Currently viewing the tag: "summer roll"

Like its name implies, Long Island is looong. Heading east from my starting point in Freeport, it’s almost 100 miles to Montauk Point (a.k.a. The End). With a year-round Hamptons local as my guide, I spent the day on this long stretch of road, searching for vegan eats but finding a stroll down memory lane… intersecting with an onslaught of beachside development homogenizing a once charming escape from the concrete jungle.

With weekend warriors still crawling slowly back west, most spots were crowded with undesirables… you know, affluent snobs, bad drivers and the like. It takes a charming farm stand to remember why you’re out there in the first place: the smell of local strawberries; the uneven, bulbous parts of an organic Heirloom tomato; fruit and vegetables without little stickers on a waxed coating.

An internet search for vegan eats on the East End was unfruitful. The few listings I had found had closed. One menu I did manage to peruse beforehand was Provisions in Sag Harbor, which seemed to have a bit for two vegans to work with. We stopped at the busy market and cafe hybrid for lunch and left a bit uninspired.

Despite the collection of seasonings and fixings available in the inefficient lay-out of the cafe, my food was quite bland. My tofu scramble wrap was seasoned with turmeric for color and nothing for taste. It was very 90′s vegan to me: healthful and animal-free, sure, but not exactly delicious. The sausage links, which counterperson claimed were vegan, were surely of the packaged variety. Lightlife sausage contain egg and profit ConAgraMorningstar, which the sausage resemble the most, contain egg. My presumption: the sausage is likely not vegan. Ew.

My $17 wrap, sausage and packaged pie seemed to be a tremendous waste of money, like the $9 smoothie my friend purchased, until I tasted said packaged pie. The Hail Merry Miracle Tart in Persian Lime was ridiculously good! It was like a soft, smooth Larabar with a delicate texture and tongue-tingling taste. This raw treat’s ingredient list read like erotic literature to my ears.

Dear cold-pressed coconut oil, I love you.

Our next stop was Joni’s in Montauk, a charming sandwich, salad and smoothie stop for hungry surfer locals and newbie resort goers. Again, the menu was 90′s style vegetarian: bared bones basics and very reliant on dairy. But these menu holes were filled with personality and the unique energy of founder Joni.

We split the Thai Me Up!–marinated tofu with shredded veggies wrapped in rice paper with a side of peanut dipping sauce. They were cool and crisp, hitting the spot. I can do without all this plastic packaging however.

Also on the menu, fresh coconut for a delicious, refreshing sip of wonder.

Naturally Good Foods and Cafe has been open in Montauk since 1985 and it is likely that their menu of food hasn’t changed since. The cafe offers more early vegetarian-ish options: rice and beans, vegetable wraps, cheese and tuna filled sandwiches. They do offer bagels with soy butter and jelly as well as the tofu scramble wrap that seems to be the veg-menu staple out East.

What is forefront on these Eastern Long Island menus is a focus on fresh vegetables, which surrounding farms supply them with, and not necessarily food craft (how pretentious that sounds!) or attention to taste. There is something to be said for a simple menu but not so much when other elements aren’t aligned (packaged foods added, fresh foods wrapped in packaged wraps, etc.)

My next trip east will include a trip to one of the many farm stands and a trip to my friend’s kitchen to have my way with the fresh produce. Then I’ll only have myself to complain about.

The start of the a Vegan Foodie Weekend in Providence, Rhode Island started with a bang! Our hosts and their neighbors prepared a vegan spread that was jaw-dropping.

Lime tortilla chips from Food Should Taste Good; roasted garlic, grilled tomato and basil bruschetta; cherries; hot and sweet peppers; sangria and Tortas de Aceite.

Fruit salad and summer rolls. Fresh and flavorful summer goodness.

Summer rolls–rice wrappers stuffed with goodness.

Dinner in the yard with a plentiful plate. Many taste buds decided they couldn’t go on mid-way through my meal.

