Where's my Vegans at? what are you guys eating?

CraigShift
CraigShift Posts: 69 Member
edited November 12 in Food and Nutrition
Where are you Vegans hiding out at? What are you eating. ?
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Replies

  • fancygirl7312
    fancygirl7312 Posts: 43 Member
    Help me lol.... I love Vegan
  • CraigShift
    CraigShift Posts: 69 Member
    There's One!!! Lets see more Friend me if you like , interested in seeing what others are eating .
  • Laurend224
    Laurend224 Posts: 1,748 Member
    Hi there Craig! You already know what I eat. ;)ktgp008cll6z.jpg
  • RodaRose
    RodaRose Posts: 9,562 Member
    Vegetarian here most of the time. 'Sent you a friend request.
  • CraigShift
    CraigShift Posts: 69 Member
    Hi Lauren, Hi RodaRose!
  • Lezavargas
    Lezavargas Posts: 223 Member
    Theres so many haters on these posts that most dont come outta the woodwork ;)
  • Laurend224
    Laurend224 Posts: 1,748 Member
    Lezavargas wrote: »
    Theres so many haters on these posts that most dont come outta the woodwork ;)

    Eh, they pretty much leave the ethical vegans alone, as long as they aren't preachy. ;)
  • Codilee87
    Codilee87 Posts: 509 Member
    I'm not vegan (or even vegetarian) but I still experiment with vegan recipes and meals. I get most of my ideas from pinterest - they have a lot of options. Here's a recipe for vegan sandwich bread:


    Ingredients:

    1 cup boiling water
    1 cup old-fashioned whole rolled oats (not quick cook or instant)
    2 cups all-purpose flour (bread flour may be used and will create a heartier, chewier bread)
    1/4 cup water (from the tap, not hot and not cold)
    2 to 3 tablespoons canola or vegetable oil
    2 tablespoons light brown sugar, packed
    2 1/4 teaspoons instant dry yeast (one 1/4-ounce packet, I use Red Star Platinum)
    pinch salt, optional and to taste
    Directions:

    In a small bowl, pour boiling water over oatmeal, stir to combine. Set aside and let cool until temperature reaches about 130F, about 15 minutes. (I use Red Star Platinum Yeast which necessitates this temperature; allow mixture to cool to the ~100F range for other types of instant dry yeast, or to package directions).

    To the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook (or a large mixing bowl and knead by hand for about 10 minutes), combine flour, 1/4 cup water, oil, brown sugar, instant dry yeast, and cooled oatmeal. Knead for 5 to 7 minutes on low speed, or until a moist, shaggy dough forms. The dough is fairly moist and sticky, but resist the temptation to add additional flour, unless it's so moist that it won't combine. Conversely, if it's too dry, add up to one-quarter cup water. Erring on the side of too moist is always preferable to dry in bread-making.

    After kneading, turn the dough out into a large, greased bowl, cover with plasticwrap, and let it rise in a warm, draft-free place for about 90 minutes, or until doubled in size. Create a warm environment by preheating your oven for 1 to 2 minutes to 400F, then shutting it off. This creates a 90F-ish warm spot. Slide the bowl in and wait while the yeast works. Just make sure your oven is off.

    After the dough has doubled, punch it down, turn it out onto a floured surface or Silpat and knead it for about 3 minutes. With your fingers, shape it into a 10-inch by 6-inch rectangle, just eyeball it. The long side should be slightly longer than the baking pan. Then, fold the short sides in so that dough is about 8 inches in length. Roll to form a tight cylinder. There's not much to roll, about 3 turns. Optionally, when rolling, sprinkle with cinnamon, nutmeg, ground ginger. Or go savory with dill, chives, or thyme.

    Spray an 8-by-4-inch loaf pan with floured cooking spray (or grease and flour the pan) and place the cylinder in the pan, seam side down. Cover with plasticwrap, and allow dough to rise in a warm, draft-free place until doubled, about 60 to 75 minutes.

    In the last minutes of rising, preheat oven to 350F. (If you were using your oven as a warm, draft-free place for rising, take bread out while oven preheats). Bake for about 30 minutes or until domed, golden, and puffy. When tapped, it should sound hollow. The internal temperature should reach 210F. Let bread cool in pan for 5 to 10 minutes before turning out onto a wire rack to cool completely before slicing.

    I store bread by wrapping a fully cooled loaf in plasticwrap, and place it inside a gallon-size Ziplock, where it stays fresh for about 5 days.

