Hot for food vegan comfort classics 101 recipes to feed your face

Lauren Toyota

Book - 2018

A fun and irreverent take on vegan comfort food that's saucy, sweet, sassy, and most definitely deep-fried, from YouTube sensation Lauren Toyota of Hot for Food.

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Published
California : Ten Speed Press [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Lauren Toyota (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
233 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9780399580147
  • Hey hot for food farm!
  • Badass brunches
  • But First ... Bacon
  • Bacon Marinade
  • Coconut Bacon
  • Almond Bacon
  • Tofu Bacon Crumbles or Slices
  • Mushroom Bacon
  • Cassava Bacon
  • The Big Brekky Skillet
  • Flaky Buttermilk Biscuits
  • The Best Breakfast Sandwich
  • Baked Bean Tostadas
  • Tofu Benny with Hollandaise
  • Mushroom & Leek Quiche
  • Pile o'Waffles
  • French Toast Coffee Cake
  • Pumpkin Spice Pancakes
  • Finger foods
  • Hot Buffalo Chicken Dip
  • Herb-Loaded Sausage Rolls
  • Cheesy Pesto Bread Twists
  • Zucchini-Onion Bhaji
  • Baked Jalapeño Poppers
  • Southern Fried Cauliflower
  • Mac & Cheese Onion Rings
  • Spicy Black Bean Taquitos
  • Crispy Crabless Cakes
  • Veggie sides & big salads
  • Lemony Parm Green Beans
  • Mushroom & Herb Toast
  • Green Curry Cauliflower Roast
  • Brussels Sprouts Caesar Salad
  • Banh Mi Bowl
  • My Big Fat Greek Potato Salad
  • Southwest Chop Salad
  • Hearty soups
  • Chicken Potpie Soup
  • Real Wonton Soup
  • Gooey French Onion Soup
  • See Food Chowder
  • Cream of Broccoli Soup
  • Curried Butternut Squash Soup
  • Comforting Lasagna Soup
  • Stacked sandwiches
  • Oyster Mushroom Po' Boy
  • Saved by Seitan
  • Philly Cheesesteak
  • Gyro Wrap
  • Filet-O-Tempeh Sandwich
  • Buffalo Cauliflower Sandwich
  • BBQ Jackfruit Sandwich
  • Monte Cristo
  • The Ramen Burger
  • Oodles of noodles
  • Mushroom Fettuccine Alfredo
  • Cold Cucumber-Chile Noodles
  • Creamy Rosé Penne
  • Spicy Peanut Noodles
  • Green Pea Pesto Linguine
  • Eggplant Parm & Spaghetti
  • Butternut Squash Cannelloni
  • Bacon Mac & Cheese Skillet
  • The Best Vegan Ramen
  • The main event
  • Stuffed Crust Pizza
  • Loaded Fries Supreme
  • Orange Tofu & Veggie Fried Rice
  • Fried Avocados with Jackfruit
  • Bean & Cheese Enchiladas Verdes
  • When in Doubt ... Put It in a Taco!
