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Monday, May 31, 2021

Tony Mantuano Goes All-In On Upscaling Of Sports Food

© 2014 Galdones PhotographyTony Mantuano will preside over Cafe Spiaggia at the US Open in Queens for the next two weeks, then heads home to Chicago to work on his forthcoming Wrigleyville restaurant with Cubs manager Joe Maddon.

“It’s the glory days” of sports food, says Tony Mantuano, speaking by phone from the grounds of the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center at the U.S. Open in Queens, New York, which starts today and runs for two weeks. The sports world’s attention will be on the big names on the court, Serena Williams, Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic. But the more than 700,000 fans who’ll attend the tournament will get hungry, and they will be able to choose from the most diverse assemblage of pop-up restaurants on the planet.

Mantuano will be there for his eighth straight year, making the journey from Chicago, home to his 34-year-old restaurant Spiaggia and its Café Spiaggia offshoot, to operate his long-running wine bar and the return of a pop-up Café Spiaggia, which opened last year as one of the Open’s marquee standalone restaurants. There’s a Fuku, and Pat LaFrieda steak sandwiches, and the omnipresent Grey Goose bar, and Esther Choi making poke, JJ Johnson previewing his forthcoming Harlem restaurant with piri piri salmon and pineapple black rice out by Court 17, and much more.

It’s a menu makeover that’s not unique to tennis; you can find high-grade sushi and A-list burgers at Major League Baseball ballparks around the country, and increasingly, high-end restaurants just outside the stadium doors. That’s the case in Atlanta, where Linton Hopkins partnered with the Braves to open a sophisticated steakhouse. And when the Cubs start the 2019 season, fans will be able to dine at the forthcoming restaurant from Mantuano and his new partner, Cubs manager Joe Maddon.

Here, Mantuano discusses these glory days, his U.S. Open presence and his bromance with the Cubs skipper—who, it turns out, has a fondness for Cabernet Franc. (This interview has been edited and condensed.)

How did you first start working on the U.S. Open eight years back?
We started out when my wife Cathy Mantuano and I wrote a cookbook called Wine Bar Food that came out around then, and the U.S. Open thought it’d be fun to do a wine bar. So we did it and it became a hit and they asked us to do a second wine bar inside Arthur Ashe Stadium on the club level. Then last year they built a new building, a sort of Mercedes-Benz showroom on the first floor with a restaurant up above, and they said, Would you consider doing something there? I said, We could bring our Café Spiaggia from Chicago and pop it up. They told us on Wednesday of last year that it was available and it’s a go and can you open by Monday? It was a challenge.

You seem to enjoy the challenges that running restaurants miles from home for two weeks brings though, right?
It’s a break from the crazy other world I come from. You really bond with the team. You work like crazy and you work long and you’re like, I’m never gonna get through this. And at the end you have this weird alliance to each other. It’s like a badge of honor, like we made it. So it’s fun.

Back in 2011, Food Republic called your ouzo shrimp at the wine bar one of the best stadium eats ever. What’s popular on the wine bar menu now?
At the wine bar in Ashe, we went on the hunt for delicious pizza crust, and we found one that’s made in Italy. I wanted something that didn’t have more than five or six ingredients and no preservatives and pre-baked in a wood-burning oven in Italy and then frozen and shipped here, and all we have to do is top it and run it through our conveyor belt oven. It’s become one of the biggest sellers up there. Pizza’s really all about the crust. It’s got to be delicious. I wouldn’t do it unless I found a crust that was unbelievable.

After the Open, you’ll head back to Chicago to work on a new restaurant outside Wrigley Field with Cubs manager Joe Maddon. What’s the story?
Joe would eat in Spiaggia now and then. He’s this laid back guy and loves food. Wrigleyville has become Rickettsville; the Cubs owners, the Ricketts, really restored Wrigley Field to its early 20th century [grandeur], with beautiful architecture from terra cotta tiles that you never knew existed to building a greenspace that’s a park, and a hotel and six or seven restaurants in the hotel that’s right next to the stadium. The Cubs’ administrative offices are right next to the stadium and there’s a corner spot, and that’s where Joe and I are gonna put this restaurant.

How’d you decide that a partnership with a baseball manager could work?
It’s something that we started talking about, and then I met his partners from his restaurant in Tampa called Ava, and I get along with them really well. We spent time last December in Hazelton, PA with Joe thinking of design and what was important to him—food and some of the influences of his upbringing. Half his family is Italian, the other half’s Polish. Then before the season started in February, we spent time with him and the partners in Tampa, so I got a sense of what Joe likes, from his being at Spiaggia, from his background. We did some research together. I want him to be happy. I listened to what he wanted in a restaurant and wine is important to Joe. Joe might be one of the only managers who has a glass of red wine in front of him at his post-game interviews.

What does he drink?
He has his favorites. The grape that he seems to be enjoying these days when we last saw him was Cabernet Franc. And that’s sort of a weird grape for people to like. It’s different than Cabernet Sauvignon, and it shows that he understands wine; he digs a little deeper. He’s enjoyed Italian wine at Spiaggia and Café Spiaggia as well. He’ll send a few players in and say, Make sure you give them some of this wine. Guys will come in and I’ll say, Joe wanted you to try this wine and Anthony Rizzo will say, Ah, c’mon, that guy will drink anything. It’s a lot of fun to be with these guys.

