/* Expandable post summary: */ Queer Vegan Kitchen: December 2009

Sunday, December 13, 2009

FEAST

I am disgusted that we annually minimize the continuing genocide against indigenous people with a celebratory feast that slaughters literally millions of turkeys (the National Turkey Federation estimates that 45 million were killed in the 2009 thanksgiving season alone). The myth of Thanksgiving is, by design, a tool to justify early European imperialism in North America, and excuse its atrocities.

I did, however, have a feast on thanksgiving day; it was delicious and considering that everyone there understood the implications of the holiday, an all vegan thanksgiving was kind of subversive. Now that its been a month and finals are over, I'mma finally post the photos.



Our theme was things shaped like other things. We had a full spread:
Cock Roast (made the night before, reheated the day of the Feast)
Sour Dough Stuffing (prepped the night before, baked the day of)
Mashed 'Tater Casserole (prepped the night before, baked the day of)
Rainbow Chard (day of)
Heart Biscuits (night before, reheated with roast)
Gravy (day of)
Cranberry Sauce (day of)
PIE! not pictured above; it'll get its own entry later

Recipes down here
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Hmmm... that thing in the middle looks kind of like a...



Cock-Roast (AKA Seitan's Penis)!
This does require a novelty penis pan, but I discovered that the recipe fit into one that was just lying around my co-op. I fudged a recipe from Bryanna's Vegan Feasts, it takes awhile so it might be a good idea to prepare it the day before your feast.

You will need:
2 c.gluten flour
1/2 c. bean flour (I blend about 2/3 a cup red lentils in my blender until it is a very fine powder, but you can use soy or chickpea(besan) flour with good results)
1/2 c. nutritional yeast flakes
2 tsp. onion powder
2 tsp. garlic granules (or more)
1tsp. pepper
12 oz. firm tofu (if you can't do soy 1 cup of cooked, mashed beans will work)
1 and 1/2 c. water
3 T. soy sauce (a little salt water, marmite dissolved in a bit of water, or diluted vegan Worcestershire sauce all work fine)
1 T. olive oil
  1. In a blender or food processor blend your tofu (or whatever) with the other wet ingredients until very smooth. I use a little more oil than a Tablespoon of oil and I think it gives the roast more character.
  2. Mix the dry ingredients well in a large bowl, or standing mixer with a dough hook.
  3. Add in the dry ingredients and mix until a dough-ball forms. Let it rest for about ten minutes.
  4. Knead for about 10 minutes, let it rest for a bit, then knead for another ten minutes. This is a lot of work to do by hand, but it pays off in the roasts texture.

  5. Let it rest for about an hour and prepare a basting broth

  6. Basting Broth (you can eyeball the spices, but be sparing with turmeric):
    2 cups hot water
    1/4 cup nutritional yeast flakes
    1/2 Tbs onion powder
    1/2 Tbs sea salt
    1 tsp sweetener (I use sucranat you can use maple syrup, but use the real stuff and maybe a tablespoon
    1 tsp garlic granules or powder
    1/2 tsp black pepper
    1/2 tsp dried thyme
    1/2 tsp finely crumbled dried sage (less if it's powder)
    1/2 tsp oregano
    1/2 tsp paprika
    1/2 tsp turmeric
    2 T. olive oil
    4 cloves garlic, crushed

  7. preheat your oven to 325 degrees
  8. Pinch your dough ball into a rough cock-and-balls shape and press it into your oiled novelty pan. A loaf pan will work, but you might consider splitting it in half and using two loaf pans; Bryanna also talks about using an oval clay cooker, but I've never tried.
  9. Try to get as much basting broth on the cock as possible, without spilling to much on the sides of the pan, and put it in the oven for about 4 hours, basting heavily every 1/2 hour or so. If you're using a loaf pan, just pour the basting broth in, and there's no need to reapply.
  10. If you have a novelty mold, flip out your roast onto a lightly oiled cookie sheet, baste heavily and put that bad boy back in for about another 2 hours, basting regularly. If you're using a loaf pan, just flip it.
  11. When its a little lighter than the one pictured below, it is done.

Delicious. If you make it the night before, it only takes about 15-20 minutes at 350 to reheat.