  • Sweet Potato Gnocchi
  • Fajita Fiesta Bowls
  • Waffle-Topped Cottage Pie
  • Bangers & Mash
  • Mushroom, Leek & Tomato Risotto
  • Sweet things
  • That Dough
  • Cinnamon Rolls
  • Apple Fritters
  • Customizable Cake
  • Chocolate Cake
  • Vanilla Cake
  • Apple Spice Cake
  • Lemon Cake
  • Buttercream Frostings
  • Chocolate Buttercream
  • Vanilla Buttercream
  • Maple Buttercream
  • Raspberry Buttercream
  • Tiramisu Trifle
  • Fudgy Brownies
  • Oatmeal Chocolate Chunk Cookies
  • Baked Blueberry Cheesecake
  • Blackberry Crumble Bars
  • Classic Apple Pie
  • Lemon Meringue Pie Tarts
  • Raspberry Funfetti Pop Tarts
  • Get saucy
  • The Nacho Cheese
  • The Parm
  • The Tartar Sauce
  • The Mozza
  • The BBQ Sauce
  • The Guac Sauce
  • The Sour Cream
  • The Maple-Mustard Dip
  • The Red Pepper Relish
  • The Spicy Peanut Sauce
  • The Red Sauce & The Rosé Sauce
  • The Hollandaise Sauce
  • The Gravy
  • The Caesar Dressing
  • Three Easy Dressings
  • The Classic Ranch
  • The Creamy Cucumber
  • The Thousand Island
  • The Aiolis
  • Homemade Vegan Mayo
  • The Sundried Tomato Aioli
  • The Horseradish-Dili Aioli
  • The Roasted Garlic Aioli
  • The Jalapeño-Lime Aioli
  • The Spicy Sriracha Aioli
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by New York Times Review

if you're a certain kind of cook, the ecstasy of a spring farmer's market, with its sweet sugar snap peas, bright peppery lettuces and juicy strawberries that are red all the way through, can easily give way to a sense of unease: the fear that you're not making the most of all that's on offer. (Perhaps you're still agonizing over missing those three minutes when ramps were available?) One way to fend off this very fortunate brand of anxiety is to check out some new cookbooks. Thankfully, just in time, there's the expected flood of vegetable-reverent titles, as well as books that will take you to all corners of the world and personal, nostalgic journeys inspiring the rediscovery of classics that feel just right for the season of rebirth. EAT A LITTLE BETTER: Great Flavor, Good Health, Better World (Clarkson Potter, $32.50), by Sam Kass, is about cooking for the Obamas when they were in the White House. Not designing menus for state dinners or assembling cookie platters for holiday parties but devising flavorful, nutritious everyday meals for Barack, Michelle, Malia and Sasha in their private residence, where 6:30 dinner was a command performance for every member of the family, including the president. "It was an inspiring sight," Kass writes, "the busiest man in the world carving out time for this daily ritual." Of course, the insider stories are irresistible - there's "POTUS's lucky pasta," which Obama credited with a triumphant presidential debate against Mitt Romney, and there's the barbecued roast chicken that was the first family's first dinner in the White House (it "had to serve as a comfort to four people whose lives were changing forever"). But the anecdotes are only part of the story. Kass, who trained at the Michelin-starred restaurant Moerwald in Vienna, where folding fist-size knobs of butter into a sauce was the norm, became determined to cook healthy, sustainable food that "occupied the place where good flavor overlaps with good-for-you." It was a mission that dovetailed nicely with Michelle Obama's vision for her family and eventually for the nation when she started her initiative to fight childhood obesity. Working with the first lady on the front lines of food politics gave Kass perspective and grounding. "If we only look to make dramatic change, we'll find ourselves standing still forever," he says. Instead, he suggests, eat a little better, a little at a time. Eat more vegetables and grains and less beef. Learn how to read a food label. Put grabbable fruits front-row center on the counter instead of cookies. Not only because it's healthy for you, but because it's better for the planet. The good-for-the-planet call to arms continues its crescendo from a wide range of vegan voices. There is VBQ: The Ultimate Vegan Barbecue Cookbook (The Experiment, paper, $19.95), by Nadine Horn and Jörg Mayer, addressing the particular vegan nightmare known as the American barbecue. Grilled onigiri (Japanese crispy rice balls) and bean burgers (made with walnuts, flaxseeds, wild rice and black beans) stand side by side with the more expected portobello mushroom panini