• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

HookedOnPlants

When getting hooked is a good thing

  • Jules
  • Why Vegan?
  • Optimize Your Diet
  • Podcast
  • Recipes
  • Contact
  • Free Breakfast Recipe Book
  • Shop
  •  

Veganism

Mostly Plants 28 Day Program | Your Guide to Better Eating

December 31, 2018 By julia

I’m incredibly excited to announce something we have been working on over the last half of the year!

 
Mostly Plants
 ( @eat_mostlyplants on instagram)

This is all about helping you get into the flow of a plant-based lifestyle, in a VERY approachable, fun, easy-going way. It’s an introduction to a lifestyle change. It’s not just a diet.

Nil (Eat for the Planet & One Green Planet), Matt (Alpine Organics), TK (Veggie Grill) and I have all come together to create the 28 day program, packed with incredible content, including a daily video from yours truly. I feel very aligned with all of it, knowing that it will help so many people & animals and I’m so excited to be their spokesperson.

Where a seed is planted, a beautiful forest grows! That’s the mindset for Mostly Plants.

Each video covers a topic about the plant-based lifestyle in an easily digestible way.

We cover everything that you need to know about being plant-based, all the way from kitchen essentials and family gatherings, to shopping tips, travelling ideas, reading nutrition panels, and health benefits….plus so much more.

Here’s a little instagram story I’ve made for you with all that you need to know:

How does it work???

Once you sign up, you’ll immediately be a part of the supportive community with full access to the recipes, the 1 on 1 coaching, the active conversations, and the awesome content!
Each day we will bring you:

  • the daily video lesson
  • helpful tips about the day’s topic
  • infographics to explain the video lesson
  • an active, supportive, completely non-judgmental community to chat with (with all of the others going through the program as well as the coaches)
  • 1 on 1 coaching with support from the Mostly Plants Team (including myself) where you can ask about ANYTHING you’re having issues with
  • tons of recipes at your fingertips, sectioned off as ‘whole food plant based’, ‘sweet’, ‘savoury’, or ‘indulgent plant-based’

The Mostly Plants way of eating:

  • 2 whole food plant based meals per day
  • 1 ‘indulgent’ plant-based meal per day
  • and if needed, 2 ‘flex meals’ per week

The first welcome video will explain all of this more in-depth!

For the week of December 31st until January 6th, we’ll be launching the program for $5!

The good catch: when you finish the program and have great results, send in a before and after  testimonial + photo … and we will give you your $5 back!
There’s nothing to lose, except maybe an inch or two and some junk food cravings:)

If you:

-need support and motivation and a guide for healthy eating
-want to jumpstart your healthy new year
-start on your plant-based journey
-need guidance to become more plant based

…then this is totally for you!

Head to www.mostlyplants.com today to be one of the first to sign up.

See you there, like this…!

 

Filed Under: Lifestyle, Veganism Tagged With: 28 day program, going plant based, going vegan, lifestyle change, mostly plants, mostly plants method, nutrition program, plant based lifestyle, plant based program, vegan lifestyle

Hooked on People: Anna Pippus aka Easy Animal Free + her Lentil Walnut Bolognese

December 6, 2018 By julia

Anna’s instagram stories ( @easyanimalfree ) make the vegan lifestyle as a busy Mom of 2 look like a breeze (by making recipes like her lentil walnut bolognese, shared below!). The way she shares recipes, ideas and tips makes her super approachable, and totally normalizes the plant-based lifestyle.
In a nutshell, Anna is an animal rights activist, and lawyer. Her life’s mission is to minimize animal’s suffering as much as she possibly can… and she’s doing this by specializing in farm animals by serving as director of farmed animal advocacy for Animal Justice, and as a strategic advisor for We Animals.
She is an incredible voice for the voiceless, and does a fantastic job bringing it all back to the mainstream by showing how simple it can be to create easy, breezy, delicious meals for her family.

Let’s get to know Anna a bit more…


Hooked on Plants: Was there a moment in your life that made you go vegan?

Anna Pippus: I went vegetarian as a kid, simply because I was a big animal lover and it didn’t feel right to eat animals. But, I didn’t know anything about farming back then, and I kept eating eggs and dairy, wearing leather, and buying cosmetics by animal testing brands without too much thought. This was the early 90s—there was no internet, and veganism was rare enough that I’d never heard of it.

A little over ten years ago, I first heard about veganism, and on some level I think it occurred to me that this was probably a good thing to do, something that I should and would do. I half-heartedly poured watery rice milk in my tea and tried to avoid cheese made with cow’s milk (which I loved, and in those days vegan cheeses were inedible). But I avoided learning more about farming. I had such empathy for animals that I couldn’t stand seeing them suffering. I told myself that I was already doing my part, that exposing myself to gory photos and videos wouldn’t help.

Then, in Charlotte Montgomery’s book Blood Relations, I read a story about a bull on a truck being taken to slaughter. The bull had a broken hip and couldn’t stand, let alone walk. But bulls are enormous animals and the only way for them to get off a truck is on their own (on farms, tractors are used to move downed cattle). The workers used an electric prod to shock the bull and force him to drag himself—using only his front legs—to the back of the truck, where he slammed several feet into the ground below. Then, he was forced to drag himself into the slaughterhouse. It took hours. By the time he was inside, the slaughterhouse was closing for the day, and he was left— alone and in pain—on the floor to wait for the next day, when workers would kill him.

