books Archives - Forks Over Knives Plant Based Living Fri, 25 Apr 2025 17:09:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://www.forksoverknives.com/uploads/2023/10/cropped-cropped-Forks_Favicon-1.jpg?auto=webp&width=32&height=32 books Archives - Forks Over Knives 32 32 Plant-Based Pros on the Books They Recommend Again and Again https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/plant-based-pros-on-the-books-they-recommend-again-and-again/ https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/plant-based-pros-on-the-books-they-recommend-again-and-again/#respond Tue, 15 Apr 2025 19:15:17 +0000 https://www.forksoverknives.com/?p=200564&preview=1 The right book at the right time can change your life. We asked plant-based experts to share books that have left a...

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The right book at the right time can change your life. We asked plant-based experts to share books that have left a lasting impression on them—from groundbreaking guides to innovative cookbooks, inspiring memoirs, and more. Whether you’re just starting out or looking to reinvigorate your plant-based journey, these titles offer knowledge, encouragement, and a fresh dose of motivation.

Editor’s note: FOK may collect a small share of sales from some of the links on this page, though it doesn’t influence our selection.

cover of the book Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease by Caldwell Esselstyn

Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease

“Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn’s Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease may very well be the most important health book ever written. It’s the science-backed, detailed guide that Dr. Esslestyn used to remedy heart disease for scores of his patients and now legions of people around the world. The book, which includes 150 mouthwatering recipes from his wife, Ann, is a must read for anyone who wants to render heart disease as nothing more than a ‘paper tiger.’”

Brian Wendel, founder of Forks Over Knives

cover of the book Diet for a New America by John Robbins

Diet for a New America

“John Robbins’ Diet for a New America was the first book that opened my eyes and made me want to remove animal products from my diet. Published in 1987, this book pioneered the plant-based movement and sparked my personal growth and career [path]. Diet for a New America is in its 25th-anniversary edition and is still a valuable read.”

Dreena Burton, author of Dreena’s Kind Kitchen: 100+ Whole-Foods Vegan Recipes to Enjoy Every Day

cover of the cookbook PlantYou Scrappy Cooking by Carleigh Bodrug

PlantYou Scrappy Cooking

“I loved PlantYou Scrappy Cooking, Carleigh Bodrug’s second cookbook, which came out last year. It makes you realize that almost everything you think is waste can actually be used for cooking, in exceptionally creative ways. It’s easy to get into a pattern of throwing away things like zucchini rinds, broccoli bottoms, lemon seeds, and date pits, but Bodrug shows you how to transform them into sauces, jams, ‘coffee,’ and much more.”

Cyrus Khambatta, Ph.D., co-author of Mastering Diabetes

Cover of the book the Homemade Vegan Pantry by Miyoko Schinner

The Homemade Vegan Pantry

“Miyoko Schinner is a legend in the plant-based movement, and in The Homemade Vegan Pantry, she provides readers with an essential guidebook for creating many plant-based staples at home, such as sausages, pasta, sour cream, and vegetable stock, instead of purchasing highly processed alternatives at the store. A few of my favorite oil-free recipes in the book are Oil-Free Eggless Mayo, Creamy Soy Milk, and Nice Thick Nondairy Yogurt. Some recipes have added sugars, oils, and salt, but you can omit them in many cases.”

Sharon Palmer, MSFS, RDN, founder of The Plant-Powered Dietitian

the covers of the books The China Study the Starch Solution Food Is Climate The Pleasure Trap and Why We Love Dogs Eat Pigs and Wear Cows

The China Study; The Starch Solution; Food Is Climate; The Pleasure Trap; and Why We Love Dogs, Eat Pigs, and Wear Cows

“My all-time top recommendations are always The China Study by T. Colin Campbell, Ph.D., and The Starch Solution by John McDougall, M.D. More recently I’ve recommended Glen Merzer’s Food Is Climate several times. (It’s a short, factual read, with the second half of the book being recipes to help the reader start eating plant-based.) The Pleasure Trap by Doug Lisle, Ph.D, and Alan Goldhamer, D.C., and Why We Love Dogs, Eat Pigs, and Wear Cows by Melanie Joy are books I often suggest to those looking to dive a little deeper into the plant-based lifestyle.”

Rachael J. Brown, author of For Fork’s Sake: A Quick Guide to Healing Yourself and the Planet Through a Plant-Based Diet

cover of the book The Whole Story by John mackey

The Whole Story

“I highly recommend diving into [Whole Foods co-founder] John Mackey’s latest masterpiece, The Whole Story. With the narrative flow of a captivating novel, Mackey [tells the story of Whole Foods and] intricately weaves in his transition to a vegan, whole-food, plant-based lifestyle, offering profound insights into his personal evolution. Moreover, the book explores his bold decision to [sell] his brainchild to the wealthiest suitor in the world. Trust me: It’s a page-turner!”

Rip Esselstyn, founder of PLANTSTRONG and author of The Engine 2 Diet

cover of the book Escape by Tim Kaufman

Escape: Breaking Free from a Self-Made Prison

“One book I’d recommend to Forks Over Knives readers is Tim Kaufman’s Escape: Breaking Free from a Self-Made Prison. It’s about Kaufman’s journey from obesity and addiction to health. His story is relatable and inspirational, a testimonial that shows how changing your lifestyle can help you overcome life’s challenges.”

Darshana Thacker Wendel, author of Forks Over Knives: Flavor!

the covers of the books How Not to Die and Finding Ultra side by side

How Not to Die and Finding Ultra

How Not to Die by Michael Greger, M.D., is a classic that I love and consistently recommend. Another of my favorites is Finding Ultra, Rich Roll’s book about turning his life around. He went from an overeating, out-of-shape lawyer who couldn’t make it up the stairs to a plant-based ultra athlete completing triathlons on each of Hawaii’s islands in under a week.”

Katie Simmons, Chicago-based personal chef and founder of Plants-Rule

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A Grain, a Green, a Bean: Gena Hamshaw’s Budget-Friendly Formula for Nourishing Vegan Meals https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/a-grain-a-green-a-bean-gena-hamshaw-budget-friendly-formula-for-nourishing-vegan-meals/ https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/a-grain-a-green-a-bean-gena-hamshaw-budget-friendly-formula-for-nourishing-vegan-meals/#respond Tue, 08 Apr 2025 17:53:15 +0000 https://www.forksoverknives.com/?p=200365&preview=1 If you’ve ever found yourself staring blankly into your refrigerator at the end of a long day, hoping for a flash of...

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If you’ve ever found yourself staring blankly into your refrigerator at the end of a long day, hoping for a flash of culinary inspiration, you’re in good company.

Gena Hamshaw, a registered dietitian and cookbook author best known for her popular plant-based food blog, The Full Helping, often found herself grappling with the “What can I make for dinner that’s nourishing and tastes good?” question, and not for a lack of recipes or a dearth of ingredients.

The missing link? A framework to streamline the meal-preparation process. Enter A Grain, A Green, A Bean, Hamshaw’s new cookbook, built around a simple formula designed to help home cooks create palate-pleasing, nutritionally balanced meals without stress or decision fatigue.

Hamshaw drew on her educational background (she holds a master’s in nutrition from Columbia) and her love of food to develop more than 80 pared-down, grain-green-bean recipes, livened up with flavors from Japan, Mexico, Korea, and beyond. Readers will also discover a helpful grain-cooking primer and an everything-you-ever-wanted-to-know-about-soybeans section in the introductory chapter of this vegan cookbook. (A note for our oil-free readers: Many recipes in A Grain, A Green, a Bean call for a small amount of oil; in most cases, you could easily adapt these recipes using classic no-oil sauté and roasting methods.)

In anticipation of the book’s April 15 launch, we spoke with Hamshaw about big-picture eating, cooking affordably, and her number-one tip for saving time in the kitchen. Read on for the full conversation, and be sure to check out the Maple Mustard Lentils, Sweet Potatoes, and Herbs recipe from the new book!

To slices of whole grain toast topped with Maple Mustard Lentils, Sweet Potatoes, and Herbs

Gena Hamshaw: I got interested in cooking at around the same time I became vegan. I live in New York, but back then, it just wasn’t easy to go into any restaurant and get a great vegan entree. And there were fewer products available, too. And so as I became vegan, I really felt like it was time for me to teach myself how to cook a little more capably.

What are some global cuisines that lend themselves particularly well to the grains-greens-beans formula?

GH: It’s not specific to a culture. This is a way of thinking about building a plate of food that can be mapped onto almost any cuisine that comes to my mind. There are certainly culinary traditions around the world that have relied more on legumes and grains than others. I’m thinking about many Southeast Asian and South American cuisines, where beans and grains have always played a prominent role in people’s diets. But I wanted to present this principle of a grain, a green, a bean as something that people can adapt to their own culinary life, their own culinary traditions, their family cooking traditions, and also their culture of origin.

You can’t help but embrace the bean after reading this book. Have you discovered any ways to minimize the flatulence they’re known to cause?

GH: I think it’s about adjusting expectations, meaning, when you eat beans—and the same goes for crucifers and really big portions of vegetables—it’s a lot of fiber. And the fiber in beans is particularly tricky for us to break down. That will create some gas and some flatulence. It’s not inherently harmful. It’s just uncomfortable. And you can make a decision about the right portion size and frequency that works for you. And just know that they’re giving your body great nutrition, whether they make you a little gassy or not.

Readers might be surprised to discover that bread, including wraps, tortillas, and pita, counts as a grain in this book. Are some breads healthier than others?

GH: I think that “healthy” is really a matter of overall dietary patterns, and this is something I feel pretty strongly about. I think you can have conversations about which breads are higher in fiber, which breads have more protein. If you are eating a diet that’s rich in plant proteins, rich in fiber overall, because you’re getting a lot of fiber-rich foods, there’s space for you to eat some baguette, which might have a little less fiber than a piece of whole grain bread.

