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Vegan
Recipes &Health Education
The lectures offers you a
lifestyle program design to meet your needs, in which you will be learning the
principles of health and nutrition. Your health education will give you
increased confidence as you plan your own personal wellness program through the
principles that will be shared with you throughout the seminars.
If you would like to make any
bookings in regard to cooking demonstrations and lifestyle presentations in your
area, please contact either e:mail addresses on the left.

Vegan Recipes

The following is a small sample of vegan vegetarian recipes
(non-dairy, non-flesh meat) for
you to try, and of course, feel free to add recipes that you have created !
1. Basic Whole Wheat Bread
Dissolve sweetener in the water then stir in yeast. Let stand 5-8 minutes
as the yeast begins to bubble. Stir in the oil and salt. Add one and a half cups
of flour. Beat vigorously for one minute. Add remaining flour gradually. Use
only the amount of flour necessary to handle dough without it sticking to your
hands. Lightly flour table and knead dough for 5 minutes. Add more flour if
necessary. Place dough in a large bowl, cover with a clean towel. Let dough rise
until double for 30-45 minutes. Punch down, knead briefly. Squeeze out all air
bubbles. Shape into loaf. Place in a medium size oiled loaf pan. Cover with a
towel. Let rise until nearly double in size for 30-45 minutes. Bake at 350
degrees for 30-40 minutes, until golden brown and bread slips from the pan. Cool
on a
rack.
2.
Sweet Sauces/Spreads
Blend all
ingredients together till smooth. Pour over fruit salad or strawberries.
3.
Banana and cashew smoothie
-
2
Bananas
-
½
cup cashew cream
-
Add water
if necessary. Drink or put on fruit
4.
Apricot/coconut spread
-
½
cup dried apricots
-
¼
cup powdered coconut
-
enough
water to blend
-
touch
of vanilla
Blend all
ingredients together. Spread on toast or bread.
5. Date
Butter
Blend all
together and put on toast or bread
6. Lentil
Spread
-
1 cup raw
sesame seeds, soaked(overnight) or half a cup of tahini
-
11/2 cups
of sprouted lentils
-
1 medium
avocado
-
1 whole
red pepper with seeds
-
¼ onion
-
1 clove
garlic
Salt to taste
(try and leave the salt out - it tastes great!!!). Blend in a little water
to make a spread.
7. Sun Seed
Tomato Dressing
Blend together
all ingredients – can have this smooth or coarse – Great on pizza, Pasta,
vegetables and salad. Can have it RAW or COOKED!
8. Tasty
Sesame Topping
White or brown
sesame seeds may be used. Toast seeds in a dry skillet over medium heat,
stirring for about 5 mins. Blend smooth all ingredients. Sprinkle over salad,
vegetables, rice and beans, etc…
9. Hummus
Blend all
together until smooth. Serve in pita bread with salad.
10. Cashew
or Avocado Mayonnaise
Blend together
water and cashews first then add remaining ingredients and blend. To make
guacamoli or AVOCADO DIP add 1 avocado and, adjust seasoning to taste.
11. Salad
Combine first
4 ingredients together, mix last 2 ingredients and pour over salad.
12. Tomato
and Red Onion Salad
-
3 tomatoes
thinly sliced
-
2 Tabs
virgin olive oil
-
1 red
onion, finely sliced
-
1 tsp
lemon juice
-
¼ cup
fresh basil finely chopped
-
1 clove
garlic and pinch salt
Mix together
first 3 ingredients in a bowl. Combine the rest and pour over salad..
13.
Tofu Cheese
-
3/4 cup water
-
1/2 cup
cashews
-
3/4 cup Tofu
-
2 tablespoon
yeast flakes
-
1 1/2
tablespoons lemon juice
-
1/3 cup
pimento
-
1 teaspoon
salt
-
1 teaspoon
onion powder
-
1/4 teaspoon
garlic powder
Blend smooth all
ingredients. Chilling will make ingredients thicker.
