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"Eat low on the food chain in high style with this eclectic collection of simply sophisticated recipes from Devra Gartenstein. Please your palate and spare the planet in one fell swoop--or one swell soup!"
—Kerry Trueman, cofounder of Eating Liberally
“Just as you don’t have to be Italian to love pasta, you don’t need to be vegan to enjoy these recipes.”
—Taste for Life
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
77 of 77 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic dishes, easy to use,
This review is from: The Accidental Vegan: Vegan Recipes (Paperback)
This cookbook is one of the best vegan cookbooks I have had the pleasure to use. I have been using it consistently for a couple of weeks now. It's not the hugest volume but it's substantial and there is plenty of variety. The author owns her own vegan catering business in Seattle. The recipes span across ethnic cuisines, with plenty of Indian, Afghani, Asian, Italian, and Mexican style dishes. There are appetizers, sides, main dishes, salads, soups, sauces, an entire chapter on seitan, and a very short dessert section. The dessert section is the only section that is pretty sparse. There is a recipe for Baklava and for some rice puddings (which were VERY delicious!). The author does use honey in some of her recipes, which I found surprising. However, if it is a concern for you (as it is for me), I think it easily substituted. The recipes are usually quite simple. The directions are simple (in one or two cases, a step was left out). Most recipes don't use huge long lists of ingredients, but many recipes do incorporate plenty of vegetables, which I think is a plus. It is obvious the author wants you, the reader, to incorporate your own style into these dishes. Most of the ingredients are readily available, although some recipes require more exotic or ethnic ingredients, but nothing you can't find at an Asian or Indian market or at your local health food store or co-op. Ms. Gartenstein lets you know, within the recipe, where to find ingredients that may be unfamiliar. There are some very outstanding dishes in this cookbook. My favorites are the Hot and Sour Soup (the stuff in the restaurant can't compare!!), Pasta with Olives and Artichokes (I could eat this every day!), and Stuffed Shells. The Date and Almond Rice Pudding was heavenly (one of the ingredients is Rose Water). I think The Accidental Vegan will remain one of my all time favorites in a collection of over 60 vegan cookbooks. I highly recommend it!
51 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good for experienced cooks,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Accidental Vegan: Vegan Recipes (Paperback)
As I flipped through this cookbook, my mouth started watering. I wanted to make EVERY one of the recipes, which I think is unusual. Gartenstein includes a variety of ethnic cuisines that appealed to me.
It is not perfect, though. Other reviewers here have noticed the same problems I did, but I have a few to add as well. 1. The directions are deliberately vague. This didn't bother me as I have a pretty good idea what I'm doing already. But not helpful for someone new to cooking or veganism. 2. Some of the directions she does include I didn't like. She does what most cookbooks do as far as throwing the garlic and the onions in at the same time, which to my mind either undercooks the onions or burns the garlic. One recipe (Split-pea soup) she had me throw the onions and garlic into boiling water! I shrugged my shoulders and trusted her - we did not enjoy the taste of boiled onions. An Indian woman once explained to me how to cook a curry paste, and I use the method when starting any pertinent recipe: Saute the onions in a little oil at medium-high ("really well, quite hot and for quite a while, until crisp but not black")(this gets rid of the bad part of the onion taste), then turn to low, add finely grated garlic and ginger, fresh curry powder (store in the freezer) and a little water. Cut tomatoes fine and cook to a paste. She said to pre-cook the veggies, but I don't usually do that, then add fresh coconut milk and cilantro. So that was her recipe and I adapt that cooking method to whatever I'm doing, you know, substitute other dried herbs/spices for the curry, put the fresh herbs in last, etc. So except for that Split Pea Soup, I just ignored her directions and did my own thing. If you are unable to do that, this book is NOT for you. 3. The salt was a problem. Sometimes she called for WAY WAY too much salt, like more than twice as much as I would use. So watch it. Other times she said "salt to taste." Well, that's fine at the end of a recipe, but when I put water and dry beans and garlic in a pot, and I'm supposed to "salt to taste," I am a bit at a loss for what raw bean-water is supposed to taste like. Can't she at least give me a range? 4. The number of servings are wacky. Somehow 1/2 lb. of tofu and a little box of frozen spinach (Palak Tofu) is supposed to feed 6 people, but 2 cups of dried beans and an entire bunch of collard greens feeds 4 (Collard Greens and Black-Eyed Peas). I made both, and the first recipe served about 3 and the second fed 7. Both were terrific. 5. It is annoying to pick up a vegan cookbook that includes honey. 6. There were obvious typos. Did anyone test these recipes or proofread the book? So, if you have to ignore the honey, the salt, the serving sizes, and the directions, what good is this book? Well, I plan to buy this book for the fresh ingredients. No processed food or cheesy substitutes here. This is healthy whole food. I'm not sure I follow the reviewer who said this was rabbit food and mostly grains - how can the recipes be both? I have found lots of bean and tofu recipes, and I love how much she uses leafy cooking greens - I don't call a recipe rabbit food when greens are paired with other protein powerhouses, but maybe that reviewer just doesn't like greens. I happened to pick this book up at the library in the fall when the greens are so abundant, and I could make something totally different with them every day. So there you have it. If you have the experience to ignore a good part of what she says, and you are looking for lowfat whole food with a variety of pleasing tastes, you may like this book as much as I do.
63 of 68 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Basic but delicious,
By "jpbooksnstuff" (New York, New York United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Accidental Vegan: Vegan Recipes (Paperback)
The recipes contained in this cookbook are mostly very basic blueprints. The author did this on purpose, and it does work rather well. I love this cookbook.Pros: * Many recipes are low-fat Acorn Squash with Herbs Cons: * MAJOR PROBLEM: some of the recipes contain honey. Even though this is easily substituted, this is unacceptable for a vegan cookbook. For this reason, I would not give this book as a gift to anyone who was not vegan unless they understood that vegans do not consume honey. I wouldn't want them to make me a recipe with honey in it. All in all, it's a great cookbook and it deserves a place on your bookshelf. PS: Here's a tip on some of her recipes, specifically the dals. Instead of boiling the spices with the other ingredients, sautee olive oil in a nonstick pan, add onion and garlic with the spices and cook for 5 minutes. Add at the end of the cooking instead of the beginning. This results in a much spicer, fuller flavor.
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