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Worldwide Vegan Bake Sale Results!

Thursday, May 5th, 2011

On April 30th, a ton of fantastic people and more than 30 compassionate bakers showed up at Nice Shoes to celebrate awesome vegan desserts and to raise money for animals affected by the earthquakes in Japan.  We were fortunate enough to have a warm and sunny day, and everyone had a good time.  Plus, Nice Shoes donated 10% of their sales that day!

Overall funds raised were over $1400! Great job, everyone!

We also had a raffle for gift certificates from Nice Shoes and a wonderful new cookbook called Quick and Easy Vegan Bake Sale, which was donated by the author, Carla Kelly.  Thanks, Carla!

All photos by Laura May.  Click to embiggen:

 

Many people lined up at the bake sale.

So many desserts!

Beautiful cupcakes in cherry and coconut

Beautiful cupcakes in cherry and coconut flavours.

People looking at desserts on tables.

What to choose...

People at tables, looking at baked goods.

Thank you, Nice Shoes!

Cinnamon buns

Delicious cinnamon buns

Some 4-legged friends visited the bake sale too.

 

Awesome Gluten-Free Sugar Cookies

Friday, January 21st, 2011

I found this delicious recipe for sugar cookies at JoyofBaking.com, veganized it, and altered it a little so that it’s gluten-free.  (If you’d like to make a regular wheat-based version, just follow the same instructions with your own flour of choice.  Leave out the xanthan gum.)

The ingredients

Here’s what you need to make these amazing cookies:

3 cups gluten-free flour & 3 teaspoons of xanthan gum

1/2 teaspoon of salt

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 cup margarine (we’re using Becel Vegan)

1 cup white sugar

2 eggs worth of egg replacer

2 tsp vanilla extract

You will also need plastic wrap.

This makes a lot of cookies, so I decided to cut the recipe in half.

In a separate bowl, whisk flour, xanthan gum, salt, and baking soda.  Then beat butter and sugar until it’s light and fluffy.  It should look like this:

Light and fluffy margarine and sugar mixture.

Add egg replacer and vanilla extract to the butter and sugar mixure, and beat again.  It will be more liquidy this time.  Now mix the two bowls together–this might take a while.  You can use an electric mixture, but the dough is so thick that I found it easier to just mix by hand.  Mix it well.  It will pprobably look pretty crumbly, though I think I screwed up here and put in too much xanthan gum.  Do not follow my example:

I thought I was supposed to measure xanthan gum in tablespoons, not teaspoons. Oops.

Now squish the dough into a big ball.  If you’re doing the full recipe, as opposed to the half recipe, separate the ball into two halves, wrap them separately in plastic wrap, and place them in the fridge.  If you’re just doing half a recipe, don’t bother to divide the dough ball.  Just wrap it in plastic wrap and put it in the fridge.

Chill for 1 hour.

Heat the oven to 350 degrees.  Get out a cookie sheet and cover it in wax paper (or parchment paper).  Roll out the dough until it’s nice and flat (about 1/4 inch thick), and then cut it into shapes…or shape, in my case.

It's really best if you have a rolling pin, but you can also just do it by hand, like I did.

Now move your cut dough into the fridge (again) for 10 or 15 minutes.  This chills the dough and prevents it from spreading when you put it into the oven.

The hard part is done!  Phew!  Now put the cookies in the oven for 8-10 minutes, or until the edges have started to brown just a little.

Now take them out, let them cool, and decorate however you like.   The frosting I made is simply powdered sugar, water, and a little margarine…and blue food colouring.

Voila!

Allergen-Free Vegan Pizza!

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

It's all gone but I want more!

Sometimes people ask what vegans eat.

Sometimes they ask what vegans with allergies or food intolerances eat. This post is about that very topic.

A couple of days ago we made a pair of absolutely amazing pizzas with Bob’s Red Mill Gluten-Free Pizza Crust Mix.  (This product is pretty readily available at any Capers Whole Foods store, just in case you want to look for it.)  The pizzas were soy-free, nut-free, and wheat-free, and they were not only delicious but quite easy to make. (You can trust me when I say that it was easy because I am a shamefully lazy cook.)

As a vegan (for almost 7 years) with allergies to all three of these foods, I am very happy to find a good pizza, but believe me when I say that anybody would like this stuff.   We simply followed the instructions on the Bob’s Red Mill package to prepare the crust, put on tomato sauce and some of our favourite veggies–like artichoke hearts, olives, onions, garlic, and mushrooms–and topped the whole thing with Daiya cheese.   I went for both the cheddar and mozzarella, and my husband stuck with mozzarella.  He also added slices of Yves vegetarian Italian sausage slices, which have soy.