What are some ways we can save money by eating the plant-based foods you include in the book?

GH: [Frozen vegetables] are a great way to save money, because they’re often inexpensive. There’s no risk of them spoiling, which is fantastic. You keep a bag of frozen broccoli florets or green beans in the freezer and you can always dip in when you need them. And of course, they’re as nutritious as fresh vegetables, sometimes more so. And beans and grains are still a good bang for your buck. A bag of lentils is still pretty inexpensive.

Do you have any favorite time-saving tips for home cooks?

GH: Meal prep is the number one, and batch-cooking. There is never a time midweek where I’m not grateful to have [already] done some of the work. And one thing I’ve learned is to be less ambitious about my batch-cooking and my meal prep. It’s great if I have time to make lasagna over the weekend, but it’s also fine if I roast some sweet potatoes, cook a couple batches of rice, maybe make a quick stir-fry with some seitan or some tofu, and just leave it there. If you have a couple of great sauces in your fridge, you can dress up very simple meals and have them still taste great.

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Brandi Doming’s ‘Vegan Wholesome’: High-Protein, Oil-Free Recipes That Pack Big Flavor https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/brandi-doming-on-vegan-wholesome-oil-free-high-protein-cookbook/ https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/brandi-doming-on-vegan-wholesome-oil-free-high-protein-cookbook/#respond Thu, 03 Apr 2025 17:11:02 +0000 https://www.forksoverknives.com/?p=200146&preview=1 For nearly a decade, Brandi Doming built a devoted following in the vegan community by keeping things simple: Every recipe on her...

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For nearly a decade, Brandi Doming built a devoted following in the vegan community by keeping things simple: Every recipe on her blog, The Vegan 8, featured just eight ingredients or fewer (not counting salt, pepper, or water). A few years ago, when Doming decided to move beyond that limit, she worried that her audience might not come along for the ride.

“I wondered, ‘Are people still going to want to make my stuff?’” Doming says. The response surprised her. “When I made the announcement, a lot of people said that they never even knew what the ‘8’ in Vegan 8 meant. They just liked my recipes because they were healthy while still being delicious and impressing non-vegans in their family. [The number of ingredients] didn’t matter.”

Stepping outside the constraint of eight ingredients gave Doming room to experiment with more complex flavor combinations while keeping her recipes healthful and accessible. Now, she’s compiled her latest creations into her second cookbook, Vegan Wholesome: High-Protein Meals and Snacks to Energize and Nourish (out April 15). The book highlights satisfying, quick meals that deliver lasting energy (think casseroles, soups, pasta, and flatbreads), along with oil-free vegan takes on day-to-day essentials like cream cheese and barbecue sauce.

Whole grain bagels spread with homemade vegan cream cheese by Brandi Doming

We caught up with Doming to discuss the inspiration behind her new book, how her own fitness journey over the past few years influenced the recipes, her favorite quick meals, must-have kitchen gadgets, and more. Read on for the full conversation, and try Doming’s Harissa Almond Pasta with Spinach for a taste of Vegan Wholesome!

What drew you to a vegan lifestyle?

Brandi Doming: I went vegan in 2012, almost 13 years ago now, because my [husband at the time] had gout. He was on a lot of medications, and we tried multiple different diets. He had been going to doctors for years and they would always tell him the same thing, to eat more chicken and to eat yogurt and dairy—which never helped. Gout can be excruciatingly painful, and he had a very serious form. His knees would flare up, his ankles, his elbows. And so he would be on crutches a lot of the time. After we had our daughter in 2011, it was really hard for me to take care of him and a newborn.

So, after following what doctors told us for so many years and none of it working, I decided to start researching things for myself. I’d stay up till 2 o’clock in the morning reading as much as I could online. Somehow, I came across plant-based eating. I started reading about how meat and dairy were inflammatory. I thought, “We’ve tried everything else.” And I didn’t want him to be on all those medications for the rest of his life, which had side effects and weren’t good for his heart. So, I said, “OK. We’re going vegan.” He wasn’t real thrilled about it, because he’s from Louisiana and he lived off seafood. But I said, “I’ll do it with you.” It ended up helping him dramatically. He was able to get off the crutches and off the medications. … And I actually got better, myself. I’d had really bad digestion problems since I was a little girl. My mom used to take me to the doctors all the time for my stomach problems, and they could never figure it out. I went vegan and within two, three weeks, the symptoms all vanished. At that point, I thought, “Wait a minute, I think I’m going to stick to this.” Then I started researching animal cruelty [of the meat and dairy industries], and once I saw that I knew I would never go back.

When you went vegan, were you immediately eating a wholesome vegan diet?

BD: Yes. I did not buy anything pre-made. I’ve cooked my whole life anyways. I’ve always been health-focused, in that sense. So, I just started making everything with vegetables and fruits. [At first we just ate] a lot of vegetables, potatoes and fruit and whole wheat pasta. I started learning how to cook more and working with nuts to make creamy sauces. And that’s been my way of cooking all these years: to make it whole food-based, but still be really satisfying and delicious and rich, because taste is super important to me. I grew up here in Texas eating very filling, indulgent meals.

How did your blog, the Vegan 8, start?

BD: When I first started cooking [plant-based], I had a different blog called The Healthy Flavor. I realized there were a lot of vegan blogs out there. So, I thought, “How can I reach more people so I can help them eat healthier and trust my recipes?” I looked at the recipes on my blog that people were making the most, and I noticed they were all eight ingredients or less—because they were simple but delicious. So I decided to call my blog “The Vegan 8” and to make every recipe eight ingredients or less, not counting salt, pepper, or water. And then my blog just took off. I did that for about nine or 10 years. And then three or four years ago, I stopped doing only eight ingredient recipes because it was limiting my creativity. I still do [short ingredient lists], but I do more than eight now. It’s still my style, still whole-food–based, still oil-free. It’s just more ingredients and more creative.

You write in the book’s introduction that you allow a little bit of oil into your diet personally. Why is it important to you that you keep your recipes oil-free?

BD: A lot of people started following me from the Forks Over Knives group on Facebook, or from some of the plant-based doctors who don’t use oil. And I just felt after learning everything I could that it is best to stick with whole-food fats, such as cashews and hemp seeds. Oil adds up so quickly. One tablespoon is 14 grams of fat. By contrast, nut butter is 8 grams.

When I go out to eat, I don’t stress about perfection. That’s just not my way, and I don’t want to raise my daughter that way. But when we cook at home, we eat oil-free as much as possible. I do use nonstick spray for baking certain things so they don’t stick to the pan. But for the most part, I try to avoid oil. And my recipes don’t taste like they’re oil-free or lacking in something, which is why so many people will say, “I can’t believe there’s not butter in this.” Because taste and texture is number one.

How did you decide on the high-protein focus for this cookbook?

BD: When I switched my blog from just eight ingredients, around that time was also when I got divorced and I started incorporating fitness to help me mentally. It was a big transition, a lot going on in my life. I started working out to help me deal with everything that was going on. So, I started sharing my workouts online with my followers, and a lot of people started following my workout plans and asking me for a higher-protein cookbook. And this book is healthier than my first book. They’re both oil-free and whole-food-based and healthy, but the first book had higher-sodium recipes and way more desserts. This one’s lower-sodium and has fewer desserts. It’s also more creative because the recipes have more ingredients.

In the book, you talk about how you try to achieve an overall balanced plate but don’t worry about counting calories or macros. Can you speak to that?

BD: I include the nutritional stats because a lot of readers like that, so that’s for them. But on a day-to-day basis, I don’t count my calories. I pretty much know, just from doing this for so long, what is in most foods, and I try to keep a balance. But I don’t like obsessing over it. I just don’t feel that’s healthy, for me personally, anyway. Everybody’s different. But I don’t want to raise my daughter with that mentality that she’s got to count every calorie and eat perfectly. … It should be a balance. Mental health relates to physical health.

What are some of your daughter’s favorite snacks?

BD: She loves the nut-free chocolate chip granola bars, which are on my blog. She doesn’t like actual granola, which is weird, but she loves those granola bars. She also loves my thin mint cookies that are on the blog. And then I have some peanut butter cookies in Vegan Wholesome, but I make them with almond butter for her, and she loves those.

What would be your top-three favorite recipes in the new book for people to try?

BD: The Swedish Meatballs with gravy and the Vegan “Tuna” Casserole. Those were the most requested recipes. And then also, my Protein-Packed Mac ‘n’ Cheese. Those three are amazing. They got approval from [my daughter] Olivia—which is saying a lot, because she’s a teenager. The soup chapter is my favorite—so many amazing soups in there that are really creative, really different. One of them, the Feel-Good Roasted Red Pepper and Veggie soup, the base is made from roasting bell peppers and then blending them up with broth and seasonings. So, it has so much flavor in it.

Vegan Swedish meatballs from Brandi Doming's Vegan Wholesome Cookbook

You mention in the book that you’ll buy nondairy yogurt from the store sometimes. Are there any other convenience foods that you recommend to make life a little easier?

BD: Definitely. Some of the recipes in the book where I use mozzarella, I give the option to use my homemade mozzarella (which is in the book and is amazing), but you can also use Miyoko’s liquid mozzarella. I feel like [Miyoko’s] is probably the healthiest vegan mozzarella, because it’s not full of all preservatives and processed stuff. It’s got real ingredients. [Editor’s note: It does contain oil.] The same thing if I call for barbecue sauce: You can use my homemade recipe or store-bought. I let the reader decide. Because I know sometimes, we’re in a hurry. Or maybe you’re making something for non-vegan guests, you could use store-bought vegan cheese, which has oil in it but maybe tastes a little bit more indulgent.

