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[personal profile] venta
Recently a colleague of mine recommended a cookery book. A vegetarian one.

He's often very damning of vegetarian food - not because he disapproves of it on principle, but since it's often just a bit rubbish in execution. He's omnivorous, but he is the main cook in his housenold and his partner is vegan. He frequently condemns vegetarian/vegan food that he's eaten out as "nowhere near as good as I make". He is similarly scathing about most recipe books.

So, when he got excited about a vegetarian cookery book, I listened. "It's by that bloke", he said. "TV chef, but looks like a normal person. Three names."

Anthony Worrall Thomspon, I hazarded.

Maybe. Was he the one that caught shop-lifting? No, not him.

Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, suggested someone else. Prepostorous, I said. Not only does he definitely not look like a normal person, the last thing he'd do is a vegetarian cookery book.

Which just shows how much I know. HFW has cut all his hair off and looks very normal indeed, and has embraced vegetables. Possibly literally, from the enthusiasm with which he writes about them.

River Cottage Veg Every Day turns out to be full of recipes which are exactly what I want from vegetarian food. That is, they involve lots of actual vegetables, and don't involve massive quantities of fake meat and cheese. In the intro, HFW writes that too often vegetarian cookery starts out thinking "how shall we replace the meat?" and that that's the wrong approach. So his recipes are - largely - dishes in themselves rather than "normal" dishes with something substituted.

Ironically, I'm about to cite a counter-example:

One of my favourite dishes from the book, thus far, is "Vegeree", a vegetarian version of kedgeree. [livejournal.com profile] becky requested the recipe, and I think [livejournal.com profile] undyingking might like it too (since he complained a while back that such a thing wasn't possible).

This recipe is, of course, © Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, or the River Cottage, or someone. If you like it, go and buy the book - it's full of yummy things :)

Serves 4

3 medium onions
1 large aubergine (about 350g)
2 medium courgettes (about 250g), halved lengthways if large
3 tbsp sunflower oil
1 tbsp good curry powder
300g basmati rice
4 large eggs, at room temperature
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

Preheat the oven to 190°C/Gas Mark 5. Slice the onions from root to tip into eighths, keeping them together at the root end. Quarter the aubergine lengthways, then cut each quarter into 1cm thick slices. Cut the courgette into 1cm thick slices.

Toss all the veg together in a large roasting tray. Pour over the sunflower oil, sprinle with the curry powder and add some salt and pepper Toss together again. Roast for 40 minutes, stirring 2 or 3 times.

Meanwhile, cook the rice. Rinse well in several changes of water, then put into a saucepan, add salt, and pour on enough water to cover by 2cm. Bring to the boil, stir once, then simmer until the water is nearly all absorbed (there should be deep steam holes in the surface). Cover the pan with a damp tea towel and a tight-fitting lid and turn the heat as low as possible. Cook for 10 minutes. Then turn off the heat and leave the rice for a further 5 minutes. Remove the lid and use a fork to separate the rice grains.

To cook the eggs, bring a pan of water to the boil, add the eggs and boil for 7 minutes. Run under cold water to stop the cooking and leave until cool. Shell, peel and halve the eggs.

Toss the cooked rice with the roasted spiced vegetables. Taste and add more salt and pepper if you think it is needed. Serve topped with the hard boiled eggs and a grinding of black pepper.

--

I've typed that up verbatim, though obviously two of the paragraphs could be summarised as "cook rice, hardboil eggs" :) Leftovers stored in the fridge and microwaved the next day are just as good, if not better.

As may be evident from the above, all the recipes are in modern-fangled measurements only. Bah.

Date: 2012-06-11 11:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
What a strange thing. This isn't something I've observed (mostly due to hanging out in posh restaurants insufficiently frequently).

I remember going to La Manoir for [livejournal.com profile] leathellin's birthday one year, to have the seven-course tasting menu. We had [livejournal.com profile] steelcityblues with us, and they provided him with what was apparently an excellent vegetarian version. I remember being vaguely surprised about that, and am disappointed to hear it isn't the norm.

(In fairness, I have a feeling that they might have been warned in advance that one of the party was going to want the vegetarian option.)

Date: 2012-06-11 12:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] undyingking.livejournal.com
I guess there are different types of posh restaurant, so I shouldn't generalize too much. (I have also had the Manoir's veggie tasting menu recommended.) But I think it goes back to the tradition that vegetables were for poor people to live on, rich people ate meat because they could.
(Cf: http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2012/mar/28/why-no-vegetables-french-restaurants )

Date: 2012-06-11 12:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
I remember [livejournal.com profile] jezzidue describing a similar issue in when travelling in China. As an honoured (and clearly wealthy-by-the-standards-of-rural-China) guest, he was given lots of meat dishes. Apparently he caused some offence when he implied the food was no good by asking for rice - the peasant food which you fill up on when you can't afford "real" food.

Date: 2012-06-11 01:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] undyingking.livejournal.com
I hadn't heard that! -- excellent story.

I can easily imagine [livejournal.com profile] jezzidue causing offence by all sorts of other means, but that one would never have occurred to me :-)
Edited Date: 2012-06-11 01:26 pm (UTC)

Date: 2012-06-11 01:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beckyc.livejournal.com
I hear the thing to do in that part of the world is to say you are Buddhist (which would also mean no garlic or onions*).

*I have (rarely) encountered such an assumption over here - at one chippy I know of, on asking if the veggie burger was cooked with the meat, they said "no, but it has onions and garlic in".

In Peru, it was a bit of a faux pas to say I don't eat meat. About equivalent to saying "I don't eat caviare" in terms of presumptuousness.

Date: 2012-06-11 01:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
Well, that's interesting. I didn't know a Buddhist diet might prevent onions and garlic. If I'd got such an answer to a question in a chipshop I'd have concluded the answerer was a bit odd, so it's lovely to know these things.

(In reference to the above comment, Jezzidue wasn't trying to get vegetarian food in China, he was just trying to get some food that wasn't made entirely of meat, to go with his meat :)

Date: 2012-06-12 09:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ar-gemlad.livejournal.com
But... but... Jezzidue eats steak sandwiches with more steak instead of the bread!!

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