Feb

21

No items matching your keywords were found.

Vegan Hard
Vegan Hard
PLEASE answer! is becoming vegan hard?


Hi, I am a vegetarian and love cheese. I eat almost all organic food..and it certified organic. Is vegan hard to become after becoming vegetarian?
Please feel free to include links!

Thanks! Happy 2008! :]

I thought it would be, because I loved cheese. But it hasn't ben hard at all.

I read a lot of books that convinced me of why I wanted to go vegan, but the one that ultimately convinced me that I *could* was a cookbook. Pick up a copy of "Vegan with a Vengeance" and try a few great recipes. I'd be surprised it you found yourself missing cheese.



No items matching your keywords were found.


Vegan


Vegan


$10.46


Vegan

Vegan Cooking for Carnivores:


Vegan Cooking for Carnivores:


$19.78


Ellen DeGeneres' personal chef, Roberto Martin, shares over 125 delicious vegan recipes he's created for Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi that he hopes will make healthy vegan cooking accessible and easy for everyone. Portia de Rossi explains in her foreword, "Roberto taught me that the key to making good food vegan is substitution...you can enjoy all your favorite foods and never feel deprived." Some of the standouts Martin, a Culinary Institute of America-trained chef, has developed for Ellen and Portia include: Banana and Oatmeal Pancakes, Avocado Reuben, Red Beans and Rice, "Chick'n" Pot Pie, and Chocolate Cheesecake. Featuring mouthwatering photographs by award-winning food photographer, Quentin Bacon, this cookbook will appeal to die-hard carnivores and vegetarians alike.

Vegan Cooking for Carnivores (Hardcover)


Vegan Cooking for Carnivores (Hardcover)


$36.82


Ellen DeGeneres` personal chef, Roberto Martin, shares over 125 delicious vegan recipes he`s created for Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi that he hopes will make healthy vegan cooking accessible and easy for everyone. Portia de Rossi explains in her foreword, "Roberto taught me that the key to making good food vegan is substitution...you can enjoy all your favorite foods and never feel deprived." Some of the standouts Martin, a Culinary Institute of America-trained chef, has developed for Ellen and Portia include: Banana and Oatmeal Pancakes, Avocado Reuben, Red Beans and Rice, "Chick`n" Pot Pie, and Chocolate Cheesecake. Featuring mouthwatering photographs by award-winning food photographer, Quentin Bacon, this cookbook will appeal to die-hard carnivores and vegetarians alike.

Quick & Easy Vegan Bake Sale:


Quick & Easy Vegan Bake Sale:


$12.2


From a popular vegan blogger, here are 150 delicious, sweet and savory vegan baked treats perfect for bake sales, afterschool snacking, or simply sharing with kids and adults alike. Quick and Easy Vegan Bake Sale is your guide to crafting simple and easy-to-make baked goods, all of which are perfect for selling at a bake sale, serving at a picnic or party, and sharing with neighbors and friends. Bakers--both vegan and those curious about vegan cuisine--will find something to suit every occasion, taste, and budget. Sections include Cakes and Cupcakes, Cookies and Squares, Muffins, Quickbreads (Scones, Biscuits, and Loaves), and Pies and Tarts, as well as a section on Savory Goodies. From Agave Crackle Cakes and Elvis Blondies to Chai Chocolate Mini Loaves and Handheld Cherry Pies, Carla Kelly has created completely vegan treats so delicious, you’ll be hard-pressed not to share them with everyone you know. With ideas for making your own bake sale or goodie swap a success, tips on how busy cooks can make vegan baking quick and easy, and strategies for feeding a crowd or just your kids, Quick and Easy Vegan Bake Sale can help anyone become the most popular baker on the block.

Vegan Sourcebook


Vegan Sourcebook


$17.56


Vegan Sourcebook

Sinfully Vegan


Sinfully Vegan


$11.86


Sinfully Vegan

Vegan Feasts


Vegan Feasts


$11.86


Vegan Feasts

The Urban Vegan:


The Urban Vegan:


$11.18


The Urban Vegan

Supermarket Vegan:


Supermarket Vegan:


$12.88


Supermarket Vegan

Viva Vegan!


Viva Vegan!


$12.88


Viva Vegan!