Say you’re home for an hour before rushing out to dance practice: What’s your go-to quick nourishing meal?

BD: The 20-minute Alfredo from my blog. I’ve timed it, start to finish. You can finish it in 20 minutes—including the pasta-cooking time—and it’s really creamy and rich. You just mix cashew butter, onion powder, broth, lemon juice, nutritional yeast and a couple other ingredients. And you could add any veggies you want, like broccoli or spinach or even chickpeas if you want higher protein.

On the blog I also have a homemade ramen soup seasoning mix that you can keep in your pantry. Add it to broth with a little bit of soy sauce, and you have homemade, low-sodium ramen soup in less than 10 minutes. You could add tofu or whatever else you like. Those are a couple of my go-tos. Olivia really likes Italian flavors, so I’ll do pasta topped with a blend of basil, tomato sauce, some of my mozzarella and some Italian seasonings. I’ll add a little bit of tahini or almond butter. I know that sounds weird, but it tastes amazing. It makes it rich and creamy, and then it gives some fat for her, because I really try to make sure she eats enough fat since she’s growing and does a lot of gymnastics, so I make sure I keep her calories high.

Did anything surprise you in the course of writing Vegan Wholesome?

BD: How much more work it was to photograph every recipe myself! I didn’t do that with the first book.

You photographed every recipe yourself?!

BD: Yes. It was crazy. At first, I was like, “Well, why not? I know how to take pictures.” But now I understand that for a cookbook, the photography style is different than typically what you put on your blog. For a cookbook, you want to give readers the feel that they’re eating it right there, with a few crumbs or seasonings spilled on the side, as opposed to everything looking perfect. And it’s true; it gives you more of a home feel. I learned so much about food styling through this book.

You include gram measurements alongside cup measurements in your recipes. Why?

BD: I’ve been cooking by grams for over a decade. It seems a little awkward at first, but a large majority of my followers make my recipes by gram weights now, because it becomes so easy. You don’t have to get out the measuring cups at all, just get out a bowl and turn the kitchen scale to zero, add the first ingredient, hit zero, add the next. You don’t use the kitchen scale for tablespoons or teaspoons, because they’re too small, and it probably won’t detect it accurately. But any measurements around three tablespoons and up, you can use the scale. Everybody measures a little bit differently when they use cups. And I want people to enjoy the recipes. So, following gram weights, you’re going to get the exact way I tested it in my kitchen. I provide cup measurements, too, and you can use those. But using the scale is so quick. And you have way less cleanup, too.

Any other essential kitchen gadgets?

BD: The Vitamix. I think probably every vegan has a Vitamix or a Blendtec. And also, a food processor, because there are some things that work better in a food processor than a blender. Those two and the scale are really the main things that I can think of that are a necessity for my recipes. Because when you’re blending up nuts and stuff, you’re going to get way better results with a high-powered blender. But if you only have a food processor, just soak the nuts longer and it’ll be fine.

At the same time you were working on this second cookbook, you’ve been pursuing your dream of becoming a dancer. What has that been like?

BD: When I started working out, like I said, I was dealing with a lot. I was in a bad depression. I started working out and getting more self-love, trying to take care of myself mentally, and I had always dreamed of being a ballroom dancer. Since I was a little girl, I always wanted to do it. I watched Dancing with the Stars for years. After I got divorced, that urge became very heavy. It was almost like it was saying, “It’s time.” Since I was sharing my workouts online with my followers and they were really interested in it, I thought, “You know what? I’m going to be honest about what I’m going through. I’m going through a divorce. I’m going through depression.” Because I feel like being honest with people helps me to connect with them more. I’m not just some perfect person who posts recipes online. I’m a human being. I’ve gone through changes and I wanted to be open and that helps my followers as well going through divorce and life changes. So, I started sharing about my dance journey, and many of my followers started taking dance lessons as well, because they were inspired to pursue their own dream. My message is, “Live your life. It’s short. Do something that you love, that you’re passionate about because you only got one life. And when you do something for yourself, you’re going to be happier mentally and physically.” Mental goes with physical; you need to take care of both. It all just ties in together.

What else would you like Forks Over Knives readers to know about Vegan Wholesome?

BD: With these recipes, I am completely confident that not only will you as a plant-based eater or vegan enjoy them, but that you can serve them to your non-vegan guests. I know a lot of people think that vegan food is only going to appeal to vegan taste buds. My goal is always to appeal to every eater. A lot of my followers are not vegan—that is my proof.

You can have something healthy and whole-food based, but it can still taste just as good as non-vegan food. And it doesn’t have to be complicated or full of a bunch of processed ingredients. My recipes are good for you and will appeal to anybody.

Brandi Doming headshot courtesy Kim Schaffer Photography. All other photographs courtesy Brandi Doming.

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Dora Ramirez’s ‘Comida Casera’: A Vegan Journey Through Mexico’s Myriad Cuisines https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/inside-doras-table-vegan-mexican-cookbook-comida-casera/ https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/inside-doras-table-vegan-mexican-cookbook-comida-casera/#respond Mon, 10 Mar 2025 19:33:16 +0000 https://www.forksoverknives.com/?p=199573&preview=1 Comida Casera, the new cookbook from Dora’s Table creator Dora Ramírez, is more than just a collection of recipes. It’s a love...

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Comida Casera, the new cookbook from Dora’s Table creator Dora Ramírez, is more than just a collection of recipes. It’s a love letter to Mexican food culture, paying tribute to its depth, diversity—and its plant-based possibilities. “Here in the United States we have very limited knowledge of Mexican cuisine,” says Ramírez. “Usually people just think of tacos, enchiladas, burritos.”

Ramírez’s own eyes were opened to the breadth of her home country’s cuisine when she moved to Mexico City as a young adult and encountered dishes and ingredients she’d never come across while growing up along the Mexico–Texas border. “I felt like I knew nothing about Mexico or Mexican food because it was so different from where I grew up,” she recalls. When she set out to write Comida Casera, she made a point of featuring veganized dishes from every corner of the country. She also took care to highlight indigenous cooks upholding the plant-forward traditions of their ancestors. “I wanted this cookbook to be all of Mexico,” says Ramírez.

Instead of the usual appetizer-main-side format, Comida Casera is structured around key culinary traditions, from mole markets to antojitos (street food), home-cooked classics, and beyond. Ramírez invites cooks of all skill levels into her kitchen, with a detailed ingredient glossary and step-by-step visual guides for essential techniques like roasting chile peppers, despining nopales, and assembling tamales.

Hibiscus barbacoa tacos - four tacos filled with hibiscus flower barbacoa, a vegan barbacoa alternate, with two lime wedges on the side and a bowl of green sauce. Recipe from Comida Casera vegan Mexican cookbook
Hibiscus Flower Barbacoa, from ‘Comida Casera’

The Culinary Institute of America–trained chef showcases the versatility of plant-based ingredients, transforming rice into chicharrones and dried hibiscus flowers into barbacoa. “Comida Casera honors traditional Mexican flavors and techniques, but relies on the immense world of plants to do so,” she says. There’s a strong whole-food focus to the book. Every recipe is vegan, and most include oil-free variations.

We caught up with Ramírez to talk about the new book (which is out March 18), the magic of Mexican food, and the fateful kitchen mix-up that made her rethink her approach to plant-based cooking. Fix yourself a plate of Tacos de Rajas con Crema and dig into the full conversation below!

Even though you grew up in your family’s restaurant, it wasn’t until you ventured far from home that you yourself fell in love with cooking. How did that happen?

Dora Ramírez: [My siblings and I] would sometimes help when my father was catering big events, but we’d help with little stuff, like peeling carrots. Most of the time, we weren’t super involved, especially not in the kitchen. And my mom stopped cooking at home when I was 6, when the restaurant opened. Because she was like, “Why am I going to keep cooking? There’s a whole restaurant!” So I wasn’t really ever exposed to cooking because I would just go to the restaurant and eat. But then I was a missionary [in Mexico City] for a year after high school, and one of my chores was to help out in the kitchen. That’s when I really discovered the magic of cooking.

What sort of food were they making there that sparked your interest?

DR: I’m from Acuña, a town on the border with Texas, and the food is a mix of Texas, Tex-Mex, and Northern Mexico influences. We’re really close to the town that’s famous for inventing nachos, so nachos are big. In Northern Mexico, we eat a lot of meat and a lot of flour tortillas, and that’s pretty much it. Not a lot of vegetables. Central Mexico is completely different. … There’s an emphasis on vegetables. There’s an emphasis on zucchini flowers. … People have a little vegetable soup to start off their meal, even if they’re eating meat.

What inspired you to go plant-based for your health?

DR: I was having a lot of yeast overgrowth, infections, and rashes, and it got to the point where it was very painful. Doctors would tell me, “You need to take this antifungal medication.” It wouldn’t work. Then they would give me antibiotics. It would be better for a little bit, and then it wouldn’t. I was just in pain all the time.

One friend said, “You need to watch Forks Over Knives.” I told her I didn’t want to. I knew it was a plant-based documentary. I loved cheese. I loved going out to restaurants. I didn’t want to have to change the way I ate. But this friend was insistent. We were in a mommy group together, and every single week she would ask, “Did you watch it yet?” It got to the point where I needed to either stop going to this mommy group or watch this documentary. I ended up watching it just to get her off my back. I was very surprised by it, and I decided to try [going whole-food, plant-based]. I failed several times. I would go plant-based for a week, say, “I don’t see any changes,” and give up. Then one Lent, I went plant-based for 40 days straight, and it was like magic. The inflammation was gone. My skin rash was gone. My pain was gone. I stopped taking all the medications I had been taking. To this day, sometimes I struggle with the yeast overgrowth, so I watch my processed sugar intake. But in general, the switch from eating a meat-centered diet to a plant-based diet resolved my health issues.