The meal ended with some vegan cupcakes. I am loving the Rhode Island hospitality!

My dear friend Artsparrow knows her medium. As a food lover, an illustrator, aspiring photographer and all around artist, she knows color equates emotion, the visual evidence of a feeling. Gathering with her near and dear, we celebrated her birthday at Nahm Thai Kitchen in Park Slope, Brooklyn with vibrant, colorful and tasty Thai cuisine.

The amazing Vegetarian Combo appetizer had so much to choose from: summer rolls, pan-fried veggie dumplings, fried tofu and chive pancake (one of my favorite bites of street food when I was in Thailand).

Of course the steamed veggie dumpling, my cryptonite, was also on the table… and spring rolls in the background.

Since I was sick and congested, I need a dish that would break through my compromised senses. The sweet sauce from my sweet & sour did the trick.

On a spring day that brought us hail, snow, snow again and huge thrashes of thunder, Artsparrow’s dutiful man brought the cupcakes! Yes we were all surprised when our friendly servers brought out the plate of CowGirl‘s cupcakes… a gesture that raised TimX‘s stocks sky high.

Andrea Sparacio, queen of the zombies, with her cupcakes.

I love Thai food.

That’s no secret to friends and loved ones. But now that I no longer have a favorite neighborhood Thai spot… (I speak of the end of my 5-year relationship with Lily Thai who refuses to stock a mushroom-based sauce for vegan substitution of their fish sauce, which I had been ingesting for years in my favorite dish naively safe in the assumption that the “sweet soy sauce” listed in the menu description was, indeed, a sweet soy sauce and not the oyster sauce noted in other menu descriptions. I never asked and I should have: my fault. But because of my underlying resentment in my eating fish, their unclear menu and their refusal to accomodate for vegan diners, I now must go elsewhere.)… I traveled back to my work place neighborhood of Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn to dine at {brace your self for the proclamation of greatness} thee best Thai place in Brooklyn: Nine D.

I first dined at Nine D after a long schedule of parent-teacher conferences but only nibbled on an appetizer. Since then I have returned often for their amazing lunch special which offers a lunche entree and three appetizers! Given the current hot, hot heat of the big bad city, lunch cravings are for cold, fresh, crisp and flavorful. Their mango salad, shredded mango with red onion, scallion, cashew nuts, avocado dressing with sweet lime sauce and a generous sprig of fresh mint, is delectable. It wakes up the mouth and feels good to eat. 
Continuing on the fresh theme, we had the summer rolls, the standard rice paper-wrapped veggies and herbs but done right and with two yummy dipping sauces.
For an entree, the Seitan Spices, every flavor I love about Thai food tossed perfectly on delicious crisp, ground peanut sprinkled seitan: lemongrass, lime, basil and onion.
Thai desserts are so often vegan-friendly and summer is mango’s season! So we couldn’t say no to mango and sticky rice. Personally I prefer a white glutinous rice but this beautiful black coconut milk-sweetened rice was a wonderful match with the bright ripe mango.

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See this food? I have eaten it and it has helped me to move from here to there to have me here typing this to you. See it? I put it in my mouth and chewed. Yeah, so what but: Have you ever paid attention to this process? Followed a bite from one side of your tongue to the other? Tasting texture. Mastication. This is no dirty word. Food touches our insides and all over, giving energy all about its path, starting first at our mouth. What else in the world to we ingest? Like fully and in abundance? Allowing it in. Allowing it everywhere. How is this not a big deal?
Tempeh roll at Dragonfly.Sweet & sour seitan lunch special @ Em.The Sag @ Bone Shakers.All I could eat at Outback Steakhouse, on 5th grade class trip to DC.Roasted veg sandwich @ the International Spy Museum in DC.A big ass salad in the cafeteria of the Capitol Building in DC.Pad Thai lunch special with summer roll and veggie dumpling @ Pad Thai.