Saturday, August 26, 2023

No-Cook Vegan Travel Recipes

 


Sometimes it’s hard to find vegan options when traveling. And if you want to travel on a budget, it helps to make your own food. But sometimes you don’t have access to a kitchen, or even a fridge. 

Some grocery stores, like Albert Heijn in the Netherlands, will have ready-made vegan options available. But if you can’t find anything, you can make your own. 

Here are some vegan foods I eat while traveling that don’t require a kitchen. Most can be made without a fridge as well. 

1. Spread with hummus, veggies, crackers, olives 

I love to try the local olives and bread with some wine. You can make it a fuller meal with a spread of hummus or other dip, veggies, olives, crackers, and bread. 

If you don’t have access to a fridge, get any cold items you want right before you’re going to eat. Maybe stop at the store on the way to a picnic spot. 

2. Salad

This works better if you have a fridge. I like to mix any lettuce and other veggies I can find, plus beans or nuts for some protein. It can be hard to find American salad dressings in other countries, but most stores have oil and balsamic vinegar. 

3. Sandwiches or wraps 

If you don’t have a fridge, you can make peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. These are good snacks for on the go too. 

If you have a fridge, you can buy more veggies and hummus or other spread. 

4. Granola and soy milk

I like to eat granola with milk like cereal. I noticed what I call granola in the US is called Muesli in Europe. 

Some countries don’t have a wide variety of vegan milk options, but I’m usually able to find soy milk. If you don’t have fridge, you might be able to find small bottles of shelf-stable soy milk. 

5. Nuts and dried fruit 

I like to have nuts and dried fruit with me as a backup in case I can’t find other food I can eat. It doesn’t really feel like a meal but will have enough calories and a range of nutrients. 

6. Try local snacks

I like to pick at least one new local item every time I go to the grocery store. For example, in Mostar I found ajvar, a delicious red pepper dip. 


Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Review: NUGGS Spicy Plant-Based Nuggets

Nuggs Spicy Plant-Based Nuggets

If you're new to plant-based protein, vegan chicken nuggets are a less-intimidating option to start with. It seems like nuggets are easier to replicate because chicken nuggets are so processed anyway.

I tried Boca's chik'n nuggets a few years and they were pretty good. I heard some buzz about NUGGS and wondered how they would stack up.

The NUGGS website calls their plant-based nuggets, "The Tesla of Chicken" that are "engineered with the world's most advanced nugget technology." (It must be fun to work on their marketing team!)

I have to say these were even better than other vegan nuggets I've tried. They really nailed the outside crispy coating. I also love that the spicy version is actually spicy. About twice as spicy as Boca's spicy chik'n patties.

I went in skeptical and ended up craving these. The same thing happened to me with Tofurky plant-based deli slices.

Another unique thing about NUGGS is they're always improving the recipe and post the updates like a tech product's release notes. It's kind of cool to read through the releases and see what changes they've made over time. This review is for NUGGS 2.0.

Close up of Nuggs Spicy Plant-Based Nuggets
Water, Soybean Oil, Textured Wheat Protein, Soy Protein Concentrate, Breadcrumbs, Wheat Flour, Corn Flour, Wheat Protein Isolate, Yeast Extract, 2% or less of: Modified Food Starch, Corn Starch, Tapioca Dextrin, Sunflower Oil, Potato Starch, Onion Powder, Garlic Powder, Methylcellulose, Sea Salt, Sodium Acid Pyrophosphate, Baking Soda, Calcium Chloride, Black Pepper, Red Pepper, Paprika, Dextrose, Natural Flavors

Nuggs Spicy Plant-Based Nuggets ingredients

Review: NUGGS Spicy Plant-Based Nuggets
First impressions: Smells good
Taste: Spicy, chicken-y flavor. Reminds me of Wendy's spicy chicken nuggets, although I haven't had those in a long time. 
Texture: Very crispy
Can you tell it's vegan? Maybe
Better than other vegan options? Yes
Worth buying again? Yes
Overall: 5/5

Monday, November 16, 2020

Review: Tofurky Oven Roasted Deli Slices

Tofurky Oven Roasted Plant-Based Deli Slices

I tried Tofurky's hickory-smoked deli slices earlier this year and ended up craving it more than I expected. I tried their oven roasted deli slices next.

These were very similar to the hickory-smoked slices. I'd have to try them side-by-side to notice a difference.

Tofurky makes other flavors of vegan deli slices, but the oven roasted and hickory smoked are the ones I usually see in stores.

