one of the food trends: veganism. If we look at the shelf of vegan kitchens, we could go around the world. Here are four references that invite us to open our minds. The Big Book of French Vegan Cuisine is inspired by the regional cuisines of India. In the presentation of the book, the writer tells how she became vegan and why she became so. It is always in the use of wasabi, according to the best vegan chefs.


If we look at the kitchen shelves where exclusively plant-based products are used, we could go around the world, thus breaking one of the common beliefs that veganism is boring and monotonous.


Rice "night out", at 'Vegan Japaneasy.

Japanese vegan recipes to prepare at home', by Tim Anderson (Libros Cúpula).Nassima Rothacker

In recent years, bookstores have echoed one of the food trends: veganism.

References and readers have multiplied, and so have views on what and how to maintain a diet according to vegan guidelines.

Today, if we look at the shelf of vegan kitchens, we could go around the world, thus breaking one of the common beliefs that veganism is boring and monotonous.

Whether we are vegan or not, here are four references that invite us to open our minds:

“Being vegan is someone who does not consume any product that comes from animal exploitation.

Vegans do not wear fur or leather, do not buy cosmetics or household products that contain animal materials or that have been tested on animals, and do not go to shows that exploit animals, such as bullfights, zoos, or theaters. circuses with animals,” writes Marie Laforêt in

The Big Book of French Vegan Cuisine

(Beta publishing house).

Then the question arises: what is vegan cuisine?

And it answers itself with “it is as diverse and varied as food in general, since all the recipes in the world can potentially be 'veganized' (...) Dishes that adjust to the seasons of the year with vegetables and ingredients organic”.

This is how it begins, and continues with “this book aims to offer recipes that everyone likes and that serve to ensure that family gatherings are no longer a headache or a source of anxiety, but rather a time when everyone can taste the same dish!” .

To do this, she proposes everything from different dishes filled with soy to fresh and creamy cheeses made with vegetable milk such as

ricotta

or soy mozzarella;

raw sprouted lentil meatballs or raw lasagna with zucchini, walnuts and tomatoes, for example.

Fake meat 'Menchi katsu', (breaded and fried vegan burger), at 'Vegan Japaneasy.

Japanese vegan recipes to prepare at home', by Tim Anderson (Libros Cúpula).Nassima Rothacker

Of course, Maire Laforêt introduces us to that universe with her motto of “everything can be converted into vegan food” in the same way that chef Tim Anderson does in

Vegan Japaneasy

.

Japanese vegan recipes to prepare at home, edited by Cúpula.

The author, owner of the Japanese home cooking restaurant Nanban (London) and author of wonderful books such as

Tokyo Stories

(Cinco Tintas publishing house) created this book inspired by his trips to Japan.

“Japan is not a particularly suitable place for vegans (...) but what I did learn is how great Japanese condiments are, and how to combine and layer them to magically create much more satisfying meals, with or without meat (... ) When you have such fantastic, tasty ingredients at your disposal—things like bitter

miso , salty

shiitake

mushrooms

, or sour ponzu, to name a few—who needs meat?”

The book, in hardcover, tempts even those who do not even remotely pretend to be vegan in their life.

Nassima Rothacker's photographs are attractive and the recipes are original: crispy fried eggplant with

spicy

miso sauce;

sweet potato roll with

ponzu

,

katsu

—a breaded and fried ingredient that usually has a sauce on top—curried

cauliflower

;

or pesto

udon

, to name a few examples.

As a final attraction, the book ends with a suggestion to prepare a luxury vegan bento to take to work and with a very tempting combination proposal: sake and watermelon mojito, brandy and green tea granita or the Bloody Mariko, Japanese version of the Traditional

bloody mary

, the difference?

It is always in the use of

wasabi

.

More information

Where to eat the five best vegan burgers in Madrid, according to expert chefs

If there is a gastronomic culture that can boast of being vegetarian and, by extension, having every possibility of converting to veganism, it is India.

Among the many examples that you can find of Indian cuisines for vegans,

Vegan Indian Cuisine

stands out .

Traditional and creative recipes to prepare at home

,

from blogger Richa Hingle (Gaia publishing house).

In the presentation of the book where the writer tells how and why she became vegan, she explains that “Indian food is almost vegetarian: rich in vegetables, it does not depend excessively on cheese or meat.”

In the volume there are 150 recipes inspired by the different regional cuisines of India, its culture, local foods and its cooking methods for any part of the day: from the first bite with tofu scrambled with South Indian spices to a

red bean

curry

, a red lentil

pulao with tomato or

tempeh

and cauliflower in yogurt and hot paprika sauce, for example.

As an addition, she teaches how to prepare traditional breads and a few desserts with a lot of Hindu seal.

Lentil casserole with cauliflower and potatoes, one of the recipes from 'Vegan Indian Cuisine.

Traditional and creative recipes to prepare at home', by Richa Hingle (Gaia Ediciones).

Speaking of desserts, is there a vegan pastry shop?

The answer is yes.

According to Toni Rodríguez, pastry chef, creator of the first vegan pastry shop in Europe, Lujuria Vegana (Barcelona) and author of the book

Vegan Pastry School

(Editorial Larousse): “it is a type of pastry in which no ingredient that comes from animal origin or exploitation is used (...) There are many 100% vegetable ingredients that are usually used in traditional pastry.”

Then it is possible to make vegan cakes giving greater prominence to nuts, using water or soy milk as a liquid base, working with fruits, pure chocolate, natural essences.

The book, which features excellent photographs by Becky Lawton, never ceases to surprise, tempt and seduce: millefeuille with caramelized sugar and vanilla;

crostata filled with homemade jam,

lemon pie

with an almond, lemon and coconut oil base;

or a

plaisir sucré

with hazelnuts, chocolate and soy milk.

A gem full of ideas for the sweetest vegans.

Sara Cucala is a writer,

filmmaker

and journalist specialized in gastronomy.

The creator of one of the first gastronomy and travel blogs, she has written numerous books, coordinated the culinary content of TVE's afternoon magazine and directed several films and documentaries.

She is founder and co-owner of the food bookstore and cooking school A Punto.

You can follow EL PAÍS Gastro

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Source: elparis

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