Posts Tagged ‘vegan’

Guest Post at Twenty-Something Travel

December 22nd, 2009
Photo: Morning Theft

Photo: Morning Theft

Stephanie over at Twenty-Something Travel  has posted my guest post: Top 5 Tips for Eating Vegan on the Road .

I lay out my best tips for eating consciously and cheaply on the road.

Eating vegan down here in Argentina has been an adventure. I´ve thankfully found some great options and gotten creative. (Specific veg suggestions for Argentina to come.)

Also to come-stories from horseback riding in the Patagonian countryside and freaking out trekking on one of the only advancing glaciers in the world, Perito Moreno.

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Why We Should Celebrate the Day After Halloween

November 1st, 2009

HalloweenHopefully everyone enjoyed their debaucherous Halloweens yesterday. I was a lazy bones and didn’t dress up this year. So, let’s just say I dressed up and pretend that last year’s costume, pictured on the right, is from this year. Sweet. (You can see a bit of Mr. Gnome’s ”Joe the Plumber” get-up from last year.)

Today is also cause for more celebration-it’s World Vegan Day!

So those of you maybe feeling a bit hungover from the alcohol and/or the sugar, I send you my sympathies. Go have a nice “couch day”. Don’t want to make you queasy or anything.

Also know that while I’m super passionate about veganism,  I don’t believe in pushing beliefs down people’s throats, regardless of what they are: drinking vs. non-drinking (props to my girl Candice for this article ), vegetarian vs. non-vegetarian, religious vs. non-religious).

Given the disclaimer above, feel free to read or not read the reasons why being a vegetarian/vegan rocks:

Environmental aspect:

  1. According to the EPA, that icky runoff from factory farms pollutes our rivers and lakes more than all industrial pollution sources combined.
  2. More than 1/3 of all the raw sources and fossil fuels we use in the US are utilized to raise animals for food.
  3. It takes about 300 gallons of water a day to produce a vegetarian-based diet. It takes about 4,000 gallons of water a day to produce a typical meat-based diet.
  4. As you’ve maybe read before on this blog, the United Nations found that the meat industry produces more greenhouse gases than all the SUVs, cars, trucks, planes, and ships combined.

Animal rights:

As the old adage goes “out of sight, out of mind”…I won’t get into all the unpleasant details, but animals raised for food are generally treated atrociously. For me, learning about the meat industry was perhaps the biggest reason for turning veg. I feel like I help raise the positive vibes in the world by doing something to alleviate some of the omnipresent suffering. And I don’t think that statement is as idealistic as it seems. I truly believe we all are interconnected. An honest smile towards someone has the ability to slightly better hundreds, thousands, and millions of people’s lives. One meal, day, week, year, or lifetime without meat impacts the world significantly.

 Health:

The book, “The China Study”  best promotes the healthiness of a vegan diet. The project surveyed the death rates for 12 different kinds of cancer in 2400 counties and 880 million of their citizens over the course of twenty years. The study, conducted jointly by Cornell University, Oxford University, and the Chinese Academy of Preventive Medicine, was spearheaded by T. Colin Campbell, Ph.D, who, himself, grew up eating a heavy meat-based diet on a dairy farm in the South.

After the twenty years of research, Cambell was surprised by the results, finding that: 

  1. Health is primarily based on the foods we eat and that “there are virtually no nutrients in animal-based foods that are not better provided by plants”.
  2. A plant-based diet can substantially control the adverse effects of noxious chemicals, play a critical role in determining which genes, good and bad, are expressed, prevent disease in its early stages and halt or reverse it in its later stages, and create health in all areas of our existence. (The fact that a vegan diet can reverse disease blew my mind.)

Taste:

Vegan cuisine has come a long way. Nowadays, there is a vegan alternative for almost any kind of food. Even my little North Carolina town has a pizza place  that serves wood-fired vegan cheese pizza. I am addicted to big ole’ chocolate chip cookies by the Alternative Baking Company , and I can still eat my comfort food: Bagels with (soy) cream cheese.

There is even a vegan foodie culture starting to develop. (Did anyone else see last week’s Top Chef  where Natalie Portman asked the chefs to create veg dishes?) 

Tal Ronnen, a graduate of the Natural Gourmet Institute and teacher at Le Cordon Bleu, is a converted vegan who just released a cookbook: “The Conscious Chef”.  I love that top-notch chefs are creating gourmet vegan food. Here’s a little of his bio:

“Chef Tal Ronnen is one of the most celebrated vegan chefs working today. In the spring of 2008, he became known nationwide as the chef who prepared vegan meals for Oprah Winfrey’s 21-day vegan cleanse. He has since catapulted to fame, catering Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi’s vegan wedding, Arianna Huffington’s party at the Democratic National Convention, and the first vegan dinner at the U.S. Senate.”