Could you talk about the comment from your mom that changed your approach to vegan cooking, as you relate in the book’s introduction?

DR: My mom got diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes. I’d been vegan for a little bit at that point and read a lot of books by plant-based doctors, including Neal Barnard’s book on reversing Type 2 diabetes. So I was trying to get my mom to eat plant-based, and I made her vegan dishes that I really loved at the time. One of the first things I made were Vietnamese spring rolls. While I was preparing them, I set a block of tofu on the kitchen table. I left the room for a moment, and I heard my mom spitting something out and saying, “What is this?” She had eaten a spoon full of tofu, thinking it was panela. It really did look like a nice fresh panela cheese. It was glistening. She thought it was the most disgusting thing. I said, “Let me cook it for you. You’ll see it’s delicious!” She said, “I’m never eating tofu again.” I tried a couple other dishes until finally she was so frustrated that she said, “Can’t you just make it Mexican?” And it hit me, like, “Oh yeah, that’s right. I can make it Mexican!”

Dora Ramírez's pink mole in a blue bowl, garnished with pomegranate seeds, from Ramírez's vegan Mexican cookbook Comida Casera
Pink Mole (Mole Rosa) from ‘Comida Casera’

Comida Casera isn’t organized like a traditional cookbook. How did you decide to organize it the way you did?

DR: The book is organized as a journey through the key culinary landmarks in Mexico. We start in the indigenous kitchen, the basis of [Mexican] cuisine. Then we go to the market—in Mexico, there are huge markets where you can buy mole pastes—and we called that chapter Mole From the Market. Then there’s street food, and home-cooked classics. … And because I have culinary training, I have a chapter, Modern Mexico, for what I would serve if I had my own fine-dining restaurant. I wanted the cookbook to represent all of Mexican cuisine, and there’s a recipe for every state in Mexico in the book.

You managed to offer oil-free versions for an impressive number and array of dishes (including chicharrones!). Why was that important to you?

DR: When I started on my whole plant-based journey, I ate oil-free, because my focus was health. But there are certain dishes where you really need the oil, from a culinary standpoint. Mole is an example. Mole has nuts and seeds, so it already has a lot of fat, but there’s a key step to making mole where you have to fry the sauce in oil, which changes its flavor. You can make it without it, but it won’t have that same flavor. So when I saw that there were certain dishes that I couldn’t replicate without oil, I moved back to using some oil.

But you’ll see in the cookbook that even for the recipes that use oil, they use very little of it—maybe two teaspoons. They don’t have huge quantities. I know a lot of people are plant-based for health reasons and need to avoid oil. And I wanted them to be a part of Comida Casera, too. So I had recipe testers make every recipe with and without oil. There are some recipes in the book that don’t include a no-oil variation—that’s because we tested them without oil and they didn’t work.

How did you discover that dried hibiscus makes a good vegan barbacoa?

DR: There has been a big vegetarian movement in Mexico since the seventies, and it’s not uncommon for hibiscus to be used as a meat substitute. The way I’ve seen it used in Mexico is as a filling for tlacoyos, where the hibiscus is very lightly sautéed with onion and garlic and then served in tortillas. In Mexico they can very lightly cook hibiscus so that it’s still chewy and has a lot of texture, probably because hibiscus in Mexico is way fresher and more tender than the kind that we get in the U.S.

But I’d been to a restaurant in Dallas called Nuno’s Tacos, and he does a barbacoa with hibiscus, and it is so good. He wouldn’t give me the recipe, but he did give me tips. As you’ll see in the book, you boil the dried hibiscus forever. But at the end, you come out with a shredded texture that absorbs flavors really well. And the hibiscus has a little bit of tanginess, which works really well with the eggplant in that recipe, because eggplant is so savory.

What was your process like for developing a Cashew Queso Asadero that actually melts?

DR: I did a lot of testing with that one. It uses kappa carrageenan, which is not a common ingredient, and so I tried to make it without it. But without it, it doesn’t melt, and it’s more like gel-like. With the addition of the kappa carrageenan, it really gets that melty texture. I did tests with agar-agar, and we tried an oil-free version that used tofu instead of oil, but it didn’t get good results with the testers. It didn’t melt.

In the book you talk about returning to ancestral foodways, and you describe the practice of la milpa. Could you share about that for our readers?

DR: La milpa was an agricultural practice practiced by the Nahuas. (Nahuas is the broad name for several indigenous groups.) La milpa is based on planting corn, which was their main crop, but with the corn, they intercropped tomatoes, chiles and beans. All of these crops were put together because they helped each other nutrient-wise, and they helped ward off pests for each other. It’s a sustainable system. They even used the weeds—they would cook and eat those, too. Those are called quelites, or wild greens, and I use them in the book, as well as huitlacoche, the fungus that grows on the corn.

The book goes beyond the typical pantry shopping list. You explain the background and use of each ingredient. How did you decide to go so in-depth?

DR: I really want this book to be for everyone. For it to be for everyone, it needs to explain everything. That’s why that chapter is so specific—because I want you to experience Mexican cuisine, really experience it, and to be able to do that, you need to maybe be a little uncomfortable and go to the Mexican store and buy dried chiles, when you’ve never used them before. That’s why I included so much information about dried chiles, the fresh chiles they come from, where you can get them, and how to prepare them. I wanted to remove all the barriers so that people can make these recipes without looking at the book and being like, “Well, I don’t know what that is. Where do I get it? How am I going to make this if I can’t get this?” Even if they’re not going to be 100% the way that they’re made in Mexico, you can very, very closely replicate them in your home.

A white baking dish full of creamy poblano and corn filling, with a spoon in the dish
Rajas con Crema from ‘Comida Casera’

Speaking of peppers, for the Rajas con Crema recipe, if someone can’t find Poblanos, is there another pepper that would work?

DR: You can make it with bell peppers. The flavor won’t be the same because it won’t have that smokiness or the heat, but you can make it with bell peppers. There’s also canned poblano peppers, which you can drain and use.

What else would you like readers to know about Comida Casera?

DR: I really loved writing the home-cooking chapter (called “Comida Casera”) because I asked my mom, “What did grandma used to make for your family meals?” My mom is one of seven kids. She said, “Look, we were really poor. Sometimes we could only eat rice and beans and a sopita (pasta soup). Sometimes we could maybe afford a little bit of meat. But one thing that I can say about your grandma is that her table was always open to everyone.” There was almost always [a guest] at their family meals, and usually it was somebody who needed a meal. That, to me, is the heart of comida casera (Mexican home-cooking), and the whole message I was trying to express in this book. This is my Mexican table, and everybody’s welcome.

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Breaking Up With Dairy: Classically Trained Chef Bai Serves Up Vegan Takes on Creamy, Cheesy Favorites https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/breaking-up-with-dairy-chef-bai-serves-up-vegan-takes-on-creamy-favorites/ https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/breaking-up-with-dairy-chef-bai-serves-up-vegan-takes-on-creamy-favorites/#respond Wed, 12 Feb 2025 19:46:41 +0000 https://www.forksoverknives.com/?p=198950&preview=1 “I could never give up dairy.” It’s the refrain of countless people when faced with the idea of a plant-based lifestyle. Le...

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“I could never give up dairy.” It’s the refrain of countless people when faced with the idea of a plant-based lifestyle. Le Cordon Bleu–trained chef Bailey Ruskus was firmly in this camp—until debilitating endometriosis symptoms forced her to reconsider. “I spent 16 years in chronic pain,” says Ruskus, known as Chef Bai to her clients and 700,000 social media followers. “I burned the skin on my abdomen because I would lay under the water in the shower so hot just to get relief.” In 2017, she watched What the Health and had a revelation: Dairy might be making her symptoms worse. “It was a lightbulb moment for me. I was vegetarian, but I had yet to try getting rid of dairy.” Although she didn’t know what it would mean for her culinary career, Ruskus decided to go vegan.

Determined not to give up the decadent creamy, cheesy dishes she knew and loved, Ruskus used her skills to come up with plant-based alternatives so delicious that no one would miss the animal products. Now, she’s collected her greatest dairy-free hits in Breaking Up With Dairy. Designed as a go-to guide for ditching dairy without deprivation, the bold, colorful cookbook includes staples such as butter, sour cream, and whole milk, as well as dishes that one might’ve thought impossible to veganize, like crème brûlée. None of the recipes require fermentation, and many are gluten-free, nut-free, soy-free, and oil-free. Plus, it’s just a downright fun read, brimming with cheeky pep talks and dynamic photography. We chatted with Ruskus about the new book, her best advice for ending your toxic relationship with dairy, the key to creating a killer vegan cheese board, and more. Read on for the full interview—and whip up Chef Bai’s Oat Chocolate Put-on-Everything Sauce for a taste of the new cookbook!

When did you know that you wanted to be a chef?

BR: Pretty much since forever. … I would watch the Food Network all the time when I was a kid. There are videos of me cooking on my VHS camcorder as an 8-year-old in the ’90s, pretending to be Martha Stewart, the original content creator. Then I got my first job in a kitchen when I was 11, because my mom’s best friend owned a pastry shop called A Grande Finale in Louisville, Colorado, and I was so in awe of the whole process of making pastries and making people happy through food. I said, “Mom, I want to do this this summer. I don’t want to go to camp. I want to cook.” So that’s what I did. I stuffed cannolis, and made buttercream frosting, and put together cake boxes, and mopped the floors, and I absolutely loved it.

Did your culinary training at Le Cordon Bleu make it hard to go vegan?