It was like I’d been splashed with a bucket of cold water. In that moment, I realized with full clarity something I think I’d been growing to understand all along: that when animals are used as commodities, they will suffer. Animal welfare is most often in tension with profits. Workers are desensitized to the suffering of animals, because they have to be in order to be able to do the job. I realized then that farming animals could never be humane. I immediately became not only vegan, but a dedicated activist. And fortunately, plant-based milks and cheeses have come a long way since then—there are lots of delicious options now!

HOP: You have a very in-depth post here about raising vegan children, but could you give a few simple tips here on vegan lunch prepping for families?

AP: In our family, I do most of the kitchen managing and cooking, because it’s something I really enjoy. But I’m definitely not up for making complicated, time-consuming meals, and I only have it in me to cook once a day, at dinner time. (I love my end-of-day ritual of putting on some music and getting absorbed in the creativity of cooking).

So, at dinner, I tend to cook big meals, that will provide us with leftovers for the next day, or extra parts that can be repurposed into something else (e.g. extra rice to make fried rice another day). That way, when I open the fridge at lunch time, there’s always something to work with.

If there isn’t, we have sandwiches or open-faced toast, along with veggies (like peppers or cucumber), fruit, nuts etc.

I’m a big believer in the gospel of hummus. Everyone should have it in the fridge! It’s delicious, ridiculously nutritious, a good source of iron, calcium, and protein, and widely liked even by the world’s least adventurous eaters. It’s perfect on sandwiches, salads, and bowls, and as a dip with crackers or vegetables.

HOP: You use your legal training to do your best to change the farm animal laws (amazing!)… but what are your top tips for people who want to make a difference in the animals lives, but don’t know where to start?

AP: There is so much to be done! Everyone has different skills, lifestyles, and personalities, so I think the first step is to self-reflect and take inventory about how you can best contribute to the movement in a way that will be both impactful for animals and sustainable for you.

Here are a few ways people can get involved to help animals:

  • donate to effective initiatives and organizations.
  • volunteer with established initiatives and organizations, especially if you have skills in bookkeeping, fundraising, graphic design, video production, or anything else that non-profits are chronically in need of.
  • organize or attend impactful protests, demonstrations, and marches.
  • share information and resources that you find impactful or useful on social media.
  • write letters to the editor in response to media pieces about animals, plant-based eating, the environment, health… any hook you can find!
  • write or meet with politicians at all levels of government (municipal, provincial, federal) to ask what they’re doing about animal issues and make suggestions for policies they can back. If there’s a particular piece of legislation being considered, write to let them know you support it.
  • contact restaurants and grocery stores in your neighbourhood to encourage them to add plant-based options. Make suggestions for your favourite products and dishes.
  • sign petitions, if they’re to specific decision-makers with specific, winnable requests.
  • use chalk to write messages on the sidewalks around your neighbourhood, or put up posters on community message boards.
  • host potlucks, meet ups, book clubs or other events to help build community and spread the word.

HOP: What facts might surprise people about grass-fed, free-range and cage free laws?

AP: These terms very often don’t mean what people think they do. Even in best-case scenarios, animals are still genetically manipulated to manifest profitable traits that often compromise their welfare. For example, dairy cows produce up to 10 times more milk these days than they used to, which leads to painful engorgement, physical depletion, and rampant mastitis (a painful infection). Chickens raised for meat are bred to grow very large, very quickly, which can cause cardiovascular problems (their little hearts can’t keep up), and lameness because their bones are too soft and immature to support their relatively massive weight. In all sectors, genetic manipulation has produced a laundry list of grotesque outcomes that directly compromise animals’ quality of life.

As a mother, probably the thing that breaks my heart the most is how on all farms—even the certified humane ones—animals are separated from their families. In the dairy industry, calves are taken from their mothers a few hours after birth, so that the milk can be diverted to humans. The babies are a waste product of the dairy industry. In nature, hens are doting mothers, peeping to their babies through the shell to establish a bond. After hatching, they’d be nearly inseparable, the babies tucked under their mothers’ wings for comfort and safety. But in our agriculture system, chicks are hatched in industrial hatcheries, never knowing their mothers. Chicken meat and egg farms are like giant orphanages with no mature presence to teach or comfort. If you go into a chicken farm and sit down, the babies will come over and fall asleep in your warm lap.

And of course, even in a best case scenario, animals are sent to be killed at a fraction of their natural lifespan. Virtually all animals are babies when we kill them for food: chickens are five to six weeks old, pigs are five to six months, turkeys are three to six months, and beef cattle are 12 to 18 months old. Slaughterhouses are frightening places; the animals can smell blood and they fight for their lives. I would be terrified if I were in their place. All of this for products that are not only unnecessary, they are damaging our health and environment, too.

HOP: Your favourite and simplest dinner recipe!?