I've been eating these Tofurky slices the same way I used to make turkey sandwiches. I lightly cook them in a frying pan to warm them up, add mustard, and eat on a toasted hoagie roll. These would probably taste great on your favorite sandwich too!

Sandwich with Tofurky Oven Roasted Deli Slices

Water, vital wheat gluten, organic tofu (water, organic soybeans,magnesium chloride, calcium chloride), soy sauce (water, soybeans, wheat, salt), expeller pressed canola oil, natural flavors, sea salt, contains less than 2% of onion, carrot, celery, garlic, leek, lemon juice concentrate, cornstarch, garbanzo bean flour, white bean flour, rosemary extract, calcium lactate, potassium chloride.

Tofurky Oven Roasted Plant-Based Deli Slices ingredients

Review: Tofurky Oven Roasted Plant-Based Deli Slices
Taste: Similar to turkey
Texture: Similar to processed turkey deli meat
Can you tell it's vegan? Maybe
Better than other vegan options? Yes
Worth buying again? Yes
Overall: 5/5

Saturday, November 14, 2020

Review: Violife Just Like Cheddar Slices

Violife Just Like Cheddar Slices

Violife is one of the most recommended vegan cheeses I see on vegan food blogs. It's also used by a lot of vegan restaurants. So I thought this would be a good choice to start trying vegan cheese.

First of all I love their packaging. The inside plastic package is resealable and easy to open. It's also labeled, so you still know what it is if you get rid of the paper outside. 

I tried this both cold and melted. When cold, it was easier to tell that it's vegan. The texture is not quite there, but it does look and taste more like dairy cheddar cheese than I expected. 


Violife Just Like Cheddar Slices unwrapped

Next, I tried it on a vegan egg sandwich with JUST egg. I tried melting it from the residual heat of the hot sandwich but that wasn't enough. The edges didn't melt and the texture was slightly gritty.  

Vegan egg sandwich with Violife cheddar slice

I tried again but this time by I put the Violife slice on top of the JUST egg in the pan and covered with a lid. This worked a lot better and it melted all the way. I did get a funny giant bubble though.

Violife Just Like Cheddar Slices melted

Vegan egg sandwich with melted Violife cheddar


Final verdict? Pretty good on a sandwich, but I wouldn't eat it by itself. 

Filtered Water, Coconut Oil, Food Starch-Modified (Potato & Corn), Potato Starch, Salt (Sea Salt), Cheddar Flavor (vegan sources), Olive Extract, Paprika extract & Beta Carotene (Color), Vitamin B12.

Violife Just Like Cheddar Slices ingredients and nutrition facts

Review: 
Violife Just Like Cheddar Slices
First impressions: Looks more like dairy cheddar cheese than I expected
Taste: Similar to cheddar cheese but doesn't have as strong of a flavor
Texture: Takes longer to melt than dairy cheese, but once melted the texture is similar
Can you tell it's vegan? Yes
Better than other vegan options? This is the first one I've tried.
Worth buying again? Maybe
Overall: 4/5

Saturday, October 24, 2020

Review: Trader Joe's Protein Patties (Plant-Based Burgers)

Trader Joe's Protein Patties Plant Based Burgers

I love that plant-based burgers are so trendy right now and so many companies are making their own version.

Trader Joe's has a lot of great vegan products so I had to try their plant-based burger patties. The packaging and ingredients are similar to Beyond Burgers, but unfortunately the taste and texture weren't on the same level.

These were oddly hard when uncooked and then too soft when cooked. They stuck to the pan and fell apart during cooking. I don't know if these would work on a grill because they fell apart so much.

Another difference is these are sold in the refrigerated section and say not suitable for freezing, so they don't last as long as the frozen plant-based burgers.

Trader Joe's Protein Patties Plant Based Burgers close up, uncooked


Trader Joe's plant based burger cooked

Trader Joe's plant based burger on a bun

Trader Joe's Protein Patties Plant Based Burgers ingredients:
Hydrated pea protein blen (water, pea protein, pea fiber), sunflower oil, beets, natural flavors, methyl cellulose, oat fiber, fruit juice (color), onion powder, sea salt, vegetable juice (color). 

Trader Joe's Protein Patties plant based burgers nutrition and ingredients

Review: Trader Joe's Protein Patties Plant Based Burgers
First impressions: Harder than I expected when uncooked
Taste: Close to Beyond Burger but a little bland
Texture: Fell apart, kind of soft and mushy
Can you tell it's vegan? Yes
Better than other vegan options? No
Worth buying again? Probably not
Overall: 3/5