Sunday Times

SAUSAGE FEAST

Linda McCartney was a vegetarian pioneer — but how do her company’s meals stack up?

- With HILARY BILLER

Iwas surprised to stumble on a freezer full of Linda McCartney’s vegetarian products — all fairly priced — at my local supermarke­t recently. McCartney, the late first wife of musician Paul McCartney of Beatles fame, was an outspoken animal-rights activist and ardent advocate of vegetarian­ism at a time when plant-based diets weren’t taken seriously. I feel sure the success of her bestsellin­g cookbook The Linda McCartney Home Cooking Vegetarian Cookbook, published in 1989, planted the seed for the establishm­ent of the Linda McCartney Foods Company in 1991.

Almost three decades later, the company appears to be flourishin­g, even though it has changed hands over the years. It has grown and ventured into the export market. Yet their website has retained the bunny-hugging Linda McCartney/family business feel.

As vegetarian­ism sweeps the world, the variety of plant-based ingredient­s is constantly evolving and the demand for ready-made vegetarian options increases. The proof of any food product lies in the eating and I put one of the recipes on the Linda McCartney Foods website to the test — vegetarian sausage cassoulet using their veggie chorizo sausages made with rehydrated textured soya protein, red pepper, tomato puree and smoked paprika. The sausages look like a slimmer version of Middle Eastern koftas, and were just as flavourful. Quick and easy to prepare, I’d happily make the dish again. And even the ardent meatlover in the house gave the meal the thumbs up.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Linda McCartney at the launch of her veggie burgers for her new vegetarian food range in 1991.
Linda McCartney at the launch of her veggie burgers for her new vegetarian food range in 1991.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa