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Dessert

Jack-O-Lantern Pumpkin Spice Muffins + Charcoal Turmeric Icing

October 27, 2018 By julia

I can’t boolieve it’s Halloween already!

Time for a funky, trying to be scary…not so scary…super dense, delish muffin recipe. These Pumpkin Spice Jack-O-Lantern Muffins are a cute replacement or add-on to your carved up big one. Or, if you don’t want to carve up a big one this year, just make these little guys and enjoy that halloween pumpkin-y feeling, and eat it, too.

These turned out better than Jack himself could have hoped for.

Sweetened mostly with dates, and packed with pumpkin-y goodness makes them so dense and so flavourful!

Smush in some vegan butter and call it a good day! (Used ‘Melt’ vegan butter here OMG)

…Density. A must have in a good muffin.

Add in that activated charcoal and turmeric to the cashew icing mix and you can pretty much call them superfood muffs!

Grab some kids, or call out your inner child, along with the squeeze bottles to create some delicious art (that will hopefully turn out spookier than my attempt at scary).

And…. Happy Halloween!

For more Halloween-y treat ideas, check out this Homemade Candy Bar round-up or these Top 15 Candy Recipes!


Jack-O-Lantern Pumpkin Spice Muffins
 
Save Print
Prep time
15 mins
Cook time
22 mins
Total time
37 mins
 
Dense, halloween-y, super pumpkin-y muffins with a superfood-y turmeric and charcoal cashew icing!
Author: Jules
Recipe type: halloween, snack, dessert
Serves: 10
Ingredients

  • Dry Ingredients:
  • 2 cups oat flour (blend 2 cups oats into a fine flour in a food processor or blender)
  • ½ cup coconut sugar
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ¾ cup chopped pecans

  • Wet Ingredients:
  • 1 can pumpkin pie mix puree
  • 2 chia eggs (2 tbsp chia soaked in 6 tbsp water for 5 minutes)
  • ¾ cup medjool dates (about 6-8), soaked in warm water for 10 minutes
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

  • Icing:
  • 1 cup cashews, pre-soaked for at least 3 hours (or over night for smoother icing)
  • 2 tbsp maple syrup
  • ½ cup vanilla almond milk
  • 1½ tsp activated charcoal
  • 1½ tsp turmeric
Instructions
  1. Pre-heat oven to 375°F.
  2. Mix together dry ingredients.
  3. In blender, mix together wet ingredients until smooth.
  4. Then add the wet to the dry and until combined.
  5. Spoon about a ¼ cup in each lined (with paper muffin cups or re-usable silicone ones) muffin tin.
  6. Bake for 22 minutes.
  7. Make the icing: In a small food processor, or blender, blend all pre-soaked cashews, almond milk and maple syrup until smooth (you will have to scape down the sides and leave it running for a few minutes).
  8. Take out a ¼ of the cashew icing and set aside. Add the turmeric to the icing in the blender and blend until combined.
  9. Spread this orange icing over the top of the muffins.
  10. Then, add the white icing back into the blender with the activated charcoal. Blend until smooth.
  11. Scoop this black icing into a squeeze bottle or a ziplock with a tiny hole cut in the corner, and create your jack-o-lantern art!
Notes
*Prep-time does not include the soaking of cashews
3.5.3226

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This week’s email was all the crazy things that happen by going vegan for just 1 day, plus a Doc spotlight on Joel Fuhrman.

Filed Under: Dessert, Holidays, Oil Free, Recipes, Snacks, Uncategorized Tagged With: halloween, halloween treat, hooked on plants, muffins, plant based muffins, pumpkin muffins, pumpkin pecan muffins, pumpkin spice, vegan muffins

Vegan Mos Hooked On People Interview + Black & White Cookies

October 11, 2018 By julia

Michael and Ethan are the Vegan Mos. Ethan is a podiatry surgeon, and on the board of directors for the Woodstock Farm Sanctuary. Michael is a recovering lawyer who’s switched his skills to speaking for the speechless, and he’s also a Food for Life instructor through PCRM. They’re both making strides in the vegan world and I was lucky enough to be graced by their presence in Victoria Moran’s house at the Main Street Vegan Academy in NYC a couple months back, where they came to speak. These two are full of positivity, life, good energy, and vegan vibes. Their new cook book, ‘NYC Vegan, Iconic Recipes for a Taste of the Big Apple‘ is packed to the brim with crazy delicious vegan comfort food (including their infamous Black & White Cookies, seen below!)

Let’s get to know them…

Hooked on Plants: Ethan, you were the first one to go vegan, and you weren’t exactly soft or silent about it to Michael (haha). Eventually Michael caught on! Can you expand on this? Why and how did you both go vegan?

Ethan: I initially went vegetarian for health reasons. At 38 years old I was already taking medication for high cholesterol and was 40 pounds over weight. I saw being vegetarian as way to lose weight and get my cholesterol under control. I then read The Face on Your Plate: The Truth About Food by Jeffrey Masson and learned the horrors of factory farming. I knew that I could not continue to eat any animal products or benefit in any way from any kind of animal abuse. Ethically, being vegan was the only logical choice, and after 5 months of being vegetarian, on Thanksgiving 2009 we went to Michael’s family for the traditional meal, but I didn’t eat anything. When we came home, I prepared the Tofurky Thanksgiving Feast and realized that if I could do Thanksgiving as a vegan, I could be vegan all the time.

