Recipe Sunday – Puffed Quinoa & Nut Bars

Happy Sunday peeps! Still going strong with my Limpia detox (20th day!) and as I said in my last post, you can do this and still enjoy food. To show how this is possible, I am sharing a delicious sweet recipe that is nicely easy and quick to make and you’ll just love it!

Puffed Quinoa & Nut Bars by ChoosingChia

Puffed Quinoa & Nut Bars by ChoosingChia

Because I am on a more restrictive eating regimen, I cannot eat any flours or sugar making it a bit more difficult to have a nice dessert. But this is really not a problem, because there are many sweets that you can make. These Puffed Quinoa & Nut Bars are one of such recipes and absolutely a must. They are matching all the rules of the detox and it’s really delicious.

The ingredients are:

  • Dates,
  • Peanut Butter;
  • Vanilla Extract;
  • Cinnamon;
  • Salt;
  • Puffed quinoa;
  • Sunflower and Pumpkin Seeds;
  • Chopped Almonds.

Put the first 5 ingredients on a food processor then add the remaining ingredients and pulse until everything is well incorporated but you are still able to see some puffed quinoa, almonds and seeds.

Line an 8×8 inch pan with parchment or wax paper and press the mixture evenly into the pan with your hands. Place in the fridge for 2 hours to set.

Cut into bars and store in an air-tight container in the fridge for up to 2 weeks.

That’s it! Easy peasy.

Let me know what you think!

Love,

TVCL xx

On Vegan and Plant-based Milk

Beautiful peeps! I hope you are all doing great and have survived the holiday period (and maybe enjoyed it, too!). I have been lucky enough to have enjoyed this time as I had a few days off from work and oh my, I needed it: the last months of 2021 had been quite demanding at work and hadn’t managed to get a proper balance in my personal life, so getting almost 10 days off had been fabulous. A lot of relaxing and recharging, much needed. It has been also a good time to catch up with some reading and researching and I am going to share with you the fruits of such research!

Today I wanted to expand a bit on what I was writing about in my last post, where I was referring to the Veganuary website suggesting to use certain foods and ingredients as substitutes for their non-vegan counterparts, while they are owned by big multinational corporations such as Coca Cola, Unilever, etc. that are really not vegan nor have animal and environment welfare as part of their principles.

An example, is the Alpro brand. Oooft! I know, it is everywhere, it is convenient and it has a wide variety of non-dairy products. Unfortunately, Alpro is owned by Danone, a massive multinational company with a focus on dairy products (it literally started as a yoghurt producer).

Similarly, the successful oat milk brand, Oatly, has been recently purchased by The Blackstone Group, an investment management group: its CEO, Stephen A. Schwarzman has shares in companies connected to deforestation in the Amazon (you can read a bit more here and here).

Another popular plant-based milk brand that is owned by a parent company to a multinational is Plenish, which has been acquired by Britvic, which “holds the franchises for producing and bottling Pepsi Cola and 7Up in the United Kingdom“.

Other brands that are not independent:

  • Rude Health (PepsiCo.);
  • Provamel (Danone);
  • Soya Soleil (Danone).

These are just few of the most popular brands that are taking over the vegan and dairy-free market of milk substitutes.

You might find this frustrating because these brands are easy to find and fairly cheap, and now you might wonder if there can be alternatives to these plant-based milks, as it seems that as soon as a brand becomes just a bit more available, any of the multinationals want a bite of them! Well, don’t despair! There are plenty of smaller and independent plant-based milk brands that are fairly easy to find and still maintain their ethical essence.

Among these are (and no, I am not sponsored by any of them):

  • Mighty Pea;
  • Plamil;
  • Ecomil;
  • Good Hemp;
  • Isola Bio;
  • Minor Figures (although I am afraid of where they are heading with their big expanse in the U.S. market).

The good thing about these smaller/independent businesses (at least in theory and from what they advertise), is that they use fewer and more genuine ingredients and it is easier to hold them accountable for what they are doing.

I am going to keep a watchful eye on the situation and will keep you updated with any changes.