AP: I have a LOT of fave dinner recipes, which you probably know if you follow me on Instagram 🙂 Right now, I’m crushing on a hearty lentil-walnut bolognese. Lentils are superfoods that we need to eat more of, and walnuts are a great source of plant-based omega 3 fatty acids.

Another all-time fave pasta dish is pasta with cream sauce. The recipe is here on my site. I’m also a big fan of bowls, which basically follow an endlessly versatile formula: grain, legume, veggies, sauce, nuts/seeds. I have a post on my site all about how to build a bowl, and plenty of bowl ideas on my instagram account.


Easy Animal Free Lentil Walnut Bolognese
 
Save Print
Prep time
5 mins
Cook time
15 mins
Total time
20 mins
 
Anna Pippus of Easy Animal Free shares her favourite easy dinner recipe at the moment! This is hearty, quick, and delicious for the whole family! Serve it up with some of this Smokey Vegan Parm
Author: Jules
Recipe type: dinner, pasta, comforting
Serves: 4
Ingredients
  • 1 sweet onion
  • 1 green pepper, chopped
  • 5-8 mushrooms, sliced
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • Splash of red wine or balsamic vinegar
  • ½ cup walnuts, finely chopped
  • 3 cups tomato sauce or your favourite marinara
  • ¾ cup brown lentils, pre-cooked
  • Oregano, to taste
  • Sea salt, to taste
  • Pasta noodles of your choice, cooked
Instructions
  1. Over medium high heat, sauté an onion until soft (with a splash of water to keep it from sticking).
  2. Add a chopped green pepper, 8 oz or so sliced mushrooms, and a few cloves of minced garlic. Use a splash or two of red wine or balsamic vinegar to deglaze the pan.
  3. Add about ½ a cup finely chopped walnuts (a food processor works well but not necessary) and toast for a minute or two.
  4. Then add about 3 cups tomato sauce or marinara, and some cooked brown lentils (I boil half a cup from dry but canned is fine too)
  5. Season with oregano and salt, and simmer for a few minutes to combine the flavours.
  6. Serve with a pound of your favourite pasta.
Notes
* Prep time doesn't included pre-cooking the brown lentils
3.5.3226

Tag me and Anna if you make this! (@hookedonplants @easyanimalfree on instagram)

We love seeing your recipes.

… and if you want more:

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

Try the #PlantsForAWeek challenge by grabbing my brand new E-Book!

 

Filed Under: Dinner, Hooked On People Interviews, Lifestyle, Uncategorized, Veganism Tagged With: animal love, animal rights, anna pippus, bolognese, easy animal free, easy plant based dinner, easy vegan dinner, hooked on people, hooked on people interview, hooked on plants, lentil bolognese, lentil walnut bolognese, pasta recipe, plant based dinner, vegan interview, vegan pasta, veganism

The Ultimate Whistler Vegan Dining Guide

November 30, 2018 By julia

Looking for vegan goodness in Whistler?

This vegan dining guide features my favourite dishes throughout Whistler.

I’ll keep adding to this, so check back for updates!

The order of things: breakfast-y spots at the top to lunch and dinner spots as you scroll!

The green ones are must-tries…

The Green Moustache 

(breakfast & lunch) ~ Village and Function Junction

Whistler’s only 100% vegan cafe with juice, smoothies, salads, bowls, amazing desserts, and soups of the day. Nicolette Richer, the creator of Green Mo, is one inspiring woman! She specializes in disease prevention with her patients through the Gerson Therapy, and it shows through her healing foods in the ever growing Green Mo. The original space is in Marketplace, and now there’s one in Function Junction too, so you can grab some healthy treats for the road trip back to Van.

What to order:

Everything!

  • Collard green wrap
  • Buddha bowl
  • Healing Kitchari
  • Any of their raw desserts

The Naked Sprout

(breakfast & lunch) ~ Village

The majority of the food from Naked Sprout is vegan, and the vibes are high. Just being in the presence of the creator, Shandy Rae, makes you feel more energized! This is a great spot to grab some health in the form of a juice, smoothie, salad or bowl, and be on your way.

What to order:

  • Any juice or smoothie, or a Solfeggio dessert (by Olympian, Kristi Richards)
  • The Vegan Ramen Bowl (they sub in avo for the egg) with spirilized carrots, mushrooms, miso broth and GF rice + millet noodles (YUM)
  • Miso Quinoa Bowl

Hunter Gather

(Lunch & Dinner) ~ Village

Created by Whistler Cooks, this casual dining restaurant is airy, easy for big groups and delicious, with a focus on local food, craft beer and VQA wines…plus they have a whole part of the menu dedicated to veggie lovers 🙂

What to order:

  • Thoughtful Falafal Wrap (with hummus instead of the garlic sauce)
  • Pemberton Bowl: local beets, dried fruit, crisped organic vegetables, fresh herbs, chickpeas, sprouted legumes and miso chili vinaigrette
  • Lentil Burger: with coriander mango chutney, house pickles, on a Portuguese bun or greens

  • Harmony Bowl: tamarind miso broth, lotsa veggies, shiitake mushrooms, house seasoning, rice noodles

Fifi’s Bistro 

(breakfast, lunch, dinner)

Cuteness overload. The space (that opened for biz in August) is beautifully decorated by the owners Kara and Max. They’re open for dinner on Friday’s and Saturdays, and are well-known for their yummy food, big portions and breakfast platters.