How is it as a restaurateur in Chicago, with the Cubs and White Sox. Do you have to stay agnostic?
I’m a Cubs fan just because I grew up in Kenosha, WI which is an hour north of Chicago, and in those days of course we had WGN, the superstation. You’d get every single Cub game. Wrigley didn’t have lights until the late ’80s so when I’m coming home from school I could catch the end of the game. I’m not agnostic at all.

How do you feel about the prospect of opening a business with a Cubs manager?
We’ve done the research to know each other really well. I feel really good about it. It’s not a sports bar and it’s steps from the entrance. It’s right next to Wrigley. There’s plenty of places where people can get a beer and a hot dog. We did a week pop-up where the Cubs take one concession stand and give it to certain chefs, and we just finished ours. We were doing fun stuff like griddled mortadella sandwiches with giardiniera—something you wouldn’t expect at a sporting event. And it’s time. You can still eat whatever you want, but there and here at the U.S. Open, people want to eat anything and everything. They spend more money. They don’t eat before they come. So the time for great food at sporting events, it’s the glory days, it’s really changing.

You’re kind of a pioneer of upscale sports food.
That’s gonna be on my gravestone.

Lastly, what’s new at Spiaggia? How do you keep it fresh?
For me it’s about mentoring the right people. You know, Joe Flamm just won Top Chef Season 15 and he’s a star now, and he’s been with me for almost five years. Beforehand it was Sarah Grueneberg, who won a Beard award last year and has her own restaurant, Monteverde, in Chicago. Before her it was Missy Robbins, who of course now has Lilia in Brooklyn. We’re all really good friends. That’s just the way we do things. I know Joe [Flamm]’s time might be coming but Joe is really transparent with me, like, Let’s find you the next guy. We send people to Italy when they come on board to learn from people that I learned from. It’s really all about mentoring for me at this point—bringing on young people and watching that talent blossom and steering tem in the right direction.

What do you tell a young chef about making Italian food for a Chicago audience?
One of the reasons that Spiaggia has been around for 34 years is that we stay true to Italy but at the same time Italy evolves too, so it’s just a matter of keeping your finger on the pulse of what’s going on around the world. You show up with passion, you show up hungry and I’ll feed you. As for mentoring chefs, it’s whatever you need to know. One thing you need to understand is that Italian food is about simplicity and ingredients. You gotta love Italian food. That’s important. All the people I talked about have Italian souls.

The post Tony Mantuano Goes All-In On Upscaling Of Sports Food appeared first on Food Republic.

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy
1235 Southeast Division Street
Portland,OR,97202
(360) 726-4141

Eating Disorders Help in Portland-Do you Suffer from Body Shame due to Binge Eating? Food Is Not The Enemy can Help with Over Eating Issues Caused by Trauma, Located in Portland, Or 97202 Call Anne Cuthbert-Licensed Professional Counselor for Private Eating Disorder Counseling at (503) 766-3399

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy

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Food Is Not The Enemy, by fuseology

Reflections From A Trip Through A Canadian Culinary Paradise

The first thing you notice in Kelowna is the sky.

Maybe it’s the water unfurled below it, a glassy lake that compounds the cerulean atmosphere to even bluer depths with its shimmering surface. Maybe it’s how the gently sloping mountains frame its edges. Either way, you’ve never seen sky like that, sky that goes on and on in an uninterrupted expanse of blue.

The city of Kelowna lies just over the U.S.-Canadian border, perched in the heart of British Columbia’s famed Okanagan Valley, where lush vineyards roll for miles and the churn of orchards mark the seasons. Chef Ravi Kapur has come to bear witness to this hidden culinary gem of the North, to taste through the streets of the city where farm-to-table is less of a choice and more a basic facet of life.

Back home in San Francisco, he’s known for his precise and free-wheeling palate at beloved Hawaiian outpost Liholiho Yacht Club, with its homemade spam and tuna poke and elegantly cheeky pineapple Baked Alaska. He and his team hone in on funky and refined wines from all over the world to highlight the food of his heritage, from pét-nat to orange wine. It’s a playful lens on the unlimited possibilities between the glass and plate, something that has come to define Kelowna’s own culinary scene, entwined as it is with the terroir that informs their wines.

Here, Kapur is a stranger. A culinary clean slate.


A STROLL THROUGH DOWNTOWN KELOWNA.

A few days into his stay, he meanders through the crowd of Chef Meets BC Grape, a gathering of 150 wineries from across the region. He meets Canada’s youngest Master of Wine, Rhys Pender, who explains that wine-wise, the Okanagan is a bit like covering a big chunk of France—that people are just beginning to scratch the surface of the exciting things the Valley can do. The varietals, the microclimates, all laying the groundwork for greatness. Christa-Lee McWatters Bond, Director of Sales & Marketing for TIME Winery, Evolve Cellars & McWatters Collection, points out that most people don’t even realize BC produces wine. It isn’t sold elsewhere, she says. You have to come to it.