Michael: During this time, I was working out of the house and doing most of the cooking. I had to learn how to make food that Ethan would eat and that I would like. So, even though I wasn’t even considering being vegan, I was learning how to cook vegan food. Also during this time, Ethan, like most people when they first learn the horrors of factory farming, became full on vegangelical and would continually ask me questions like, “how is your plate of murder?” ….Rather than getting me to go vegan, this had the opposite effect. I can be very stubborn and wasn’t about to be bullied into doing something. Thankfully, Ethan soon realized that this approach wasn’t working and accepted the fact that he was the one who changed and it wasn’t fair to expect me to change as well. As soon as Ethan stopped pushing, space was created that allowed me to walk forward. After seeing Kathy Freston on Oprah talk about “leaning in to veganism” and being “flexitarian,” I started doing Meatless Mondays. I eventually added in Tofu Tuesdays, Wegetable Wednedays, Tempeh Thursdays, etc. I didn’t say a word to Ethan about what I was doing, but as soon as I completed a full 7 days vegan, I looked at Ethan and said, “It’s been a full week, I am vegan now.”  I then of course went through my own vegangelical phase and found myself doing the exact same things Ethan did. Luckily, I soon stopped.  

HOP: What are your tips for talking to non-vegan family members?

Ethan: My best advice is to accept that you might not necessarily be able change them. Just like you are asking for them to accept you and your choice to live vegan, it is important to understand that they may not be in a space where they can receive the same information that you did, much less integrate it or act on it. Often, it is hardest for our closest friends and family to receive this information from us because our relationships are steeped in lots of history and baggage. It is always important to share your truth with the people you love and you should never tolerate relationships where you are ridiculed, teased or not accepted because of the ethical choices you make, because that cuts at the trust and mutual respect which is at the core of any healthy relationship.

At the same time, respect goes both ways. Even though it might be difficult for us to never truly respect our loved one’s choice to not personally embrace a vegan ethic, it’s important to separate that from respecting them as individuals and respecting their right to make their own choices, even choices with which we strongly disagree. In my experience, when you come at folks without an agenda of “getting them to go vegan” it’s far more likely that they actually will.

Michael: Don’t pressure them, as we both learned, that never works. It is better to inspire by example…we need to meet people where they are. If they bring it up, I like to follow the advice of Colleen Patrick Goudreau who said, ‘if you are asked about being vegan during a meal, let the person know you are more than happy to have that conversation, but ask if they really want to have that conversation right now.’

HOP: The Vegan Mos NYC Vegan cookbook is so drool-worthy and packed with old time comfort-food faves! Can you tell us what ‘Vegan Mos’ stands of and how it started?

Vegan Mos: The “Mos” in our name is short for homos. Our friends Dan and Mike already had The Gay Vegans, so we decided to use vegan as the adjective to modify Mos. In the 90’s in the LGBT community, using the term “mo” became a way of referring to one another “oh, he’s a mo,” so we decided to reclaim it. We began Vegan Mos as a way of sharing recipes for delicious, homemade vegan food. We wanted to show people that going vegan did not mean giving up any of the flavours we loved. We also wanted to highlight the intersection of LGBT rights and animal rights. We wanted to help people see that speciesism is no different than homophobia – both stem from a fictitious belief that one group of beings is superior to another and therefore can oppress the perceived lesser one.

HOP: Can you tell us one of the most life changing moments you have had on a farm sanctuary?

Ethan: I remember when The Tiniest Herd was rescued at Woodstock Farm Sanctuary back in 2016 and the first time I went up and met all the tiny baby goats (like many folks, I can get a little obsessed with the cuteness overload from baby goat videos). When I got to meet all of these babies and watch them with their young mothers, I had my first “Ah-ha” moment about how special this truly was: here were Mothers who got to keep their babies. That just doesn’t happen to the overwhelming majority of farmed animals out there. It really hit me right then and there: when we support industries that use animals for food or some other human purpose, we’re actually destroying families. It was such a special experience to witness these cute babies playing around us with their equally adorable young Mamas who were keeping a watchful eye on them, occasionally disciplining them as needed. I thought, “this is how it’s supposed to be.” That experience infused my already deeply-rooted animal rights activism with a deeper layer of commitment: to keeping families from being separated, whether they are animal families or human families. 

Michael: It was when I first got to meet a piglet at Woodstock Farm Sanctuary named Mishka. Ethan named him Mishka, after me. Mishka was my name in Russian class and when my cousin Karen learned that, she began calling me that, and still does to this day (I won’t say how many decades later). At Woodstock, they don’t like to use the same names for different residents to avoid any confusion when talking about the animals. As there already was a Mike there (even though I never go by Mike, they didn’t want to risk confusion between Mike and Michael), Ethan chose to use Mishka. Mishka and his family (3 brothers, his sister, and his mother) were rescued from a horrible situation of neglect. Sadly one of his brother’s passed away, but Mishka will get to live his life safe and happy with his family. Mishka was the littlest of the bunch and they were not sure he would survive, but he did. This is much like my start in life having been born as a premie and no one knew if I would survive. When I finally got to meet my namesake I was overwhelmed with emotions I began to cry. I will never forget that moment. To know that this little pig is getting the life that so few farm animals will ever get and the fact that he was named was truly remarkable. It was this bittersweet experience of joy for this family and sadness for all the other pigs, and really all the animals, that will never get to live free from harm with their families. 