BR: Well, I went vegetarian after going to a slaughterhouse with my butchery program. And soon after, I had a class with a vegan chef, Chef Anita, who essentially had us make Michelin-star food without using animal products and without using salt. All of my classmates were like, “This is impossible. She’s setting us up to fail!” I loved the way it stretched my mind. I liked cooking with plants. I found it really interesting. But I didn’t do much with it right away. It took hitting rock bottom in my health journey to need to make that type of change, and it was really hard for me professionally. I didn’t know if I would be good at being a vegan chef, because you have to relearn so much. But thank God I did.

How soon after cutting out dairy did you have relief from your endometriosis symptoms?

BR: It was gradual. Bloating and acne pretty quickly went away. I used to have extreme nightmares every night, and I thought that was normal, but when I cut dairy out, I stopped having nightmares. I started sleeping peacefully. After six months, I was able to get off all my hormone replacements and opiates. At that point, I was a brand-new person and feeling really confident, too. I noticed my periods were so much more manageable. If I’m not on my game, if I’m super stressed out, I still have “endo” problems. But it’s definitely manageable now, where before it was running my life and totally unmanageable.

How did you decide to focus your second cookbook on dairy?

BR: In 2021, I posted [my vegan mac and cheese recipe] on TikTok, and it went mega viral. It made my first cookbook hit the top 10 books on Amazon in all categories overnight. So I started posting all these dairy-free recipes—butter, ricotta, cashew cream—telling the stories behind them, sharing my own dairy-free journey. I got thousands of comments from people saying things like, “This is me. I have all the same symptoms. I can’t get dairy out of my diet. I’m so addicted to cheese,” or, “I go to work, and there’s donuts.” Everyone had examples of how dairy was infiltrating their lives, saying that they knew that they needed to get rid of it, but they couldn’t do it. So I started a “Breaking Up with Dairy” series on TikTok. I woke up one day, and I was like, you know what? I just want to turn this into a cookbook. I wanted it to be like the dairy-free encyclopedia, where when you have a recipe that calls for butter, there’s a butter alternative; if you have a recipe that calls for whole milk, there’s a whole milk alternative.

a hand flicks the cap off a bottle of milk - photo from breaking up with dairy by bailey ruskus

It took a while to write, because I spent so much time reading all the dairy-free books that are out there. Mad respect to all authors, but the thing that I noticed was that all of the cheeses required fermentation. And there were a lot of complicated steps. I want things to be quick and fast. So we recreated these dairy classics in a way that needed no fermentation.

What have you learned about why it’s so hard for people to give up cheese?

BR: Cheese is just pure milk fat, and milk in itself is very addicting. It has casomorphins in it, which essentially trigger a dopamine release in your brain. When we’re babies and we’re being held by our moms and we’re getting breastfed, you have that trigger in your brain that says, “I’m safe; I’m happy.” We talk about babies being “milk drunk,” because they get high off milk because of the casomorphins. And so that’s why people feel this emotional attachment to cheese, specifically, because it’s concentrated milk fat, and it’s triggering your brain’s reward system.

You note in the book that the dairy industry is brutal not just for the animals but also for the workers. Can you say more about that?

BR: It’s important to remember that the dairy industry also uses factory farming. It’s not like we were raised to think: that there are two dairy cows and a farmer goes and sits on a stool and milks them. … They shuffle these cows onto these huge machines. They take their babies from them. And those dairy cows get slaughtered, and their babies get slaughtered. … There are statistics showing cities and small towns that have slaughterhouses and/or factory farms have some of the highest rates of alcoholism, drug abuse, depression, domestic violence, and suicide. These industries are so brutal. You’re literally being paid to abuse animals, and eventually, that does get to people. … The industry is brutal for every single person involved—except, of course, for the lobbyists and the people at the very top who are making all the money.

Chef Bai poses next to a goat at an animal sanctuary

What are some myths that you find yourself always busting when it comes to dairy?

BR: How much time do you have? I think one of the biggest myths is the calcium thing. … It’s interesting, because we were all kind of fear-mongered into thinking that our bones are going to snap in half if we don’t drink a ton of milk every day. But you can actually get more bioavailable calcium in other sources. Chia seeds, for instance, are one of my favorite sources of calcium. … If you eat a diverse plant-based diet, calcium deficiency is really going to be the last thing on your mind.

Why was it important to you to accommodate many types of allergies in the book?

BR: I think a big hurdle preventing people from going dairy-free is food allergies. I get those comments all the time, “I’m allergic to cashews, and everything has cashews in it,” or, “I’m allergic to soy, and everything has soy in it.” I have private cheffed for so many people with every food allergy you can imagine. So I’m really used to cooking plant-based for allergies. I wanted this to be a book that everyone could enjoy. I made a couple recipes that are perfect for kids, specifically—for instance, the chocolate chunk fudge pops are free of all allergens.

Dairy free choco fudge pops on a blue background - photo from Chef Bai cookbook Breaking Up with Dairy

Why was it important to you to include a lot of oil-free recipes in the cookbook?

I interviewed Dr. Neal Barnard, head of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, an incredible force in the vegan scene. When I was talking to him, I asked, “Would you take this book as seriously if there were oil in it?” And he said no. I really took that to heart, because I know that he’s revolutionizing how we deal with heart disease and how we deal with Type 2 diabetes.

My dad has heart disease, and I know a lot of people who are oil-free, and I’m friends with Rip Esselstyn, who runs PLANTSTRONG and does everything oil-free. I was thinking about older generations who might be dealing with heart disease or high cholesterol. A lot of those folks are looking for oil-free recipes, and it’s pretty much impossible to find dairy-free alternatives in the grocery store that don’t have oil in them. So I really wanted there to be options, to eliminate all the hurdles and to meet people where they’re at.

What are your tips for creating a great vegan cheese board?

BR: I’m all about filling the gaps. I’ll make at least three different cheeses (the chevre log and gruyere recipes from the new book are perfect for this), and I’ll fill the space with gluten-free crackers, toast points, and things to put the cheese on. And then seasonal fruit is my absolute favorite to pair with it, because fruit and cheese is always just always a win. I also love to do marinated olives in little bowls. The more [varied ingredients] that you have on there, the better the cheese board’s going to be. Dried fruit, little mini cucumbers or pickles, nuts. … You could do a Mediterranean-inspired one that has cherry tomatoes and marinated peppers. And then always fill in the blanks with herbs and flowers—that will really take it to the next level.

Vegan cheese board by Chef Bailey Ruskus with a colorful array of plant based ingredients including homemade vegan soft cheese and seasonal fruits and fresh herbs and edible flowers

What would be your top piece of advice for someone cutting out dairy?

BR: Have compassion for yourself while you’re going through the process, because we are living in a world where we are constantly fed [dairy] advertisements; we’re constantly snuck ingredients like whey milk powder. Realize that you are swimming upstream, so it’s hard. Start super small, with the things that you consume regularly at home, with your coffee creamer, your ice cream. Then branch out and see what restaurants have good dairy-free options. You can take it slow.

Remember that dairy is an addictive thing, you’re physically, chemically addicted to it. It’s OK to miss it. You have to go through that period of missing it and allowing yourself to crave it in order for all those cravings to stop.

Editor’s note: This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Photos copyright © 2025 by Bailey Ruskus, reprinted with permission of Balance, an imprint of Grand Central Publishing.

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Easy, Flavorful Vegan Vibes: Inside Jenné Claiborne’s New Cookbook https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/easy-flavorful-vegan-vibes-inside-jenne-claiborne-new-cookbook/ https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/easy-flavorful-vegan-vibes-inside-jenne-claiborne-new-cookbook/#respond Wed, 29 Jan 2025 18:33:33 +0000 https://www.forksoverknives.com/?p=197985&preview=1 Jenné Claiborne was 8 years old when she cooked her first meal (Szechuan chicken), and she’s rarely put down the spatula since....

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Jenné Claiborne was 8 years old when she cooked her first meal (Szechuan chicken), and she’s rarely put down the spatula since. Her plant-based journey began in 2011, when the Atlanta native embraced veganism and started sharing vibrant, inventive recipes on her Sweet Potato Soul YouTube channel. While living in New York City, she became a sought-after personal chef for vegan and whole-food, plant-based clients while continuing to grow her online community. In 2018, she released her debut cookbook, Sweet Potato Soul.

Now, as a mom balancing a busy life, she knows firsthand how challenging it can be to get healthy meals on the table every day. “I don’t spend a lot of time in the kitchen if I’m not working, because I’m busy, just like everybody else,” Claiborne says. “If I’m cooking just for my daughter and me, it’s going to be something quick and easy.” That ethos inspired her latest book, Sweet Potato Soul Vegan Vibes, which hits shelves February 4.

Cover of Jenné Claiborne's cookbook Sweet Potato Soul Vegan Vibes

The gorgeous collection of 100 recipes is all about creating big flavors with minimal effort, showcasing Claiborne’s imagination and resourcefulness as a chef.

We caught up with Claiborne about the new book, her ingenious oil-free granola recipe, farmers-market obsession, and more. Read on for the full conversation!

You went vegan for the animals, but I understand you experienced some health benefits, as well.

Jenné Claiborne: When I first became vegan, I thought I couldn’t be any healthier. I was only 24 years old. I did have a lot of gut issues, but I’d been to different doctors, and they never told me to stop eating dairy. I thought, OK, well, I have a bad stomach, but otherwise, I’m healthy, so if I’m going vegan, it’s just for the animals. I became vegan, and within a week, maybe two, I stopped experiencing all of my gastrointestinal issues, 100%. None of it has ever come back.

You’ve mentioned that the contemporary South was a big influence as you were writing this cookbook. How so?