That exclusivity makes the food scene something of an infinite loop; a pristine sustainable system that bigger cities can only dream of. Farmers live next door to their customers; the wine on the table comes from a patch of vines you passed on your way in.


DINNER AT DUSK, QUAILS’ GATE WINERY.

“Our wine list is 100% local. Our food is hyper-local,” says Rod Butters, the prolific chef and co-owner behind local spots RauDZ Regional Table, Micro Bar and BitesTerrafina, and Sunny’s. Butters is what you might call a legacy player in town, and he reminds Kapur a bit of the dreamers who built the Bay Area plate by plate. “When I moved here, there weren’t really restaurants or accommodations to partner with the world-class wine being produced,” Butters says. “You need to have that connection.

“The landscape reminds me of Italy,” he adds. “The sunshine, the light on the mountains and the hillsides, the amazing lake… I felt very alone here when I came 17 years ago, but there are so many chefs here now. So many talented people.”


A STOP AT SUNNY’S WITH CHEF ROD BUTTERS.

Kapur soon joins one of those talents, Aman Dosanj of pop-up dinner series The Paisley Notebook, on the trails of Knox Mountain on the edge of the city. Fields of vibrant wildflowers slope down towards the lake, while dark evergreens lean towards the peak. It’s marigold yellow and olive green and rusty red dirt all around.

“The landscape is so edible,” she says, loose wisps of hair framing her face in the breeze. “When you’re a cook you’re working with the seasons, yes, but you take it for granted. I love wine because it’s a reflection of the previous season.”


AMAN DOSANJ AND KAPUR TAKE IN THE VIEW FROM KNOX MOUNTAIN.

Kapur thinks about the ocean in San Francisco; how one day it’s mammoth and crucial and salts the air, and the next it’s as if it’s not there at all. Where, oddly, nature’s very existence is determined by your schedule, not the other way around. In Kelowna, life revolves around those transitions. The food grants you the immediacy of the moment, and the wine provides hindsight.

The closest thing to a local keeper of those seasons is Jennay Oliver, the fourth-generation owner of Paynter’s Fruit Market. Everyone in town knows Paynter’s, and so everyone knows her. They can see her family’s touch in the peaches, in the melons warmed by the sun, in the thousands of tomato plants she babies each spring.


JENNAY OLIVER AND HER ORCHARDS.

In the early 1920s, Oliver’s pioneering great-grandfather took dynamite west into the mountains in search of water. The resulting flow powered the family farm, and then in 1951, a fruit stand. In the 80s, her mother took over with her aunts and uncles, and ten years ago, Jennay took her place in the line.

“When you grow up on a farm, it’s always in your blood. It’s pretty hard to get away from it,” she says. “We have so much support from our neighbors. It’s really neat when you’ve got chefs that do these long table dinners and all the producers are right there. There’s the winemaker, the meat producers, and the egg producers…pretty much everything you need to be kind of self-sustainable is here. It’s pretty amazing.”

That enthusiasm is no small thing. Access to beautiful product is one thing, demand for it is another.


A STOP AT OKANAGAN LAVENDER & HERB FARM.

“People are finally finding out that this is an amazing place to live. Our community has grown so much in the last 20 years,” Oliver says. “You can go hiking for hours and not see anybody, or you can just go to downtown Kelowna and be right in the heart of our city. It’s really good for us as humans just to go out and get some fresh air, to be more connected to our food sources, to get our hands dirty.”

She laughs a little devilishly. “So maybe don’t tell everybody!”

A few weeks after his return, Kapur has yet to shake that sky, all that refracting clear blue. “The hardest thing to forget is the water,” he says. “You cross that bridge from West Kelowna to Kelowna…I still think about it every day. It’s wild.”

This post first appeared on Chefsfeed.

The post Reflections From A Trip Through A Canadian Culinary Paradise appeared first on Food Republic.

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy
1235 Southeast Division Street
Portland,OR,97202
(360) 726-4141

Eating Disorders Help in Portland-Do you Suffer from Body Shame due to Binge Eating? Food Is Not The Enemy can Help with Over Eating Issues Caused by Trauma, Located in Portland, Or 97202 Call Anne Cuthbert-Licensed Professional Counselor for Private Eating Disorder Counseling at (503) 766-3399

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy

Eating Disorders Counselor of Vancouver - Food Is Not The Enemy

https://sites.google.com/fuseologycreative.com/fuseology-creative-clients/home

Food Is Not The Enemy, by fuseology

Charleston Wine + Food Festival Dates, Chefs And More Announced


The South’s elite chefs* gather annually at the Charleston Wine + Food Festival, where the bourbon flows freely and barbecue smoke wafts over the ever-charming city. We’re somewhat biased, given Food Republic’s annual media sponsorship of events like last year’s Harlem and Hominy Brunch and N. Chas Night Bazaar, but this fest stands out due to the programming, location and a certain je ne sais quoi.

And now it’s time to plan for next year’s Charleston Wine + Food Festival, which will take place March 6-10, 2019. Organizers have just announced a preliminary list of participating chefs including Gavin Kaysen, Jeremiah Bacon, Mike Lata, Michelle Weaver, Vivian Howard, Seamus Mullen, Maneet Chauhan, Steven D. Greene, David and Anna Posey, Nina Compton, Jody Williams and Rita Sodi, and Vishwesh Bhatt.