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  • ashes1017
    ashes1017 Posts: 11 Member
    Vegetarian for 4 years... working on being vegan. I've been on and off vegan for those 4 years but I always fail when we go out to eat. I'm gonna do it this time. I'm in it or the ethical reasons.... so I have to keep reminding myself why I'm doing it.
  • Rhumax67
    Rhumax67 Posts: 162 Member
    Join these groups: Happy Herbivores & Team Vegan. Nice people, no abuse. :)
  • CraigShift
    CraigShift Posts: 69 Member
    Codilee, That bread recipe looks good, I will try it out. Thanks.
  • CraigShift
    CraigShift Posts: 69 Member
    Ashes, you can DO IT. I f I can do it anyone can do it. There are a few movies that just really opened my eyes . First one was forks over knives, cause I did the lifestyle change for health, then my eyes really opened when I saw most of Earthlings on youtube. I could not watch it all and it did not take the whole movie to know better and for me to take off the blinders and forget the crap I was told at a young age growing up by parents and by the lobbyist .
  • Vegan for 5 years. If I need inspiration I use ohsheglows.com for ideas... I've been vegan long enough to work out a meal with what's on hand most days though.
  • blahblahfood
    blahblahfood Posts: 14 Member
    I've recently started eating vegan but not sure if I can keep it up. I've been having trouble getting enough calories a day without feeling like I'm over eating. I'm thinking of switching to vegetarian just so I can add eggs and cheese for added calories and proteins. I switched for ethical and health reasons any tips to add calories but not food volume?
  • Laurend224
    Laurend224 Posts: 1,748 Member
    Yes. Add oils, hummus, nut butters, avocado, and grain products. There is no reason you shouldn't be able to meet your caloric needs on a vegan diet.
    For proteins, add beans, tofu, seitan, tempeh, tvp, meat analogs and possibly a good quality vegan protein powder. Soy milk also has a protein profile more comparable to cow milk.

    If being vegan is what you truly want to do, you can make it work!

    Cheers,
    Lauren

  • healthygal95
    healthygal95 Posts: 23 Member
    Out pops a vegan! :) It's totally easy to eat enough calories. Everything Lauren said, and with nuts and seeds. If you like smoothies, they are an easy way to up calories, as is drinking soy milk.
  • CraigShift
    CraigShift Posts: 69 Member
    Nuts are good fats, coconut meat good oils = good fats , Chickpeas excellent
  • NicoleS9
    NicoleS9 Posts: 62 Member
    I'm not Vegan but I love Vegans & my husband is vegetarian. Can I still join the party?
    I try to get most of my protein needs met through heAlthy plant based proteins, so I'm always looking for more suggestions there.
  • Hi everyone looking for some support in thing new journey, started this last new down 45 have 40 more to go only vegan in the house have any suggests to how to plan Protein pack day
  • pieceofperu
    pieceofperu Posts: 4 Member
    Hi. Vegan over here too
  • veganbettie
    veganbettie Posts: 701 Member
    meeeeee almost 8 years. imagine that.
  • neutralmente
    neutralmente Posts: 5
    edited February 2015
    I've been trying to eat more vegetarian for ethical reasons, but my body doesn't tolerate the extra carbohydrates very well. I have pretty bad insulin resistance, even with exercise. My doctor wants me to eat a small carb & protein (10-20 grams) meal every 3 hours. Do any of you manage a higher protein vegetarian/vegan diet? I'd love ideas.
  • PeachyCarol
    PeachyCarol Posts: 8,029 Member
    edited February 2015
    I've been trying to eat more vegetarian for ethical reasons, but my body doesn't tolerate the extra carbohydrates very well. I have pretty bad insulin resistance, even with exercise. My doctor wants me to eat a small carb & protein (10-20 grams) meal every 3 hours. Do any of you manage a higher protein vegetarian/vegan diet? I'd love ideas.

    I'm a higher protein veggie. I'd probably ethically prefer to be vegan, but my body needs the balance of moderate carbs and higher protein. I'm not sure how I'd do that without dairy and eggs. I also have celiac disease, and that would cut out some good sources of vegan protein.

  • swole_elsa
    swole_elsa Posts: 247 Member
    edited February 2015
    Vegan here. Heyoooo.

    Question is, what don't I eat?
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    ETA it's for ethical reasons. Veganism is not a diet. It is a way of living that excludes animal products and exploitation from all aspects of life, not just your diet. If you're just doing it for diet it's not vegan, it's "plant-based." Not one for labels but I just thought I'd clear up some confusion ;)
  • VeggieStef
    VeggieStef Posts: 54 Member
    Smoothie for breakfast with some Sun Warrior protein has been helping me stay full until lunchtime. I have been vegan a few years and vegetarian 10 years in May. I am not having a hard time finding foods to eat but I cook a lot. Also am lucky to work near several good vegan friendly places. Happy to see so many vegans here :)
  • leecha2014
    leecha2014 Posts: 385 Member
    Hi there, I've been a vegetarian for many years and a vegan for 1.5 yr, love it no looking back. Looking for vegan friends with open diaries to get ideas! Pls sent me friend request, I also cook a lot and might have something for you
  • jesjesjesjes2
    jesjesjesjes2 Posts: 2 Member
    edited February 2015
    Been vegan for years. Hi! Welcome to friend me. Open diary. I'm back on mfp to drop the last of my baby weight. (Have a 6 month old) :)
  • CraigShift
    CraigShift Posts: 69 Member
    Good to see so many vegans and people who want to eat plant based and also are aware of ethical treatment of animals.
  • stephenmakin1
    stephenmakin1 Posts: 17 Member
    Another vegan here: mainly ethical. I love the cookbook Veganomicon, so mostly cook from that. About to start on 'Vegan Eats World' by same author.

    Feel free to send a friend request.
  • SoulOfRusalka
    SoulOfRusalka Posts: 1,201 Member
    Hi! Ethical and environmental reasons here (plus milk is weird. It's just... why does anyone drink that.) I might also have been a little influenced by Arch Enemy >.>
    And you can get more than enough calories on a vegan diet! Ahem, chocolate granola.
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