HOP: What are your top 3 tips for people out there who want to go vegan?

 Vegan Mos:

  1. Take it one meal at a time. Don’t worry about what you are going to do on Thanksgiving, or about your birthday cake, or any other far-off meal.
  2. Shifting your focus from yourself to the animals you are saving really helps. No animal product tastes as good as saving that animal’s life.
  3. Instead of focusing on what’s “missing” from your plate, see that empty space as an opportunity to discover new foods. Try wheatberries, quinoa, amaranth or barley if you haven’t tried them. Maybe you could try Anasazi or Fava beans? Ever try a broccolini? What about Romanesco? There are so many amazingly delicious, unique and nutrient-dense foods out there. We just need to open ourselves up to trying them.

HOP: What makes you happy on a normal day outside of being vegan superstars? 🙂

Ethan: When I can remember in the middle of my day to practice mindfulness and focus on my gratitude it shifts my mood immediately and lifts me up. It’s super easy in our current sociopolitical climate to feel threatened and overwhelmed if you’re an LGBT person (or any other minority for that matter.) Sometimes I’ll just stop and think, “You’re breathing… and it’s easy and painless” and I shift my focus and awareness there and just go with that and it immediately de-stresses me and reconnects me to the innate joy and peace that’s always there, but that is often covered up. It is something that I can do anywhere, anytime and radically increases my capacity to feel joy during everyday moments and when doing otherwise mundane activities. 

Michael: Spending time with our dogs Riley and Charlie gives me so much joy. There is nothing as wonderful as the love of a companion animal. Also, I am a TV junkie, so sitting on the couch a being able to lose myself in a good TV show is wonderful. 

HOP: Where is the next place you’ll be for people to come meet up with you?

Vegan Mos: Our next scheduled public appearance will at the Hudson Valley Vegfest on either November 3 or 4.

HOP: Let us in on your favourite recipe from your cookbook!

Vegan Mos: That is like trying to pick which of our dogs we love more. All the recipes in NYC Vegan have some special meaning to us. However, in the list of truly iconic NYC food, Black and White Cookies are near the top (scroll down for the recipe)

Where to find the Vegan Mos:

www.VeganMos.com

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Black & White Cookies ~ NYC Vegan
 
Save Print
Cook time
15 mins
Total time
15 mins
 
Thanks to a famous episode of Seinfeld, the black and white cookie, once only known to New Yorkers, garnered national attention. In that episode, Jerry used the black and white as a metaphor for racial harmony. Although called a cookie, these treats are actually made from a stiff cake batter and baked free-form on a cookie sheet. Once found only in bakeries, today the black and white can be found in almost every grocery store and bodega in New York.
Author: Vegan Mos
Recipe type: dessert, snack
Serves: 18
Ingredients

  • Cookies:
  • 2½ cups unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 1¼ teaspoons baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cup nondairy butter
  • ¼ cup nondairy milk, at room temperature
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract

  • Icing:
  • 3½ cups confectioners’ sugar
  • ¼ cup boiling water, plus more if needed
  • ¼ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • ⅔ cup nondairy semisweet chocolate chips
Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line 2 (18 x 12-inch) baking sheets with parchment paper. In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Set aside.
  2. In another large bowl, combine the sugar and butter and beat until creamy, about 5 minutes. Add the milk and vanilla and beat until incorporated. Add the flour mixture to the butter mixture in batches, beating after each addition, until combined.
  3. Scoop the dough, ¼ cup at a time, onto the prepared baking sheets, spacing the scoops 3 inches apart. Flatten them slightly with your hands (keep your hands wet to prevent the dough from sticking). Allow room between the scoops as the cookies will spread as they bake.
  4. Bake the cookies for 15 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Allow the cookies to cool 2 minutes on the baking sheets and then carefully flip the cookies over and transfer them, upside down, to a wire rack to cool completely.
  5. While the cookies are cooling, make the icing. In a large mixing bowl, combine the confectioners’ sugar, boiling water, and vanilla. Mix well to get a spreadable icing. Add a little more water, if needed. Using an offset spatula, spread a thin layer of icing onto the flat side, the former bottom, of each cookie. Return the cookies to the wire rack to dry. You should have about ½ cup of icing left.
  6. While the white icing is drying, melt the chocolate chips in a microwave or double boiler. When the chips are all melted and smooth, whisk the melted chocolate into the remaining icing. The chocolate icing should be thicker than the white, but still be spreadable. If it is too thick, add a little hot water to thin it out. Use the offset spatula to frost one half of each cookie over the white icing. Return the cookies to the wire racks to dry. Store leftovers in a covered container for up for 5 days.
3.5.3226

Tag me or the Vegan Mos if you make this! (@hookedonplants @veganmos on instagram)!