Programming will be revealed later this month, but two initiatives of note for 2019 are a celebration of International Women’s Day and a focus on wellness. Beyond that, it’s worth paying attention to coming announcements as individually ticketed events for special dinners, cooking classes and regional excursions sell out quickly. Tickets go on sale August 29 at the Charleston Wine + Food Festival website.

“One thing that makes Charleston Wine + Food unique compared to other wine and food festivals, is that we reprogram 85% of our schedule year after year,” says Gillian Zettler, Charleston Wine + Food Festival Executive Director. “There are a few differences that I think you will notice on the 2019 schedule compared to past festivals, including an expanded wellness event series, excursions that offer guests exclusive + unique culinary storytelling experiences with a sense of place, and a renewed focus on diversifying our talent line-up.”

Check out our podcast from the 2018 fest featuring interviews with Mashama Bailey, Linton Hopkins, Maneet Chauhan and Katie Button.

* Indeed, many of the South’s best-known chefs make the annual trip to Charleston for the festival, but as you can see above, it attracts many star chefs from New York City, Chicago and elsewhere. 

The post Charleston Wine + Food Festival Dates, Chefs And More Announced appeared first on Food Republic.

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy
1235 Southeast Division Street
Portland,OR,97202
(360) 726-4141

Eating Disorders Help in Portland-Do you Suffer from Body Shame due to Binge Eating? Food Is Not The Enemy can Help with Over Eating Issues Caused by Trauma, Located in Portland, Or 97202 Call Anne Cuthbert-Licensed Professional Counselor for Private Eating Disorder Counseling at (503) 766-3399

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy

Eating Disorders Counselor of Vancouver - Food Is Not The Enemy

https://sites.google.com/fuseologycreative.com/fuseology-creative-clients/home

Food Is Not The Enemy, by fuseology

Meatless Monday: 8 Hearty Vegan Dinner Recipes

News flash: It’s a total myth that a vegan meal won’t fill you up. You don’t need meat or dairy to feel satisfied, and we’ve got eight great recipes to prove it. Protein is protein, after all, and the higher-quality it is, the better it’ll work for you. We’re talking about lentils, quinoa, tofu, nuts, seeds and other plant-based foods that will nourish, fuel and sate you, all without slowing you down. Enjoy your Meatless Monday (and maybe even Tuesday)!

Recipe: Spiced Udon With Crispy Tofu

Time-saving tip: Steam the vegetables over the saucepan you are cooking the noodles in so they cook at the same time.

Spiced daal smoothed out with coconut milk: It’ll cure what ails you, guaranteed.

Recipe: A Hearty Coconut Daal Bowl

In this soup, I make the lentils a bit more dilute and add in any greens I have lying around — kale, baby spinach, chard, a super-greens blend — to take advantage of the cold-fighting vitamins. I sometimes add in a bit of coconut milk for silkiness, and if I need a bit more bulk, I throw in some cooked rice, bulghur or quinoa. Pickled shallots add the perfect tart balance, and toasted cashews up the nuttiness factor.

Recipe: Plantain Tacos With Pepitas

These wholesome yet rich-tasting soft vegan tacos filled with chunky, savory refried beans and caramelized ripe plantains will please everybody at your table, including the most fanatic meat-taco aficionados. My mom and I came up with the recipe the last time she visited us. We paired the refrieds with the plantains and topped them with a crunchy mix of toasted walnuts and pumpkin and sunflower seeds tossed with seared scallions. Don’t hesitate to drizzle a liberal amount of quick salsa verde over the tacos.

Recipe: Green Beans And Mushrooms With Tehina

I created this dish for a Chanukah meal at Zahav in 2013, the year that the first day of Chanukah coincided with Thanksgiving. Since this hadn’t happened in over 100 years (and won’t happen again for another 77,000), we decided to have fun and merge some of our Israeli flavors with traditional American Thanksgiving casseroles. This is our riff on the classic green bean casserole, with tehina standing in for the cream of mushroom soup.

Recipe: Eggplant, Tomato And Almond Pasta With Quinoa “Meatballs”

A healthier version of classic spaghetti with meatballs, this eggplant, tomato and almond pasta dish is still packed with protein, but it skips the saturated fat and cholesterol. Eggplants are rich in antioxidants, particularly nasunin, which is predominantly found in the skin of eggplants — so don’t peel it off!

Spiked with sweet rum and accented with dragon fruit, this vegan fried rice is a healthy way to get your daily dose of delicious.

Recipe: Rum Fried Rice With Dragon Fruit

“Fried rice was the equivalent of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich in my family, a super-quick fix for those moments when hunger strikes and you want instant gratification,” says Daphne Cheng of New York’s Mother of Pearl. “Hawaiian cuisine draws from Chinese cuisine, but I wanted to create a dish with more Hawaiian flavor, so I added rum and tropical fruits, including fresh citrus, pineapple and dragon fruit. The end result is full of flavor and fun textures.”