14.
Carob Balls
Thoroughly mix
carob and milk powder into honey. Stir nut butter into this. Form into balls by
rolling portions between palms. Roll in coconut. Chill to make more firm.
15.
Vegetable Pot Pie
Cook vegetables
until tender in small amount of water. Stir in tofu and gravy. If desiring a
bottom crust, use a double recipe for the crust and lightly oil a 1 1/2 quart
casserole. Cover bottom and sides with portion of crust. Fill with vegetable
mixture and top with remaining crust. Poke a few holes in the crust then bake at
350 degrees for 50 minutes.
16. Fruit
Cheesecake Recipe
Base:
Granola/ Ginger biscuits/ Grape Nuts
Filling:
230g Firm Tofu/
200g Cashew/
Almonds Nuts/
500 mls Soya
Milk
Honey at Taste
Vanilla
Essence (optional)
Almond Essence
if using Almonds Nuts (optional)
1 T Agar
Flakes (1 1/2 if using Soya milk)
Topping:
300mls Orange Juice/ Pineapple/Strawberry Jelly (vegan)
1T Agar Flakes
Orange
segments/ Pineapple pieces/Cleaned sliced strawberries
Honey
(optional)
Base: Blend
the granola/Ginger biscuits/Grape nuts For a little until lumpy
Press into the
base of 7.5" Flan tin and freeze.
Filling:
Liquidise all filling ingredients together. Stir over gentle heat until starting
to boil, keep stirring until it starts to thicken a little.
Pour over
base. Chill.
Topping:
Whisk the juice and agar flakes together over gentle heat until nearly
boiling. Organise the fruit pieces over the filling. When starts thickening
Remove from heat and spoon over filling on top of the fruit pieces.
17. Millet
salad
-
3
cups of uncooked millet (cook for 1 ½ hrs) with 1 teaspoon salt
-
1
cup raw onions
-
1
cup red or green pepper
-
½
cup black olives (optional)
-
2
Tablespoon (T) olive oil
-
2
cloves garlic
-
1
cup fresh coriander or parsley
-
1
T lemon juice
Cook
millet for 1 ½ - 2hrs and add remaining ingredients.
18.
Pinto bean stew
Soak
beans overnight. Cook high temperature to destroy poison then cook for further
2hrs on low flame. Saute onions and garlic in olive oil. Add everything until
cooked and serve with cooked millet and salad of your choice.
19.
Millet Pie
Cook
1 lb of millet for 1 ½ - 2 hrs
Sauce
-
4
Tablespoons (Tb) of peanut or any other butter
-
2
cloves garlic
-
1
cup of cooked millet
-
½
cup parsley for green sauce
-
1
Tb cornflour
-
(or
½ pimento for red sauce)
-
2
cups of water
-
1
Tb bullion
-
½
onion
Blend
together and pour over cooked millet in shallow casserole dish(square).
Cook
for 30 min. at Reg. 8 until it browns
20.
Shepherd’s Pie
-
1
lb Red lentils
-
1
cup chopped onions
-
2
cloves of garlic
-
1
Tb cumin
-
2
Tb bullion
-
2
Tb Tomato Puree
-
Pinch
of salt
-
1
Tb Yeast flakes
Boil
lentils until cooked and add all other ingredients and cook until smooth.
Mash
it thoroughly and put it on top of the lentil mixture; Have with green
vegetables (carrots and salad) of your own choice. (We will serve cooked
broccoli, raw broccoli and cauliflower salad with guacomoli).
21.
Corn Bread
Mix
together all dry ingredients; add water ingredients; mix well – moist to the
hand; cook at Reg 3 – 4 (around 150 degrees) – for 2 hours.
(Low
oven for a longer period.)
22.
