Dec 5, 2010

Holidays

The holidays can either be wonderful or a setback. When first having gone veg, this is probably one of the more difficult times since the gatherings with families can place strain on the new diet. Your little Tofurkey looks more like an afterthought than a centerpiece, and a turkey or ham can dominate the table.

That is, unless you actually have a contending centerpiece.

The dish that this Holiday Seitan Roast is in is a normal-sized casserole dish - 9X13. This is not a small roast. It has a beautiful glaze and you can see the texture is moist and lovely. We enjoyed this roast on Thanksgiving, but it is an appropriate addition to any holiday table. It is made using a variation of Tofu-Seitan (which I will be posting) and requires the same amount of cooking time as a turkey would, although it needs no brine.

The Truffle Green Bean Casserole is an upscale version of a regular green bean casserole, but I couldn't stand another holiday with the same old green beans. This is one of those dishes that the holidays would not be the same without, yet needed a revamping. I made it with porcini mushrooms and truffle oil.

Lastly, is the Yule Log Cake. This is made with the same cake batter that I made for Olive Garden's Tiramisu, but baked the batter in a sheet pan and rolled it around a cocoa-cream cheese filling. The frosting is a chocolate ganache. This is tricky to roll and fill, but I love its looks.

The holiday recipes are coming; I am also trying to catch up with the MoFo recipes, so stay tuned.


Holiday Roast

Truffle Green Bean Casserole

Yule Log Cake



15 comments:

  1. Excellent looking centerpieces. Don't think I've seen a vegan dish so big. Can't wait for the recipes!

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  2. Your roast is definitely centerpiece worthy! All those dishes are!

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  3. waiting, not so patiently lol, for the recipes. so beautiful!

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  4. Thank you, all! I think it is really nice to be able to do one of these roasts - and it makes great sandwiches after, too.

    I remember going to my in-laws for Thanksgiving and bringing this little Tofurkey. It was kind of a joke. I also don't want anything that looks like a turkey (although in the past I did). I just want something that will be taken seriously and respected. Sort of make an impression. Good for us and the birds.

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  5. all of them look delicious!!!! :D

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  6. Even for a non-vegan these dishes really make me hungry!

    Happy Holidays

    Jason

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  7. Beautiful presentation with all of them!

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  8. Oh my, this is one amazing spread. You are such a talent! I have been looking for a bouche de noel recipe, and I think this one will do the trick. I like your notes. They're very helpful. I was a bit concerned when I saw the towel =)

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  9. The seitan roast looks wonderful! I was thinking about buying a pre-made vegan roast for Christmas, but maybe I'll make one instead?! Thanks for the recipe.

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  10. Thanks, eatgreek, Jason and Evan :)

    Veggietestkitchen, the towel kind of scared me, too. But just accept that it needs to be done this way. Besides, since it is a rolled up cake, even if it breaks a bit, just roll that part first so the top layer winds up being the best looking part. The frosting helps cover mistakes, too. Let me know how it works for you.

    Tiffany, you can give this a pre-Xmas try and freeze it after tasting it to make sure the seitan works for you. Then you can defrost it in the fridge overnight, glaze and bake. Makes the experience easier and quicker since you don't have to worry about it. Just take a taste from the bottom of the roast so the ends stay whole.

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  11. I am DYING to see the roast recipe!!!!!

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  12. Hmmm...thinking about the Christmas Eve meal. This might fit the bill. How many people would you say the roast feeds?

    Thanks,
    Susan J

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  13. Hope you like it, TaffKey.

    Susan, it feeds a good 8-12 people, depending on the variety of sides you have. When the 5 of us had it over Thanksgiving, it fed us all well and we had at least half left over.

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  14. I made the roast and it was out of this world good! Did not have the ingredients for the glaze, so it was served "naked".
    One thing that I can't seem to master with any seitan dish is getting the dough to stay together after kneading it. After 10 min. in the mixer, I get 4-5 "balls" of dough that sort of stay together, but not in one "ball".
    The finished product does not fall apart, and it slices well, yet it's clear that it's made of 4-5 pieces, sort of like Monkey Bread...
    Any ideas what I am doing wrong?

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  15. One of two things could be happening:

    (1) I use a bread machine and the machine turns it slowly for the first 2 or 3 minutes and then speeds up. A mixer can go on medium and still be too fast because...

    (2) of the mixing appendage. A bread machine is only 1 1/2 inches long but the mixer is about 4 inches (?) or so. This is most likely the culprit - the mixer hand is breaks up the gluten. Try doing this at a lower speed for the entire kneading time. If the gluten still seems to be breaking up, see if you can slow it down even more. Or... do the whole thing by hand. A pain.

    A fix might be to mix by hand to incorporate everything in one big batch and then knead with the mixer on very low for 10 minutes or until you see that the gluten is shiny but not dividing. Let it rest for 30 minutes and knead it again on very low for 10 more minutes. Let it rest again for 30 and form it into one big mass and now let it rest again. This is where the gluten should relax enough to allow the mass to become incorporated, even if some parts are divided.

    I will make seitan with a mixer this week to see what the problem is (although I know exactly what you are talking about) and if this would fix it. The next seitan post will be about this.

    Thank you for highlighting this problem; I'm sure others are experiencing the same issue.

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LIVE FROM A BATTERY CAGE... Spend 5 MINUTES here. Just 5 MINUTES.

I know, disturbing, right? Not exactly what you'd expect to see on a food blog - and, yet, if you buy eggs, this is exactly what you should be aware of.

We, as consumers, are the only ones who can change this - with every egg we choose not to buy.


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