Lots of toppings

Just a note: if you haven’t tried Daiya, you’re missing out! It’s vegan, free of common allergens, and just about the best vegan cheese you’ve ever tasted. AND it melts! It’s available in Canada now, at places like Capers Whole Foods (again) and Karmavore.

Anyway, the Bob’s Red Mill mix is definitely to be recommended.  First, it was easy to make.  And more importantly, it was delicious–it came out perfectly, not squishy or dry and tasteless, like some gluten-free pizzas I’ve tried.

So there you have it.  Vegan with allergies?  Vegan without allergies?  Not even vegan but you love good pizza?  Try this stuff.  You will not regret it.

Just to Whet Your Appetite…

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

…tomorrow we’re holding our exciting Earth Day vegan cupcake giveaway to highlight the relationship between animal agriculture and climate change. That’s right, we’re going to be giving away free cupcakes!

In preparation for the big event, volunteers from Liberation BC and Supreme Master TV gathered in an industrial kitchen off Commercial Drive for a few hours to bake…and bake…and bake:

…and frost…and frost…and frost…

…and voila!:

Hope to see you guys tomorrow at the Vancouver Art Gallery from noon to 1PM.  Free cupcakes!

Chilean Earthquake Relief Vegan Bake Sale (guest post by Stephanie Belding)

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

Chile Earthquake ReliefIt is amazing what a difference a week can make. As I write this post, I am overlooking the North Shore mountains, watching float planes skirt the sky and can still see the Olympic rings floating idly on their barge in the harbour below.

This time last Saturday morning, February 27th, the world awoke, yet again, to horrific news of a phenomenal 8.8 magnitude earthquake off the coast of Chile.  A massive tsunami followed as well as numerous aftershocks, which as of last night, were still occurring in and around Valparaiso, Chile, at a magnitude of 6.5. The destruction has been devastating, wiping out roads, bridges, almost the complete infrastructure, including water supplies and electricity. The city of Concepción, Chile’s second-largest metropolitan area, which is roughly 70 miles from the quake’s center, has been among the hardest hit. The capital of Santiago also experienced massive destruction. Chile’s aid and emergency relief efforts are well underway and foreign aid has started to trickle in but there are thousands reported still missing and the death toll has yet to be properly accounted for. Water purification systems, emergency field hospitals, temporary bridges are all of high priority. Over the coming weeks, months, years, the world will watch as Chile slowly starts to rebuild and recover.

Chile Bake Sale poster

Chile Earthquake Relief Vegan Bake Sale - March 12, 6:30pm - 10pm, Radha Yoga & Eatery

As was the case in the horrific January 13th earthquake in Haiti, the world is coming together to raise funds, offer support and help rebuild the ravaged communities. Although the earthquake that rocked Chile last week was far stronger than the 7.0-magnitude one that destroyed Haiti six weeks ago, the damage and death toll in Chile are likely to be far less extensive, in part because of strict building codes put in place after devastating earthquakes.

That being said, I wondered if people were still willing to offer up aid and assistance after giving so generously to Haiti’s relief efforts. I hoped there wouldn’t be a charity malaise that had set in. Perhaps that sounds cynical, but for those of us so far away from the point of impact, it can be easy to disengage.

Last month, Radha Yoga Eatery so very generously donated their space for a vegan Bake Sale to raise funds for the Haitian Earthquake Relief. Gabrielle Pope wrote a wonderful post here about the gestation of vegan bake sales, and the power of small scale community activism, how a group of like minded individuals can pool resources, talents and time to create a much larger effort. Over $3000 was raised from last month’s vegan bake sale, which was matched by the Canadian government. I know as an individual, there is no way I can contribute anywhere near that kind of aid but boy oh boy, I can sure bake up a storm; I can spend a nominal amount in donating baked goods in order to help manifest a return which is a thousand times greater than my singular input.

So we’re doing it again. On Friday, March 12th from 6:30 pm to 10 pm Radha is graciously hosting our Chilean Earthquake Relief Vegan Bake Sale, with special musical guest Reid Jamieson.

Please come down, bring your own take away containers and lots of cash to stock up on phenomenal vegan baked goods supplied by wonderful local bakers, including Veganmania and many other fabulous contributers. We will also have fabulous raffle prizes to offer up from Sequel Naturals and a $50 gift certificate to Karmavore.
If you would like to contribute baked goods or offer up raffle donations, you can find more information on Facebook, here.