Vegetable – Nut loaf Mix
-
MIX:
2 T olive oil; ¼ cups soya milk; 2 T flour; 1 ¼ salt
-
Stir
over heat till mixture boils;
-
Combine
with:
-
2
cups chopped nuts
-
1
cup chopped fine green peppers
-
¼
cup chopped onions
-
½
cup finely chopped celery
-
2
T cashew or peanut butter
-
1
cup seasoned breadcrumbs
-
2
cups of cooked cracked wheat or brown rice
Stir
and mix all ingredients together; Place in greased loaf pan; Bake at 350 degrees
for 50 – 60 minutes; Turn out on serving plate; Serve with favourite gravy
(cashew parsley gravy). Cooked sweet corn and green garden peas with potato
salad (with cashew or soya mayonnaise).
23.
Sweet: Peanut Butter cookies
24.
Cashew Cream
-
1 cup cashews
-
½ cup water
-
1 Tbs honey
-
Vanilla
-
Blend all together
25. Banana Coconut
Cookies
-
2 cups mashed banana
pulp
-
1 cup chopped
walnuts
-
2 cups finely ground
coconut
-
2 Tbs honey
-
1 Tbs yeast flakes
-
Mix and form into
patties and roll in sesame seeds. Press a walnut into each cookie.
26. Tomato Ketchup
-
2 cups tomato sauce
-
¼ cup chopped onion
-
clove of garlic
-
1 Tbs yeast flakes
-
1 Tbs honey
-
1 teaspoon of
oregano, basil or marjoram
-
pinch of salt
-
Add 1 Tbs or two of
virgin olive oil if required. Add all ingredients to blender and mix
together.
27. Cashew Nut Loaf
Peel and set parsnips to
boil until soft enough for a fork to pass through them. Place onions, peppers
and garlic into a saucepan with a little oil for a few minutes, until blanched.
Prepare the vegetable stock, and add to it the dried yeast or yeast flakes.
Mash the parsnips with a
little oil or margarine. Add the onions, peppers, and garlic and the dry
ingredients (nuts, breadcrumbs, herbs). Now slowly add the stock while mixing
the ingredients to a smooth but firm consistency. Place your mixture into a
greased baking tin, ensuring that you cover the tin with baking foil to prevent
burning or drying out. Optional: A layer of cooked sweet-corn can be placed
midway in the loaf for added taste and presentation, alternatively mushrooms or
spinach can be used.
Now bake in the upper
part of the oven, mark 6/180° for approx. 30-40 minutes.
28. Soya Butter
29. Garlic Butter
30. Cashew
Cheese/Butter
31. Avocado Dip
-
2 avocados
-
½ cup cashews/ 1
cup of water
-
2 tablespoons lemon
juice
-
½ medium onion
-
salt
-
(garlic optional)
-
Blend cashews well
then add the rest.
32. Cashew Pimento
Cheese Sauce
33. Cashew Mayonnaise
-
1 ¼ cups boiling
water
-
1 cup raw cashews
-
¼ cup lemon juice
-
1 tablespoon honey
-
1 teaspoon salt
34. Rye, Corn &
Oat Bread
Mix well all dry
ingredients together in a big bowl. In a jug, mix the liquids (honey & water
& olive oil). Kneed well all ingredients together until they form into a
nice tight elastic ball. Cover with cling film and a cloth and put the bowl in a
nice warm place – e.g. place on unlit grill with oven on for consistent warm
temperature. When the bread rises to double the size, knead dough again and
shape into loaves. Cut a piece of dough and stretch it into a cylinder shape
ensuring that you squeeze the air out. Put into warm greased tins and bake with
between preheat numbers 6 to 8 for ½ an hour, then turn the oven temperature
down to number 3 until baked. (Normally baking is complete when the bread sounds
hollow when tapped underneath).