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Filed Under: Dessert, Hooked On People Interviews, Lifestyle, Recipes, Snacks, Uncategorized, Veganism Tagged With: black and white cookies, cookie recipe, cookies, dessert, hooked on people interview, plant based interview, vegan cookies, vegan dessert, vegan interview, vegan mos

Chocolate Green Smoothie Popsicles | Detox Pops

August 23, 2018 By julia

There’s a whole lot of hidden green goodness in these babies! Chocolate green smoothie popsicles…..

A frosty treat? Yes.

A refreshing snack? Uh huh.

A mega-dose of nutrients? Totes.

A smoothie on a stick? HELLS YA

… all drizzled with vegan chocolate.

There are smoothie pops, and then there are these. They’re creamy with almond milk, sweet with banana, and incredibly easy with Chelsie’s Blender Bites.

Chelsie is a genius. She had the problem that most of us have when it comes to smoothie making.

Here’s how it goes:

  • Take every piece of produce out of the fridge
  • Throw a bit of everything in the blender
  • Add your powders
  • Add your frozen fruit
  • Then, WHA-BAM!! A tornado has now graced your kitchen.

The Blender Bites makes it an easy affair with no clean up. They’re little frozen pucks packed with greens, fruit, and superfoods that you just throw into your blender with the liquid of choice and maybe a banana (or not), and call it a smoothie. SO ridiculously easy.

I love local companies (Chelsie makes all of the frozen pucks in Vancouver), especially when they add so much ease to my morning.

I went a little further than your typical smoothie today to create these frosty treats!

Read on for the recipe if you want a super healthy pop, still packed with flavour and drizzled in chocolate goodness (totally optional) to slap that junk food craving in the face.


5.0 from 1 reviews
Chocolate Green Smoothie Popsicles | Detox Pops
 
Save Print
Prep time
5 mins
Total time
5 mins
 
A hidden greens popsicle that cures that frosty treat craving!
Author: Jules
Recipe type: dessert, breakfast, snack
Serves: 5
Ingredients

  • Popsicles:
  • 2 blender bite pucks
  • 2 bananas
  • 1 cup vanilla or chocolate plant milk (almond, coconut, hemp, soy, pea or cashew)

  • Chocolate Drizzle:
  • ¼ cup vegan chocolate chips
  • 1 tsp coconut oil
Instructions
  1. Blend popsicle ingredients until smooth.
  2. Pour mixture into popsicle molds and freeze overnight.
  3. Make chocolate drizzle by microwaving chocolate and oil together in a bowl for 30 seconds (can also be melted in a double boilerset up). Take out and whisk immediately until smooth.
  4. Pull out popsicles (run under warm water for 10 seconds to make it easier to pull them out), and lay them on a plate.
  5. Drizzle chocolate over top, then place in freezer for 5 minutes.
  6. Enjoy!
3.5.3226

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This week was all about the 3 supplements you should be taking! The one spray I take each day is Complement, because it has all that you need in one go! You can use HOOKEDONPLANTS at the check out for 10% off.

Filed Under: Dessert, Gluten Free, Recipes, Snacks, Summer, Uncategorized Tagged With: blender bites, chocolate green smoothie popsicles, chocolate smoothie popsicles, detox pops, easy snack, green smoothie popsicles, hooked on plants, kids recipe, melted chocolate, plant based treat, plant-based snack, popsicle recipe, popsicles, smoothie pops, smoothie popsicles, superfood snack, vegan chocolate, vegan treat, whole food plant based

Blueberry Banana Coconut Cream Milkshake | Vegan

July 26, 2018 By julia

The dog days of summer call for something frosty, creamy and nostalgic. This vanilla blueberry banana coconut cream milkshake is the answer…always.

Creaminess, frostiness & blueberries…something magical happens when these 3 collide. The blueberries become much more than the usual blueberry you’d expect. It reminds me of getting blueberry milkshakes as a kid at the Hornby Island bakery. They came as a massive glass filled with a blue galaxy of creaminess. It was packed with dairy though, so this one is infinite galaxies better.

The amazing taste and mouth feel is still all there.

Here we have a dairy-free version with all the thickness, creamy goodness and decadence that I remember.

On a hot summers day, there’s nothing better than a slow sip-full of this masterpiece.

It’s ridiculously easy to make.

It’s refreshingly frosty.

It’s melt-in-your mouth decadent.

It’s blueberry banana coconut cream milkshake heaven with a touch of vanilla deliciousness.

Top it off with some cookie crumbles (I used Anna’s Ginger Snaps), extra fruit … or maybe some coco whip from this pumpkin cheezecake recipe?! (Drooling as I write this).

Let’s talk blueberries for a sec. They’re packed with antioxidants (especially wild blueberries) to combat free radicals and protect you from all forms of disease, aging and viruses, plus they’re high in vitamin C to boost your immunity. At just 80 calories per cup, they’re a megadose of nutrition, so eat them by the handful!!! They are part of the dirty dozen group when it comes to organics, though. This just means you should make blueberries one of the ingredients that you always get organic! Buying them local is also always best. If you can grow your own, amazing… but if not, find a local farmer. I stock up on Hare’s Farm’s blueberries from Pemberton every year throughout the summer and try to have a freezer full of them to last me at least a month of winter (they go down fast around here!)