Alicia Silverstone also has a new cookbook out called “The Kind Diet: A Simple Guide to Feeling Great, Losing Weight, and Saving the Planet” . Now, I didn’t know Alicia Silverstone was a cook, but who cares. Loved her in Clueless. 

Hopefully this gives us all a little food for thought. (Teehee-pun intended). I find that, as a more recent convert to veganism, it helps me a lot to read literature like this and renew my reasons for doing what I’m doing. Happy World Vegan Day!

 

I would love to hear from you guys. Have you considered going vegetarian/vegan? Are you already veg? Never will be veg?

 

text/photo: Nancy Harder

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A Vegan Feast On The Road

October 13th, 2009

 

Boba House

On the way to our meditation retreat , Mr. Gnome and I stopped in Greensboro, NC. We broke up the 7 hour drive by chowing down at one of our favorite vegetarian restaurants, Boba House, on Tate Street.

I’ve been vegan now for about 4 months and have loved it. (No really! I see your skeptical eyebrow raised.) I flirted with vegetarianism in the past, even being vegetarian for about a year in high-school. I finally decided to go vegan after doing some summer reading with books like The China Study , Becoming Vegan , magazines like Veg News , blogs like Christine Kane , and websites like Go Veg .

What were my main reasons for going veg?

1. It’s the number 1 thing that I can do for the environment. (For instance, the meat industry produces more greenhouse gases than all the SUVs, cars, planes, and ships combined.)

2. I can’t prevent all the atrocities in the world from happening. I can do my part to not participate in any animal or human suffering associated with the meat or dairy industry. It’s also a philosophy of yoga, ahimsa: non-harming.

3. It’s healthy. My body has felt so much healthier in the last few months. It’s not even weight-related. (I don’t own a scale, so I wouldn’t even know if I had lost weight. Although, I’ve noticed my clothes have slightly loosened.) The main thing I’ve noticed is a feeling of “lightness” and increased energy.

4. It tastes good. Nowadays, there is some great vegan food out there. It’s not just tofu and sprouts anymore. Some examples? Alternative Baking Company makes deliiicious chocolate chip cookies. Tofutti  makes a cream cheese and sour cream alternative. We even have a pizza joint in town that offers their yummy wood-fired pizza with vegan cheese. Contrary to my doubts, I haven’t even craved anything that couldn’t be satisfied with a vegan alternative.

Anywhoozers…drool over these (completely) vegan dishes from Boba House. (And humor my experiments with the f-stop on my camera.)

Mixed greens with a ginger vinaigrette. (So light and fresh.)

Salad

  

Satay Skewers: Spicy coconut marinated ”chicken” (seitan), sprinkled with sesame seeds. (I don’t know what spices they use, but my mouth is watering just looking at this photo.)

 Skewers

 

 Boba Pad Thai: Flat rice noodles stir-fried with mixed vegetablese and your choice of “chicken” (again, seitan) with a crispy spring roll. (This is quintessential comfort food. I could eat this Boba House version a couple of times a week.)

 Pad Thai

 

 I snuck a picture of Mr. Gnome’s dish, Basil “Beef”: “Beef” (seitan, again) sauteed in a chili-garlic sauce with basil leaves, onion, and bell peppers. (I’m surprised I even got a picture in time; Mr. Gnome scarfed this down.)

 Beef and Basil

 

 I also left with a lychee-flavored Bubble Tea with tapioca pearls. (Kind of like a vegan tea milkshake. The pearls are chewy; lychee is a flavor unto itself. Ignore the discarded cigarette butts.)

 Boba Tea

 

 

Anyone else have any favorite vegan dishes/restaurant suggestions?

 

text/photos: Nancy Harder

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The Sounds of Silence

October 5th, 2009

Calm

My head is reverberating with stillness after returning from a four day silent meditation/yoga retreat last night. The world feels fresh and my senses sensitive. I’m keeping the quiet around me, bundled like a flannel blanket.

The retreat, led by Susan Grant and Cindy Dollar , was held at the Southern Dharma Center.

During this, my first meditation retreat, I experienced the present in a profound way. I also deepened my yoga and meditation practice.

Being silent for four days was its own teacher. (This from the chick who has been known to type on the computer, talk on the cell, watch tv, and eat dinner all at the same time.)  Not only did the 25 participants or so observe “noble silence”, but eye contact was discouraged to limit visual communication. A slow pace was encouraged in everything from eating all the delicious vegan food to walking in the woods.

After getting uncomfortable and a little angry with the silence, it began to teach me. As did the 3 hours or so of meditation sitting each day.

Some of my favorite phrases the teachers gave us at the retreat?

*Every moment is an opportunity for mindfulness.

*Thoughts are not facts, even if they say they are.

*Ask for what you want, accept what you get.

*How you do anything is how you do everything.

May all of you experience ease, calm and moments of mindfulness today :)

text: Nancy Harder, photo: dan

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