and hyper-specific instructions to optimize tofu grilling. (This involves pressing, freezing, slicing, marinating and using plenty of oil. And it works.) In SWEET POTATO SOUL: 100 Easy Vegan Recipes for the Southern Flavors of Smoke, Sugar, Spice and Soul (Harmony, paper, $19.99), Jenné Claiborne makes the case that historically "soul food lies more in the nutrient-rich foods that blacks were able to cultivate themselves in slave gardens and later on their own land"; in other words, in dark leafy greens, beans, whole grains and starchy vegetables. Soul food, she argues, should be as much about vegetarian cooking as it is about barbecue, fried chicken and pork-spiked collard greens. In HOT FOR FOOD VEGAN COMFORT CLASSICS: 101 Recipes to Feed Your Face (Ten Speed, paper, $22) the Youftlbe SuperStar Lauren Toyota fends off skeptics with a lineup of indulgent-by-any-standards classics: Southern fried cauliflower, sweet potato gnocchi, spicy peanut noodles, fudgy brownies, apple fritters. Though many of her recipes contain subrecipes (a 12-ingredient ramen burger calls for either a homemade nine-ingredient Thousand Island dressing or a three-ingredient Sriracha aioli, along with an 11ingredient barbecue sauce), she understands better than anyone that multiple layers of flavor and texture are crucial when you're not allowed to fall back on butter and bacon fat. Linally, Chloe Coscarelli, chef and onetime "Cupcake Wars" champ, weighs in with CHLOE FLAVOR: Saucy, Crispy, Spicy, Vegan (Clarkson Potter, $27.99), a bright, innovative collection in which blended tofu stands in for ricotta while mac and cheese gets its mouthfeel from a whirl of butternut squash and cashews. Lor cooks who rely heavily on photography for inspiration, this is a winner. Meera Sodha, author Of FRESH INDIA: 130 Quick, Easy and Delicious Vegetarian Recipes for Every Day (Flatiron, $35), would argue that "vegetable-first" cooking, as she calls it, has roots in a movement that began approximately 2,200 years before Yotam Ottolenghi was winning over his legions with glamour shots of eggplant and pomegranate seeds. The year 269 B.C. to be exact, when Emperor Ashoka banned the slaughter of any living animal in the Sodha family's ancestral state of Gujarat. With her assembly of approachable vegetarian recipes, Sodha, a Londoner who grew up in a farming village in England, seeks to redefine Indian food, avoiding rich dishes "swimming in brown sauce" and opting for the way her family has cooked for generations: fresh, vibrant, seasonal. Though there are a few special-occasion showstoppers (clear the day to make her grand vegetable biryani or her mom's famous lentil fritters, which are actually four recipes in one), most of the dishes are geared toward the modern cook who isn't in it for the fuss. Lresh matar paneer showcases the best of spring and summer (snow peas, peas, tomatoes and green beans, and a slew of spices that anyone can locate in the nearest supermarket). Sodha advises making Punjabi corn roti with a cookie cutter instead of rolling them by hand in the traditional way - because it's quicker. We thank her for that. Tamar Adler is comfortable editorializing tradition, and the proof is in SOMETHING OLD, SOMETHING NEW: Classic Recipes Revised (Scribner, $27), her deep dive into the archives of our oldest cookbooks and restaurant menus, some dating as far back as the 17th century. Though the names of the recipes (Chicken Liver â la Toscane, Crab Louis Dashiell, Pâté D'oeuf, Potatoes Delmonico) can conjure images of anthropological treasures, Adler is determined to see the modern possibilities in these dishes. Initially drawn to the "poetry of lost specifics" in old recipes, Adler, a chef and a mom as well as an award-winning food writer, can't help seeing them through a 21st-century lens. "If a shortcut exists, I have found it," she writes. "Any technique that demanded too much seriousness has been unsentimentally removed." Sacrilege? No, she argues. It's "gratifying to keep the good things alive, and perhaps most gratifying of all to revive those things already gone." Like Adler's previous book "An Everlasting Meal," this one is as much about the writing as it is about the cooking. The Chicken Liver â la Toscane was a pâté she made for her brother's wedding, where the guests "spread it recklessly on cold fried chicken, an unintentional symbol of continuity and closed loops." Explaining one