Being vegan for me is about compassion, about eradicating the pain and suffering of all sentient beings through conscientious and mindful living. It is about practicing ahimsa, the avoidance of violence. When the earth seems to be tilting on it’s axis, when everything is pell mell and the world itself seems to be shaking us off and creating incredible turmoil, destruction and overwhelming despair, instinctively I want to reach out and somehow affect change for the greater good. I alone have limited resources and skills; I bake, I act, I train people, I sort of write and create work where need be. But if I gather other like minded folk around me and we pool our resources and intentions then together we can make great change.

I love the Margaret Mead quote:  “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” So please, help us raise funds for the people of Chile; for their families and friends who are far away and unable to reconnect, for the survivors and their loved ones who are facing months, perhaps years of struggle and rebuilding. For all the sentient beings who need our help.

Funds raised will go to Medecins Sans Frontieres/Doctors Without Borders, who have been on the ground in Chile over the past week supplying medical help and relief to those hardest hit by the earthquake.

*******

Stephanie Belding is an actor, personal trainer, and  passionate lover of tasty vegan treats. You can often find her baking up a storm and pouring over vegan cookbooks with a zealot’s delight. She is currently in Vancouver but come May, will make Toronto her home once again.

Vegan Bake Sale for Haiti (guest post by Gabrielle Pope)

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Vancouver Vegan Bake Sale with Musical Performance by Frazey Ford - Radha Yoga and Eatery - February 4th, 2010 from 6:30 pm – 10 pm

On the 13th of January of this year, many of us woke up to the devastating news that the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere had been rocked by 7.0 magnitude catastrophic earthquake, which has since claimed the lives of at least 150,000 people, injured innumerable people, destroyed national landmarks and ravaged homes, hospitals, communication, electricity and transportation systems, and left a desperate country with far‐ranging needs regarding medical care, sanitation (and the necessary development of mass graves to bury those killed by the effects of the quake), emergency services, and a general rebuilding of an already shaky Haitian human and political infrastructure.

Those are the facts, neither sensationalized nor exaggerated, and as I sat at my computer in my heated apartment eating a morning bagel and reading of the calamities while people in Haiti were struggling to live, witnessing countless deaths and dread too horrific for me to even imagine, I felt, as many others, a disparate sense of injustice and a longing to do something, anything, to give those affected by the quake a sense of aid, no matter how minimal.

Since the event and in response to the sizeable amount of aid given by individuals, organizations and governments in an attempt to provide Haiti with the emergency services so badly needed, on blog posts and in editorial OP’s I’ve heard cynics collectively sneer about the sense of self‐righteousness donors were enjoying in response to their philanthropy. I’ve read accusations that those putting their face on relief efforts all but ignore aid needed elsewhere in the world (including, but not limited to, the Middle East). Celebrities are mocked for their self‐promoting very public donations, and obvious targets such as the Georges (Clooney and W. Bush) are torn apart because their efforts are not great enough, nor sincere enough, nor even acceptable according to whatever sins they’ve yet to be publically absolved of in the past.

This is no request for sentimental appeal to the Georges, but far be it for anyone to criticize any type of aid in times of tragedy. What good does it do for me to compare myself as a significantly indebted grad student to someone like George Clooney, and to claim that he should be doing a lot more, because he “can”? It is my feeling that anyone who cares about the situation in Haiti and realizes that they can help in whatever way possible for them should put their money and their efforts where their mouths are. The looting, sick, desperate, stranded, mourning people of Haiti aren’t waiting around for us to argue about ethics and manners of giving.

Isa Chandra Moskowitz is a vegan activist and cookbook author. When the call for need comes, she answers as any compassionate vegan would: bake sales. Bake sales can be scoffed at for garnering minimal funds, but when those of us without the means to personally send significant donations off to Doctors Without Borders, the Humanitarian Coalition and the like put our heads together to hustle up a series of worldwide vegan bake sales under Moskowitz’s original manifesto of sorts for this worthy cause, what is the result? So far: over 10 thousand dollars from vegan bake sales alone(held in the US, Canada, Britain and beyond). That’s a lot of baking, a lot of volunteers, a lot of happy bellies stuffed with vegan goodies, and a lot of Earth Balance. Upcoming bake sales in Portland, LA, NYC, Minneapolis, Miami, Seattle, Ottawa, right here in Vancouver and many more promise to add significantly to that pool of support.

It was through Moskowitz’s website’s forums that several of us from Vancouver came together and decided to rally up our baked goods and be proactive vegans.