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Variations
|
|
Onion Bread |
Wheat/ Rye/
Rice Bread |
Wheat &
Soya Bread |
|
1 cup wholewheat
flour
1 cup white
unbleached flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon olive
oil
1 ½ cups of
water
1 finely chopped
onion
choose your
herbs
1 sachet yeast
|
1 cup rye flour
1 cup rice flour
olive oil
1 cup unbleached
white flour
1 cup wholewheat
flour
1 tablespoon
malt/ honey/ raw cane sugar
Linseeds
Sesame seeds
Poppy seeds
2 –3 cups
water
1 sachet yeast
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2 cups
wholewheat
½ cup soya
1 tablespoon raw
cane sugar
Pumpkin seeds
Sunflowers seeds
1 teaspoon salt
1 ½ cups olive
water
1 tablespoon
olive oil
1 sachet yeast
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35. Unlevened Bread
Mix all ingredients
together until making a nice soft dough. Stretch the dough on a oiled oven dish
with a rolling pin to a thickness no higher than ½ inch. Score the dough into
squares before baking and impress each square with a fork. Bake in a heated oven
4 or 5 for about 15 to 20 minutes. Has got to be soft but slightly crunchy.
36. Unleavened Corn
Bread
-
2 cups corn flour
-
1 cup Soya flour
-
½ cup shredded
coconut
-
1 Tbs malt
-
1 – 1 ½ cups warm
water
-
¼ cup olive oil
Mix dry ingredients
together. Mix malt & warm water together. Add to dry mixture. Kneed
slightly. Roll out in pan and cook on low heat for 1 hour – Reg. 3 or 4.
37. Fresh Cranberry Relish
- 12oz or 340g of fresh or frozen cranberries
- 1 medium orange
- ¾ to 1 cup (150g to 200g) of brown dark sugar
Slice unpeeled orange into eights; remove seeds. Place half cranberries and
half of the oranges slices in food processor container. Process until mixture is
evenly chopped. Transfer to a bowl. Repeat with remainder cranberries and orange
slices. Stir in sugar to desired sweetness. Store in refrigerator or freezer.
Makes about 2 ½ cups.
38. Whole Berry Cranberry Sauce
- 1 cup or 200g of brown dark sugar
- 1 cup or 255ml of water
- 12oz or 340g of fresh or frozen cranberries
- Orange peel and juice if desired but reduce water
In sauce pan mix sugar and water; stir to dissolve sugar. Bring to boil; add
cranberries, return to boil; reduce heat; boil gently for 10 minutes stirring
occasionally. Remove from heat. Cool at room temperature and refrigerate. Makes
2 ½ cups.
39. Jellied Cranberry sauce
Prepare as above. Before cooling place a wire mesh strainer over a mixing
bowl. Pour contents of saucepan into strainer. Mash cranberries with the back of
a spoon, frequently scraping the outside of the strainer cover and cool at room
temperature refrigerate until serving time. Makes 1 cup.
40. Apple and red or black currants or cranberry crumble
- 12oz or 340g ready prepared chopped apples (eating or cooking)
- 12oz or 340g red or blackcurrants or cranberries
- 1cup of brown dark sugar; add another ½ cup if using cooking apples or
cranberries
Steam the apples and berries together with the sugar until just soft. Pour
into an ovenproof dish. Raisins and currants may be added; check the sugar you
may desire to use less.
41. Crumble
Blend 4 slices of wholemeal bread and add:
- ½ teaspoon of ground coriander
- ½ teaspoon of ground cardoman
- 1 teaspoon of tarragon
- 1 teaspoon of rosemary
- ½ cup of brown dark sugar
Blend together until the texture of bread crumbs.
In another bowl prepare:
- 1 ½ cup of wholemeal flour
- ½ cupof sunflour oil or olive oil
Mix together and then rub with the palms of your hands all the lumps until
smooth. Mix the bread crumbs and the flour together well. Gently spread on top
of the fruit. Bake in a 4 to 5 oven until golden brown.
42. Best Ever Asparagus Soup
1 bunch of fresh asparagus (use tips
and tender pieces only)
3 large or 6 medium parsnips
3 large ribs of celery, chopped
1 leek, stalk only, finely chopped
8 small or 4 large cloves of garlic, minced
6 Tablespoons roasted cashews (from a can or tin is fine)
2 Large bay leaves
Real Salt or any quality nonprocessed salt (to taste)
Pure water
1. Simmer asparagus and bay leaves in water until asparagus is just
tender.