You can order 10lb frozen boxes from JD Hare directly through email: haresfarm1993@gmail.com or find his blueberries at the Whistler Farmer’s Market!

On to the recipe!


Blueberry Banana Coconut Cream Milkshake
 
Save Print
Prep time
5 mins
Total time
5 mins
 
A thick & frosty treat for that hot summer's day, still packed with benefits.
Author: Jules
Recipe type: Dessert, Snack
Serves: 2
Ingredients
  • 2 cups blueberries
  • 1 cup vanilla coconut ice cream (I used Coconut Bliss)
  • 2-3 cups vanilla plant-based milk (I used Califia Vanilla Almond)
  • 2 frozen bananas
  • Toppings (optional):
  • Extra blueberries
  • Crumbled cookies (like vegan graham crackers or Annie's ginger snaps)
  • Banana slices
  • Coconut Whipped Cream from this cheezecake recipe (oh man that would be so good!!!)
Instructions
  1. Blend all mylkshake ingredients together in your blender. Start with just 2 cups of milk, then keep adding until you have the consistency that will slowly move through your straw.
  2. Pour into your favourite jar, and top it off with your choice of toppings.
3.5.3226

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Filed Under: Dessert, Gluten Free, Oil Free, Raw, Recipes, Salt Free, Snacks, Spring, Summer, Uncategorized Tagged With: 5 minute dessert, banana milkshake, blueberries, blueberry milkshake, coconut cream milkshake, coconut icecream recipe, coconut milkshake, frosty dessert, hare's farm blueberries, hooked on plants, mylkshake, plant based dessert, plant based milkshake, ready in 5, refreshing dessert, summer treat, vegan blueberry coconut milkshake, vegan dessert, vegan milkshake, vegan snack, vegan summer dessert, vegan summer treat

NYC Vegan Dining Guide | What I Ate in New York City

July 5, 2018 By julia

The Big Apple! Vegan cafes, restaurants, grocery stores and shops are hard to miss in NYC… I tried to hit them all, but obviously I’ll just have to go back over and over again! I hope this NYC vegan dining guide will help you make the most of your eating adventure while you’re in this incredible city.

A couple small town girls ripping around the city

The purpose behind my NYC trip was to become a Vegan Lifestyle Coach and Educator through Main Street Vegan Academy. Mission accomplished, I came home with a new certification and beautiful piece of paper, but more importantly an incredible fire burning inside of me for this plant-based revolution. The 5 days was full of vegan restaurants, plant-based doctor presentations, vegan chef demos and the creation of a passionate community who fuelled off of each other’s good energy!

Thanks to the inspiring Victoria Moran for creating such an amazing week.

I was welcomed to NY by Dan and Keziah with some delish vegan pasta, and after the 5 day course, a glorious friend made the trek down and we explored more arts, culture, food and views.

Urban Vegan Kitchen Brunchin’

Some inspirational peeps who’ve sparked my vegan fire over the last week:

Vegan Mos (influencers Michael and Ethan of NYC Vegan)

Martin Rowe (Brighter Green – ALL about the environment)

JL Fields (podcaster + culinary coach)

Dr. Milton Mills (as seen on What the Health)

The Discerning Brute (Brave Gentle Man vegan fashion brand owner)

Mariann Sullivan (Our Hen House- Animal law pro)

Tatiana Ferero Puerto (lifestyle coaching)

Robert Ostfeld, MD. (Forks over Knives, Cardiologist)

Marty Davey Dietician

Fran Costigan (Vegan Chocolate guru)

For a behind the scenes look of my week in New York, check out my saved instagram story at @hookedonplants

Main Street Vegan graduates

On to the guide.

I made it to most of these, but added some that I couldn’t fit in…this trip. Until next time NYC!

RESTAURANTS

Beyond Sushi

What: 100% Plant-based sushi take-out with 5 spots in Manhattan

Known For: Chef Guy’s (a Hell’s Kitchen chef) incredible whole food flavour creations with rolls, soups, dumpling and salads

Social: @beyondsushinyc

Personal note: One of our dinners at Victoria’s Main Street Vegan Academy was catered from these guys. The sushi came with a variety of amazing sauces, and a delish seaweed side salad.

Champs Diner

What: Classic diner! For breakfast, brunch, lunch and dinner!

Known For: Mozzerella Sticks, Hangover Hippie dish, S’mores Sundae, Tempeh Wings and Tater Tots

Addy: 197 Meserole Street, Brooklyn

Social: @champsdiner

Personal note: If you’re worried about being deprived of your favourite foods by going vegan, just eat at this place and you’ll be blown away. Serious comfort food. I had the waffle with fresh berries, and tried some of the hangover hippie tofu scramble …YUM. Ohhh and those tots. So crisp and delish. 

‘Crawfish’ @ Seasoned Vegan

Raw Walnut Nori Roll @ Seasoned Vegan

‘Gravy smothered chicken’ + Mac & Cheese


Seasoned Vegan

What: Vegan Louisiana soul food in the heart of Harlem

Known For: Their crawfish, hot cakes, + mac & cheese

Addy:  55 St Nicholas Ave

Social: @seasonedvegan

Personal note: I tried their raw walnut sushi (so good), and shared some hot cakes with vegan butter (amazing), and had to try bites of their famous crawfish, gravy-smothered chicken and the deeply delicious mac + cheese! The restaurant was bustling with a constant stream of hungry New Yorkers, and yup …. Mind = blown.