It’s all for today, my beautiful kittens!

TVCL xx

Veganuary it’s here!

It’s officially 2022. Today it’s the very first day of a new year and I am very excited to see what it will bring (but I don’t want to jinx anything as we’ve seen how the past 2 years have gone, generally speaking). And with the new year, it comes also Veganuary. Let’s take a look into it.

Veganuary is an initiative by the UK organisation with the same name, that promotes veganism by simply asking whoever want to take part to try a vegan diet during the month of January. I think it is quite a simple and fairly effective initiative and it can surely benefit the vegan cause: they provide facts to raise awareness without being too pushy, in their website you can find recipes to get you started as well as nutrition tips. They are making it very easy for people to potentially go vegan, without excuses of not knowing what to eat, of vegan food, being too difficult to make or that the dishes are not balanced. On the Veganuary website, you’ll find all the relevant information.

The initiative started in 2014 and seems to go quite well. However… I still have to find a person that decided to go vegan because they tried Veganuary. I don’t know, maybe it’s because I live in a small rural town, but it also seems that the places where I can get a vegan takeout or even sit in for a meal, have either closed or significantly reduced the variety of vegan food on offer. Yes, supermarkets are providing some ready meals or quick to make stuff, which is great when you are in a hurry and didn’t manage to cook anything the night before. But they are not for everyday consumption. So I am wondering where are all these vegans? Are they only in the bigger cities? If you know, please share your knowledge.

Now, going back to Veganuary and its effectiveness. I applaud the initiative and the organisation because they are raising awareness not only in the UK but all around the world, and as the old saying goes “The more, the merrier”. But I have to raise a concern (no, I don’t have to-have to in the categorical sense, but that I feel I should. Then why you don’t say that? Because I don’t want to. Now let’s proceed.): some of the ingredients they are suggesting people should use, are from brands owned by multinational companies such as Coca Cola, Pepsi, etc, which we established are not vegan (you can find a list of non-vegan companies, as well as a chart of the multinationals and the brands that they own). I know that many vegans are very excited about this initiative, and again, I am too and I am very supportive. Also, I understand that they are promoting the use of certain foods because they might be cheaper than buying them from smaller, independent companies and it’s also easier than making them yourself: all factors that can help people approach veganism.

Nevertheless, I strongly believe that any money given to these companies is just protracting the suffering of animals: it doesn’t matter that that product is labelled as plant-based and vegan-friendly if it comes from a business that is exploiting animals, its employees and the environment (you can read some more of this here). There are really plenty of small businesses that make vegan food and ingredients, that are true to vegan ethics because they were born as vegan and ethical companies. There are several places where you can find lists of such businesses for vegan food, clothes etc. and if you find yourself stuck in terms of beauty products and snacks, FreedmStreet is the website for you (no, this is not a paid post, it’s just that I have been buying stuff from them for the past 3 years and I am always 100% satisfied, hence why I am suggesting it).

So, go vegan, try it for January, for a few months or for your life, but try to do also some research: there are many resources online that you can consult and this blog wants to make your life easier, plus there is a massive community online and many charities and organisations to whom you can talk about going vegan.

If you need any assistance, please leave a comment or get in touch!

And to conclude, here are some easy recipes to get you started

Love,

TVCL

Recipe Sunday – Chocolate Yogurt Loaf

Happy Sunday, folks! I hope you are well. I don’t know you, but as it is becoming colder and colder, getting closer to the Winter Solstice (21st December) I feel that I am craving chocolate-y food. So today I made this recipe by Chocolate Covered Katie: it is a delicious, easy and comfortable dessert that you can make quickly and requires minimal ingredients. This Chocolate Yogurt Loaf is so easy to make and the result is just amazing!