2. Remove asparagus and save cooking liquid with bay leaves.
3. Place parsnips, celery, leek, and Real Salt into your soup pot.
4. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and simmer until just tender (about 10
minutes if
finely chopped) and remove from heat.
5. Remove and discard bay leaves.
6. Place 1/3 of liquid and 1/3 of cooked vegetables (no asparagus) into a
blender.
7. Add cashews and minced garlic into blender. NOTE: most blenders will
not puree
whole garlic. It is important that the garlic not
be added earlier and only heated
through.
8. Puree and return to soup pot.
9. Add asparagus tips and pieces, heat through, and serve.
(From the Christian kitchen of Jim
McDonald)
43. Apple Oats Casserole
2 cups rolled oats
1 cup raisins
1 or more cups unsweetened coconut
2 small apples, grated
2 or more cups soy or nut milk
1/2 cup slivered almonds
*Measurements may vary depending on size of casserole dish. In an 8" x
8" baking dish, sprinkle 1/3 of the oats on the bottom of dish. Next, layer
1/2 of the raisins, 1/2 of the coconut, another 1/3 of the oats, and all of the
apples. Pour on 1/2 of the milk. Continue by adding the rest of the raisins,
oats and coconut. Top with the almonds. Pour on the rest of the milk. Bake at
350° for 30 minutes. Top with blended apricots
44. Tofu cottage cheese
1 cup Tofu, 4 Tabs chives, 1 clove garlic, 1 small finely chopped onion, 1 teasp
reduced salt bullion, 1/2 - 1 cup tofu mayonnaise.
Mash tofu, add mayonnaise and all other ingredients.
45. Mayonnaise - 1 block tofu, 1 c garlic, 1 tab lemon, 1/2 teasp
bullion, 1teasp tomatoe pure, 2 tabs Flax oil, enough soya milk to blend -
place all ingredients in a blender.
Have with Baked jacket potato - Thats the real cheese and jacket potatoe!!!
and its dead easy to make. Have with sauted brocolli, cauli and sweet corn.
46. Apple Breakfast Bars
1 1/2 cups quick rolled oats
1/4 cup whole wheat flour
2/3 cup dates, chopped
1/2 cup walnuts, chopped
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1/4 cup soya milk
1 1/2 cups raw apples, shredded
Combine all ingredients. Let stand 10 minutes. Press mixture into 8" x
8" baking dish. Bake at 375° until lightly browned, about 25 minutes.
Loosen with spatula, and cut into bars while warm. Serve hot for breakfast.
47. Salad
Crispy Spring Salad
2 cups shredded carrots,celery,parsnip
1 cup sun-dried tomatoes, soaked one hour or more and pureed in a blender
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil or flaxseed oil(or half/half)
1/3-1/2 red onion, finely minced
1/2 onion finely minced
2 cloves shredded garlic
1tsp. cumin powder
1 tsp. bullion
1 Tbsp. braggs.Using your hands, mix all ingredients together well in a large
bowl.sit
48. Pine Nut Soya Cream
1 1/4 cups pine nuts, soaked 1 hour or more
1/2 cup coconut powder
1/2 tsp.braggs
1/4 tsp. bullion
1 1/2 Tbsp. lemon juice (about 1/2 lemon)Blend all ingredients together in a
blender until smooth and creamy. Will keep for up to 2 week in the refrigerator.
49. Guacamoli
1 large or 2 small ripe avocados
1 tsp onion powder
½ tsp. celtic sea salt
2 tsp. lemon juice. Use a fork to mash the avocado and seasonings together. To
maintain the green color, leave an avocado pit in the guacamole
50. Cheese Not Cheese (get it!)
Pimento(red pepper) cheese
4 Tabs of Agar Agar, 1 cup water,- soak for 5 mins until clear, blend with the
following mixture:
1 blanched red pepper, 3/4 cup of cashews, 2 tabs sesami seeds, 3 Tabs flaked
yeast, 11/4 teasp salt(sea salt or reduced salt bullion).