fancy term, she writes that "in life as it is lived, fricassee is also what anyone used to call a stew that possessed some culinary conviction." Sometimes it's hard to differentiate her prose from the lyrical recipe writing she's paying tribute to. Adler might be the only person in today's food world who can get away with using the word "hogwash." It's tempting to say that Ilene Rosen's saladish: a Crunchier, Grainier, Herbier, Heartier, Tastier Way With Vegetables (Artisan, $24.95), written with Donna Gelb, is so appealing because the recipes seem to reflect the way we all want to eat right now. Which is to say: globally informed, vegetable-forward and Instagram-ready. The only problem with this theory is that Rosen has been cooking like this for nearly two decades, as anyone who's visited her cultish salad bar at New York's City Bakery likely knows. This is her long-time-coming book version of that salad bar (think black rice with pea greens, Vietnamese-style tofu salad, a smoked trout and pumpernickel bread salad, essentially Jewish brunch in a bowl) and it ranks highest on the usability scale of any book this spring. "Everything could be made ahead and left to sit in the fridge and it would still be delicious," Rosen writes of her City Bakery philosophy. "It was a practical style of cooking and eating that stuck with me and became my M.O. as I raised my twin daughters." This is not to suggest that all her salads are a breeze to put together - you'll find yourself outside your comfort zone hunting down items like makrut lime leaves and Tianjin (Chinese preserved cabbage), but special wouldn't be special if it weren't a little hard to come by. And Rosen is a natural teacher, demystifying fancy-sounding ingredients, dispensing a few crucial laws of salad composition (you want a combo of toothsome, fluffy, hefty, crunchy and crisp) alongside menu suggestions not for special occasions and holidays but for real life, for a real dinner table. Diana Henry would appreciate this. "There is poetry in menus," she writes in HOW TO EAT A PEACH: Menus, Stories, and Places (Mitchell Beazley, $34.99). "They can transport you to the Breton coast, or to a Saturday night in Manhattan; they are short stories." From anyone else, this kind of sentiment might signal the earnest preciousness that rings food writing's death knell. Not from Henry, who's built her brand on what you might call poetic practicality. "How to Eat a Peach" is about her love of designing menus, a hobby that dates back to her teenage years, when she kept a giftwrapped journal of fantasy meals she wanted to cook and serve. As she got older, creating menus became a way for her to conjure memories and recreate her travels. Of her first trip to Mexico, where she journeyed after being dumped by a boyfriend: "It's a good place to mend a broken heart." In her headnote for crepes dentelles with sauteed apples and caramel: "I was taught to make these by my first French boyfriend. He was called Christophe. I was 15. So for me, this is more than just a recipe." Henry is unapologetically purist in her opinions about what she serves and enjoys, rightfully assuming that you will enjoy her taste memories right along with her. "I don't invite people over and then wonder what I'll cook," she writes. "I come up with a menu and then consider who would like to eat it." This authority is especially welcome when Henry lists her rules for "having people over" (note: not "entertaining," a word that reminds her of "hostess trolleys and instructions on how to plump up your cushions"). A few of these rules: "No more than two courses should be cooked at the last minute, otherwise you'll be stressed"; "cream should only appear in one course"; "it's not ideal to repeat ingredients"; "consider color, texture and temperature"; "eat seasonally." The recipes are beautifully photographed by Laura Edwards, propped with plates and linens in the fashionable palette best described as marble-and-potato-sack, and range from the stock-in-trade sophisticated and simple (Kir Breton cocktails made with creme de cassis and hard cider) to the indulgent (homemade pork rillettes and an amazing fideua, a paella made with noodles instead of rice). For those who enjoy their food even more when there's a story behind it, Anissa Helou's FEAST: Food of the Islamic World (Ecco/HarperCollins, $60) is the book of the spring. This 500-plus-page collection presents