Sourdough Stuffing

Stuffing is self explanatory: toast the bread, saute the vegetables, combine and bake. It practically makes itself but breaking it down can't hurt.
You need:
4 carrots
4 stalks of celery
1 small onion
1/2-2/3 loaf sour dough (best if its a bit stale, bakery dumpsters often have a lot of this)
1 cup water, broth, or mushroom soaking liquid (from rehydrating dried mushrooms)
2 tsp sage
2 tsp garlic granules
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp coriander
1/2 tsp allspice
olive oil for toasting and sauteing
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees
  2. Cube the bread, smaller is generally better, but its definitely a personal taste thing.
  3. Toss cubes on a cookie sheet with olive oil, and maybe a bit of salt and pepper.
  4. Toast until golden, stirring regularly, no more than 30 minutes.
  5. While your bread is toasting, dice your vegetables.
  6. In a large sauce pan, saute the onions with the salt and pepper, until they start to become translucent. (be sure to remove your bread from the oven)
  7. Add your carrots, and as they get to temperature add the celery.
  8. When your celery gets to temperature, add your other spices,
  9. When your mirepoix (vegetable mix) starts to become a bit tender, add the broth and stir until the broth is hot.
  10. Combine everything in a mixing bowl and toss to spread the juices around.
  11. Put it in a greased casserole, and bake for about 45 minutes at 350.
Do not expect leftovers

Mashed 'Tater Casserole
Or Casserole des Pommes de Terre au Rosemarin avec Duxelles Vegetalienne
Mashed potatoes are delicious, but dull; everyone loves them, but people are afraid of change and won't dare to tamper with tradition. Fuck that.

For the vegan Duxelles:
~1 pound of mushrooms
4-6 shallots
1 medium onion
5-6 cloves of garlic
2 tsp dry rosemary, measured then crushed (or 1 Tbl fresh rosemary, chopped)
1 tsp oregano
1 tsp sage
salt and pepper
~2 Tbl olive oil

For the 'Taters
~3-5 pounds potatoes
a handfull of rosemary
salt and pepper to taste
1/4 cup olive oil... don't judge me.
  1. Set a large pot of salted water on to boil, not too salty, you might want to use the cooking liquid.
  2. Preheat your oven to 375.
  3. Chop the potatoes into course chunks, and when the water boils drop 'em in.
  4. While yur 'taters are a-cookin', chop the onions, mushrooms, and shallots fine.
  5. In a medium saucepan heat some oil, then saute the shallots and onions with a bit of salt and pepper until they become transluscent. (remember to keep testing your 'taters for mashability)
  6. Add in your garlic, mushrooms and herbs, and continue to saute until the mushrooms are tender.
  7. Drain your 'taters, reserve liquid for gravy (if you wanna). Mash 'em with a little oil, and herbs. They're a lot thicker than your standard mashed taters, it's a good thing.
  8. Grease a 3 quart casserole (~13" x 9" x 2"), and put down a thick-ish (~.25"-.5") layer of 'tater, spread evenly.
  9. Cover that evenly with your duxelle (the shallot-mushroom-onion stuff)
  10. Repeat this process until the casserole is filled, make sure you've enough for a layer of 'tater on top.
  11. Drizzle the top with a little olive oil, or place a few chunks of coconut oil if you're feeling really decadent.
  12. Bake for about 45 minutes, or until the top has nice hints of gold.

Mashed potatoes don't know what they're missing.

Rainbow Chard
The queerest vegetable!

You need:
2 bunches of rainbow chard
6-12 cloves of garlic
1 large or 2 medium onions
1 tsp of sugar
a generous splash (~3 Tbl) of vinegar (apple cider or balsamic)
2 Tbl olive oil
salt and pepper
  1. Chop your onions and your chard into bite-sized bits. I separate the stems from the leaves 'cause they take a little longer to cook.
  2. In a medium-to-large-ish fry pan or wok, saute the onions in the olive oil with some salt and pepper.
  3. When the onions start to get translucent, add the chard stems and garlic.
  4. When those are to temperature, add your leaves, sugar and vinegar. Stir, cover, and turn the heat down to medium-low.
  5. Continue steaming for 5-10 more minutes, stirring fairly often. When the leaves start to get bright green, poor the pan's contents into a serving unit you can cover.
Heart-Shaped Biscuits
I used my general biscuit recipe, but I didn't have any coconut mylk on-hand so I used 1/4 cup hazlenut butter dissolved in 1 1/4 cups water (I also used more baking soda, I think ours gets less potent 'cause it sits out). I happened to have a heart-shaped cookie-cutter on hand, so I rolled out the dough roughly (if you mess with it too much it gets chewy, and hard) to about 3/4" thick and wiggled the cutter a little as I pressed so the sides wouldn't get all pinched together.

Food that is shaped like other things just tastes better.

Gravy

I doubled my gravy recipe, but I used olive oil and potato cooking liquid in place of water, which lends nutrition and nuance.

Cranberry Sauce
Like stuffing it practically makes itself; I like the stuff in a jar because it is novel, retro, and absurd, but tastewise, it can never compare to the homemade stuff; a hint of lemon and love make all the difference. Jesus I sound like fuckin' Martha Stewart... it's a good thing.

You Need:
1 cup some kind of juice (orange works great, water is fine, but you might want more sugar)
1 cup sucanat (or sweetener of your choice)
1 pound cranberries
a little cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and/or cloves
  1. Put all your ingredients in a pot, bring it to a boil, reduce it to a simmer.
  2. Let it simmer until all of the berries have exploded.
  3. Pour into a mold and allow it to cool before serving.