What to order:

  • Vegan Breakfast Platter for 2 (or Vegan Breaky for 1): a smorgasbord of falafel, hummus, sautéed spinach, warm olives and tomatoes, beans, berry chia pudding, sourdough, avo, spring salad and potatoes.
  • Smoothies: tropical mango pineapple, banana coconut, or peanut butter oat date smoothies
  • Avocado Bruschetta with pea shoots and chili salt

Ingrid’s Cafe 

(breakfast & lunch) ~ Village

The grab & go spot in the heart of the village.

What to order:

  • Garden Burger (ask to veganize it with no cheese)
  • Fantastic Falafal Burger with cous cous (sub the tzatziki for hummus)

Raven’s Nest (Breakfast, Lunch, Apres) ~ Whistler Mountain

The place for vegetarian grub on the hill! A veggie meal with a wicked view.

What to order:

  • Most things!
  • Vegan Pulled Pork Sandwich
  • Vegan Sub
  • Vegan Chocolate Cake
  • Superfood Salad

PureBread Bakery  

(coffee & snacks) ~ Village and Function Junction

Known for the amazing aroma, to-die-for treats and one of a kind breads! Paula and Mark started Purebread in Function Junction, and once people caught on to their delicious breads, they expanded to the Village and now Vancouver. Walking into Purebread with their simple and beautiful decor just makes you feel so… good!

 What to order:

  • Bread!! Seriously Seedy, Rustic Sourdough, Buckwheat Sour Cherry Pecan, Dinkel
  • The Pure Bar (omg)
  • Vegan Scones of the day
  • Banana Loaf
  • Vegan Chocolate Chip cookies

Ed’s Bred

(Breakfast/Lunch, Treats, Lattés) ~Creekside

A new 100% vegan cafe with delicious fresh bread, cookies and sometimes flatbread too.

What to order:

  • Everything!
  • Their cookies
  • Their dirty chai (so spicy and flavourful)
  • Any of their breads

Velvet Underground 

(Breakfast, Lunch, Café, Consignment store) ~Function Junction

A 100% vegan cafe that serves as a consignment store, and sells Black Sheep Vegan Cheese too!

 What to order:

  • Arabian Nights sandwich with crispy cauliflower, roasted squash, cilantro hummus, cashew yogurt on 200 Degrees focaccia

Functional Pie Pizzeria

(Lunch, Dinner) ~ Function Junction

A pizza place that will veganize any pizza with melty mozzerella (Daiya) to the edge of the crust, and the Beyond Meat sausage!

What to order:

  • The Vegan Mos Def (I always add extra peppers and olives)

HandleBar Aprés (Lunch, Aprés, Dinner) ~ Upper Village

A local favourite! Nestled in the upper village, this hot aprés spot was created by locals and features craft beer, delicious aprés and really good vibes.

 What to order:

  • Deep-Fried Pickles
  • Fried Brussel Sprouts without parm
  • Vegan Sausage!

Stonesedge Kitchen 

(brunch & dinner) ~ Village

Brunch hour or cocktail hour… this place has good vibes and yummy grub too.

What to order:

  • Granola bowl: maple toasted oats, sunflower seeds, dried fruits, pumpkin seeds, toasted almonds with blueberry chia seeds, coconut yoghurt, strawberry, banana, waffle cone
  • Vege Toast without the egg
  • Grilled carrots with cashew cream
  • Vegan Burger: black bean quinoa and mushroom patty with lettuce, tomato, pickle, Gibbons après lager bbq sauce on multigrain bun
  • Spanky’s Bowl: quinoa, sweet potato, spinach, grilled red pepper, carrot, curry cauliflower, crispy chick peas and curry cashew sauce

Harajuku Izakaya 

(lunch & dinner) ~ Village

“Izakayas” are informal Japanese gastropubs popular throughout Japan known for quick, tapas-style food. Chef Yutaka Shishido has brought it to Whistler and knows how to whip up some vegan goodness!  Harajuku’s interior is inspired by a Japanese village in the early 1900s for romance and booths for birthdays.

What to order:

  • Appies: Spinach Gommae, Fried Brussels, Agadashi Tofu
  • The Green Bowl: fried rice + veggies
  • Rock n’ Roll Roll (so good!): tempura yam, avocado, cucumber, carrot, beets, Shiitake, soba noodle
  • Avocado Osho Sushi (minus the mayo): like vegan nigiri!
  • Creamy Vegan Ramen Bowl (one of the best Ramen bowls around!) : creamy veggie broth, shiitake, corn, rape blossom, bean sprouts, onion chips, garlic oil, kale noodles

Splitz Grill

(lunch & dinner) ~ Village

This long-time Whistler burger joint has a great vegan burger! Choose your patty, and customize with toppings (gluten free bun, or lettuce wrap options are available, too).

