The Cajun vegan cookbook A modern guide to classic cajun cooking & southern-inspired cuisine

Krimsey Lilleth

Book - 2021

Cajun food is playful, hearty, and rick . Lilleth blends Louisiana's flavor profiles with plant-forward ingredients that are fresh and sustainable, yet still authentic and delicious. She inspires readers to try new things, have fun with their food, and be reminded that life is one big party. Enjoy! -- adapted from back cover

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Published
[Bend, OR] : [Blue Star Press] [2021].
Language
English
Main Author
Krimsey Lilleth (author)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
273 pages : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781950968473
  • Introduction
  • Stocking your kitchen
  • Cast-iron cooking
  • Frying for beginners
  • Soaking beans
  • Breakfast & breads
  • Soups, salads, & poboys
  • Entrees
  • Sides
  • Dressings, sauces, & toppings
  • Desserts
  • Drinks.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Louisiana native Lilleth, whose now-shuttered L.A. restaurant Krimsey's Cajun Kitchen touted itself as the world's first to offer vegan Cajun cuisine, debuts with an uninspiring collection that claims to marry the "deep flavor" of New Orleans favorites with fresh ingredients. Far from fresh, many of these recipes simply insert replacement products: pistolettes are hollowed rolls stuffed with vegan beef crumbles, vegan cheddar cheese, nondairy milk, and broccoli, then brushed with vegan butter and baked. Meanwhile, corn dogs are battered and fried vegan sausage links. Her more successful dishes translate lusty Cajun flavors less literally--such as a salad that incorporates shredded kale, "blackened Cajun corn," and coconut flake "bacon" bits. Disappointingly, the po'boys call for store-bought rolls, and two of the recipes are virtually identical. A section on seasoning and caring for one's cast-iron skillet is useful, while another on equipment could be in any cookbook. The tone can be juvenile: the author calls eating boiled artichokes "zany and quirky," and confesses she hates "squishy foods," but that she "love eating rainbow foods." Though everything is free of animal products--down to the fat used to season cast-iron cookware--that isn't enough to make the dishes feel modern, as she promises. This feels like a missed opportunity. (Oct.)

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