JC: I left Atlanta for college in ’06 and I didn’t move back until 2021. I had been living in Los Angeles for four years, looking for inspiration for my second cookbook, but I wasn’t finding it. When I came back home to Atlanta, I was reminded of how diverse this place is, too, and it’s much more laidback, and the people are very friendly. … I go to the grocery store and I see produce from all around the world, and I drive down the street and there are 10 different restaurants from 10 different parts of the planet. That was super inspiring to me.

You weren’t feeling LA?

JC: LA was not my place. It’s so far away from home. … What I do miss about LA, though, are the farmers markets. That was my No. 1 favorite thing about living there. I very rarely bought produce at the grocery store in those four years. … I live walking distance to, in my opinion, the best farmers market in Atlanta, and I’m lucky and I’m grateful for it, but there isn’t as much demand, so the variety [of produce] is not as robust.

I’m a farmers market stan. I love them so much. … They [illustrate] the bounty and the abundance of eating plants, of what’s possible when you eat plants. My first time ever going to a farmers market was when I moved to Boston for college, and that’s kind of how I started eating plant-based, and eating healthier, and expanding my palate, because I was the pickiest kid. I hardly ate any vegetables. I didn’t like 90% of the fruits I had been exposed to. But when I started going to farmers markets, I was picking up produce like, “Ooh, what’s this? I’ve never seen this!” That totally changed my life.

The new book includes your much-loved tahini-granola recipe, which is oil-free. What was the inspiration for that recipe?

JC: Tahini is one of my top-three favorite ingredients (Broccolini and sweet potatoes being the other two) because it is so versatile and it tastes amazing. I remember I lived in New York at the time when I first made that recipe. It was kind of a spinoff of my tahini cookie recipe, which is in my first cookbook, and it’s also on the blog. I’d been making that recipe for a long time, and I realized that you don’t have to form it into cookies. You can just sprinkle it on the tray and [bake it as] granola, because it crisps up so well, especially along the edges.

Jenne Claiborne's rose tahini granola

The granola recipe calls for dried rose petals. What else can folks use those for?

JC: I love the essence of rose just in anything. I’ve got some tea blends with mint and rose. You can put it in your water. You could use rose powder—which is just ground up dried rose petals—to color an icing. I recently [did that] because I don’t use artificial dyes in our food, and my daughter and nieces and I were making cupcakes. It made such a pretty pink, and that rose flavor, to me, is one of the best flavors. It’s floral, and it’s elevated. It’s heavenly.

What recipes would you recommend from the new book for a romantic Valentine’s Day meal?

JC: One of my favorite recipes in the cookbook is the Perfect Pea Pesto Pasta. It is so easy to make, but it looks fancy. … It’s made with basil, mint, and frozen peas that you thaw and blend into a pesto. You can toss it with any pasta you’d like. I always do a nice short pasta like gemelli. And the Za’atar Cauliflower Steaks would be perfect for Valentine’s Day. They would be really nice served with that pea pesto pasta, because the za’atar has all these herbs in it, like parsley, and that pea pesto pasta has basil and mint, so those would really complement each other. Or you could serve the pasta with the Simple Oyster Mushroom Steaks. That recipe is also so easy. If you are doing a Valentine’s Day dinner after work, and you need to put something together in under 30 minutes, then that would work perfectly. You wouldn’t have to make anything in advance, and it would be beautiful.

Jenne Claiborne slicing cauliflower in her kitchen beside a photo of her za'atar-roasted cauliflower steaks on a baking tray

Would those dishes you just mentioned be adaptable for oil-free eaters?

JC: Absolutely. The pesto pasta does have olive oil in it, but it’s not required. You could remove that, and if you need to thin [the sauce] out, add a little of the pasta [cooking] water. The cauliflower steaks have tahini, so the tahini keeps them really nice and moist, without having to douse them in oil. There is some oil in that recipe, but you can totally take it out. And mushrooms don’t require any oil to cook at all. Sometimes I’ll sauté garlic in a little bit of oil before adding mushrooms to the pan, but the mushrooms themselves don’t need any oil because they’re full of liquid on their own. They’re super hard to burn. Mushrooms are amazing if you’re doing whole-food, plant-based and avoiding oil.

Could you explain the 80–20 approach that you advocate for healthy eating?

JC: Eighty percent of the time, you want to focus on eating wholesome, minimally processed foods. No more than 20% of the time, you can let your hair down, go out to eat, or eat more highly processed foods. What I mean by highly processed is stuff you could never make at home. Tofu is a processed food, but it’s minimally processed. Same with tempeh—super easy to make at home. … When you get to Beyond Meat, and Impossible, and all of these replicas of meat and dairy, those are in the ultraprocessed category. We’re going to reserve that for 10–20% of the time, if not even less. The reason I advocate this is I think it’s helpful for people to transition into eating healthier, understanding that your diet doesn’t have to be perfect right away [or ever]. But I do want to encourage people to keep doing better and better, because you’ll feel better.

I also like to mention that if you have a health condition and your doctor has told you you need to avoid all oil, all [refined] sugar, or sodium, then, of course, follow the doctor’s advice.

And you can easily fall into the trap of going to Costco, and there’s all this easy-peasy, ultraprocessed vegan food. You can tell yourself you’re just stocking the freezer for when you don’t feel like cooking and you’re only going to have it once a week, but then the next thing you know, you’re eating it every day because you have a container of 20. If you learn how to make easy, wholesome food that takes no more than 20 minutes, you don’t have to rely on those highly processed foods as much.

Do you do a lot of meal prepping?

JC: Sometimes I will get the zoomies, and I’m like, “I’m going to meal prep!” But I don’t actually reliably do that on a regular basis. That is once in a blue moon. … But my kitchen is always well-stocked. For example … I always have [cooked] brown rice in the fridge. I have a lot of frozen veggies, so I might steam some frozen spinach and peas together, and then put that all in a bowl and top it with tahini sauce straight out of the jar. If I’m going to be fancy, I’ll make a tahini dressing with lemon and miso. …That is how I eat most of the time. Honestly, it’s delicious.

Have you and your daughter, Jorji, made anything together recently?

JC: She has her own cutting board, knives, all the stuff she would need, but lately, she doesn’t even want to slice her own apples. Her favorite thing to do in the kitchen is just mix stuff, which is my favorite thing, too. My nana always let me do that. … I don’t throw away outdated spices anymore. I save them for her, and she mixes stuff.

Is there anything else you’d like to share with our readers?

JC: I’m glad you asked me about the adaptations for oil-free, because almost all the recipes in the cookbook, you’re able to just [omit oil], with the exception, I would say, of some of the baked goods. For those baked goods, you could replace [the oil]. For example, I’ve got these chocolate sweet potato muffins—maybe just use a little bit more sweet potato in that recipe instead of the oil.

This cookbook definitely fits in that 80–20 philosophy of mine, where 80% to 90% of these recipes are more wholesome, not a lot of sugar, but [some are more decadent]. … There is a balance of recipes in this cookbook, because I really wanted it to be for everybody.

Editor’s note: This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Photos copyright © 2025 by Jenné Claiborne and used by permission of Rodale Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York. All rights reserved.

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Giuseppe Federici and His Nonna Marianna Are Redefining Italian Food for Plant-Based Audiences https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/giuseppe-federici-and-nonna-release-plant-based-italian-cookbook/ https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/giuseppe-federici-and-nonna-release-plant-based-italian-cookbook/#respond Fri, 10 Jan 2025 18:10:42 +0000 https://www.forksoverknives.com/?p=197408&preview=1 When his father was diagnosed with colon cancer nearly a decade ago, Giuseppe Federici did what many of us do when a...

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When his father was diagnosed with colon cancer nearly a decade ago, Giuseppe Federici did what many of us do when a family member becomes sick: He began researching ways to support his dad’s recovery. “Pretty much everything pointed back to how a plant-based diet can help reverse and even prevent these diseases,” says Federici, known as Sepps to his fans on social media.

After adopting a plant-based diet and convincing his dad to do the same, London-based Federici—then a university student—began chronicling his personal food journey, posting photos of home-cooked meals alongside brief nutritional analyses. He kept it up as a hobby for five years, slowly building a following, but things ramped up after he posted a video of himself and his Sicilian-born nonna (italian for “grandmother”), Marianna, cooking pasta sauce together.

@sepps_eats

first time seeing our book in real life 🫣 Beyond grateful to finally have a copy in our hands after working on this for over a year. It still feels surreal but I’m so excited for it to be out in less than two weeks. To me this isn’t just a recipe book, it tells the story of my grandparents who came to the UK from Sicily almost 70 years ago. This book is a celebration of rustic Italian home cooking, plant-based eating, family, and bringing generations together. I simply wouldn’t have been able to do this without the support of this online community, so thank you so much. You can order the book via the link in my bio 💙. Thank you so much to my incredible photographer @davidloftus, my agent @rachelmillsliterary, my publisher @michaeljbooks @sarahfras1 @danhurst82 and stylist @sticky_toffee_tofu 💙 Grazie Sepps x

♬ original sound – Giuseppe Federici

Practically overnight, Federici’s audience quadrupled, and he and his nonna began fielding invites to radio shows and morning TV programs, and even landed a meet-and-greet with King Charles and Queen Camilla. Now, two years and more than a million followers later, the duo is celebrating the launch of Italian Cooking with Nonna, a colorful, photo-rich cookbook featuring more than 80 vegan versions of Italian classics, many of which spotlight the foods that helped Federici’s dad beat cancer: fresh vegetables, whole grains, and plenty of pasta and tomato sauce.

In anticipation of the book’s launch, we spoke with Federici about the virtues of eggplant, how to stock your pantry like an Italian, and the one recipe he’d recommend to a vegan newbie. Read the interview, then try Federici’s Pasta con i Broccoli recipe for a taste of the new book!

