Help us go vegetarian!

Anonymous
Also check out Cookie + Kate, http://cookieandkate.com/. She has some great recipes on her site.
Anonymous
I was veggie for years and loved - and still love - portobello mushrooms as a sub for burger patties and to add a kind of meaty feel to lasagna and other dishes.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Check out the moosewood cookbooks. My favorite.


Moosewood' Simple Suppers is excellent. Vegetarian and fish.
Anonymous
We also eat more vegetarian meals, and one thing I do is try to figure out how to substitute the chicken/beef with beans or lentils.

For instance, instead of Sloppy Joe's we make Sloppy Split Peas; probably the same recipe but with split peas instead of ground beef (my husband doesn't eat ground meat, so I found a lentil recipe and use that).

Think about the texture of the beans when you're cooking. We put dried beans in a crockpot with a bay leaf and a lot of water and let it cook. Then I package up the beans in 1-2 cup containers for the freezer. Black beans are more tough (they don't fall apart), while pinto and roman beans are very creamy.

Good luck!
Anonymous
I was vegetarian for about two years. I agree with moving away from the idea of mains and sides, and get a vegetarian cookbook.

I ate a lot of hummus, beans, salad, yogurt. I love squash and did a squash curry soup and butternut squash tahini dip. I don't have many more ideas right now, but I suggest opening an Instagram account if you don't have one and following some vegetarian pages. So many accounts post full recipes with the pictures-- actually seeing the food can be great motivation, and there's so much variety!
Anonymous
Start learning to make homemade Indian food, there is a lot of vegetarian options to choose from.

Baingan Bharta
http://indianfood.about.com/od/vegetarianrecipes/r/bainganbharta2.htm

Vegetable Biriyani
http://www.sanjeevkapoor.com/recipe/Vegetable-Biryani-KhaanaKhazana.html

Cabbage Thoran
http://www.vegrecipesofindia.com/cabbage-thoran/

There are much more Indian vegetarian dishes out there. Plus India is a diverse country so each region will have it's own specialties. That is why Keralite, Bengali, Punjabi, Gujarati and Rajasthani food are all very different from each other.
Anonymous
I'm not vegetarian, but I found this broadcast interesting:
http://thekojonnamdishow.org/shows/2014-09-17/putting-vegan-dishes-menu
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