Recipe: Quinoa Stir-Fry With Garlic And Pineapple

Stir-fried rice is one of my favorite Asian dishes. However, it’s not always the healthiest, so I swapped in quinoa for added protein and nutritional value. I borrowed the cashew and pineapple idea from my college roommate, who made some of the best fried rice. The five-ingredient sauce melds everything together to create a flavorful, hearty entrée or side dish.

Recipe: Lemon-Soy Edamame Barley Bowl

The distinctive flavors of lemon, sesame oil, soy sauce, and oregano combine beautifully in this perfectly balanced “power lunch.” I love to use fiber-rich barley as a base for hearty lunch bowls — it has such a great texture and is really filling. Add tofu, edamame, and — my favorite — avocado, and you have a totally satisfying meat-free meal.

This post has been updated.

The post Meatless Monday: 8 Hearty Vegan Dinner Recipes appeared first on Food Republic.

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy
1235 Southeast Division Street
Portland,OR,97202
(360) 726-4141

Eating Disorders Help in Portland-Do you Suffer from Body Shame due to Binge Eating? Food Is Not The Enemy can Help with Over Eating Issues Caused by Trauma, Located in Portland, Or 97202 Call Anne Cuthbert-Licensed Professional Counselor for Private Eating Disorder Counseling at (503) 766-3399

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy

Eating Disorders Counselor of Vancouver - Food Is Not The Enemy

https://sites.google.com/fuseologycreative.com/fuseology-creative-clients/home

Food Is Not The Enemy, by fuseology

Sunday, May 30, 2021

Ina Garten’s Baked Rigatoni with Lamb Ragù Is the Comfort Food We Need


Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy
1235 Southeast Division Street
Portland,OR,97202
(360) 726-4141

Eating Disorders Help in Portland-Do you Suffer from Body Shame due to Binge Eating? Food Is Not The Enemy can Help with Over Eating Issues Caused by Trauma, Located in Portland, Or 97202 Call Anne Cuthbert-Licensed Professional Counselor for Private Eating Disorder Counseling at (503) 766-3399

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy

Eating Disorders Counselor of Vancouver - Food Is Not The Enemy

https://sites.google.com/fuseologycreative.com/fuseology-creative-clients/home

Food Is Not The Enemy, by fuseology

Chowhound Christmas Gift Guide 2020: Vegan-Friendly Food Treats

Giving edible Christmas gifts is a no-brainer, unless you’re gifting to a vegan. Then things get a tad more complicated. But we got you. Below, the best edible vegan gifts out there that are so good they’ll probably work for the omnivore on your list, too.

Chocolate Is Always a Good Idea

Lagusta’s Luscious Winter Wonderland Box, $75

Lagusta’s Luscious

New York based Lagusta’s Luscious is a chocolate specialty shop that ships its delectables, including a Chocolate-of-the-Month Club box, all over the world. The shop is completely vegan, but you couldn’t tell—the bon bons, peppermint bark (their holiday bark is pictured at the top of this page), and caramels are insanely addictive. In addition to being vegan, all the chocolate here is organic and fair trade.

Other high-quality options for vegan chocolate assortments include Compartes vegan chocolates and Divine Treasures. These vegan French chocolate truffles on Thrive Market would make a great host or hostess gift. Look for vegan options at local chocolate shops too.

For treats that are not only vegan but allergy-friendly (helpful if you’re looking for treats to send to school!), try No Whey! Foods. They make goodies that are vegan, kosher, and free of the common eight allergens. They also have chocolates for many major holidays, including Santa-shaped chocolate pops and Christmas-themed truffle boxes that are a bit less expensive than some of the aforementioned boutique options.Buy Now

Buy a Cookbook (and Ingredients for One of the Recipes)

“Vegan Christmas: Over 70 Amazing Recipes for the Festive Season” by Gaz Oakley, $18.46 on Amazon

Amazon

Want to show someone that you put some thought into his or her gift? Find a vegan cookbook such as “Vegan Soul Kitchen” by Bryant Terry or “Fun, Festive & Fabulous: Vegan Holidays for Everyone” by Marla Rose and choose a recipe. Next, get all the ingredients to make the dish and package it up in a gift basket. Of course, this option only works if the person loves to cook (or if you are offering your services for the evening).Buy Now

Or Try a Curated Snack Box

Vegan Snack Box, $103 on Mouth

Mouth

This gift box comes packed with delicious, small-batch vegan snacks, from decadent hot fudge sauce and luscious almond butter to rosemary popcorn and plant-based jerky! If you’re on a tighter budget, check out this $43 Vegan Snack Kit at Thrive Market, or seek out boutique vegan snacks at your local Whole Foods or similar store and put together your own box of goodies. For example, a vegan s’mores gift basket might have vegan marshmallows, chocolate made from plant-based milks (like Rakka Chocolate’s oat milk chocolate), and vegan graham crackers.Buy Now

Get Snacky

Fruhling Trail Mix, $28 for a Pack of Four

Fruhling

Anyone who’s on the go inherently knows how difficult it is to find a snack that’s not only healthy and vegan, but also provides you with enough energy to make it through the rest of the day. Enter Fruhling, a nut-forward trail mix that’s all about high-quality ingredients, like prized Bronte pistachios, Pizzuta almonds, golden berries, and roasted cacao. The trail mix, which is made in New York City, doesn’t boast any added sugar, preservatives, or additives, so you’re guaranteed to feel good about what you’re putting in your body.  Buy Now