What to order:

  • Beyond Meat Patty with vegan mayo (love the chipotle mayo)! Maybe add a hash brown, caramelized onions, and mushrooms? 
  • Lentil Burger with Babaganoush, maybe with a grilled pineapple and some breaded pickles ?!) 
  • Vegan Hot Dog

Aura & The Cure & The Fix at Nita Lake Lodge 

(breakfast & lunch & dinner) ~ Creekside

A beautiful spot right on the lake that has MEATLESS MONDAYS (Yesssss). The head chef, James, is vegan and so creative (found that out from the incredible food he created for my bridal shower!).

 

Go try their 3-course vegan meal on Mondays at Aura.

Go with 1 other and order everything on the vegan menu.

You won’t regret it!!

Otherwise, hang at the Cure and eat some of their vegan options, all while listening to my friend and favourite DJ, Rob Cutler aka DJ-Surgeon playing chill tunes on Friday eves, alternating with local pro photographer Eric Berger aka DJ Smokey!

What to order:

  • The Fix: the spot for juice and smoothies in creekside!
  • The Cure: Aprés spot that starts anything off with popcorn (my fave). Veggie burger!
  • Aura: Meatless Monday 3 course vegan goodness

Dusty’s Bar & Grill: Bar & Grill (lunch, aprés, dinner) ~ Creekside

One of Whistler’s original aprés spots with history on the walls and good old school vibes!

What to order:

  • Vegan Wings !
  • The Creekside Power Salad (minus the feta)
  • The Ultimate Veggie Platter (extra hummus, no ranch)

Pizzeria Antico 

(lunch & dinner) ~ Village

Their pizza dough!!! So good. They have such a hot pizza oven that a pizza takes just 90 seconds. Cool atmosphere in here too, and their back section is great for birthday group resos.

What to order:

  • Insalata di Funghi without ‘burrata’ cheese: butter lettuce, radicchio, microgreens, raw mushrooms, oven-dried tomato, with a truffle lemon dressing (love this dressing)
  • Ortolana Pizza (replace the cheese with avocado and I like adding artichokes!): Tomato base, roasted veggies and basil

La Cantina 

(lunch & dinner) ~ Nesters Market and Village

The sister restaurant to Pepe’s Mexican Corner, in a quicker, more casual style. These taco/burrito spots (in the Village and by Nesters) have added more delicious vegan-ness to the menu since this summer.

What to order:

  • Luchador Salad (switch out the honey-based dressing)
  • Jackfruit Picadillo (with potatoes, carrots, celery) Tacos or Burrito or Bowl minus the feta or sour cream (my fave)
  • Portobello Tamarind Tacos or Burrito
  • Tofu (with nutritional yeast, tomatoes, celery) Tacos or Burrito minus sour cream/feta
  • Mestizo Rice + Black Beans with avocado sauce Tacos or Burrito or Bowl minus sour cream/feta

Peaked Pies 

Village

An Australian couple opened this one up a few years ago, and they just came out with vegan pies!

What to order:

  • Vegetable Medley Pie
  • Berry Dessert Pie

The Raven Room

Whistler’s newest cocktail bar created by locals, for everyone, with lots of delicious vegan options from Chef Erin Stone

What to order:

  • Aquafaba Sour ~ ask to sub out the egg white for aquafaba!
  • Jackfruit Bao Buns
  • Mushroom Pate
  • Shaved Vegetable Salad
  • Meatless Balls with vegetable noodles
  • Blueberry and Lavender ‘Cheese’ Cake

The Mexican Corner 

(lunch & dinner) ~ Village

Pepe created the awesome mexican vibe by bringing decor from his hometown in Mexico, up to his new Whistler hometown. Step into Mexico and enjoy their veg options!

What to order:

  • Vegan Chorizo Tacos
  • Ensalata Di Frijoles
  • Flautas (crispy potato tacos), minus the feta and sour cream
  • Tortilla Soup, minus the feta and sour cream

Creekbread

(dinner) ~ Creekside

They’re into local, organic ingredients, and know their pizza. Thin crust, flavourful, and the oven smack dab in the middle of the restaurant. Cool vibes.

What to order:

  • No Boundaries Salad with all the veggies and no cheese (so good with potatoes and seaweed!)
  • The Vegan Pizza (I go for extra caramelized onions and roasted red peppers)

Misty Mountain Pizza (lunch & dinner) ~ Village

This place has been around for a coon’s age! Annnnd it has vegan cheese (applause!!).

What to order:

  • Any veggie pizza with vegan cheese instead! I love the West Coast Veggie

Tandoori Grill 

(lunch & dinner) ~ Village

This Indian restaurant has a full-on vegan/vegetarian section on the menu! There’s 6 completely vegan items, and a whole lot more that you can easily make vegan. Plus, the Roti is vegan too. Just be warned… level 5 on the spice-o-meter is super sizzzzzlin’.

