Windsor Star

Book shines spotlight on meatless dishes

Meatless recipes can stick to your ribs

- LAURA BREHAUT Recipes excerpted from Vegetarian Any Day: Over 100 Simple, Healthy, Satisfying Meatless Recipes by Carolyn Hemming and Patricia Green (Penguin Canada)

Patricia Green and Carolyn Hemming made their name as the “quinoa sisters.”

Quinoa is readily available in most grocery stores, but in 2010, when the bestsellin­g authors released their first cookbook, Quinoa 365, some Canadians were eating it for the first time.

The sisters have written five cookbooks, all of which encourage the use of non-geneticall­y modified ancient grains and seeds with a focus on nutritious, user-friendly recipes.

In their latest, Vegetarian Any Day (Penguin Canada), Canadians Green and Hemming put the spotlight solely on meatless dishes.

More than 100 recipes aimed at flexitaria­ns are the cornerston­e of the collection.

Flexitaria­nism is about eating less meat rather than restrictin­g it altogether — “you may already be flexitaria­n, and you don’t even know it,” Green and Hemming write.

Whether you’re new or adept at preparing meatless meals, Green and Hemming set out to inspire home cooks to incorporat­e new vegetarian options into their repertoire­s.

As the global Meatless Monday movement has brought to light, eating meat-free just once a week can have positive effects on health and the environmen­t.

With meat prices rising, vegetarian cooking is also becoming more and more affordable. As the sisters point out, many vegetarian recipes are straightfo­rward and well-suited to novice cooks.

“We’ve always followed the model of keeping it accessible and uncomplica­ted because complicate­d recipes weren’t for me and my sister was never going to be able to pull me into this world if it was going to be difficult,” Hemming says with a laugh.

“Patricia explains it as providing solutions. (This is) a different kind of book in that it’s not a platform for how we got healthy or … how we changed our lives by eating differentl­y. It’s not about us.

“It’s about providing solutions for people who are just looking for ways to cook healthy things easily.”

Neither sister is vegetarian, but Hemming describes herself as a “veteran flexitaria­n.”

She has favoured vegetables over meat since childhood. Today, when she occasional­ly eats meat, she opts for bison or chicken.

As Hemming points out, the departure doesn’t have to be that far. Incorporat­ing ingredient­s such as mushrooms, and beans and legumes makes for satisfying everyday cooking.

“The message of flexitaria­nism we want people to know is that it’s easy and that the ingredient­s are very accessible … These recipes are not frilly little veggies that (will leave you) hungry 10 minutes later. These recipes hold their weight,” Hemming says. “They’ve got robust flavours. The roasting, the caramelizi­ng, the spices: za’atar, paprika or sumac.

“These interestin­g spices and seasonings and ways of cooking things are still very simple. (You won’t be thinking) ‘It’s Meatless Monday; I’m suffering.’ But ‘It’s Meatless Monday; this is incredible. And maybe I’ll have some of this tomorrow, even though it’s not Meatless Monday.’”

 ?? PHOTOS: RYAN SZULC/PENGUIN CANADA ?? “It’s an amazing sandwich,” Carolyn Hemming says of her sister Patricia Green’s creation, which features caramelize­d onions with Gruyère and sauerkraut on dark rye.
PHOTOS: RYAN SZULC/PENGUIN CANADA “It’s an amazing sandwich,” Carolyn Hemming says of her sister Patricia Green’s creation, which features caramelize­d onions with Gruyère and sauerkraut on dark rye.
 ??  ?? Mornay sauce is served Benedict-style over sunny-side up eggs, asparagus, whole portobello mushrooms and sliced tomato.
Mornay sauce is served Benedict-style over sunny-side up eggs, asparagus, whole portobello mushrooms and sliced tomato.
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