Ayurveda Cafe

What: Ayurveda is all about that balance, and quite literally the ‘knowledge’ (veda) ‘of life’ (ayur). It goes back over 5000 years of traditional holistic system of well-being from india. By including all 6 tastes (sour, sweet, bitter, astringent, pungent, salty) it’s incredibly satisfying and rejuvenating. Here you can take the decision making out of the equation because the set menu changes daily (fun). Tapa’s style!

Known For: They’re balanced meals and a new menu daily. Ordering seconds for free is encouraged:) Just ask for it.

Addy: 706 Amsterdam Ave

Social: @ayurvedacafe

Personal note: I loved this place. It’s super casual and welcoming and so fun to have mini dishes of a variety of food that you know is balanced with healing herbs and spices. Cauliflower carrot curry, brown rice, spicy lentils. The naan was the only gluten-containing part of the lunch.

Zoma Ethiopian

What: Ethiopian in NYC! It’s not a completely vegan restaurant, but has a handful of delicious vegan options.

Known For: Their teff sourdough bread is somethin’ else (stretchy and yum, perfect for dipping), and the veg dishes are raved about.

Addy: 113th and Frederick Douglass  

Social: @zomanyc1

Personal note:  I love dipping, so this was right up my alley. No utensils needed, just tear the bread and dip away. Order a few different veg options and get those taste buds in a higher state! The 3 of us shared the 4 veg dish sampler of Shiro Wett (chickpea/lentil/roasted peas), Gomen (collard greens simmered in veggie broth, onion + garlic), Atakakilt Wett (carrot, potato, cabbage, onion tomato dish), and Misir Wett (spicy red lentils).

Raw Platter @ Caravan of Dreams

Caravan of Dreams

What: An incredible vegan cafe with a 1970’s, low-key, hippie vibe with a massive menu full of options from raw, to macrobiotic, to comfort food. Walking into this place feels like you’re walking into a dream land. Founded in 1991, by Angel, it’s considered to be one of  NYC’s leading vegan restaurants combining, food, culture, entertainment and healthy vibes.

Known For: There’s something for everyone! Their elixir drinks are packed to the brim with crazy superfoods.

Addy: 405 East 6th Street, East Village

Raw Sushi @ Caravan of Dreams

Social: @caravanofdreams405

Personal note: One of my favourites. I had the raw food platter, and it was the most colourful dish I’ve seen with beet carpaccio, raw lasagne, strawberry cashew bites, raw meat balls, house made sauerkraut and mango somethin! So flavourful, bright and energizing. I started the experience off with their ‘Good Mood Tonic’ with ashawagandha, skullcap flower, macuna prurient, shilajit, cordiceps, St.John’s wort flower, prickly ash bark, lucuma, cacao, mesquite, chug and mulberries (I know… amazing right?!).

Nori Crusted Tofu + Asian veggies with Black rice @ Candle Cafe West

Candle Café West

What: 1 of the 3 Candle Restaurants. These creative restaurants have something for everyone and are known for their celeb guest sightings. Candle Cafe West is a more casual sister restaurant to the fancy-vibe, well known Candle 79 restaurant. It’s 100% organic, kosher and vegan with a full bar!

Known For: Seitan chimichurri appy, avocado tomato tartare and their artichoke heart happy.

Addy: 2427 Broadway, Upper West Side

Raw Lasagne @ Candle Cafe West

Avocado Tomato TarTare @ Candle Cafe West

Social: @candlecafewest

Personal note:  It was tough to decide, but I chose to share the avocado tomato tartare + cheesy seitan nachos to start, and topped it off with the Nori Crusted Tofu main dish with black rice, asian veggies and sake-miso sauce. It felt like I was ordered the catch o’ the day! Incredibly satisfying and flavourful. Candle restaurants are on the pricier side, but a nice experience with super creative veg dishes! Total worth it.

Tandoor bread + 3 dips @ Nix

Nix

What: A vegetarian restaurant (still serves egg and cheese), with a ton of creative vegan dishes.

Known For: The creativity with their veggie dishes (roasted sunchokes + wok-fried cactus). People come for their Tandoor bread and smoky caramelized onion eggplant dip.

Addy: 72 University Pl

Cauliflower Buffalo Wings @ Nix

Social: @nixny

Personal note: Love this place. Beauty aesthetic with white brick walls, green plants and patterned seats. Mandy and I shared the Cauliflower Tempura Wings (great crunch), Tandoor Bread and 3 dips (avocado mint, eggplant, and hummus) that I could have easily eaten for eternity, plus the miso soup with pickled veggies…and rosé of course, being our last meal in the Big Apple.

Chickpea Fries + Duxelle Mushroom Pizza @ Peace Food Cafe

Peacefood Cafe

What: Super cute, sit-down, 100% vegan cafe with an extensive menu and baked goods.

Known For: Their 2 bite brownies (VegNews winning dessert), cookie sandwiches, their chickpea fries, and layered sweet potato, cashew quiche!