All you need is

1 1/2 cups spelt, white, or oat flour (180g)

1/4 cup cocoa powder2

1/2 tbsp dutch cocoa (or additional regular)

1 1/2 tsp baking powder

3/4 tsp each: baking soda and salt

2/3 cup sugar, unrefined if desired

3/4 cup yogurt (or see substitution note above)

2/3 cup milk of choice

1/4 cup oil, peanut butter, or additional yogurt

1/2 cup mini chocolate chips (not optional)

1 1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract

1/4 tsp instant coffee (optional)

While the oven is heating up to 350F, mix all the dry ingredients then all the other ingredients. Set in a loaf pan (previously greased). Bake until the centre of the loaf is cooked through (i.e. toothpick inserted come out clean)

You can make a chocolate glazing, but the loaf it’s already perfect this way!

Let me know if you try it and enjoyed it as much as I did.

Will be back soon!

TVCL xx

Recipe Sunday – Scalloped Potatoes

We’re back with Recipe Sunday! Since this is the first Sunday of December and it is getting colder here in the U.K., I believe we all need some hearty comfort food and these Scalloped Potatoes by Elavegan are doing just the trick.

I made them recently and thought of sharing their deliciousness with you.

As always, since I am usually looking for recipes that can be made with few ingredients and don’t require enormous amounts of time, this falls in all the right categories for me: an easy and quick vegan comfort food that will brighten up your dinner/lunch.

With the ingredients basically being potatoes (duh), cashews, small onion, 3-4 garlic cloves, bit of spices, tapioca flour and the longest part of the process is peeling and slicing the potatoes, this has the bonus point of being a perfect recipe for beginners.

So, without further ado, the recipe: Elavegan’s Scalloped Potatoes!

I hope you’ll enjoy this dish as much as I have.

Happy Sunday and happy (vegan) munching!

TVCL xx

Recipe Sunday – Vegan Gnocchi Bake

I know, I am coming a bit late today for this weekly appointment, but I wnated to share with you this beautiful recipe, perfect comfort food for every time of the year. It is deliciously vegan and you won’t regret making it.

Vegan Gnocchi Bake – LazyCatKitchen

In another post I included this recipe as a suggestion for a Valentine’s Day menu.

The reason I am dedicating a whole post to this recipe is because is the perfect comfort food: it is easy to make and tastes divinely, while also maintaining a certain healthiness as you can use your homemade gnocchi (so that you knwo what the ingredients are).

This Vegan Gnocchi Bake is nutricious, with shallots, mushrooms and broccoli. At the same time it’s also very tasty because of the gnocchi themselves, the flavoursome bechamel sauce and the vegan cheese.

It requires no effort, while returning an amazing result.

I made it now three times and never disappoints: try it to believe it!

Enjoy!

The All-Vegan Easter Menu

This menu for an all-vegan Easter is brought to you after carefully selecting the best springy recipes so that you can enjoy a tasty Easter without harming any animal nor the environment. What can you ask more?!

During these holidays there are many blogs that will give you 30+ recipes suitable for such events. Now, I don’t know about you, but I find it a bit overwhelming, especially if all the recipes look so good making it difficult to select the “right ones” (there obviously are not “right” recipes, but I mean it in the sense that are best for how you are feeling on the day, how much you want to cook, what do the Moon and the rest of the Cosmos suggesting, etc.). So, looking around, searching my favourite vegan blogs, I selected those course that I think would make a nice menu for Easter 2021.

Appetisers

I know I am repeating myself, but Sam’s Deviled Potatoes (ItDoesn’tTasteLikeChicken) are a must for this Easter: easy and delicious, just GO. FOR. THEM.

Deviled Potatoes (ItDoesn’tTasteLikeChicken)

However, if you don’t feel like an egg-y dish, why not try the cutest Spinach Puffs by ConnoiseurusVeg?

Spinach Puffs by ConnoiseurusVeg

Main

A lovely Minestrone by The Minimalist Baker, would be the perfect soup for Easter.

Minestrone by The Minimalist Baker

Then there would be the choice between a Vegan Pesto Risotto with Roasted Tomatoes (FromMyBowl) or a Creamy Pasta Al Limone (EatingByElaine).

Vegan Pesto Risotto with Roasted Tomatoes (FromMyBowl)
Creamy Pasta Al Limone (EatingByElaine)

Whatever your choice, after that go for the Vegan Hotpot With Lentils and Mushrooms (LazyCatKitchen): YUM!

