Guest guest Posted October 23, 2005 Report Share Posted October 23, 2005 At 10:35 AM 10/23/2005 -0700, Meghan Gray wrote: > >--- Nancy <meritra wrote: > >> someone decided... (of all things) >> tomatoes were not vegan! >I'm scratching my head on that one... mind you, I know >someone who ordered a vegetarian salad, and, when she >found it contained bacon, tried to return it, only to >be told by the staff that " bacon is not a meat, " Yikes, that's really hard core. I've been 'informed' by clueless waitstaff that vegetarians eat fish and even chicken, but *bacon*? ::boggle:: I think the anti-tomato guy may have been referring to GMO tomatoes, but tried to imply it was true of all tomatoes. Here's a tried and true recipe and a good way to use a cheese slicer. Since bacon was the most difficult thing for me to give up, I was delighted to find it. Makes a great TLT sandwich too. I've seen some vegan bacon recipes which advise marinating the tofu in the flavoring liquid before frying, but I've found that the flavorings will char if that is done. The slices, when crisp, will quickly crisp up again after adding the flavorings. Just keep them in the pan on low heat until that happens. I usually use half the amount of yeast called for (personal preference). ---------- Recipe via Meal-Master v8.06 Title: Vegan Tofu Bacon Categories: Breakfast, Meat analog Yield: 1 servings 1 lb Firm Tofu; cut into strips shaped like bacon 2 tb Nutritional yeast 2 tb Tamari/shoyu 1 ts Wright's (or other brand) liquid smoke. 1 tb oil (something neutral; not olive or sesame) Fry tofu strips on low or medium heat until they are crispy on the outside. The best way to do this is to lay them in the pan in the oil and let them sit for at least 10 minutes, simmering. They should turn easily after that. Turn them and give them another 10 minutes on the other side. Mix the tamari/shoyu soy sauce with the liquid smoke first, then take the pan off the heat. Pour the liquid smoke/tamari into the pan and stir the tofu so all sides are coated, then sprinkle the yeast over all, stir some more, over the heat, until the liquid is gone and the tofu is covered with sticky yeast. Try it. It tastes EXACTLY like bacon. Another variation is to marinate the tofu in the tamari/liquid smoke mixture for several hours and then fry, but it misses a little bit without the nutritional yeast. Posted to rec.food.veg by Paul Houtz 2-26-92, originally from The Now and Zen Epicure by Miyoko Nishimoto ----- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 23, 2005 Report Share Posted October 23, 2005 If you like the bacon flavor, take an put sessime seeds on a skilit and brown them. For some strange reason, they come out tasting like bacon and are wonderful on a baked potato. Corey... Here's a tried and true recipe and a good way to use a cheese slicer. Since bacon was the most difficult thing for me to give up, I was delighted to find it. Makes a great TLT sandwich too. I've seen some vegan bacon recipes which advise marinating the tofu in the flavoring liquid before frying, but I've found that the flavorings will char if that is done. The slices, when crisp, will quickly crisp up again after adding the flavorings. Just keep them in the pan on low heat until that happens. I usually use half the amount of yeast called for (personal preference). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2005 Report Share Posted October 24, 2005 At 04:14 PM 10/23/2005 -0400, Corey wrote: > > If you like the bacon flavor, take an put sessime seeds on a skilit and >brown them. For some strange reason, they come out tasting like bacon >and are wonderful on a baked potato. YES! From the time I first went vege, and to this day, I purchase sesame seeds (natural, unhulled) by the pound and pan-toast them. I love them on rice, bread, salads and vegetables. Toasted sesame oil is often used in Chinese cooking especially Buddhist temple cookery, to give a definite 'meaty' undertone. Exquisite. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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