How did your nonna react when she first tasted your updated renditions of her recipes?

Giuseppe Federici: A lot of the food that my nonna has grown up on is accidentally vegan—things like minestrone, which is just a vegetable soup, and pasta with aubergines (eggplant). So, it wasn’t really, “Here’s the first time you’re ever going to try something vegan,” because she’s been eating vegan foods for most of her life.

You’ve included a handy list of pantry staples and fresh foods that make it easy to pull together a delicious Italian-inspired meal on the fly. What are some items you recommend that we always keep on hand?

GF: I’m thinking about what nonna is never without: [canned] tomatoes and dried pasta. With tomatoes and pasta, you can make one of the most delicious Italian staple dishes, my nonna’s Pasta with Tomato Sauce. It uses simple ingredients that can stay in your cupboard for months and months.

Giuseppe Federici, right, and his grandmother, aka nonna, Marianna, weigh produce at a fresh market on a sunny day

What misconceptions about Italian food have you encountered on your culinary journey?

GF: You have the concept of it being super indulgent and heavily filled with cheese and cream, and there are some aspects to Italian cuisine that involve that, but that’s more of the commercialized [contemporary] view of it. [Historically] Italians have had access to [and relied on]—especially lower-income households—“cheap” foods, which are the pulses (legumes), the vegetables, the grains. And so naturally, a lot of Italian food—especially Sicilian food, where my nonna comes from—lends itself very favorably to a plant-based diet.

The majority of the recipes in Italian Cooking with Nonna are centered on seasonal produce, including the often-misunderstood eggplant. What would you say to someone who “doesn’t like eggplant”?

GF: Eggplant—or aubergine, as we call it over here across the pond—is definitely an underrated vegetable. I think the reason people don’t like it is because they don’t know how to cook it. If you don’t do it well, it can turn into this soggy bit of vegetable. But in Italian cooking, there are so many different recipes, and quite a few in the book really do champion eggplant. We’ve got the eggplant parm, almost like a lasagna, but instead of pasta, you have eggplant coated in breadcrumbs. Once that absorbs the tomato sauce, it’s a really nice, almost meaty texture. Try it different ways, because you might not like it in a pasta dish where it’s a bit softer, but you might like it when it’s nice and crispy.

You mention some Italian-cuisine-specific cooking tools in the book—gnocchi boards and cannoli molds, to name two. What is the one cooking tool or gadget you find indispensable in your everyday cooking?

GF: A mandoline is my favorite gadget in the kitchen. Obviously, it’s dangerous if you don’t concentrate on what you’re doing, but it’s a great way to quickly slice anything. What I love to do is put it straight over a pan. I’ll mandoline a whole zucchini into a pan in a minute, which is great. You can just use it in so many creative ways.

Giuseppe Federici vegan walnut ragu, from Plant-Based Italian Cooking cookbook

What one recipe from your book would you steer a newbie vegan or plant-based eater to first?

GF: My Walnut and Mushroom Ragú is a great way to introduce a meat eater into the realm of whole-food plant-based dishes. It’s super healthy, high protein, full of plant-based fiber and healthy fats, and it’s essentially a ragu made of soaked walnuts, chopped and blitzed mushrooms, and soaked sunflower seeds. When you blend it all together with some seasonings into a tomato sauce, it creates a delicious ragu that can be used either with pasta on its own, or I also love to incorporate it into a lasagna.

You mention in your acknowledgements that you’ve experienced imposter syndrome as a fledgling cookbook author. What words of advice would you offer a burgeoning chef?

GF: Imposter syndrome is definitely something many people face, especially when trying something new or if you get a lot of success in something quite quickly like I have. But I’ve learned that being a great cook and inspiring people to cook isn’t about having particular training, or having a particular background, or having qualifications of being a Michelin star chef, because I have none of those things. It’s about passion, curiosity, and the willingness to do better and learn and improve yourself time and time again, and take inspiration from other people. Embrace the journey; give it a go. You don’t have to be perfect.

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From Incarceration to Plant-Based Powerhouse: Dom Thompson Shares His Remarkable Story https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/dom-thompson-from-incarceration-to-plant-based-powerhouse https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/dom-thompson-from-incarceration-to-plant-based-powerhouse#respond Fri, 03 Jan 2025 18:08:23 +0000 https://www.forksoverknives.com/?p=197241&preview=1 Ironman triathlete, animal rights activist, and entrepreneur Dom Thompson has never been one to sit still. After his release from prison more...

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Ironman triathlete, animal rights activist, and entrepreneur Dom Thompson has never been one to sit still. After his release from prison more than two decades ago, while still under house arrest, he began working at a health care company. There, he rose to the executive level and saved up enough money to launch his own brand, Eat What Elephants Eat—all the while rigorously training for marathons and powerlifting competitions.

Today Dom’s become a fixture of vegan social media, amassing a quarter of million followers across Instagram and TikTok with posts that touch on animal rights, body positivity, and social justice—featuring lots of appearances from his rescue dog, a scene-stealing husky named Roc.

For someone so ambitious, Thompson has an ease about him that seems to come from clarity of purpose, an ethos he encapsulates in six words: If it requires harm, then nahh. The mantra first came to Thompson during his incarceration, at just 21 years old, spurring him to give up meat overnight. “My cellmates thought I was crazy—they couldn’t believe I would trade my animal protein for their carbs,” Thompson says, chuckling.

Now Thompson is sharing his remarkable personal story in a new book: Eat What Elephants Eat: Vegan Recipes for a Strong Body and a Gentle Spirit, out January 7. “It’s a hybrid cookbook-autobiography,” says Thompson. “It dives into my ‘why’—how I made this decision to go vegetarian when I was in prison 24 years ago, and also helps you, the reader, identify your why.” It’s also a guide, presenting nutrition research in an easy-to-digest way and laying out three different pathways for adopting a more plant-based diet. The cookbook section is peppered with healthy cooking tips, and many of the recipes are oil-free.

Cover of Dom Thompson's book Eat What Elephants Eat

We spoke with Thompson about the new book and picked his brain for his go-to workout fuel, tips for sticking with New Year’s resolutions, and more. Read on for the full convo—then try out a recipe from the new cookbook, Dom’s “Egg Salad” Collard Wraps.

Why elephants?

Dominick Thompson: I guess we could start with the beginning of my love for elephants. In terms of my bloodline, I come from two different tribes, Nigerian and Congo, and that’s where elephants are the most protected—at those national parks, specifically. Innately, I feel like I have a [connection] with them. When I started [doing speaking engagements about veganism] years and years ago, I always included a visual aid to show people some of the most iconic vegan mammals. And I always led with elephants. People forget that the largest, strongest and most powerful walking land animals, elephants, eat plants.

One of the other reasons is because when my platform started growing about 10 to 12 years ago, the poaching crisis was at an all-time high in Africa, with respect to the rhinos and the elephants. I wanted to do something with my platform to bring awareness to the anti-poaching efforts. The almighty African elephant represents a lot of different things humans can learn from, including eating plants and having a gentle soul.

In the book, you lay out advice and meal plans for three types of reader: those who want to crowd out some animal foods, those who want to try a vegan diet with faux meats and cheeses, those who want to go all in on a more whole-food vegan diet. Why did you decide to present these three pathways?

DT: I think we need to get back to being real and also being compassionate enough to meet people where they are in their journeys. It feels like for so many years, a lot of people got really dialed into being purists. That’s an all-or-nothing approach, and I just don’t think you’re going to influence many people with that type of approach.

You seem to have always been a vegan at heart.

DT: Yeah. I have always been compassionate at heart from when I was a little boy. I used to break up the dog fights in my neighborhood. … I’d be in the middle of it and get into these little scuffles too, even with my own friends and homies at the time. They’d be curious to know what a bow and arrow or a handmade slingshot would do to a stray cat. They would shoot at them and I would slap them across the head. … I’ve always been a protector of anything that I felt was being harmed or being taken advantage of.

Empathy is a throughline in the book. Can you speak to that?

DT: I think we all, especially now that we live in a very divided society, sometimes aren’t able to comprehend or even consider another point of view. I say this all the time, but there are over 8 billion people in this world, all waking up tomorrow with different ideas and different lifestyles. That’s what diversity is. We’re not going to all get it right and be uniform in our beliefs, and it’s OK to sit down to have a conversation with someone that is totally opposite in their views as long as it’s respectful.

How did you feel after you first went vegetarian, during your incarceration?

DT: I never took drugs in my life, but the best way to describe it is what people say they experience when they first get a high. I just felt invincible. When I stopped eating meat, the inflammation left my body radically, within weeks. I was over 250 pounds, and suddenly, I was dropping weight. Then my strength and my energy levels [surged]. I felt really in tune with my body in a way that I never had before. I was able to see my abs and see my leg muscles. My body just felt very strong, in an effortless way. … I’m still a very healthy, strong guy, but that first couple days to weeks when I stopped eating meat in prison was really incredible. What I experienced—from my mental health, down to the body that my soul occupies—it was one of the best feelings I ever felt.

Close up of two hands rolling Dom Thompson's "Egg Salad” Collard Wraps on a wooden counter
“Egg Salad” Collard Wraps from Thompson’s new cookbook, Eat What Elephants Eat

In the book you write about redefining soul food. What does that mean to you?

DT: Historically, much of what has been called soul food [is] the food that was deemed inedible by slave masters and was passed on as scraps to my ancestors. Many black creators and chefs, not just me, are redefining soul food cuisine into something that’s more whole and plant-based, and that’s not associated with the [unhealthy animal-based foods] that we were eating back in slavery.

Do you have a favorite pre-workout snack?