What to order:

  • Papadom (lentil wafer) instead of naan (which isn’t vegan)
  • Channa Masala ~ chickpeas cooked with tomatoes, fresh ginger, onions & exotic spices
  • Aloo Gobhi ~ cauliflower and potatoes cooked with onions, tomatoes & exotic spices
  • Palak Aloo ~ chopped spinach cooked with potatoes, onions, tomatoes & exotic spices
  • Eggplant Bharta ~ eggplants roasted over charcoal, mashed with onions, tomatoes & paprika

Alta Bistro 

(dinner) ~Village

Run by Whistler local, Eric Griffith, this good-vibe, casual, yet fine dining restaurant puts emphasis local, seasonal and organic ingredients. There are a few amazing vegan dishes on his dinner menu!

What to order:

  • Slow cooked celeriac & apple soup with garam masala popcorn
  • Crispy Brioche & Mushroom Walnut Paté
  • Vegan Portobello Burger with a delicious house-made coconut bun
  • Peaches & Cashew Cream Cheezecake with bbq’d amaretto peach, toasted almonds, oat granola and basil

Earl’s

(Brunch, Lunch, Dinner) ~ Village

This chain just added a full vegan menu, with 7 entrées !!

What to order:

  • Cauliflower wings with vegan ranch
  • Vegan Hunan Kung Pao
  • Beyond Burger

Table Nineteen Lakeside Eatery 

(Lunch, Dinner) ~ Nicklaus North

A beautiful patio with a view of green lake in the summer, with a cozy vibe in the winter.

What to order:

  • The Beyond Burger!!! Pick any burger toppings on the menu, and replace the meat patty with the Beyond patty. The only restaurant in Whistler that serves Beyond Meat!

Garibaldi Lift Co 

(Lunch, Aprés Ski, Dinner) ~ Village

The spot for a good dance at night, good aprés in the afternoon, and a nice sit-down lunch to avoid crowds during a ski day.

What to order:

  • Vegan Tempeh Burger without mayo
  • Vegan Caeser Salad (add tempeh!)
  • Vegan Poke Bowl !!! With the sought after Ahimi poké from Ocean Hugger Foods (made from tomato!)

Mongolie Grill 

(lunch & dinner) ~ Village

A fun place to go with a group. It’s super interactive while you go up to make your own mega-stirfry bowl, and watch the chefs whip it up right in front of you. If you’re not into eating off the same surface that meat was just cooked on, this may not be the place for you. But, it’s a fun way to get in a ton of veg!

What to order:

  • Load up your bowl with every veggie, douse on some of their vegan sauce options, and enjoy with the rice or rice paper wraps they bring to your table!

RimRock Cafe

(dinner) ~ Creekside

A rustic, fine dining experience. One of Whistler’s original restaurants, nestled in the woods of Whistler Mountain. This place isn’t known for their vegan food (they’re more about the seafood and meat dishes), but they have some great vegan options – especially if you know what to ask for! The ambiance in here is so lovely, and perfect for a special occasion.

What to order:

  • Mushroom Salad with sesame vinaigrette and crispy onions (SO good)
  • Grilled Vegetable Mushroom Risotto
  • Vegan Chickpea Curry with Cauliflower Steak (ask for this – not be on the main menu!)

Olives Community Market 

(grocery, breakfast, lunch) ~ Function Junction

A cute, organic grocery store packed with vegan goodies, grab & go lunches, a salad bar, and smoothies.

What to order:

  • See what’s in the fridge for lunch, and what the soup of the day is! Most likely it’s vegan, nutritious and delicious.
  • Their desserts, smoothies, lattés, and a big salad from the salad bar

If you want to eat in, Whistler Dine In delivers most of these delicious meals!

Filed Under: Breakfast, Brunch, Dessert, Dinner, Lifestyle, Lunch, Uncategorized, Veganism Tagged With: eating out vegan, plant based dining guide, plant based restaurants, plant based whistler, vegan dining guide, vegan food, vegan guide, vegan meals, vegan restaurants, whistler dining guide, whistler vegan, whistler vegan restaurants

It’s Here! The #PlantsForAWeek Challenge (The Ultimate Vegan Handbook)

October 18, 2018 By julia

There are more reasons to eat more plants these days than there are glitters on a unicorn’s tail. That’s why I’m SO excited to finally have finished the #PlantsForAWeek vegan handbook for you!

You’ve probably noticed the words ‘vegan’ and ‘plant-based’ popping up in main stream news, all over restaurant menus, all around town, and even in your feeds.

This is for a good reason, and it’s not a fad.

Plants are perfection. They come as packages gifted to us from nature and provide all the things our body thrives on (water, antioxidants, micronutrients, phytonutrients, amino acids, minerals, vitamins, fibre), but don’t provide the things that inflame us and weigh our bodies down (saturated fat, animal protein, hormones).

Here’s a few reasons why we should all be soooo ‘hooked on plants’:

Share this!

For a more in-depth reasoning of why we should move towards a vegan lifestyle as much as possible, and as quickly as possible… check out my Why Vegan page.

And if you’re curious about what it would be like to live a plant-based lifestyle, try out the #PlantsForAWeek Challenge!

What’s inside?