Then add slowly 1/4 cup of olive oil, then last but not least 1/2 cup lemon
juice. Place in a dish and let it set. For today place it over brown soaked
cooked rice(you dont have to let it set - so make double to put on sandwiches -
its mouth watering and replaces all that saturated stuff. See notes at the end
on cheese.
Theres some really nice cabbage about, put it in olive oil and water and saute
it out, add some onions raw garlic and dill, you've now got a meal that fits the
bill!
51. Banana Delight
1/2 cup cashews
8 dates, chopped
1/2 cup water
2 large bananas
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/2 cup raisins
1 1/2 - 2 cups cooked brown rice, millet or oats
Blend first 5 ingredients until smooth. Pour over raisins and grain of your
choice, stir to mix. Heat in 350° oven until heated through.
52. Dressing
2 cups soaked sunflower seeds, almonds or sesame seeds (1¼ cup before soaking)
1 tsp. cumin
2 cloves garlic
1 cup of corriander leaves
1 cup pure water
2 tsp. bullion
6 Tbsp. lemon juice (about 1 lemon)
1 raw garlic
¼ cup flaxseed-, hempseed- or olive-oil. Blend well and serve over a fresh
green salad.(just lettuice, green onions, alfa, rocket salad) This dressing may
thicken as it sits in your refrigerator, so you may need to add more water
later. Will last up to 2 weeks.Use romaine lettuce leaves or cabbage leaves as
your tostada shell, and fill with: Guacamole, Salsa, and Pine Nut "Sour
Cream."
½ cup flaxseed oil, hempseed oil, or extra virgin olive oil
3 ½ tsp. onion powder
1/4 teasp cayenne Pepper
2 ½ tsp. cumin powder
1 tsp.bullion
1 Tbsp. Braggs
53. Granola
12 cups rolled oats
2 cups wheat germ or bran
1 cup cashew pieces
1 cup slivered almonds
1 cup date pieces
1 cup dried pineapple
2 cups soya flour
2 cups shredded coconut
1 cup water
1 cup honey
1/2 cup olive oil
Mix all dry ingredients together well. Mix water, honey, and oil in blender. Add
to dry ingredients. Mix well. Bake at 250° for 1 1/2 hours in shallow pans,
stirring every 1/2 hour.
54. Smoothies all day - here goes for fast days!
Multivitamin-In-A-Cup Smoothie
Makes 3 servings. This smoothie will supply most of the vitamins and amino
acids you'll need for a day. 1 cup soymilk
11/2 cups green grapes
1 apple, cored and diced
3 bananas
2 tablespoons wheat germ
1 tablespoon lecithin granules
2 tablespoons nutritional yeast
2 tabs flax oil
Blend all ingredients together. Drink and enjoy!
Make these for fun:
55. Better than sweets
1
cup of raw almonds
1 cup of raw walnuts
1/2 cup dates chopped
1/2 cup raisins
shredded dried coconut
sesame seeds (white hulled)Soak nuts overnight or at least 10 hours. Drain and
rinse and place nuts in food processor. Process until fine. Then add other
ingredients, and process until mixture is thick and binds together easily. Make
balls by rolling about 1 tablespoon of mixture for each one. Then roll the balls
in the dried coconut or sesame seeds.Place in oven on low for 2 hours or eat
them like they are. (They bind better when cooked)
Tofu
is processed soya bean curd. Contains easily digested protein; B vitamins and
minerals including calcium, phosphorus, iron, sodium, potassium, inexpensive and
low in calories. Tofu calcium content can equal that of milk without all
the side effects(see article on milk).