Vegan Hotpot With Lentils and Mushrooms (LazyCatKitchen)

Side

[I was going to suggest a potato salad – the Roast Potato Salad – YumVeganLunches – but I also understand that you might have had the Devied Potatoes as an appetiser so this recipe is only if you’re feeling extra (after all it’s holiday, so why not?)].

Roast Potato Salad – YumVeganLunches

There is the option of a Cannellini Bean Salad With Olives and Cashew Cheese (LavenderAndMacarons) or a Kale Salad With Apple (VeganOnBoard).

Cannellini Bean Salad With Olives and Cashew Cheese (LavenderAndMacarons)
Kale Salad With Apple (VeganOnBoard)

Dessert

If you don’t already have an Easter Egg, then you could make one following the recipe for Peanut Butter Eggs by The Minimalist Baker.

Peanut Butter Eggs by The Minimalist Baker

However, there is the option for a Carrot Cake (recipe by VeganHuggs).

Carrot Cake (recipe by VeganHuggs)

Whichever dessert you choose, I would definitely “pear” it with the Healthy Baked Pears (RunningOnRealFood).

Healthy Baked Pears (RunningOnRealFood)

Recipe Sunday – Chia Fresca

Spring it’s here! After months of snow and cold, as nature intended, we are now officially into the new season: a time of rebirth, blossoming, the birds are chirping, the days are lighter and lighter and this is the time when we should do some detox to get ready to enter this new period. Hence, I am sharing this recipe with you, because it is packed with nutrients that will help you dealing with Springtime in an energising and refreshing way.

Now, I don’t know about you, but going from Winter to Spring for me it’s always devastating: it has been like this for more than 10 years (before I went vegan) and it’s the only change of season that brings with it, physical and mental issues: from brain fog to feeling physically depleted as well as gastrointestinal problems (I am going to talk about this Seasonal Affective Disorder soon because maybe there some of you who suffer from the same stuff and I can help you with the solutions that I am using for myself), leaving Winter is quite a challenge every year.

For this reason, I was absolutely delighted to read about a very quick and easy recipe for Chia Fresca by Choosing Chia. And it’s obviously vegan!

Let’s get down to business. The recipe wants:

1 1/2 cups filtered water

1 tbsp chia seeds

juice of 1/2 lemon 

1–3 tsp maple syrup  

pinch of cayenne (optional)

Mix all the ingredients in a glass or jar. Stir or shake it up to make sure the chia seeds don’t clump together.

Let sit in the fridge for at least 15 minutes before drinking.

It is easy, delicious, very quick. However, I have modified it a little bit: I have been using 1/2 cup of boiled water and 1 cup of cool water, no maple syrup nor cayenne. Instead, I have been adding 1 kiwi (peeled and sliced). I prepare this first thing in the morning, while I prepare breakfast and I drink it until lunchtime: it does provide a good kick and I have been able to focus a bit better at work while also calming my stomach.

But I would also like to show you the nutritional value of the ingredients used for this amazing recipe. And again, all this is vegan and superhealthy, so give it a try!

Chia Seeds

From Harvard T. H.. Chan School of Public Health: “Two tablespoons of chia seeds (1 ounce or 28 grams) contain about 140 calories, 4 grams of protein, 11 grams of fiber, 7 grams of unsaturated fat, 18% RDA for calcium, and trace minerals including zinc and copper. They are the richest plant source of omega-3 fatty acids. Chia seeds are a complete protein, containing all nine essential amino acids that cannot be made by the body.”

From Healthline.com we have another complete brakdown of all the nutrition facts of these little seeds. For example, what they might be lacking in vitamins, they’ll make up with minerals: Manganese, Phosphorus, Copper, Selenium, Iron, Magnesium and Calcium. They also contain many antioxidants (the good stuff that it’s supposed to be helping against cancer).