  • 30 whole food, plant-based recipes
  • 1 week of meals planned out for you
  • a ton of nutrition questions answered
  • how-to’s on stocking your kitchen and figuring out your ‘why’
  • resources that were life-changing for me

I wrote this for those of you asking similar questions, and all the veg-curious people out there!
I want to show you how simple, delicious and profoundly meaningful this whole vegan lifestyle can be.

Let’s call this your Vegan Handbook.

If you’re veg-curious and ready for a little detox, kickstart or inspiration, grab this book while it’s still on sale for $14.99.

It’s on sale until Halloween!

I dove into the deep end for you over the last few years. I’ve become a Registered Holistic Nutritionist, a Certified Plant-Based Chef & Raw Food Chef, and a Vegan Lifestyle Coach and Educator… so I finally felt the need to put it all into one package for all of you who were asking about this lifestyle.

Enjoy! Let me know if you get it and make a recipe so I can see your creations!

xx Jules

What people are saying:

Louise

 

Want more?

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

This week’s email was all about the new climate change report!

Filed Under: Lifestyle, Uncategorized, Veganism Tagged With: e book, go vegan, hooked on plants 10 reasons vegan, plant based challenge, plants for a week, plantsforaweek, recipe book, vegan challenge, vegan e book, vegan handbook, vegan recipe book

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

Facebook

Twitter

Instagram

 

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)!

We love seeing your recipes.

Want more?

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

This week’s email is all about the super inspiring new documentary Running For Good.

Try the #PlantsForAWeek challenge by grabbing my brand new E-Book!

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

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Search Recipes

WELCOME

welcome-julia-murray

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

Instagram

hookedonplants

🌱 Olympian | RHN | Plant-Based Chef
➡️ Dealing with puffiness? 2 min survey in bio #EatPlantsandDance
🏠 Animal Supporting Realtor @living.in.whistler

Here’s how: - chop in 1 inch rounds - score both Here’s how:

- chop in 1 inch rounds
- score both sides
- heat olive oil (or truffle oil) with some minced garlic in medium hot pan, then 3 minutes a side

Mind, blown. 

🤤 

Tag me if you make these. 🎉 🌱 

(And YES: you in fact Can Be Anything) 

#MUSHROOMSfortheWIN #mushroommeat #veganseafood #vegandinneridea #easyvegandinner
Shower patrol 🫶 Wouldn’t have it any other way. W Shower patrol 🫶 Wouldn’t have it any other way.

Who can relate? 
(Dogs are the best)

PS: If you’re dog isn’t thriving, shoot me a message with the word ‘dogs 🙌 ’ and I’ll send you a link to check out the food that changed Zak’s skin 👌 💗 

#dogsofinstagram #vegandogs #plantbaseddogs #dogstagram #Rescuedog
Love in food form. 🌱 PS: did you see the 4-part Love in food form. 🌱 

PS: did you see the 4-part Series on Reducing Inflammation happening over on Hooked on Plants Substack? 

🔗 Message or comment the word ‘SUBSTACK’ & I’ll send over the link. 

Any guesses what’s in this bowl? 

Guess right and I’ll send you the cutest pig reel you ever did see 

📍 @theveganshack
Full deets 👀 ⬇️ 👩‍🍳 Ingredients: ½ cup chickpe Full deets 👀 ⬇️ 

👩‍🍳 Ingredients: 

½ cup chickpea flour

½ cup water 

Eggy spices ✨  ½ tsp each: Garlic • turmeric • onion • (the magic) black salt (kala namak) — or @shaniseasoning vegan egg spice mix!

½ cup finely chopped veggies (mushroom, onion, red pepper

Vegan cheese of choice (used @daiyafoods mozz)

👀 Bonus protein addition: @complement unflavoured protein powder is great / so easy to sneak into anything savoury you’re whipping up!! Easiest way to add a little extra clean plant protein. Use ‘Hookedonplants’ for a discount (link in bio) 

👩‍🍳 Directions: 

	1.	Whisk chickpea flour + spices + water until completely smooth
👉 should be pourable, not tooooo thick
	2.	Heat a non-stick pan on medium and lightly oil
	3.	Sauté veggies until translucent 
	4.	Pour batter, spread gently into a thin circle & cook 3–4 minutes until edges lift and centre sets
	5.	Add veggies & cheeze to one half & Flip carefully, cook 1–2 more minutes, lid on. 
	7.	Make sure it’s cooked through & serve hot with @sriracha_ca 🤤 or vegan hollandaise !! 

#brunch #veganegg #veganomelette #noeggnoproblem #chickpeaomelette
How to prep soy curls 👀 AND: the start of somethin How to prep soy curls 👀 AND: the start of something new…… posting real, raw, in the moment, NON-insta-aesthetic food content because … otherwise I just don’t post.

I’d rather actually post tips to help you eat more plants, instead of not posting at all because my lighting’s bad, or presentation isn’t great. 

🙌 SOY CURLS. 
They’re JUST THE BEST. 
High protein & delish. 

How do you prep them?

My go- to: 

(Big batch: leftovers in the fridge for wrapping, toppers, etc) 

- soak in water 10 minutes then strain

- little bit of olive oil and @bragg liquid aminos on medium heated pan 

- add soy curls (just enough of them to cover whole pan in one layer)

- Cooke 3 minutes, mix around and pan fry another 3 minutes until crispy brown edges. 