Benefits lungs and large intestine, moistens dry conditions in the stomach,
relieves inflammation of the stomach, neutralizes toxins -used in cases of
alcholism, chronic amoebic dysentry, healing reactions, dietary changes, etc;
It is a concentrated protein and should be eaten in moderation - no more than
twice weekly.
56.
Cheese - another cheese recipe
MELTY CHEESE
11/2 C hot water 2 TBL corn flour
3/4 C cashews 1/4 C pimentos
3'/3 TBL sesame seeds 1/3 C Brewer's yeast flakes (opt.)
I tsp salt I TBL lemon juice
2 tsp onion powder 1/8 tsp garlic powderBLEND all but lemon juice. BRING to boil
while stirring constantly; BOIL for 2-3 minutes. REMOVE from heat and ADD lemon
juice.
Health News
Very few things are sacrosanct in this day, and cheese must now be classed
among those things that have lost their halo. Cheese has been used for at least
4,000 years, and has been widely acclaimed as a healthful food. Some have
claimed unusual hardiness and advanced old age for cheese users. Only recently
has it been learned that cheese is not the wonder food that many had thought.
There may be real dangers in its use. All dairy products have become more
suspect recently, from the association of the saturated fat of milk with the
elevation of the blood cholesterol, to the transmission of many animal diseases
to man through dairy products. Most of the diseases transmitted from animals are
of a minor nature, resembling colds, flu, streptococcal sore throat, and other
infections, but some diseases are life-threatening. A battle is still going on
with brucellosis, a disease contracted from milk which threatens the quality of
life for many years, giving a chronic low grade fever and below par performance
to the afflicted person. Between 1883 and 1947, there were 59 epidemics caused
by cheese, with 117 deaths in the U. S. alone.Now, cheese is under special
attack, not because of infectious diseases which it shares with all dairy
products, but because of its basic chemistry. Cheese is made by the action of
waste products from molds and bacteria on milk. Most foods contaminated with
molds and bacteria produce such an unpleasant flavor that few people care to eat
them. Generally, an unpleasant flavor in food heralds danger, and apparently
this principle holds true for cheese, since most children naturally reject their
first taste of cheese and must be taught to accept it.Changes which occur in
cheese during the fermenting and "ripening" process include the
production of a toxic alkaloid called roquefortine (as in Roquefort dressing), a
neurotoxin which can cause mice to have convulsive seizures. All blue cheeses
probably contain roquefortine. The alkaloid is produced by the mold Penicillium
roqueforti. The alkaloids are all toxic and include such widely differing
poisons as coniine, one of the major volatile alkaloids found in the poison
hemlock plant from which Socrates met his Waterloo; to caffeine, the major
alkaloid in coffee, tea, colas, and chocolate.Another class of toxic substances
includes the toxic amines. Any fermented food or beverage may contain toxic
amines. They can produce changes in the nervous system which bring on headaches,
palpitations, high blood pressure, migraines, and other known disorders which
occur at a cellular level.Several toxic and nontoxic amines are produced during
the fermentation of milk, tyramine being among them, the amine causing migraine
headaches. The only cheeses containing tyramine in insignificant amounts are
creamed cheese, ricotta cheese, and cottage cheese. Some other foods containing
tyramine are chocolate, herring, yeast, broad beans, chicken livers, ripened
sausages (bologna, summer sausages, salami, pepperoni, etc.), meat extracts, and
alcoholic beverages. If a human follows his natural taste he will avoid anything
that has the faintest taint of spoilage about it.Milk, produced by glands that
are actually modified sweat glands, is naturally high in salt. Cheese shares in
this high salt content. A high salt intake increases one's likelihood of having
high blood pressure.The rennet for the curdling process in cheesemaking is
commonly obtained from the stomachs of calves. A combination of rennin and
pepsin is sometimes used, or plant enzymes derived from fungus. Pepsin is
obtained principally from fresh hog stomachs.
Many processed cheeses have preservatives, emulsifying agents, and other
chemicals added to them, that can have a harmful effect on the body. The
putrefactive process through which milk goes to produce cheese reduces the
vitamin content. Cheese is almost completely devoid of water soluble vitamins.