Initially turned down by UBC (turns out there are only certain foodstuffs okay to sell on campus, and those do not include vegan baked goods with all‐natural and mostly organic ingredients) and denied donations by some bigger natural health markets, we turned our attentions to Radha Yoga and Eatery, the city’s best vegan restaurant doubling as a non‐profit organization and committed to community and the environment (in 2009 Radha closed their doors for several months to undergo green renovations that include an air‐source heat pump, solar light tubes, LED and fluorescent dimmable lights, and a green roof). I was genuinely touched and thoroughly uplifted by Radha’s enthusiasm to not only host us, but also support a full‐on event complete with live music from a (volunteering) Frazey Ford of the Be Good Tanya’s, an art opening, and of course the sale, held during Radha’s Thursday night dinner service and featuring baked goods by a slew of Vancouver talents including Radha themselves, Vegan Mania, the Vancouver Vegan Cupcake Queen, and the bakers behind blogs such as Pistachio Rose and Epicurvegan.

On February 4th, 2010, we invite you between the hours of 6:30 and 10 PM to join us for music, art, cupcakes and beyond, and to witness a community sense of compassion and giving that will make your sweet treats taste all the more decadent, with a lingering impression that these small‐scale activist efforts really do make a difference, and the more they happen, the more we foster a local spirit for compassion for all types of animals, humans included.

Vancouver Vegan Bake Sale with Musical Performance by Frazey Ford
Radha Yoga and Eatery
728 Main Street
Vancouver BC
Thursday February 4th, 2010 from 6:30 pm – 10 pm

Note: Radha’s regular dinner service will be served, and we encourage you to taste the best vegan food in the city. Menu here.

All proceeds go to the Humanitarian Coalition’s efforts for Haiti. Whatever we raise will be matched by the Canadian government.

Special thanks to our amazing sponsors: Radha, Karmavore, Mainly Organics, Anita’s Organics, Indigo, Horizon Distributors, Wholesome Sweeteners, Queensdale Market, and all our amazing volunteers! We’re still happily taking contributions for baked goods.

Gabrielle Pope is writer of fiction, plays, nonfiction and children’s literature completing an MFA in Creative Writing at UBC. She is an avid (yet self-taught) vegan chef and animal right’s advocate. She is currently working on a vegan cookbook, young adult novel, and collection of short stories.

Rosemary chocolate cupcakes

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

rosemary-cupcake1This is a simple variation on the basic chocolate cupcake found in Vegan Cupcakes Take Over the World. You need to buy this book.

This recipe makes about a dozen cupcakes.

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup soy milk (or any other non-dairy milk – I used vanilla soy milk)
  • 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
  • 3/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/3 cup canola oil
  • 1 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/3 cup cocoa powder ( I use organic Dutch-processed)
  • 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 3 teaspoons finely-chopped rosemary (fresh)

Directions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F and line muffin pan with paper or foil liners.
  2. Whisk together soy milk and vinegar in a large bowl and set aside to curdle for a few minutes (about 5 minutes is usually enough). Add the sugar, oil, and vanilla to the soy milk mixture and beat until foamy. In a separate bowl sift together the flour, cocoa powder, and salt. Add in two batches to the wet ingredients and beat until no large lumps remain. Add in the rosemary and beat until mixed.
  3. Pour into liners, filling 3/4 of the way. Bake 18 – 20 minutes, until a toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean. Transfer to a cooling rack and let cool completely.

Icing

I wanted the icing to be somewhat low-key and non-obtrusive, so I used a variation on the Green Tea Glaze:

Ingredients:

  • 2 tablespoons margarine (I used Earth Balance)
  • 1 cup confectioners’ sugar
  • 1 to 2 tablespoons rice milk (I used almond milk)
  • 1/4 teaspoon almond extract
  • drop of vanilla extract
  • 1 drop green food colouring

Directions:

  1. With a fork, beat margarine to a fluff, then mix in confectioners’ sugar to form a crumbly mixture. Slowly beat in 1 tablespoon of the non-dairy milk and extracts. If the icing is too thick to spread, add additional non-dairy milk and mix until desired consistency is reached. Add in 1 drop of green food colouring and beat until well-mixed, even a little bit foamy.
  2. With a spoon, put a dollop of icing onto the top of each cupcake and spread around with the back of the spoon, leaving  the edge of the cupcake exposed.
  3. Garnish with a sprig of rosemary. I tried to find sprigs with flowers, since I think they’re pretty.

Bring a batch in to work and wow your co-workers with just how good vegan cupcakes can be.