yum_burnt_toast

joined 1 year ago

thanks! we had a warm spell and i needed something that required minimal cooking

[–] yum_burnt_toast@reddthat.com 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

thats what i usually call it but i live in a city with a significant vietnamese population and ive seen it listed as salad rolls, summer rolls, and hand rolls in english on the menus

my pleasure! it is fun for a group gathering but i would definitely recommend a decent sized table to fit a water bowl for hydrating the wraps.

 

spring roll? summer roll? salad roll? hand roll? ive seen different variations on the name, but the package says banh trang so i suppose thats what they are. made these as a roll-your-own at the table, which made for a good time for my preschooler.

 

i wasnt able to fit the other bits in the photo, but i served it with rice, date and walnut ssamjang, pickled lobak, and a (store bought) vegan kimchi

[–] yum_burnt_toast@reddthat.com 3 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

oh there was pita and aubergine just not in the photo. i also intended to make a tzatziki but the cashew yogurt had gone off. i had used to stuff the pita when i was single, but as a family we stack the ingredients on triangles, mostly so my four year old is less focused on why she doesnt have the same amount of pita as everyone else.

[–] yum_burnt_toast@reddthat.com 4 points 3 weeks ago

after emptying the whole jar, i knew there was no turning back.

 
[–] yum_burnt_toast@reddthat.com 2 points 3 weeks ago

haha, thats close to the truth. its about a half bowl above the rim

 

carrot, courgette, spinach, soy glazed shiitake, quick pickled cucumber, vegan kimchi, and gochujang sauce. i promise rice is at the bottom.

[–] yum_burnt_toast@reddthat.com 1 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

thanks! ive been enjoying sharing here as cooking and the vegan diet have become increasingly important parts of my life, and as ive been in a bit of a rut lately it is nice to have a creative outlet.

i always have polenta in the pantry and love cooking with it, especially during the colder months. i like how much it expands, i usually cook it at a 4:1 liquid to polenta ratio but i have to be careful how much i make so we dont have a weeks worth in the refrigerator.

[–] yum_burnt_toast@reddthat.com 2 points 3 weeks ago

ah, sorry for phrasing, i made a pizza at home with my wife last week and had made a tomato sauce with garlic and oregano.

 

had some leftover ingredients to use up, and i needed a cheap meal, so i made some polenta with soymilk and tossed some sauteed crimini mushrooms in pizza sauce.

[–] yum_burnt_toast@reddthat.com 4 points 4 weeks ago

looks great! and yea, that miyokos is pretty good. i went to a pizza party at a friend's with a wood fired oven, it went over pretty well with the non-vegans.

[–] yum_burnt_toast@reddthat.com 8 points 1 month ago (1 children)

sure!

the mushroom topping is chopped oyster mushroom, sauteed until quite brown and slightly crispy, to which i added the sliced whites of six scallions until softened, and about a tablespoon each of yellow miso and bean sauce (chile bean sauce/paste/doubanjiang if you want spice, but as my meal plan includes a pre-schooler i used a bean sauce without chiles and added chile oil to the finished soup).

the tare was two tablespoons of shiitake mushroom powder, between a third and a half cup of sesame paste, a generous tablespoon of yellow miso, a standard tablespoon of dark soy sauce, and as much grated garlic and ginger as i thought my family would tolerate, which amounted to about 4 garlic cloves and a half thumb of ginger. i added it all to a sautee pan thinned out with some sesame oil and a bit of coconut sugar and warmed just enough to melt the sugar, hydrate the mushroom powder, and mellow out the raw garlic/ginger flavors.

when ready to put together, its just broth (tare + soymilk), noodles, mushrooms, cucumber, and scallion greens. you can either mix the broth per bowl or do it all together. there is a local tofu company near me that makes a soymilk (labeled soybean juice) which is more savory in flavor that lends well to the broth, but any soymilk would be fine. the picture was slightly paler than i would have liked, so make sure to taste until its where you like it. for the amount i made it would be about 1.5 litres. if youre cool with msg that would make a good addition to the broth as well.

[–] yum_burnt_toast@reddthat.com 6 points 1 month ago (1 children)

yea pretty much! it is a japanese version of dan dan noodles but with a sesame-heavy broth. there is a great local tofu producer near me which sells soy milk that definitely has a savory almost funkiness, and i use that to thin out a fairly strong paste of miso, sesame paste, dark soy sauce, ginger, and garlic. a nice make ahead dish for a hot day!

 
[–] yum_burnt_toast@reddthat.com 4 points 1 month ago

damn, hearing it from someone else hits different. sometimes i yearn for the closeness of intimate friendships but the anxiety at the vulnerability of expressing a genuinely held opinion wont let me do anything else

 
 

i like making a bento style lunch with 4-5 different dishes. this week i tried a french theme.

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