Thursday, 13 March 2014

Recipe: BBQ pulled 'pork' sandwich - Vegan-style!

Here's the thing:- when I used to eat meat, like millions of other people, I was pretty partial to something called a 'pulled pork sandwich'. Since I've been Vegan I've actually found that I very rarely miss eating meat or fish - but, just occasionally, my mind would wander back to my carnivorous years - and this is one of the dishes it would linger over.

However, what I've discovered in my 13 months (yay!) of cooking 100's of Vegan meals, is that many meat dishes actually get their flavour from the delicious herbs, spices and veggies that they're cooked with. THIS one is a prime example. 

So I have no qualms in recreating dishes that emulate traditional meaty ones, because much of the time it's not so much the meat that was loved, but the flavours that went with that meat... 
... and I've now seen that these Veganised dishes can lure many a non-Vegan into the lifestyle, because it helps them to realise they'll miss nothing, food-wise, at all.
And that has to be great news for them, for the animals and our planet.

Read, salivate and make it for non-Vegan friends ;)

Much love to you xx


BBQ pulled 'pork' sandwich - Vegan-Style!
Serves 4-6 depending on how hungry you are ;)

So unbelievably tasty!

Gather:

1 tbsp oil (veg, rapeseed, olive etc)
1 medium onion – quartered and thinly sliced

2 tbsp garlic puree (or approx 8 cloves garlic – crushed)

1 tsp smoked paprika
1 tbsp tomato puree
1 tbsp creamed horseradish sauce
1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
2 tbsp agave syrup or unrefined brown sugar
Zest of half a lemon (make sure its unwaxed)
*[1 red chilli - deseeded and thinly sliced – optional, for heat lovers]

1 tin chopped plum tomatoes
2 tins braised gluten (mock ‘duck’) - drained, patted dry & shredded OR a large punnet of shiitake mushrooms - shredded into strips OR even 225g tempeh- shredded into strips

Salt and pepper to taste

#Bread rolls to serve
#Coleslaw and salad for the side


Create:



1.  Gently fry the onions in a pan with the oil over a low/medium heat for 5 mins or until soft.

2.  Add the garlic and fry for a further 2 mins.

3.  Add all of the other seasoning ingredients (except the tinned tomatoes & ‘meat’ of choice) and fry for a further 2 minutes – stirring constantly.

4.  Add the tomatoes and simmer gently over a very low heat for 20 minutes or until the sauce thickens.

5.  Add a little water if the mixture appears too dry, add the gluten, mushrooms or tempeh and simmer for a further 5 minutes to warm through.

Sticky BBQ lusciousness!

Enjoy:

Serve on hot toasted rolls (I used ciabatta) topped with homemade coleslaw and a fresh salad on the side! p.s. it’s great with a hot chilli sauce added too.



Cooks tips:

Coleslaw: For this recipe I used a combination of the classic ½ small white cabbage - shredded, 1 red onion – very finely sliced and 3 large carrots – grated, all seasoned with white pepper and mixed with Plamil egg-free mayonnaise.
Salad: totally ‘old school’ with shredded iceberg, tomatoes and cucumber! So it was just like my favourite from somewhere like Hardrock Café!

Crisp fresh 'old school' salad on the side ;)


Thursday, 27 February 2014

Restaurant review: Jasmine Thai, Exeter - with Vegan options.



Style:
Probably best described as a traditional/yet contemporary Thai dining experience in the heart of the city (they describe it as Thai-style fine dining). The front of the restaurant is more brightly lit and the upper floor at the back is more dimly lit. It’s a large space and the floor is tiled with a central walkway offering quite good access.



Service:
The usual lovely smiley attentiveness you would expect of any Thai restaurant – although we hardly saw the same member of the team twice – which meant a little confusion on and double checking of our order.

starter sharing platter
Food choices:
A vast menu of varied non-Vegan dishes – but Vegan options are all marked Vg so you can hop straight to them – which is great! And there is more than enough to create a little feast from. 
We started with a mixed shared Vegan platter, followed by a Red curry (cooked with Tofu and Vegetables in a curry base containing Thai Red curry paste, coconut milk, bamboo shoots and fresh herbs), stirfry Mixed Vegetables (stir fried with garlic, cashew nuts, mushroom and peppers in soya sauce), Phad Thai noodles and 2 rice dishes (fragrant jasmine & coconut), ending with two Vegan desserts (they offer Vegan ice cream, which is unusual!).


Nom factor:
I adore Thai food and the freshness and aromatics of the flavours. I think the starters were some of the best I’ve had in a Thai restaurant – rubbery fish cakes with too much lemon grass can often be quite grim. But these little samosas, spring rolls, tempura and sweetcorn fritters were all beautifully crisp and complimented well with a trio of spicy, fruity and sweet chilli dips. High 5 on the #nom.

thai red curry with tofu



The main courses were tasty and unwittingly we created a good mix of flavours. However, for me the food was over-seasoned. (This may be due to the fact that when making a Thai curry at home now I never use salt?) I also didn’t like the tofu used in the curry – it was quite chewy and reminded me more of the tinned braised gluten you can cook with. Dave liked it but I would have preferred more vegetables instead had I known.





 
Phad Thai with rice noodles



The Phad Thai rice noodles were quite chewy too, but sticky and sweet and quite enjoyable none-the-less, but the rice, though fragrant with jasmine and coconut was over-cooked I thought and past its best.










vegetable stirfry with soy sauce, garlic & cashews





The vegetable stirfry wasnt exactly as described - mushrooms but no peppers and repetition with broccoli and cauliflower (as per the curry).











pineapple fritters with Vegan ice cream


I rarely eat desserts in Asian restaurants, really because I’m an English pud kinda gal – but on this first visit, and on a special occasion, I thought… why not?! I had Pineapple fritters with Vegan icecream. OKish, but the pineapple was non-descript and I’m sure the batter was tainted by having been cooked in the general purpose fryer. Something to be aware of if, as a Vegan, you prefer to have food cooked separately – because I’m worried this doesn’t happen here. 





Dave opted for Banana in hot coconut milk – which was….well… banana in hot coconut milk! Not something worth paying for in a restaurant, as I could have knocked it up for him when we’d got home if he’d been really desperate!



How much?:
An eye watering £83 including 4 drinks (2 Badgers Ale and 2 Becks Blue). Although admittedly we had 3 courses (not forgetting Vegan mints at the end), I couldn't help feeling that although I did enjoy it – I would have enjoyed a 3 course meal at my local just as much for half the price and with twice the atmosphere – which was disappointing really.
NB a single portion of rice will set you back £4.25! [sharing platter £14.90, main dishes approx £10.95, desserts approx £5.95]


Other stuff:
The toilets are spotless, with cubicles that you can actually get into without clambering sideways over the loo. Always a bonus.
As I booked last minute we could only get in at 6pm and were seated at the front of the restaurant only to have a family with 2 young boys put literally right next to us. As they began screaming over where to sit and pulled out their electronic game consols my face must have said it all and a waitress did rush over to us and ask if we would like to be moved. This wouldn’t have made for a lovely quiet 'meal a-deux'! If I owned a restaurant I have to say I wouldn’t have sat us/them there in the first place and also would probably not allow parents like these in… but what do I know – I spent most of the time taking pictures of the food – which I know restaurateurs just love! ;)


*danger note* they flambe some dishes at the table and to do this pretty much run from the kitchen to the table with a ladle full of flaming oil! As one customer had to quickly dodge a waitress and another such high flame melted some of the hanging ceiling decorations above a table I couldn't help but wonder whether Health & Safety officers have ever visited!!!


Comments:
I can’t quite put my finger on it, but Jasmine Thai just didn’t do it for me. 
I really really wanted to love it because I knew beforehand that the owner is in fact Vegan! They certainly do have a good understanding of and variety of suitable food. But something is missing. Maybe it’s the atmosphere? I found it a bit 'office party / large family dining' for me, and as they label themselves 'fine dining' (with prices to match) I guess I just expected something a little bit more special.
Still, I woofed the food merrily and felt perfectly satisfied – if a little thirsty on the way home…

Would I go again? 
Hmmm I’d rather try somewhere else new first…. And perhaps not be tempted into a place on the sheer ‘merit’ that they do some Vegan food…

Still much foodie love though... Chantal xx