Addy: 460 Amsterdam Ave

Social: @peacefoodnyc

Layered Kale Cashew Sweet Potato Quiche @ Peacefood Cafe

Personal note: After renting bikes and doing a big loop around Manhattan in the sunshine, we found our way to this gem. We shared the chickpea fries, and they were all they were worked up to be (must try!!!). We also enjoyed the rainbow-layered Sweet Potato, Cashew Kale Quiche which was up there for the best dish of the trip. So gorgeous and packed with beautiful colour.  Plus…. the Mushroom Duxelle pizza with a base of roasted sweet potatoes, onion and beans, all topped off with zucchini and red peppers. NOM.

On our way out the door, the torrential down pour moved in, and we were forced to stay in the cafe for a house-made Cashew Milk Latté, their famous 2 bite brownies and the Grasshopper Cookie Sandwich with mint filling, and the Chocolate Chip cookie sandwiches with chocolate cream. Everything happens for a reason right?:)

Urban Vegan Kitchen

What: Hip vegan restaurant with a DJ booth, full bar and comfort-style breaki, lunch and dins. The menu was created by @mississippivegan and owner, @bigapplevegan ! She’s the same owner of Blossom and Blossom Du Jour (vegan fast food with 4 spots in NYC)

Known For: Their Chick-Un & Waffles made from southern fried seitan with maple mustard aioli.

Addy: 41 Charmine Street

Social: @urbanvegankitchen

Funky vibes of Urban Vegan Kitchen

Personal note: So good, I had to go here twice. Walking into this space immediately made me feel excited for the food. Photos of animals everywhere with hidden words on the brick walls, with a bright graffiti-covered wall behind the DJ booth and a downstairs perfect for groups. Dinner for me started with the Jackfruit Quesadilla with numu mozzarella, grilled peppers and vegan sour cream, followed by the Urban Macro Bowl with garlic mustard marinated tempeh, sautéed kale, herbed quinoa, arugula, roasted carrots, and beautiful creamy cashew beet dressing. It did not disappoint!

We had to come back from brunch that brought on the Seitan Buffalo Wings to start (why not), the Tofu Scramble with maple mushroom bacon (oh my) for me, and the BLT for Mandy. Seriously savoury deliciousness.

Oyster Mushroom Escargot @ Delice & Serrasin

Delice & Serrasin:

What: French Vegan Food! The cutest little restaurant you’ll ever see. Seats only 22, so reservations are a good idea. It feels like you’re taking a trip to France in the middle of NY, but vegan.

Known For: Their incredible french dishes! HOW do they do it?

Addy: 20 Christopher Street

Social: @delicesarrasin

Personal note: My Mom used to make the most amazing Coq Au Vin (after living in Europe for 7 years in her Freestyle competitor days, she picked up on the local cuisine and perfected her SacherTorte and Coq Au Vin recipes to match the true french flavours). But, it was far from vegan. Now both of us are vegan, so I didn’t expect to taste Coq Au Vin like up to my Mom’s par ever again. I had to order it here and… MAGIC! The seitan ‘chicken’ and deep, french flavours brought me back, I couldn’t believe it!!! We also shared Oyster Mushroom Escargot. Wow. This place is top-notch, quaint and a place you simply must experience.

Bar Verde

What: A 100% vegan mexican + latin, Mathew Kenney restaurant.

Known For: Vegan share plates and sustainable tequila!

Addy:  65 2nd Ave

Social: @barverdenyc @mathewkenneycuisine

Personal note: Mathew Kenney is a powerhouse plant-based chef, creating the future of food in the form of plant-based cuisine! He has multiple restaurants all over the world (including Plant Food + Wine in LA) His others in NYC are Plntmade and Double Zero pizza.

Jajaja Plantis Mexicana

What: Vegan Mexican. Beautiful, happy, light decor!

Known For: Their immensely flavourful jackfruit taco’s that taste exactly pulled pork.

Addy: 162 E. Broadway

Social: @jajajanyc

Personal note: It was so busy that we couldn’t get a walk-in table, so this is one for the next trip (make a reso!).

Avant Garden

What: A small, elegant foodie’s dream from the famous Ravi DeRossi, an esteemed NYC restaurateur who went vegan! He’s in the process of turning all of his restaurants (close to a dozen) vegan: YAY. Reserve well in advance.

Known For:  Paella + Hen of the Woods (made with mushroom puree and kohlorabi!)

Addy: 130 E. 7th St

Social: @avantgardevegan

Blossom + Blossom Du Jour:

What: Restaurants by @BigAppleVegan (Pamela Elizabeth)

Known For: Blossom, with 2 locations, is a sit down restaurant, and Blossom Du Jour, with 4 locations, is a grab n’ go ‘fast foody’ kind of place. Fun, healthy, quick and delish. That’s her moto. Blossom has become an NYC leader in the vegan restaurant movement.

Social: @blossomnyc @blossomdujour

Personal note: I made it to her sister restaurant, @urbanvegankitchen,  twice! But did have the time to check out the Blossoms (I’ve heard so many great things about them though). Guess I have to go back!

