I love salads, and I love raw vegetables. I can relish a bowl of mixed spring greens drizzled only in a bit of lemon juice, or add black beans and toss the whole thing with salsa and satisfy my tastes and my ethics. Crudite and a small dish of sunflower seed butter is a fast tasty snack. So for months I only ate my salads and cut raw veggies with the obvious out of the jar dips and dressings like nut butters and citrus juices.
But one day, I went to Sweet Tomatoes with my son and DIL for dinner and drenched my vegetable goodness in real live dressing. My mouth stood up and did a dance, and although I still can eat all things green in a simple garment of lemon or thinned hummus, my quest had begun to re-introduce the excitement of taste layered dips and complex creaminess into my vegan life.
I do love to cook, but I also have a busy modern life, so first I looked on store shelves. Reading ingredients lists on bottles quickly alerted me to the fact that as a vegan, I would either be making my own dips and dressings or finding a more lucrative career so I could afford the organic prepackaged offerings. (It has always amazed and flumoxed me how leaving ingredients out of a product increases the price exponentially.)
What follows are my three favorite dressing that now replace Italian, Ranch, and Russian dressing in my food lexicon. I am still experimenting and trying recipes I find in vegan books. My favorite coleslaw for vegans is found in “Skinny Bitch in the Kitch” so no need to post it here, besides the fact it would be plagiarism, Freedman’s book is readily available at libraries and bookstores (like Changing Hands http://changinghands.com/)and chock full of other tasty vegan treats, so if you want good coleslaw, check her out, http://roryfreedman.com/. A qualifier here is that I am not bought into the whole skinnier is better or prettier paradigm, but her vegan recipes have never failed to please even “meat”atarians.
So here are Sally’s favorite salad dressings, no coleslaw among them (see above) although I LoooovE coleslaw, with a reminder that the quality of ingredients used will determine the quality of the finished product.
Italian Dressing
1/2 cup Bragg’s organic Cider Vinegar
1/4 cup Organic Olive oil
1 T Bragg’s Amino Acids
1 small clove garlic, pressed
1 T Organic Italian seasoning (I mix my own, but it can easily be bought)
Place in glass bottle with lid and shake well, it is best mixed an hour or two before serving. I do store it in the fridge but take it out well before dinner as the oil will coagulate! To make it creamy Italian just place it all in the blender with 8 ozs of tofu, but then it must sit for 8 hours or the the tofu will take over the taste.
Creamy Vegan Ranch
1 3/4 cups cooked (one can) cooked, drained, and rinsed garbanzo beans
1 T tahini
2 tsp. garlic balsamic vineger (the vinegar used makes a huge difference in this recipe, so experiment with flavors, but stick with Balsamic or high quality wine vinegar)
1 tsp Bragg’s Amino Acid (if soy sensitive, omit this. This is the only soy based ingredient, and it does change the flavor by omitting it but it is still good, just salt and pepper to taste)
1 tsp Bragg’s Organic Sprinkles or (what I do)use 1 T fresh parsley with 2 tsp chopped fresh chive and 1 tsp fresh chopped dill for a more “ranch” flavored dressing.
(optional ingredient to get that creamy taste and feel is adding 3 T vegan sour cream substitute).
Vegan Russian Dressing (also an easy tasty sweet potato fry sauce!)
1 cup vegan mayonnaise
1/4 cup organic ketchup
1 T fresh lemon juice
1 tsp horseradish
1 tsp Brag’s amino acids
1 T finely chopped pickles.
Mix together in a jar and let the flavors blend for 2-3 hours then dip or dress!
So fellow vegans and/or foodies go forth and try these homemade condiments and tell me what you think , and maybe even share your own recipes.
Tomorrow some Homesteading updates and a bit about what I am listening to and watching (even if a lot of you may laugh!)
You don’t have to make ‘creamy’ dressings. I’m a meat eater – but I still create some great non-animal ingredient salad dressings. One of my favourite is soy sauce (low salt version) and sesame oil with a sprinkling of Chinese 5 spice powder. Or cider vinegar and walnut oil. If you get the ratio right you get quite a thick dressing.
I will have to try them both, although I admit to preferring Bragg’s Amino Acids to regular soy sauce, I will look for Chinese 5 spice next shopping trip, and I love using walnut oil both in my dressings and in my baking.
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Actually it looks like it did, and I went and checked it out! Big Kudos for Dylan Thomas reference as soon as I open the page!