Give the Edible Gift That Keeps On Giving

Purple Carrot Vegan Meal Kit, $71.94+

Purple Carrot

If your vegan gift recipient does like to cook but lives a busy life, make it easier and more enjoyable for them to whip up interesting, healthy, and delicious meals with the gift of a plant-based meal kit subscription. Purple Carrot lets you send a 2-serving or 4-serving plan and choose between 1, 2, and 4 week duration options when sending a gift; each delivery will contain 3 globally inspired recipes that are totally vegan (like Refried Butternut Tacos, Korean Tofu Bowls, and Fire Roasted Gnocchi Bolognese) with all the ingredients needed to make them.

Check out other healthy meal kits on CNET. Or if you know your vegan foodie is not much of a cook, consider a fancy fruit of the month club.Buy Now

Give a Little Luxury

Runamok Organic Vermont Maple Syrup, 2-3 for $45-$68 on Food52

Food52

Honey is a no-no for vegans, but maple syrup is a great all-natural sweetener that can be used for baking, making drinks, and anointing vegan pancakes and waffles (and vegan fried chicken, for that matter). Finding an artisanal, infused maple syrup is easy these days, and a bottle of it makes a nice gift that’s a pretty safe bet for anyone, whether it’s your plant-based bestie or a vegan acquaintance you don’t yet know so well. This particular maple syrup from Runamok comes in an array of flavors, like Holiday Spice, Coffee, and Ginger Root (you can find it on Amazon too).Buy Now

Get Spicy

Truff Hot Sauce Limited Edition White Truffle Flavor, $34.99 at Truff

Truff

Hot head on your list? Find a gourmet, vegan-friendly hot sauce to light their fire, like this Oprah-approved white truffle-infused version with agave nectar and coriander. (Worth noting: Oprah’s Favorite Things on Amazon 2019 include some other choice vegan treats too, like gourmet mustard, infused grapeseed oils, and actual spices.)Buy Now

Gift Card It

If you have a tighter budget and/or want to give your gift recipient a bit more control, think about buying the special vegan in your life a dinner at a vegan eatery (like Loving Hut, a healthy, plant-based chain you’ll find across the country). Or consider a gift card to Vegan Essentials, which sells a wide range of staples from chewing gum to marshmallows, so they can buy exactly what they need.

You could even get a gift card for the Red Robin Song Bed and Breakfast that also doubles as an animal sanctuary. The vegan breakfast is worth the trip alone—think pumpkin pancakes, banana French toast, tofu scramble, among lots of other treats.

Related Video: How to Make Delicious Vegan Cookies with CBD If You Want to DIY

10 Clever Ways to Use Dryer Sheets That Don’t Involve Laundry


Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy
1235 Southeast Division Street
Portland,OR,97202
(360) 726-4141

Eating Disorders Help in Portland-Do you Suffer from Body Shame due to Binge Eating? Food Is Not The Enemy can Help with Over Eating Issues Caused by Trauma, Located in Portland, Or 97202 Call Anne Cuthbert-Licensed Professional Counselor for Private Eating Disorder Counseling at (503) 766-3399

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy

Eating Disorders Counselor of Vancouver - Food Is Not The Enemy

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Food Is Not The Enemy, by fuseology

How to Clean & Maintain Your Wooden Cutting Board without Ruining It


Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy
1235 Southeast Division Street
Portland,OR,97202
(360) 726-4141

Eating Disorders Help in Portland-Do you Suffer from Body Shame due to Binge Eating? Food Is Not The Enemy can Help with Over Eating Issues Caused by Trauma, Located in Portland, Or 97202 Call Anne Cuthbert-Licensed Professional Counselor for Private Eating Disorder Counseling at (503) 766-3399

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy

Eating Disorders Counselor of Vancouver - Food Is Not The Enemy

https://sites.google.com/fuseologycreative.com/fuseology-creative-clients/home

Food Is Not The Enemy, by fuseology

Saturday, May 29, 2021

8 Easy Ways to Make Boxed Mac & Cheese Taste Like You Made It from Scratch


Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy
1235 Southeast Division Street
Portland,OR,97202
(360) 726-4141

Eating Disorders Help in Portland-Do you Suffer from Body Shame due to Binge Eating? Food Is Not The Enemy can Help with Over Eating Issues Caused by Trauma, Located in Portland, Or 97202 Call Anne Cuthbert-Licensed Professional Counselor for Private Eating Disorder Counseling at (503) 766-3399

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy

Eating Disorders Counselor of Vancouver - Food Is Not The Enemy

https://sites.google.com/fuseologycreative.com/fuseology-creative-clients/home

Food Is Not The Enemy, by fuseology

Why Is Natural Wine Such a Big Deal?


Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy
1235 Southeast Division Street
Portland,OR,97202
(360) 726-4141

Eating Disorders Help in Portland-Do you Suffer from Body Shame due to Binge Eating? Food Is Not The Enemy can Help with Over Eating Issues Caused by Trauma, Located in Portland, Or 97202 Call Anne Cuthbert-Licensed Professional Counselor for Private Eating Disorder Counseling at (503) 766-3399

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy

Eating Disorders Counselor of Vancouver - Food Is Not The Enemy

https://sites.google.com/fuseologycreative.com/fuseology-creative-clients/home

Food Is Not The Enemy, by fuseology

An Ode to 5 Thanksgiving Foods That Are Better from the Package


Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy
1235 Southeast Division Street
Portland,OR,97202
(360) 726-4141

Eating Disorders Help in Portland-Do you Suffer from Body Shame due to Binge Eating? Food Is Not The Enemy can Help with Over Eating Issues Caused by Trauma, Located in Portland, Or 97202 Call Anne Cuthbert-Licensed Professional Counselor for Private Eating Disorder Counseling at (503) 766-3399

Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy

Eating Disorders Counselor of Vancouver - Food Is Not The Enemy

https://sites.google.com/fuseologycreative.com/fuseology-creative-clients/home

Food Is Not The Enemy, by fuseology

Better-Than-Homemade Goodies That Can Be Ordered Online

Mail order cookies, cakes, pies, and other sweet treats are better (and more prolific) than ever, and that’s a good thing this holiday season. We rounded up some of the best desserts you can order online, whether you’re looking for a delicious gift or an easy way to end your holiday dinner.

It seemed like a great idea at first: Desserts are a must on the holiday table so why not bake a couple from scratch? But you still have to run out and do some last minute shopping. And you’re definitely going to hit the grocery store a few more times (it doesn’t help that your nephew decided to go full keto recently). Oh, and now the oven is acting up.

Sometimes it’s best to play it safe and let someone else handle the heavy lifting. We’ve rounded up a bunch of sweet standouts that can be ordered directly to your door. It’s pie season, so we’ve included several of those as well as great mail order cookies, cakes, and even some non-baked ice cream additions because when it comes to dessert, the more the merrier.

Send them to someone you love, or have them delivered to your own house to help save your sanity this holiday hosting season.

Four & Twenty Blackbirds Bittersweet Chocolate Pecan Pie, $79 from Goldbelly

Goldbelly

This article is intended to bring some relief to the holiday cooking and/or gift-giving process, but let’s be honest, trying to decide which incredible dessert to order from Four & Twenty Blackbirds can be stress-inducing. The Brooklyn-based bakery has a number of delicious options including their famed Salty Honey Pie.

But for Thanksgiving, this option takes the traditional pecan pie you know and love to the next level with a generous dose of chocolate ganache and tons of roasty toasty pecans.

Buy Now

Piedaho Salted Caramel Apple Pie, $35

Piedaho Bakery

Stamped with Oprah’s seal of approval last year, this gorgeous pie packs all the sweet, sticky, fruity flavor of caramel apples into a tender, cinnamon-speckled crust with a judicious hint of salt to make everything pop.Buy Now

Bien Cuit Pumpkin Bread Pudding with Caramelized White Chocolate, $8

Bien Cuit

Having a small Thanksgiving gathering this year? These single-serve bread puddings are the perfect pie alternative. With blonde chocolate, pumpkin, and dulce de leche-soaked pan de mie, these rich, bready bites are a nice break from tradition that still capture the seasonal flavors you’re craving. This heavenly bakery is anchored in New York with three locations across Brooklyn and Manhattan but delivers their sweets nationwide.Buy Now

Vanilla Salted Caramel Cake by Ovenly, $79 from Goldbelly

Ovenly via Goldbelly

For those looking to go beyond classic pie offerings during the holidays, Ovenly’s Vanilla Salted Caramel Cake will fit the bill. The key is a double dose of caramel, whipped into the buttercream and drizzled on top that makes this sweet treat an absolute showstopper. But don’t miss their perfect pumpkin olive oil loaf either.Buy Now

Lady M Mille Crêpe Cakes, $90+ each

Lady M

Need something super sophisticated that’s also super delicious? A mille crêpe cake from Lady M will wow, whether it’s one of their classic flavors like vanilla and chocolate, or a seasonal treat like their chestnut version. The delicate layers of tender, lacy-edged crepes (at least 20 in each cake) and pastry cream or custard look incredible, and taste just as good too. In addition to their signature striped sweets, you’ll find impressive checkerboard cakes and cheesecakes, including a limited edition Pumpkin Nuage that beats plain old pie any day.Buy Now

Savannah’s Southern Pecan Pie by Savannah’s Candy Kitchen, 2 for $79.95

Savannah’s Candy Kitchen

If, however, you remain staunchly Team Pie, you certainly can’t go wrong with serving up a slice of Southern hospitality. This particular pecan pie features a delightfully gooey center and is topped, of course, with a crunchy layer of homegrown Georgia pecans.  Buy Now

S’mores Pie by Butter & Scotch, $42

Butter & Scotch

This New York bar and bakery had an instant hit when it introduced its Instagram-worthy S’mores Pie. A graham cracker crust and creamy chocolate filling provide the foundation to a roasty, toasty marshmallow topping that is oh so addictive. They also have a Bourbon Ginger Pecan Pie for those who want a bite firmly anchored in fall.Buy Now

