The Oklahoman

MEATLESS holidays

Forget impostor proteins — veggies done well please all

- BY ARI LEVAUX — Ari LeVaux writes Flash in the Pan, a syndicated weekly food column that’s appeared in more than 50 newspapers in 25 states. Ari lives in Montana and New Mexico and can be reached at flash@ flashinthe­pan.net. Follow him on Twitter at @ari

As the days get short and blustery and we dig in for the holidays, I find myself pondering the Tofurky, and how we got here. The soy-and-wheat-based cylinder was designed to resemble a baked stuffed turkey with gravy, and it would, if a stuffed turkey resembled a plant-based cheese Combo.

Most vegetarian­s I know don’t feel the need to go through the motions of ritually eating the roast beast to fit in. Like the kid in high school who wore a varsity jacket but didn’t play sports, public displays of faux carnivory announce your sense of inadequacy to the world.

In my experience, the vegetarian­s and vegans are often the best cooks in the room. If the cook is allowed to use bacon and butter, anything can taste good, but to satisfy an omnivorous body with herbivorou­s cooking is a trickier feat. That the meal resembles a dead animal is not a goal my vegetarian­s tend to share.

I’m more of the camp that what vegetarian­s really want is vegetables. So I say, cook vegetables that look and taste like what they are, rather than like a carcass. Don’t worry about your guests’ protein levels. Successful vegetarian­s know how to manage that on their own.

Here are two recipes that will satisfy all of the vegetarian­s at your table, providing you make enough. That’s a big providing, because the carnivores will be on this, too.

One, roasted roots, is as old as autumn. The other tastes like bacon. After all, vegetarian­s miss turkey once or twice a year, but they miss bacon every day.

Roasted roots

My roasted roots technique is based on the potato, but several more roots can be added, such as carrots, celeriac, parsnip or yellow beets (red beets will make the whole batch look like it’s drenched in blood).

Dense, greasy fingerling potatoes are my favorite for roasted roots.

Cut all the roots into to similar-sized chunks so they cook at the same pace, and toss them in olive oil, salt, pepper and garlic powder.

If you want to add herbs, like thyme, rosemary, sage, I don’t have a problem with that.

Spread the roots on a baking tray and bake at 350 F until they are done, about an hour depending on how thinly they are sliced, stirring every 15 minutes or so.

When the roots are done, add grated or pressed garlic while still piping hot, stir one final time, and allow to cool.

Tofu ‘bacon’

Cut a brick of extra-firm tofu into half-inch cubes. I like to do it sloppily, so that the pieces are uneven, with thick and thin parts, but cubes are cool, too. Add them to a pan on low heat, with about two tablespoon­s of olive oil per pound of tofu. Cook as slowly as possible, stirring on occasion as the water cooks off and a layer of brown builds on the flat sides of the increasing­ly dense, crisping pieces.

At this point you realize you should have made at least double the amount, because the tofu is shrinking, and every hand in the kitchen, from Junior to Grandma, will be reaching into that pan for those crispy bits.

If and when the olive oil disappears, add more. And again, until a thin layer of oil remains on the pan surface and the cubes are saturated. This is, after all, bacon we are going for. Add a few sheets of onion — that is, large chunks from a single onion layer — to the pan, along with a clove of garlic, cut in half. These can be fished out later and disposed of in the chef’s mouth.

As the brown approaches irresistib­ility on all sides, sprinkle in light amounts of salt, pepper, garlic powder, paprika. At the tail, tail end of cooking, add a teaspoon of honey per pound of tofu — or more, to taste — and soy sauce to taste.

Don’t worry about what to serve it with. Like bacon, these tofu bits can go on anything, from roasted roots to salad to vegetable side dish. If they beg for your secret, tell them it’s bacon grease.

Most vegetarian­s I know don’t feel the need to go through the motions of ritually eating the roast beast to fit in. Like the kid in high school who wore a varsity jacket but didn’t play sports, public displays of faux carnivory announce your sense of inadequacy to the world.

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 ?? [ARI LEVAUX PHOTOS] ?? Roasted roots (top) and tofu “bacon” (above) will delight just about every eater.
[ARI LEVAUX PHOTOS] Roasted roots (top) and tofu “bacon” (above) will delight just about every eater.

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