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xrodolfox wrote:I just cooked for 15 people on $35, and got to take home 2 quarts of soup, 3lbs of unprepared seitan, 1pint of pan fried seitan, 1pint of salad greens, 1quart of fruit salad, and 1cup of gravy.All it took was time. (since it was a community dinner, I get paid back too).
Ingredients
1 1/2 cups vital wheat gluten flour
1/4 cup nutritional yeast flakes
1 cup very cold water or vegetable broth
1/2 cup soy sauce
1 tablespoon tomato paste
2 cloves garlic, pressed or grated on a microplane grater
1 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest
Simmering Broth
10 cups water or vegetable broth
1/2 cup soy sauce
Directions
In a large bowl, mix together Vital Wheat Gluten Flour and nutritional yeast flakes.
In a seperate bowl, mix together reamining ingredients: water or veg broth, soy sauce. tomato paste, garlic, lemon zest.
Pour the wet ingredients into the dry and combine with a firm spatula, knead dough for about 3 minutes until a spongy, elastic dough is formed. Let dough rest for a couple of minutes and prepare your broth, but don't start boiling it.
Now roll your dough into a log shape about 8 inches long and cut into 3 equal sized pieces. Place the pieces in the broth. It is important that the water/broth be very cold when you add the dough, it helps with the texture and ensures that it doesn't fall apart. Partially cover the pot (leave a little space for steam to escape) and bring to a boil.
When the water has come to a boil set the heat to low and gently simmer for an hour, turning the peices every now and again.
Now you've got gluten. Let it cool in the simmering broth for at least a half an hour. It is best if it cools completely.
What you do next depends on the recipe you are using. If it calls for gluten use it as is. If you want to store some of it for later use put it in a sealable container covered in the simmering broth.
If your recipe calls for seitan cut your peices up as desired. I prefer to use a cast iron skillet for the frying because it produces the best flavor and texture. Use as little oil as possible to coat the bottom of the skillet, 1 teaspoon may suffice. Heat the skillet over medium high and add your gluten. Cook for about 20 minutes, turning the pieces occasionally. And there you have it. Yummy seitan.

Redbeard the Scruffy wrote:Well, I love cooking.
Just...my wife doesn't love my cooking. I'm a rather good cook, but, well, she's excellent, and won't eat anything that she couldn't cook just as good herself, lol (one reason there are several restaurants we can't go back to). So only a few of my recipes will she grub down on.
But yeah, it definitely gave us a lot of ideas for when we next hit the grocery store.
Redbeard the Scruffy wrote:What kind of gravy can you make that's vegan? Closest thing I've found was cream of mushroom soup, but that's got dairy in it.
The Jean-Paul Sartre cookbook: "Today I made a Black Forest cake out of five pounds of cherries and a live beaver, challenging the very definition of the word cake."
Enhydra Lutris wrote:Redbeard the Scruffy wrote:What kind of gravy can you make that's vegan? Closest thing I've found was cream of mushroom soup, but that's got dairy in it.
Unless you want to make it from scratch, have a look at the different (instant) gravy powders in your local shops/supermarkets. Most that I've come across are vegan, but that might just be in the UK.
Redbeard the Scruffy wrote:Enhydra Lutris wrote:Redbeard the Scruffy wrote:What kind of gravy can you make that's vegan? Closest thing I've found was cream of mushroom soup, but that's got dairy in it.
Unless you want to make it from scratch, have a look at the different (instant) gravy powders in your local shops/supermarkets. Most that I've come across are vegan, but that might just be in the UK.
Doubtful. America is very animal-intense in their food, unless you live on the west coast or something like that. But I'll look around, it would definitely be nice.

Redbeard the Scruffy wrote:America is very animal-intense in their food, unless you live on the west coast or something like that...
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