Lemon juice

This ingredient is very famous because is so rich in Vitamin C (an essential vitamin for the proper functioning of the immune system, and much more). But did you know that it has a good amount of Vitamin A? Another important vitamin for the immune system as well helping in maintaining healthy skin.

But lemon juice is not only a magnificent source of such vitamins: it is also your ally against kidney stones and anemia (amongst other benefits – read more here and here).

Kiwi

As I said, my version of the vegan Chia Fresca sees the use of kiwi. I have always been used to eating kiwis when I was little because my grandma loves them and this has been passed on to my mum. Now, I am not crazy about them like my grandma, but I like their taste: the combination of bitter and sweet and the juicy pulp, makes it a nice snack. Or also it can be used to take away a bit of the sweetness of some foods that sometimes are really too sweet, if you get what I mean. For example, I used to slice a kiwi to put in those yoghurts where cleary they used a bit too much sugar and/or sweetners. I am not trying to sell you some kiwis, but just to give you an idea one kiwi has

  • 42 calories (cal)
  • 215 milligrams (mg) of potassium, or 5 percent recommended daily value (DV)
  • 1 g of dietary fiber, or 8 percent DV
  • 8 g of protein, or 2 percent DV
  • 23 mg of calcium, or 2 percent DV
  • 64 mg of vitamin C, or 107 percent DV
  • 2 g of sugar
  • 1 mg of vitamin E, or 5 percent DV
  • 8 micrograms (mcg) of vitamin K, or 35 percent DV
  • 7 mg of magnesium, or 3 percent DV
  • 60 international units (IU) of vitamin A, or 1 percent DV
  • 17 mcg of folate
    (from EverydayHealth.com)

which I think it’s already pretty amazing. And all this translates in many health advantages such as being beneficial for the respiratory tract and gastrointestinal system.

So, now you can go and try this delicious (and nutricious) beverage. Let me know if you’ll try it and if it gave you a boost of vitality.

Drink up!

Recipe Sunday – Vegan Babka

It’s Sunday and despite being in March it is still quite cold. So it comes natural seeking some comfort food. And there is not comfort-er food than this vegan babka: a cake that will be perfect for your breakfast, but also for an afternoon snack (and why not, after dinner, while you’re watching your favourite TV show).

The first time I heard the word ‘babka’ was when a friend showed me the picture of a babka he made. Unfortunately, this was not vegan. But this was not a deterrent for me: the cake was way too beautiful and looked so darn tasty so I started researching for recipes of vegan babkas, that were reasonably doable without requiring the help of celestial being for overly complicated cooking and baking processes (something that happens when I see the list of ingredients for some recipes).

And there it was: after comparing some recipes, I found it! The Domestic Gothess shared the recipe for a beautiful Vegan Chocolate Babka and I didn’t hesitate to make it straight away (when I find something that I like I am like a dog with a bone). The ingredients are almost all vegan pantry-staples so you too can make this delicious treat right now. The process might seem lengthy, but trust me it is actually straightforward. Plus, you have the sensorial experience of working the vegan butter into the dough and I found it so fun! Very squishy and messy at the beginning, but I enjoyed it a lot. The only downside is that you have to be patient with the rising time because you’ll have to leave the dough to rise in the fridge overnight. But other than that, this recipe won’t take too long and all this work will be well worth the result: a luscious, delicious sweet treat for yourself (and all those that appreciate bread and chocolate).

Try it now!

Pancake Day

Hello, hello and Happy Pancake Day! I didn’t have anything prepared for this because I just found out. But I couldn’t refrain from writing a post about this because there is a pancake recipe that I have tried a couple of weeks ago and I need to share with you in case you didn’t know about it. You must try it!

So, the recipe is for Fluffy Vegan Blueberry Pancakes by The Viet Vegan: I stumbled upon the video where she makes these pancakes and not only she makes a recipe that is easy (I don’t know if you got it from the past posts, but I like simple yet satisfying recipes) but also she sends some good, positive vibes (she also has a blog where she shares a ton of brilliant recipes, and also some more deep thoughts so go and have a look!), which is what everyone needs.

Here’s the video. Enjoy!