AJB Temple
Sequoia
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2019
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Aware that we have some foodies here: anyone got any vegetarian or vegan cookery book recommendations?
In the last year of two we’ve become less enamoured with the quality of meat and fish. Salmon and sea bass farming practices are poor and unhealthy, we’ve gone right off lamb (dislike the smell). We eat a lot of home grown salad, fruit and veg, but it’s the spring dearth now so Lidlald and M&S rule.
Just watched Netflix series about plant based vs omnivore / a study on twins / 3* Eleven Madison Park NY (Daniel Humm). Obviously there's a fair degree of bias, but I would like to enrich my plant based cooking repertoire anyway. Trouble is I’ve never found an inspirational vegan or vegetarian cook book, despite having several in my cook book collection. These include a few generics plus Simon Hopkinson, Amelia Freer, Orell Fussli, and a couple of Ottolengi’s. With the exception of Simon, they’re all a bit evangelistic. Most vegetarian ones rely heavily on cheese to provide fats and flavour, & eggs as binders. Nothing against that but it makes everything taste cheesy / eggy.
I treat cookbooks like reading books, so looking for something interesting and inspirational.
In the last year of two we’ve become less enamoured with the quality of meat and fish. Salmon and sea bass farming practices are poor and unhealthy, we’ve gone right off lamb (dislike the smell). We eat a lot of home grown salad, fruit and veg, but it’s the spring dearth now so Lidlald and M&S rule.
Just watched Netflix series about plant based vs omnivore / a study on twins / 3* Eleven Madison Park NY (Daniel Humm). Obviously there's a fair degree of bias, but I would like to enrich my plant based cooking repertoire anyway. Trouble is I’ve never found an inspirational vegan or vegetarian cook book, despite having several in my cook book collection. These include a few generics plus Simon Hopkinson, Amelia Freer, Orell Fussli, and a couple of Ottolengi’s. With the exception of Simon, they’re all a bit evangelistic. Most vegetarian ones rely heavily on cheese to provide fats and flavour, & eggs as binders. Nothing against that but it makes everything taste cheesy / eggy.
I treat cookbooks like reading books, so looking for something interesting and inspirational.






