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Cooking for the vegan is more or less like cooking for any other ethnic or religious group which restricts
certain things from their diet. A little creativity will win you some big points with your vegan customers, and
furthermore will help conquer a niche market. Vegans often mourn the lack of restaurants that cater to their needs.
Providing some imaginative menu entries for vegan customers will make a happy patron who spreads good word of mouth
to their vegan friends!
Understanding Vegans...
Vegans are vegans for any combinations of these reasons:
_Health_ The vegan diet includes whole grains, beans, soy products, olive oil, fresh fruits and vegetables,
nuts, and fresh spices. Resultantly, they argue, their diet is very high in protein, vitamins, beneficial
monounsaturated fats, and antioxidants and other micronutrients, while being moderate in sodium, calories, and
saturated fats. In addition, they automatically exclude those scary food contamination problems that strike their
meat-eating counterparts, such as e. coli and mad cow disease.
It should be noted that there are essential vitamins missing from the vegan diet, most notably B12, iron, and
calcium, which they must supplement by other means. Vitamin-fortified foods or vitamin supplements are usually
used.
_Ethics_ Probably the biggest concern is for animal cruelty. Vegans typically wish to exclude any and all forms
of ""animal exploitation"" - not just meat and leather, but even the products that you can obtain from an animal
without killing it; because even milking a cow or shearing a sheep for wool is still exploiting an animal for a
human's benefit. This is a belief, when held, which varies in degrees of commitment from philosophy to
religion.
_Environmental Responsibility_ The typical environmental impact talks about methane gas from domesticated
animals being as bad for the ozone layer as emissions from car exhaust, and about how it takes this many acres of
land to sustain one cow where the same acres could more efficiently be used to raise crops, and so on.
_Religion_ While religions which specifically require veganism are rare, several sects of Buddhism still require
strict adherence to non-violence, including killing an animal. Parts of different philosophies, which usually focus
on reducing the impact one's life has on the Earth, also suggest or enforce vegan beliefs.
_Aesthetics_ It can certainly be argued, if you've been inside a slaughterhouse, that the factory-like process
of butchering animals is unpleasant in smell and appearance. Vegans also boast that their food just plain tastes
and looks better. They say that the elimination of salt, grease, animal fat, and so on keeps their palette clean
enough to taste the real essence of fresh fruit and vegetables.
Vegan Cuisine...
One wonders where vegans would be without soybeans. Soy forms a big staple in the vegan diet, in the form of soy
milk, soy meat substitutes, and tofu. It is interesting that vegans work so hard to create so many things out of
soy beans that look, smell, and taste just like the meat and animal products they are trying to eliminate. Anyway,
soy substitutes will be a big part of any large vegan banquet, particularly because soy is so easily fortified with
other vitamins and nutrients.
International cuisine holds many wonders for the vegan dietary spectrum. In particular, Mediterranean, Middle
Eastern, Southern Indian, Thai, Mesoamerican, East Asian, and East African cuisine have a rich tradition of recipes
and dishes which happen to be vegan-friendly. This is due in part to some parts of the world having birthed their
culture in a regional area that doesn't have a handy livestock animal nearby, or just being poor grazing grounds to
start with.
But also, many cultures of the world have a wealth of native crops which lend some interesting flavors to the
cuisine. At least here, you can be a little envious of vegans - some of them are gourmets in their own right, and
can regale you with tales of Indian curry, rice pilaf, almond deserts, salsa, baba ganoush, seven-grain bread, and
various other cultural specialties. Particularly in contrast to the typical North American and European Union
homogenized diets, which sometimes seem to consist entirely of hamburgers and fries or chips, the vegans certainly
get a wider variety of flavors.
A chef can see this as an artistic challenge to be creative within a strict set of rules, and studying some
vegan recipes and the menus at vegan restaurants should give you a host of inspiring ideas.
Meat substitute will usually be some form of tofu. Tofu comes in textures ranging from soft, which is about like
yogurt or jello in consistency, to very firm, which is more like a hard cheese. Tofu is marvelous because it can
take on the taste of virtually anything.
Make tofu bacon by slicing thin strips of hard tofu and frying in a skillet with vegetable oil, adding a couple
drops of liquid smoke flavoring. Or grind hard tofu into a good hamburger and chili substitute. The medium-texture
tofu can be used for a cheese substitute. And soy, itself, can be made into anything from milk to yogurt to ice
cream, some of it tastes as good if not better than its animal exploiting counterpart.
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