dishes from three of the great Muslim empires (Abbasid, Ottoman and Mughal). Organized by essential ingredients - bread; rice, grains, pasta and legumes; meat; spices; and so on - these chapters hop to a new region with almost every page. We learn in quick succession that one of Egypt's most beloved foods, koshari (a vermicelli and lentil dish topped with spicy tomatoes, chickpeas and crispy onions), is now known as the food of the revolution because it sustained protesters in Tahrir Square during the Arab Spring. Ttirn the page and you're in Zanzibar learning the finer points of cooking Wdli Wd Nazi, or simple coconut rice. Next: Afghani Reshta Piliau and Lebanese/Syrian vermicelli rice. In some cases, the recipe headnotes are longer than the recipes themselves, which doesn't mean you're getting a book of simple dishes. Quite the contrary: These are exhaustively researched foods, culled from history books, family lore, even celebrity chefs - the intensely good chickpea flour fritters that Helou describes as "essential iftar food" come from a Qatari TV food personality. Comprehensive category killers are all well and good, but sometimes what you prefer is a careful curation of a single person's recipes, especially when that person is the renowned writer-illustrator Maira Kalman. Maybe it's because a generation of young chefs are learning how to bake not from their grandmothers but from a steady stream of videos on tiny screens, or maybe it's just nice to think of a time when people sat down in the afternoon with a cup of tea and something sweet, but Kalman's CAKE (Penguin Press, $25) seems to hit just the right counterprogramming note. With an assist from the recipe developer Barbara Scott-Goodman, Kalman gives us a whimsical (some might say random) highlight reel of the baked goods that have played an important role in her life. The book is pretty to hold and leaf through - or just to keep on the kitchen counter as a reminder that baking a cake is "a simple pleasure that should not be taken lightly." The confections themselves represent a tight, satisfying arsenal, in spite of the fact that they're here because they're associated with someone else's memories. These cakes don't call for tahini or Froot Loops or candies spilling from the center, or any of the typical acrobatics today's clickbait bakers expect. The best cakes, Scott-Goodman argues, are the ones in which "the layers are a little lopsided and the frosting looks like the kids or grandkids were helping out in the kitchen... tea cakes, poundcakes and sheet cakes." As such, expect gingerbread, lemon poundcake, strawberry shortcake and a boozy olive oil cake. Lastly heed this instruction, which should say everything about the old-school perspective on display here: "Tread lightly and avoid major activity in the kitchen while cakes are baking." Also in the nostalgia department: Brittany Bennett's THE TAARTWORKS PIE COOKBOOK: Grandmother's Recipes, Granddaughter's Remix (Page Street, paper, $19.99). When Bennett waltzed downstairs one Thanksgiving morning holding an apple pie recipe she had printed from some soulless corner of the internet, her Dutch grandmother, or Oma, wouldn't have it. Instead she taught Bennett the family recipe for an appeltaart, the Dutch specialty that's similar to a pie but boasts a pressed-in shortbread-y crust. Armed with her Oma's generations-old dough recipe and a decidedly Brooklynized pantry, Bennett established her taart company. Its best recipes have been assembled in this innovative, scrapbook-feeling collection. Oma's dough recipe is simple and classic, and because what's old is new again, Bennett asks you to use only the best ingredients - the flour should be locally milled, the butter preferably from a neighborhood dairy farm (if you're not churning your own). What goes inside these crusts, though, is delightfully unexpected. (A white chocolate pie that gets its intense pink color from beets; strawberry-thyme balsamic pie with ricotta whip; sesame pumpkin pie with chocolate tahini swirl.) The book is not overly produced, making it feel as if you've inherited your favorite aunt's recipe box. "Perfection is bland," Bennett writes. "Let juices overflow and stain the crust." What does she like most about her taarts? They're "always constructed with the intent to be devoured by someone you care about." Amen. jenny rosenstrach writes the blog Dinner: A Love Story and is the author of four cookbooks, most recently "How to Celebrate Everything." online: Don't mind the heat and can't bear to get out of the kitchen? For a quick look at 10 more cookbooks, visit nytimes.com/books.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 3, 2018]
