If there is any one food product that is the bane of the vegan existence, it's bacon. If the vegans are ever going to be taken seriously, we must find a good substitute for bacon.
I aimed to conquer this dastardly devil, with my own with Vegan Bacon!!!
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3 tsp of soy sauce (Bragg's is prefered)
1/3 c apple cider vinegar
1 tsp tomato paste
1/4 tsp liquid smoke
1 pkg tempeh
and oil for frying











































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I HATE MY NEIGHBORS!!!!!!!!!! I CAN HERE THEIR MUSINC THROUGH A SOUND PROOF WALL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Keep on trying new recipes. I will never go to the dark side but my wife medically cannot eat meat so things like this make life a little easier. Thanks and we'll give it a try.
I think it's mostly the combination of that type of fat and the salt that makes it so addictive!
BTW, every vegan i know names bacon as their "apocolyse food": the one thing that they will loot from the stores and eat glutinously when we all are about to die anyway.
But by all means keep trying new recipes!
It's like saying a diabetic should stop using sugar substitutes. They may not be choosing to eat sugar (because it'll kill them if they don't) but they can still like sweet things.
I'm on the other side of this debate. I'm not a vegan or vegetarian, but I love tempah bacon. :)
- Many recipes call for meat. By making meat substitute that can fill these roles, it opens up a lot of extra variety at mealtime.
- Many people these days are switching to a meatless diet for health or political reasons, and meat substitutes help to ease that transition.
- People enjoy these meat substitutes in their own right. They don't need to exactly replicate meat to have their own merits. I know omnivores who buy vegetarian (admittedly not vegan) sausages because they prefer them in taste, ease of preparation, and health to the "real deal"
But I guess some people could miss something. I used to like gelatin as a child, and I was very happy when I discovered vegan substitutes. I suppose it could be the same thing with bacon, or any other thing for that matter.
from http://www.soya.be/what-is-tempeh.php , a DIY tempeh page:
Tempeh is cake of soybeans, which have been de-hulled, cooked, mixed with a tempeh starter (culture of Rhizopus oligosporusor Rhizopus oryzae) and incubated for a day or two.
it's a very small town is what i'm saying.
i have absolutely no problem killing an animal to serve a purpose - it IS how nature is designed, after all. what i have a problem with is waste - no excuse for that - and the way the food processors bend, fold, spindle, and mutilate the meat in the name of extending shelf life.
In my *OPINION* vegan food substitutes are one of the stupidest things ever. I don't mean to insult, but if you want to eat the food, eat it. If you don't, don't. For example, at the store the other day I saw whipped cream made from rice. That's just nasty. You'd get more weird chemicals from that then just eating plain whipped cream.
Meat, of course, is murder. Tasty, tasty murder :)
I am fully supportive of any person's right to eat whatever food they choose, but this is a bacon SUBSTITUTE, and has nothing to do with actual bacon, which by definition is cured and smoked PORK.
Good luck with your experiments.
It is hard to change your liking over night for certain flavours, especially if you're not a person who has had much alternative (parental upbringing sometimes dictates you eating habits when at a young age). So it would only seem natural to want a taste that has been with you for a long while, and if you have given up meat due to cruel treatment of animals, it doesn't mean that those favours you have enjoyed are going to go away instantly over night.
So finding a produce that can represent those flavours is something that will always be around. That's not to say that you can not enjoy incorporating other vegetable flavours that are around as well.
Live the life you want, but defend your choice with logic instead of becoming livid every time someone takes a shot at you. If you choose to be vegan, accept the fact that meat-eaters will attack you, and vice-versa. The "eating healthier" argument has it's points, and can be defended with medical and scientific evidence (to a point at least), but the "doing it for a cause" argument is based on emotion, and therefore not defensible by logic.
In my opinion, if you can accept the logic and reason, and instead debate the merits, then you can have a civil debate instead of a flame war. But hey, this is the internet. There is no room for logic or reason, so my points are moot. I'm an indiscriminate omnivore by the way, so I appreciate this 'ible very much. Thank you!
Hey you, yeah you bigmama1079! You with the silly, ugly suit! Why's your suit so ugly, huh?! Your stupid face and your stupid suit? What's wrong with you?!
...Now that wasn't very nice, was it? And it was completely uncalled for. Much in the same way that attacking someone based on what they eat is. But then, maybe you don't think it was uncalled for? Maybe you should have to support your clothing decision with a well reasoned argument? Should homosexuals give up their sexual orientation because it's based on feelings?
I'm a proponent of logic over feeling, and a fan of well-reasoned discourse, but sometimes a feeling is just a feeling, and as long as it's doing no harm to others, I see no reason not to embrace it. Heck, there's a logical, evolutionary imperative why we have these feelings which guide us, so maybe it's logical to follow your gut after all.