Losses of both vitamins and minerals occur with the loss of whey.Undesirable
chemicals are produced by cheesemaking that involve all three major constituents
of cheese: fats, carbohydrates, and proteins. The fat in cheese is hydrolyzed to
irritating fatty acids, butyric, caproic, caprylic and longer carbon-chain fatty
acids. The carbohydrate of milk, mainly lactose is converted to lactic acid by
putrefaction. The protein is fermented to peptides, amines, indoles, skatole,
and ammonia, several of these being implicated in the production of cancer. The
possibility of production of nitrosamine, one of the most powerful cancer
producing agents known, is particularly disturbing. Both the nervous system and
the gastrointestinal tract are irritated by certain of these substances, causing
the individual to be irritable and cranky.Of course, cheese also presents the
usual drawbacks of milk such as allergies, lactose intolerance, food
sensitivities, and high calorie content. Cheese contains a goodly quantity of
the amino acid tryptophane, which causes after-meal drowsiness and inability to
concentrate.Certain imported cheeses have been discovered as culprits in
outbreaks of food-borne gastroenteritis in the United States. As many as 120
disease -producing germs have been isolated per gram of cheese; that would be
600 germs in a teaspoon of cheese! We can say from the foregoing, that some
foods generally thought to be wholesome are actually injurious to the
health.Other foods that develop a specific flavor through the activity of
bacteria include sauerkraut, vinegar, pickles, butter, buttermilk, and cultured
milk. The holes in Swiss cheese come from the action of gas forming bacilli,
similar to those which form gas in the bowel.For those who would like a cheese
substitute, two very nice ones have been added below. There are many other good
and safe alternative cheese recipes. Cheeses you can slice, cheeses you can dip,
cheeses you can use as a spread, cheeses you can pour as a sauce. It won't take
long before you have a whole collection of good recipes and are more than
Animal Disease Is On the Increase
Over 100 million chickens die per year of chicken leukemia. About 235 million
chickens die each year from all causes - many of which are transmittible to
humans.Yearbook of Agriculture, pp. 466-474.
Approximately 2 1/2 million beef livers are rejected annually by federal meat
inspectors because they have cancer, abscesses or parasitic worms. The rest of
the carcass is, however, allowed to be sold for human food. Yearbook of
Agriculture, p. 11.
Approximately 40 million hogs and piglets die of disease on our farms each year
and never (we hope) reach the meat market. About 3 1/4 million that do reach the
slaughter house are rejected in part or total by meat inspectors. Life and
Health, Oct. 1969, p. 31.
Over 71 thousand cattle were sold for human food in 1967 after malignant eye
tumors were discovered. (Only the eye itself was condemned). Life and Health,
Oct. 1969, p. 31.
Thousands of chickens contaminated or stained with feces are shipped every day
instead of being condemned, 81 federal testified. The Atlanta Constitution,
May 26, 1991.
In January 1993, contaminated hamburgers were the cause of the biggest outbreak
ever of the deadly bacteria, E. Coli 0157:H7. The outbreak killed four children
and hospitalized 500 people. The Spokesman Review, January 23, 1993.
In 1993 the USDA temporarily closed 30 beef slaughterhouses after inspections
revealed contaminated carcasses at dozens of plants. The Tallahassee Democrat,
May 28, 1993, p. 31.
Two cattle diseases, Bovine Immunodeficiency Virus (cow AIDS) and Bovine
Leukemia Virus have been discovered in the U.S. - BIV and BLV are widespread and
suspected of being transmitted to humans through the ingestion pathway. Beyond
Beef, Jeremy Rifkin, p. 143.
We wish above all
things that you prosper and be in good health even as your soul prospers.
Whatsoever you eat
or whatsoever you do, do all to the glory of God.

For further vegan
recipes, please e:mail - info@leavesoflife.org.
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