Fall Cookie Set by Southern Sugar Bakery, $54

Southern Sugar Bakery

Straight out of North Carolina, this autumnal assortment from Southern Sugar Bakery are mini works of edible art. Along with fall colored leaves, the collection includes plaque cookies with the message “Happy Fall Y’all” to help reinforce that these were indeed baked in the south. Buy Now

Milk Bar Pie by Milk Bar, $46

Milk Bar

The dessert formerly known as Crack Pie is the signature offering from Christina Tosi’s Milk Bar and for good reason. This sinfully sweet and salty creation is housed in an oat cookie crust and finished off with a light dusting of powdered sugar. It’s sure to be a crowd pleaser at your holiday gathering provided there aren’t any dentists at the table.Buy Now

Maple Wicked Whoopie by Wicked Whoopies, 12 for $30

Wicked Whoopies

Amy Bouchard has been making whoopie pies for over two decades. In fact, her company Wicked Whoopies has produced over 30 million of the beloved hand-held delight. Wicked’s pies come in a variety of flavors but their maple version featuring rounds of syrup-infused cake filled with fluffy cream is a favorite for the holidays.  Buy Now

Kermit’s Key Lime Pie by Kermit’s Key West Key Lime Shoppe, $38.95+

Kermit’s Key West Key Lime Shoppe

Kermit’s Key Lime Pie is the best in Key West, or anywhere else for that matter. Local key limes are the key (oh, dad puns!) to a bright, tart filling that complements the pie’s signature graham cracker crust. A ring of whipped cream offers just the right touch of sweetness.  Buy Now

Dutch Apple by Julian Pie Company, $20.95

Julian Pie

The Smothers Family knows a thing or two about apple pie. Not only do they continue to run the Julian Pie Company, the Southern California institution which they founded over 32 years ago, they even bought their own apple orchard. Not surprisingly, apples find their way into nearly all of the bakery’s pies, but the Dutch version, which features a crunchy crumb topping, is a standout.  Buy Now

Maman’s Nutty Chocolate Chip Cookies, 12 for $65

Maman

There is no occasion that won’t be improved by chocolate chip cookies, and these beauties from Maman bakery are packed full of dark chocolate chunks and a blend of salted nuts for crunch. They were Oprah-annointed in 2017 and are still a delicious contender for best chocolate chip cookie in NYC—but you can order them from anywhere in the continental U.S.Buy Now

Deep Dish Pumpkin Pie by Harry and David, $49.99

Harry and David

An extra-thick layer of creamy pumpkin pie filling is topped off with fluffy whipped cream. It’s a classic, but even more of it than usual, and there’s nothing wrong with that. You can also order a gluten-free pumpkin pie, though it’s not deep dish.Buy Now 

Sugar Cream “Hoosier Sugar Pie” by My Sugar Pie, $28

My Sugar Pie

If you’re not familiar with the Hoosier Pie, it might just be the best thing to come out of Indiana aside from Larry Bird and David Letterman. It doesn’t get much better than My Sugar Pie’s version which keeps things traditional with the trinity of butter, sugar, and cream. It’s the kind of slice that after taking one bite you’ll be asking, “Where have you been all my life?”  Buy Now

Pumpkin & Cookies Mochi Ice Cream by Mochidoki, 4 for $10

Mochidoki

Though not technically a baked good, Mochidoki’s ice cream stuffed rice cakes are sure to provide a sweet end to any holiday meal. Flavors run the gamut from Black Honey Walnut to Vegan Lychee, but if you want a taste of the holidays, Pumpkin & Cookies can’t be beat. This seasonal mochi features pumpkin spice ice cream studded with chocolate and vanilla creme cookies for the ultimate two-bite dessert.  For now, shipping is only available around the eastern United States so cross your fingers and make sure your state is on the list. Buy Now

McConnell’s Pumpkin Pie Ice Cream, $12

McConnell’s

Who says ice cream is only for summer? Vanilla is a classic for topping pies, but you’ll find plenty of delicious seasonal fall and winter flavors from several ice cream companies that ship nationwide, including California favorite McConnell’s. Their ultra creamy pints are always made from grass-fed milk and cream, and this one is swirled with roast pumpkin puree warmly spiced with cinnamon, ginger, cloves, and molasses.Buy Now

The PieCaken, $99 from Goldbelly

Goldbelly

If you truly can’t decide on your favorite holiday dessert, there’s always the modern classic/monstrosity that is the PieCaken. You get pumpkin pie, pecan pie, spice cake, cinnamon buttercream, and apple pie filling all in one towering Turducken of sweets. (Fingers crossed for the return of the Christmas PieCaken later in the season.)Buy Now

For more great gift ideas, see our Gourmet Food and Drink Gift Guide, and our Best Kitchen Gadgets, Tools, and Appliances Gift Guide.

And see our sister sites’ tech gift guides, gaming gift guides, fashion and beauty gift guides, and TV gift guides.

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Eating Disorders Counselor of Portland - Food Is Not The Enemy 1235 Southeast Division Street Portland,OR,97202 (360) 726-4141 Web: https:/...