DT: For cardiovascular [workouts], I like to juice beets and watermelon together. It’s a really good energy booster drink, and it really fuels the body with a lot of natural electrolytes. For strength-training, I love a really good 16- to 24-ounce smoothie full of hemp seeds and homemade oat milk with some bananas, frozen strawberries, and peanut powder. … I add a little bit of maple syrup or dates, and that’s a really good pre-workout for strength-training.

Any advice for folks who are trying to stick to a health-minded New Year’s resolution but fumble here and there?

DT: I would say don’t give up on yourself. It’s OK. Life is truly, truly, and I mean this wholeheartedly, a marathon. It’s not a sprint. And it’s OK to take your time. As long as you’re doing it and you’re in motion, you’ll get to your goals.

Editor’s note: This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

To learn more about a whole-food, plant-based diet, visit our Plant-Based Primer. For meal-planning support, check out Forks Meal Planner, FOK’s easy weekly meal-planning tool to keep you on a healthy plant-based path.

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Pamela Anderson’s Flower-Powered Tea Recipes for Every Mood https://www.forksoverknives.com/how-tos/pamela-anderson-i-love-you-flower-powered-tea-recipes-for-every-mood/ https://www.forksoverknives.com/how-tos/pamela-anderson-i-love-you-flower-powered-tea-recipes-for-every-mood/#respond Fri, 18 Oct 2024 17:24:05 +0000 https://www.forksoverknives.com/?p=195046&preview=1 Editor’s Note: This excerpt is from I LOVE YOU, the debut cookbook by actor, bestselling author, and vegan activist Pamela Anderson. Featuring...

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Editor’s Note: This excerpt is from I LOVE YOU, the debut cookbook by actor, bestselling author, and vegan activist Pamela Anderson. Featuring 80 of her favorite plant-based recipes, the vibrant book includes personal photos from her Vancouver Island home and reflections on life, love, and family. While not entirely oil-free, the recipes emphasize whole, minimally processed ingredients. Here, Anderson shares her four favorite flower tea blends.

Cover of Pamela Anderson's cookbook I Love You, showing Pam Anderson sitting on a counter in jeans and a white shirt

Teas have grown on me. I feel a real connection to the earth and its medicinal gifts. I love to dry my own herbs from my own organic garden (to be sure they have not been sprayed with pesticides) or you can find food-grade dried herbs and flowers easily online or in specialty stores. If you forage them, clean them well. I love these tisanes hot and cold, or in between. And I also like to mix up batches of these teas to give to friends as gifts, wrapped up in jars with pretty fabric. The sensual blend is my personal favorite. On cold days I keep it in a thermos and sip on it all day long.

Sensual Blend

dried flowers herbs and other plant ingredients shown grouped together to create four tea blends by Pamela Anderson
  • ¼ cup (8 grams) dried spearmint
  • 3 tablespoons dried lavender
  • 3 tablespoons dried rose petals
  • 2 tablespoons dried elderflowers
  • 2 tablespoons dried red clover

Longevity Blend

dried flowers herbs and other plant ingredients shown grouped together to create four tea blends by Pamela Anderson
  • 1 tablespoon dried dandelion
  • 1 tablespoon dried nettle
  • 1 tablespoon dried ginger root pieces

Beauty Blend

dried flowers herbs and other plant ingredients shown grouped together to create four tea blends by Pamela Anderson
  • ¼ cup (8 grams) mixed white and green tea leaves
  • ¼ cup (8 grams) rooibos
  • ¼ cup (8 grams) dried calendula
  • 3 tablespoons dried lemon balm
  • 3 tablespoons dried lavender
  • 2 tablespoons dried peppermint
  • 2 tablespoons dried citrus peels
  • 1 tablespoon dried lemongrass

Calming Sleepy Tea

dried flowers herbs and other plant ingredients shown grouped together to create four tea blends by Pamela Anderson
  • ½ cup (16 grams) dried chamomile flowers
  • ¼ cup (8 grams) dried lavender
  • ¼ cup (10 grams) dried orange peel
  • 2 tablespoons dried rose petals

Instructions

  1. Mix all the ingredients together gently and store in a glass jar. (Don’t forget to label. I use an old-school labeler or just masking tape—easy to read and comes off the jars cleanly when you want to reuse them.)
  2. To brew, heat water to boiling and pour over the herbs. Use about 2 teaspoons of the dried tea mixture for every 1 cup (240 ml) of water. Let steep for 3 to 5 minutes. Strain (or use a tea ball) and serve.

Excerpted from I LOVE YOU by Pamela Anderson with Maria Zizka. Copyright © 2024 by Anderson Media Company, LLC. Photographs by Ditte Isager. Used with permission of Voracious, an imprint of Little, Brown and Company. New York, NY. All rights reserved.

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Sarah Cobacho of Plantbaes on Her New Cookbook, and the 9 Foods She Always Keeps in Her Kitchen https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/plantbaes-sarah-cobacho-on-kitchen-staples-new-ultimate-plant-based-cookbook/ https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/plantbaes-sarah-cobacho-on-kitchen-staples-new-ultimate-plant-based-cookbook/#respond Mon, 26 Aug 2024 17:48:23 +0000 https://www.forksoverknives.com/?p=187505&preview=1 Some cookbooks dazzle with their food photography. Others capture our attention with their unique, mouthwatering recipes. And still others draw us in...

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Some cookbooks dazzle with their food photography. Others capture our attention with their unique, mouthwatering recipes. And still others draw us in through the reputation of their authors. Sarah Cobacho’s The Ultimate Plant-Based Cookbook—a collection of 100 low-in-fat, big-on-flavor recipes hitting bookstore shelves on August 27—has managed all three.

Australia-based Cobacho, the co-founder of the popular online community Plantbaes, grew up in the South of France with a father who ran his own restaurant, and weekends meant time in the kitchen as a family, chopping vegetables, making homemade pasta, and slow-cooking tomato sauce. “It was our love language,” says Cobacho.

As an adult, her father’s cancer diagnosis spurred Cobacho to reevaluate her own lifestyle, prompting some big changes. “I went down a rabbit hole, started looking into nutrition, into how I could become healthier, and learned a bit more about veganism,” says Cobacho.

Ultimately, she earned a degree in nutrition and paired her newfound knowledge with her passion for food to create Plantbaes, which she launched in 2022 with her partner Cam Crawley, who served as photographer for The Ultimate Plant-Based Cookbook.

Today, more than 1.5 million social media followers turn to Plantbaes for how-to videos and ultra-healthy recipes that brim with flavor, texture, and color. We spoke with Cobacho about the new book, her viral one-ingredient bread recipe, and her top 10 pantry staples for creating nourishing meals at home.

The recipe photos in The Ultimate Plant-Based Cookbook are so tantalizing, thanks in part to your partner Cam’s photography skills. As a recipe developer, what is the secret to making healthy, nourishing food that’s also visually appealing?

SC: It starts with nutrition. I want to make sure I get enough fiber, enough protein. I want to have a bean component, a grain component, and a veggie component, and nuts and seeds. From there, I choose beautiful vegetables. The plants shine for themselves.

Since launching Plantbaes in 2022, you’ve gained a substantial following on social media. What feedback have you received from the Plantbaes community?

SC. So many people tell me about how this has completely transformed their family’s health. That’s the biggest joy in my life—especially when they’re telling me they’re getting their kids to eat vegetables. It’s a great honor to be able to contribute just a little bit to that journey.

SC: I love bread. I’m French—I grew up on bread. But especially in the U.S. and other places, there’s a lot added to it. I think this recipe really resonates with people because it’s simple, it’s easy, and it makes you feel amazing, but it’s still a very familiar food.

What are a few recipes from the book that you might pull together for a nourishing weeknight meal with your bae?

SC: The Fiesta Bowl (p. 63) and the Rice Noodle Salad with Mango Red Thai Curry dressing (p. 64) are two of my absolute favorites. And my Chickpea Cookie Skillet (p. 161) is amazing—something everyone has to make from the book. I insist!

For those avoiding added oil, you’ve suggested adding nuts to some dishes. Can you explain a bit about why we need some natural fats in our diet?

SC: Some vitamins need a little bit of fat to be better absorbed. We absolutely do not need oil, but we just need to make sure to have a little bit of nuts, seeds, or avocado. It can be a teaspoon of sesame seeds or tablespoon of crushed walnuts added to the dish. I’m a big fan of walnuts.

Sarah Cobacho’s Staples

We asked Cobacho for the indispensable ingredients that she always keeps in her refrigerator and pantry. She shared her top nine.

  1. Legumes (beans, lentils, chickpeas, tofu)—all great sources of protein, fiber, and minerals.
  2. Whole grains (quinoa, brown rice, oats, buckwheat)—complex carbohydrates that provide sustained energy and fiber.
  3. Fresh fruits and vegetables—as diverse as possible, with a daily intake of berries and green leafy vegetables.
  4. Nuts and seeds (hemp seeds, chia seeds, flaxseeds, walnuts)—a minimum of two tablespoons a day to keep up with our omega-3 requirements on a plant-based diet.
  5. Nut butter (almond butter, peanut butter, tahini)—a great source of healthy fats and a delicious addition to sauces for salads or stir-fry.
  6. Spices (turmeric, cumin, paprika, garlic powder)—not only do they make food fun and exciting, but they are packed with antioxidants.
  7. Fresh herbs—they’re nutrient-packed, count as a serving of greens, and will really elevate your cooking to the next level.
  8. Nutritional yeast—a cheesy-tasting addition that’s high in B vitamins and protein.
  9. Soy milk—preferably fortified in calcium and vitamin D.

For a taste of the new cookbook, check out Sarah Cobacho’s Creamy Dill Potato Salad!

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