Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

Spread of flora

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Katy Beskow launched the Little Miss Meat Free blog to share vegan recipes with friends. She tells Sarah Freeman how it became a full-time job.

On a mission to bust a few misconcept­ions about a meatfree diet, even vegans have guilty pleasures, says Katy Beskow. Hers are kettle chips. Or chocolate brownies. Growing up in Beverley, Katy became a vegetarian as a teenager, but it was when she moved to London 10 years ago to study physiother­apy that she embraced veganism.

“Initially it was partly for ethical reasons and partly financial,” she says. “As a student I didn’t have much money and I lived next to this amazing fruit and vegetable market. I had this amazing produce on my doorstep and I’d always enjoyed cooking, so I just started experiment­ing.”

When friends and family began asking for Katy’s recipes she set up a blog as an easy way to share ideas. However, while Little Miss Meat Free was set up as a hobby, Katy soon found she was getting commission­s from magazines to provide vegan recipes.

“Honestly, the response was incredible. In recent years there has been a rise in the number of people turning to a vegan diet and I guess my blog hit at the right time. At first I was juggling it with working as a physiother­apist, but I have now given that up to concentrat­e on my foodie commitment­s full time.”

Having moved back to Beverley, Katy can often be found at the Yorkshire Wolds Cookery School showing others how to prepare meat-free dishes and she has also just launched her cookbook Fifteen Minute Vegan.

“I want to show people that vegan food can be both quick and tasty,” she says. “There is this perception that you have to spend hours boiling pulses, but it really doesn’t have to be that way. I’ve also purposeful­ly not included tofu or any specialist ingredient­s, because I want people to be able to get everything they need from their local market or green grocers.

“My mum and dad are now vegetarian because they realised that they can cook cheap, healthy food using just vegetables.

Katy says her store cupboard essentials are pasta, rice and spices. Lots of spices.

“Just like any diet, a vegan diet must be balanced in order to be healthy. I don’t claim that my recipes are super-charged and uber-healthy, but you’ll find a good mix of good food and cheeky treats. I’m not a food apologist, a little of what you fancy does you good.”

by Katy Beskow is published by Quadrille, priced £15.

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