Salty, sweet and a little smokey make grilled sweet potatoes a great accompaniment for burgers and franks at any barbeque. You will want to make extra as they will go fast. They are a great alternative to French fries or potato chips. Also, by adding the oil to the potatoes and shaking them up in a bag, you end up using much less oil than if you brushed the oil on each one. It’s much quicker and easier too. You can use a store bought seasoned salt or try our recipe to make your own. Prep Time: 5 minutes Cooking Time: 6-8 minutes Servings 4-8 Ingredients: 4 sweet potatoes, scrubbed clean. 1 TBL olive oil 2 TBL seasoned salt* Directions: 1. Slice each potato in half lengthwise. Slice each half into 4 to 6 wedges lengthwise depending on the size of the potato. 2. Place potato wedges in a large resealable

Artichokes are one of those foods that have always puzzled me. Who was the first person to see one and say, “hey, I want to eat that!”? They cannot be eaten raw, so who first though to cook one? When you cut them open there is a fuzzy center that you cannot eat, that covers the delicious heart. And then there is the eating of the leaves. Looking at all of this, I am really amazed and thankful that someone took the time to figure these suckers out. There is little better than a grilled artichoke in the summer. However, will a little preparation, you can enjoy the awesomeness that is a grilled artichoke. Grilling one whole does not really work without some serious prepartion and attention (I have lost many an artichoke to the fire gods). When I first attempted to grill an artichoke, I simply cut it in half,

I woke up one morning and had a brilliant idea – what if I took a hot dog, sliced it down the center, filled it with cheese, wrapped the entire thing in bacon and grilled it? It really wasn’t so much a question as an exclamation. Later that day I did just that for lunch. When I started preparing it, Ethan looked at me with wide eyes, marveling at what I was doing. He wanted one too. Who wouldn’t? After a few mintues on the grill it was time to taste. It was even better than I thought it would be. Prep Time: 6 minutes Cooking Time: 8 minutes Yield: As many as you make Ingredients: 1 package of vegan hotdogs. (I love the Field Roast Frankfurters) 2 strips of vegan bacon per hotdog (Upton’s Naturals Seitan Bacon is great here) Shredded cheddar style vegan cheese Hotdog buns & condiments Directions:

Everytime I make fried seitan, I always make more than necessary for the immediate meal just so I can have these sandwiches the next day. Sometimes, I will even make the seitan for the sole purpose of making these. This is my veganized verison of the standard deli chicken cutlet sandwich. Even omnivores love this sandwich. Is it truly a bahn-mi? Well, as I don’t use a baguette, I suppose it isn’t. But that doesn’t really matter. Crispy seitan, pickled cucumbers and carrots, ciabatta bread and a hoisin spread all combine in a symphony of flavors and textures to make one amazing sandwich. In any event, here is my recipe for a Seitan Bahn-Mi Sandwich. Prep Time: 10 Minutes Cooking Time: 5 minutes Servings: 6 sandwiches Ingredients: 1 recipe fried seitan 1 recipe pickled cucumbers and carrots 2 green onions sliced into long thin strips, white and light green parts only

This gets filed under the “little work for big return” recipes. A quick soak in a simple pickling solution gives regular carrots and cucumbers and extra flavor burst that is both salty and sweet with a hint of tart thanks to the rice vinegar. Want to add a little something special to sandwiches? Try these. This recipe is a key ingredient in our Seitan Bahn Mi sandwich (recipe coming soon). They also work great in sushi. This is also a great recipe for practicing your knife skills. You want the carrot and cucumber strips to be about 3 inches long. They can be longer and thicker, but then they will require a little more soaking time to allow the brine to work its magic. Prep Time: 5 minutes Marinading time: 30 minutes Ingredients: 1 cucumber 2 carrots 1 cup water 2 TBL white vinegar 2 TBL sugar 1 tsp salt Directions: 1. Peel
After months and asking and waiting, our local Whole Foods finally is carrying Eat Pastry Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough. It is like a dream come true! When I was little, my mom’s idea of baking cookies was using the “slice and bake” roll of cookie dough. Don’t get me wrong, I loved it. In college that roll got me through some hard times. However, once I started baking and developed my own recipe for chocolate chip cookies, refrigerated dough became something solely for snacking, not baking. After becoming vegan, I thought refrigerated cookie dough was a thing of the past. Enter Eat Pastry. The amazing people at Eat Pastry have created vegan versions of your favorite refrigerated cookie doughs. Each flavor comes in its own tub that you can eat with a spoon if you cannot wait to bake them. As they are 100% vegan, there is no fear of

While on the field trip as part of the Main Street Vegan Academy, we walked past Palà Pizza at 198 Allen Steet, New York, NY. One of my classmates said they had vegan options so I went in to grab a menu. Unfortunately, they don’t have paper menus to take, but they did give me a match book with a link to their website and told me the site had the full menu on it. I wasn’t able to look it up that day, but as soon as I did, I was so happy. It’s not just a pizza place that will throw some daiya on a pizza and call it a day. No siree. The entire back side of the menu is 100% vegan. There are almost as many vegan options as there are non-vegan ones. Considering how much love pizza, I knew Palà was a must go to. Fast foward

From May 23, 2014, to May 28, 2014, I was fortunate enough to attend Victoria Moran’s Main Street Vegan Academy. This intensive 5 day course trains students to become certified Vegan Lifestyle Coaches and Educators (VLCE). Victoria gathered some of the best vegan educators to help conduct the course. Our instructors, in addition to Victoria, included Dr. Robert Ostfeld, Jennifer Gannett, Sharon Nazarian, Joshua Katcher, Marty Davey, JL Fields, Chef Fran Costigan, Jasmin Singer, Mariann Sullivan, Robert Notter, Michael Parrish DuDell and Robert Cohen. Each person who spoke to us was truly a master of his or her subject. We were instruced on everything from animal rights to performing cooking demonstrations to setting up our own coaching businesses. It is truly a fast paced, information packed course. As stated on the MSVA website, the topics covered during the session were: • History and philosophy of veganism • Basics of plant-based nutrition •

During the summer, I like to grill as often as possible. In fact, when I am a t barbecue, I am often appointed grill master for the evening and take over all grilling duties. When I became vegan, I didn’t think I would be grilling again, aside from vegetables anyway. But I loved my grill and I was not giving it up. I just needed to figure out what to grill. Tofu was a logical thing to try. It just needed a good marinade. I got some tofu, put in into my teriyaki marinade and voila! Success. My days of grilling were far from over. This recipe will even get the “I don’t like tofu” people to love tofu. The longer you let this marinate, the better. You want the flavors really getting into the tofu. Prep Time: 10 miuntes, plus at least 1 hour to marinade Cooking Time: 8

This recipe came to me from a former co-worker at my first job out of law school. We were working on a large anti-trust document review project and we all sat at the table in a conference room for 10 hours a day, every day for 5 weeks. Everyone brought his or her lunch to work as we didn’t have enough time to go and buy lunch somewhere, bring it back to the office and eat. The work was dull, but the working environment was great. One day, one of my co-workers brought in a huge container of sesame noodles to share with everyone. They were fantastic. I asked her for the recipe, which she readily shared. In fact, I still have the orginial paper she copied it on to. It stands out in my recipe binder as it is on pink paper from the photocopier at the office. The original recipe