That’s it! 

How do you enjoy your soy curls? 
…
(And: Let me know if any of you else feel this way too?)

#soycurls #veganprotein #eatplantsanddance
That snort - outta control cuteness. 🎅 ask Santa t That snort - outta control cuteness. 🎅 ask Santa to put Woodstock under the tree this year?!

Woody has suuuuch a sweet demeanour & is looking for a forever home. Could it be you? 

For his full story, go to 
@whistlerwag website 🥰 

Volunteer shift was a very cute experience today. 

There are so many beautiful animals just waiting for you. 🐱 🐶 

Pls and thx. 

#whistleranimals #animalsofwhistler #adoptadog #christmaspresent 

If I could adopt a 3rd I would take him today…!

PS: thanks to WAG for all the amazing work they do!!! Did you know - We donate in our clients’ names at every closing 🏠 (Team Longmuir Murray @living.in.whistler) ❤️
Love all animals 💗 Birthday fundraiser: thanks for Love all animals 💗
Birthday fundraiser: thanks for supporting this local animal sanctuary 🐾 Let’s see how much we can raise before Dec 23rd 🎂
Ok I lied. 3 MAIN ingredients… + just a couple of Ok I lied. 
3 MAIN ingredients…
+ just a couple of easy add-in boosters 👌 

Blender-made.

So easy. So delish.

👨‍🍳 Base:
	•	3 cups oats
	•	2–3 ripe bananas
	•	Plant milk of choice (about 1½ cups — add more if needed to blend smoothly)

👨‍🍳 Extra fluff (optional but recommended):
	•	1 tsp baking soda
	•	1 tsp baking powder
	•	Pinch of salt

👨‍🍳 Add-In benefits (also optional):
	•	1 scoop each of @complement Greens + Chocolate Protein (super clean — use code Hookedonplants for a discount)
	•	2 tbsp Daily Defend Mushroom Blend powder (code Hookedonplants at @staywyldorganics)
	•	1 tsp vanilla
	•	1 tbsp cinnamon

Blend a big batch, flip a bunch, and freeze for later.

Perfect toaster pancakes for busy mornings 🙌

Tag me if you devour, please 🥞💛

PS …. have you signed up to Hooked on Plants Substack?

Recipes will be flowing and you’ll get a little gift for subscribing 🪄…

Link in bio ✨

#veganfood #pancakes #veganpancakes #veganbreakfast #plantbasedbreakfast
Energy. Good skin. Great digestion: All the things Energy. Good skin. Great digestion: All the things you want your pup to have so they can live life to the absolute fullest. 💛🐾

When we picked Zak up from the SPCA at 7 months, he had hot spots and itchy skin. We tried everything — every food under the sun, even home-cooked meals for a while (yes, we went full gourmet dog-parent mode 😂).

But our sensitive dude still wasn’t feeling his best… until we finally connected with Virchew — made in Vancouver, delivered right to your door in the Sea to Sky, and created by passionate animal lover, Laura.

✨ Hot spots… gone.
✨ Digestion… smooooth.
✨ Energy… he initiates the play.

Tez has been on Virchew since we rescued her in Mexico at around 8 months old. She loved it instantly and has been thriving ever since.

Now these two weirdos have mega energy, shiny coats, and happy bellies, and it feels so good knowing we’re fuelling them with goodness. 🐶💚🐶

Love that dogs can thrive on plants.  It’s a win for the environment & the other animals too. ❤️ 

Try 10 days of Virchew with their Starter Kit. The love and care Laura & the team puts into this kit is NEXT level (treats for hoomans in there too @mymatchalife)

Use ‘hookedonplants’ or the link in my bio for a discount. 

Vet approved & perfect for all doggies of the world. 

❤️ ❤️ ❤️ 

🎥 @crueltyfreewithme 

#vegandogs #plantbaseddog #plantbaseddogfood #vegandog
Join the Community

Categories

  • Appetizers (24)
  • Breakfast (39)
  • Brunch (9)
  • Dessert (66)
  • Dinner (81)
  • Drinks (7)
  • fall (4)
  • Gluten Free (97)
  • halloween (2)
  • Holidays (19)
  • Hooked On People Interviews (19)
  • Jules Fuel (5)
  • Lifestyle (22)
  • Lunch (81)
  • Oil Free (91)
  • One Pot (1)
  • Raw (45)
  • Ready under 30 (1)
  • Recipes (157)
  • Salt Free (41)
  • Sauces/Dressings (34)
  • Snacks (79)
  • Spring (41)
  • Summer (42)
  • Thanksgiving (12)
  • Travel (1)
  • Uncategorized (154)
  • Vegan Dogs (1)
  • Veganism (15)
  • Winter (31)

© 2016 Veritas Techsoft Pvt. Ltd

Check out Hooked on Plants Substack

Recipes, health hacks for a busy life, and interesting ways to lighten up. Plus a surprise gift.

SUBSCRIBE HERE