By Chloe

What: Vegan Sweets, Vegan Fast Food

Known For: The amazing Chef Chloe can be found all over instagram and youtube, veganizing old favourites. Her ice cream, cookies, burgers, and fries bring people in from around the globe.

Addy: 7 Locations in NYC! 

Social: @eatbychloe

Cocoa V

What: Vegan Chocolate & Wine!

Known For: Decadent chocolates paired with vegan wines.

Addy: 174 Ninth Ave

Social: @cocoavnyc

SHOPS

Fanciful Fox

What: 100% vegan, toxin-free, cruelty-free soap + beauty product dispensary started by Amanda Fox and her mama Kathy! Amanda is a Main Street Vegan graduate who followed her passion and created this beautiful store with magical branding.

Known For: Her mystical, creative vibes throughout her whole store! All of her products are ‘tested on dirty vegans, not animals’ 😉

Addy: 204 Irving Ave, Brooklyn

Social: @thefancifulfox 

Personal note: Majestic. This beautiful Mama/Daughter duo has created something really special. My favourite is the ‘Fire Dance’ air freshener, ‘Unicorn Dream’ candles, and ‘Dirty Hippie’ hand sanitizer. This shop oozes passion from the Fox’s.

Fanciful Fox Soapery

Dual Spice

What: An emporium of spices, herbs, superfoods and Ayurvedic products. What seems like a little hole in the wall has an incredible variety of allllll the things!

Known For: It’s abundance of powders, tonics, essential oils and superfoods. It’s pretty much a pharmacy in the form of plants.

Addy: 91 1st Avenue

Personal note: I could have spent hours in this place. I came home with an extra carry-on packed with superfood mushroom powders, essential oils, Amla powder (one of the highest antioxidant and highest vitamin C superfood powders available), cordyceps and reishi powders, beet powder (for unicorn hummus :), digestive tonic, black Hawaiian salt, turmeric golden milk powder … to name a few

High Vibe Health

What: The first ever raw-food store in America to open up, run by raw food guru and health coach, Dagger and his wife. This place has all the raw vegan goodies, and prides themselves on the local vibes by supporting local vendors and creating an inclusive community of high vibers

Known For: Their array of goodies! Raw vegan chocolate, desserts, cheeses, crackers, and natural body care products.

Addy: 138 E 3rd St

Social: @HighVibeNYC

Personal note:  Just walk into this place, and you’ll feel right at home. Owners Gay and Dagger say their philosophy is to treat every customer as if they were they’re Mom or Grandma; with respect and like a queen! We were lucky enough to get a run down of some high vibe products, and just before heading out, a serenade from Dagger on his guitar. He sees his store as a 2nd home, and a place for creativity, fun, comfort and high vibe raw foods.

Moo Shoes

What: Vegan Shoes, Bags & Accessories

Known For: Fashionable vegan shoes and bags

Addy:

Social: @Mooshoes

Orchard Grocer:

What: 100% vegan grocery store, deli and gelato shop (a door frame away from Moo Shoes and owned by the same awesome people)

Known For: New vegan cheeses, their delish gelato and vegan snacks!

Addy: 78 Orchard Street

Social: @orchardgrocer

Erin McKenna’s Bakery

What: Vegan Bakery! Erin has been on the Martha Stewart show, the Today Show, and has a bakery in Disney World too.

Known For: Her gluten-free, soy-free, non-gmo, 100% vegan cupcakes, cookies and cute outfits.

Addy: 248 Broome St

Social: @erinmckennasBakery

Riverdel Cheese

What: 100% Vegan Cheese Shop created by Main Street Vegan alumni, Michaela Grob.

Known For: Look forward to sampling pretty much every vegan cheese you’ve ever heard of, and some you haven’t. Toasted cheese sandwiches anyone?

Addy: 820 Washington Avenue, Brooklyn

Social: @riverdelcheese

Personal note: If I was to go back to NYC and all I could do is visit this shop, I’d go in a milli-sec.  I’m drooling just from reading about the array of vegan cheese she has!

I hope this NYC vegan dining guide helps you make the most of your trip to New York!

Or, at least I hope it inspired you to eat more plants in a creative way:)

Other things to do in NYC?

Go see a Broadway show

Walk the HighLine

Run in Central Park

Rent a bike and go along Hudson’s River

See a Burlesque Show at House of Yes!

Check out a Speak Easy like Please Don’t Tell or The Back Room

Want more?

Sign up to my emails for weekly inspiration, recipes, plus a free PDF on How to Get Hooked On Plants

A sign at Times Square on a Friday night! #GoVegan 🙂

Filed Under: Breakfast, Brunch, Dessert, Dinner, Holidays, Lifestyle, Lunch, Travel, Uncategorized Tagged With: a week in new york, a week in nyc, hooked on plants takes on nyc, hooked on plants travel, main street vegan, new york guide, nyc cafes, nyc eats, nyc restaurants, nyc vegan dining guide, plant based travel, vegan cafe, vegan new york, vegan nyc, vegan travel

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Hi, I'm Julia! I like to simplify plant-based eating and make yummy recipes. I'm a Registered Holistic Nutritionist, certified plant-based chef, Olympian, and I make cereal (Jules Fuel). Enjoy! Read more

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