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Canadian media personality Toyota, creator of the vegan Hot for Food blog and the YouTube channel of the same name, presents satisfying recipes for "indulgent, delectable, gourmet vegan comfort foods." Toyota refashions classic stick-to-your-ribs fare with vegan substitutes such as nuts, tofu, and friendly fats. A chapter titled "Badass Brunches" showcases buttermilk biscuits, waffles with berry syrup and cream, and six plant-based variations on bacon. Finger foods presented here include crispy crabless cakes and party-friendly jalapeño poppers. Soups include a tummy-warming one made with wontons, and mains include deep-fried avocados stuffed with jackfruit. The Mozz, a meltable cashew-based mozzarella replacement, can serve as a topping for onion soup and gyros. For lighter fare, Toyota suggests Thai-inspired roasted green-curry cauliflower, and though salads and raw-veggie dishes are not Toyota's focus, there are recipes for rich aiolis for sandwich spreads and dressings for salads. Desserts contain gluten, sugar, and shortening and offer "framework recipes" for customizable chocolate/vanilla cake batter and dough for apple fritters or cinnamon rolls. Some recipes require high-speed blenders, food processors, or a deep-frying setup. In this excellent book of hearty, bold recipes, Toyota makes good on her promise to offer "indulgent, not pious" vegan fare. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

What constitutes comfort food and what is a classic comfort meal? Hot for Food blogger Toyota answers both questions with menu-spanning recipes. Bacon is often among the most missed foods, taste-wise and texture-wise, that vegans long for-and Toyota offers six ways to replicate it. Achieving authentic taste without animal-based ingredients means more preparation and attention to flavor and mouth feel. While most recipes offered here are from scratch, such as the seitan loaf that is the staple for sandwiches, Toyota also uses vegan butter, some vegan cheeses, and nondairy milks. There are some newer nominees for comfort food, such as a savory butternut squash soup, but also top-of-the-list favorites, such as mac and cheese and brownies. Toyota explains how the idea of "comfort food" is formed over time and culturally flavored; Indian bhaji, black bean taquitos, and wonton soup represent the spectrum of satisfying cuisines. VERDICT Vegan cooks will find this volume true to its title, with recipes that will be among their favorite "classics."-Jeanette McVeigh, Univ. of the Sciences, Philadelphia © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

COLD CUCUMBER- CHILE NOODLES Makes 4 to 6 servings   1 pound thick flat rice noodles  2 English cucumbers  2 green onions, white and green parts, finely sliced diagonally  2 tablespoons toasted sesame oil  2 tablespoons sesame seeds  1⁄4 to 1⁄2 teaspoon sea salt  4 tablespoons chile oil  Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. If your rice noodles already contain salt, do not add salt to the water. Cook the noodles until al dente, approximately 6 minutes.  Meanwhile, cut the cucumber into ribbons using a vegetable peeler or slice very thin using a mandolin.  Drain the noodles, rinse under cool water, and place in a large bowl. Toss with the cucumber ribbons, green onions, sesame oil, sesame seeds (reserving 1 teaspoon for garnish), and 1⁄4 teaspoon of the salt (more to taste, if necessary). Divide among serving plates.  Drizzle each portion with 1 tablespoon of the chile oil (or use more sesame oil if you don't want spice) and garnish with the remaining sesame seeds. You can also toss the noodles in only the sesame oil, salt, and sesame seeds, leaving the cucumber ribbons and green onions to place on top of the noodles in each serving. I think this looks prettier!  If you have leftovers, soften the noodles by heating them with a bit of water in a covered pan or heat in a microwave. Drain any excess water before serving.  Excerpted from Hot for Food Vegan Comfort Classics: 101 Recipes to Feed Your Face by Lauren Toyota All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.