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Hay Fellow Vegans...
#1
Fellow Vegans (a Fellowship I am excluded from - I wanted you to know that)...

Now you can enjoy bacon too!

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BACON LOVERS: YOU CAN MAKE A CRISPY VEGAN VERSION OUT OF—WAIT FOR IT—RICE PAPER

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[img=40x0]https://www.wellandgood.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/tehrene-firman-1-150x150.jpg[/img]
GOOD FOOD
 TEHRENE FIRMAN, AUGUST 24, 2018






[img=840x0]https://www.wellandgood.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/vegan-bacon-recipe-3_2-1024x683-Photo-Huggins.jpg[/img]
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Photo: Vegan Huggs
There are plenty of ways to make vegan bacon: You can [url=https://www.wellandgood.com/good-food/the-vegan-shop-up-food-market-is-coming-to-manhattan-this-weekend/]create it from zucchini, mushrooms, tempeh, carrots—seriously, the options are nearly endless. One way in particular that’s sure to drop your jaw though? Using none other than rice paper—you know, the item that holds together delicious veggie-packed summer rolls—are the star ingredient.
The genius idea—originally created by the Danish duo Veganer.nu back in 2016—instantly sparked a widespread trend that only continues to grow. More recently, Melissa Huggins, the food blogger behind Vegan Huggs, came up with a version that uses a handful of ingredients to make the rice-paper version taste pretty darn close to the real thing. “Now, I can’t lie and say the rice paper bacon has the same texture as pig bacon because it’s missing the fattiness. However, it’s crispy and slightly chewy with all the sweet, smoky, salty, and umami flavors we’re addicted to,” she writes on her blog.

Quote:“It’s crispy and slightly chewy with all the sweet, smoky, salty, and umami flavors we’re addicted to.” —Melissa Huggins, food blogger
To get the melt-in-you-mouth taste, don’t skip Huggins’ secret: super-bacon-y marinade, which involves ingredients like tamari, maple syrup, liquid smoke, molasses, and garlic. And there’s a certain technique to get that crispiness too. Instead of dipping the pieces of rice paper directly in the mix, she first softens them under water then lays them on a flat surface and lightly brushes the marinade on each side, making sure not to put on too much, which can lead to sogginess and chewiness.
After cutting the rice paper into thick strips, they go onto a parchment paper-lined baking sheet. But before putting them in the oven at 375°F for five to seven  minutes, there’s one trick you can use to amp up your vegan bacon-eating experience even more: “This next step is optional and will create a slightly chewier texture on the edge of the bacon,” Huggins writes. “Just lightly brush the marinade on half of the bacon strip. No need to flip it over, one side is enough.” What results is a crispy treat that saves the piggies and keeps your heart healthy.
Listless Vessels!
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#2
I'd be willing to taste it.
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#3
Or you can buy bacon
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#4
Some serious mental gymnastics you'll need there to use all of those imported agricultural ingredients to make an inferior version of an animal product that's been roaming pastures for hundred of thousands of years.

Cult's unraveling. The more vegan celebrities go off the rails, the more people will wise up that it's all bullshit.

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#5
^^ that was pretty entertaining, but it would have been a lot easier to take her seriously if she would have been topless.
You do the best you can with what you have to work with
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#6
[Image: 269f02d857563b4208032644c0e00427.jpg]
Because I said so. 
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#7
[Image: 204bnc.jpg]
Because I said so. 
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#8
What is this stupid obsession with vegebrains to replicate meat meals. If your a vege, eat vege, not psuedo meat !
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#9
I had a double BLT for lunch the other day. Absolutely delicious.
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