The Voluptuous Vegan


The Voluptuous Vegan


$12.6


The Voluptuous Vegan

Sweet Vegan:


Sweet Vegan:


$12.5


Sweet Vegan

Big Vegan:


Big Vegan:


$19.76


Big Vegan

The Tipsy Vegan:


The Tipsy Vegan:


$11.55


The Tipsy Vegan

Everyday Vegan


Everyday Vegan


$13.96


Everyday Vegan

Celebrate Vegan:


Celebrate Vegan:


$12.07


Celebrate Vegan

Caribbean Vegan:


Caribbean Vegan:


$12.77


Caribbean Vegan

Now Vegan!


Now Vegan!


$19.76


Now Vegan!



Munchkin Arm & Hammer Diaper Pail  Refill Bags, 3 Pack
Munchkin Arm & Hammer Diaper Pail Refill Bags, 3 Pack
List Price: $20.97
Sale Price: $15.99
You save: $4.98 (24%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Munchkin Arm and Hammer Diaper Bag Dispenser, Colors May Vary
Munchkin Arm and Hammer Diaper Bag Dispenser, Colors May Vary
List Price: $4.99
Sale Price: $2.49
You save: $2.50 (50%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Green N Pack Eco Friendly 200-Count Baby Diaper Sacks(Special Offers)
Green N Pack Eco Friendly 200-Count Baby Diaper Sacks(Special Offers)
List Price: $11.99
Sale Price: $8.99
You save: $3.00 (25%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Munchkin Arm and Hammer Bag Refill, 36 Bags
Munchkin Arm and Hammer Bag Refill, 36 Bags
List Price: $4.99
Sale Price: $3.49
You save: $1.50 (30%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Playtex Diaper Genie Disposal System Refills (810 count total - 3 pack of 270 each)
Playtex Diaper Genie Disposal System Refills (810 count total - 3 pack of 270 each)
List Price: $22.64
Sale Price: $15.95
You save: $6.69 (30%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Fisher-Price Luv U Zoo Diaper Bag, Brown
Fisher-Price Luv U Zoo Diaper Bag, Brown
List Price: $24.99
Sale Price: $19.00
You save: $5.99 (24%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sassy Baby Disposable 200 Counts Diaper Sacks
Sassy Baby Disposable 200 Counts Diaper Sacks
List Price: $9.00
Sale Price: $7.22
You save: $1.78 (20%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Gerber Stripe Nylon Diaper Tote, Blue
Gerber Stripe Nylon Diaper Tote, Blue
List Price: $19.99
Sale Price: $16.00
You save: $3.99 (20%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Munchkin Arm & Hammer Diaper  Refill Bags, 10 Bags
Munchkin Arm & Hammer Diaper Refill Bags, 10 Bags
List Price: $6.99
Sale Price: $2.65
You save: $4.34 (62%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Summer Infant Keep Me Clean Disposable Diaper Sacks, Green
Summer Infant Keep Me Clean Disposable Diaper Sacks, Green
List Price: $3.99
Sale Price: $1.75
You save: $2.24 (56%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days




A Video for RISE AGAINST from the Die-Hard FANS and how we SURVIVE. Vegan Sarah


The Pitfalls of a Raw Food or Vegan Diet

In this article, Dr. Jameth Sheridan shares candidly on the pitfalls of a raw food or vegan diet.

Renegade Roundtable with Dr. Jameth Sheridan. Dr. Sheridan is a naturopath and nutritional consultant. He and his wife Kim co-authored "Uncooking with Jameth and Kim" and they co-own and operate Health Force Nutritional.

Kevin: So you've been at this for 23 years now. What are some of the most common pitfalls you see with a raw food or vegan diet?

Jameth: I think the number one pitfall that a raw fooder suffers from is, based on my 23 years of experience in raw food with countless tens of thousands of people, is if they're a regular person, they eat regular foods, and let's say they're ill and they go raw immediately and they get well, I actually think that is ultimately a mistake. Because I see people when they "fall off the wagon" so to speak, they fall off hard and they fall back to what they started from. So if I'm eating regular pizza and regular chicken and regular animal products, things like that, regular cookies, I fall off the wagon with raw, do things with family, I'll just go ahead and eat those and then, you know, "When I do that, and finish with my binge, then I'll just go back to being raw." And, I see a lot of people leaving raw foods or just being less healthy by going back and forth between those things. Because in raw the emphasis is so hard, and this is how I was taught too, on raw, that it forgets all the other things that are important, that make a raw food diet successful. And the number one thing that makes a raw food diet successful - all of a sudden, you are a whole food vegan.

If you become vegan, all of a sudden, if you stop eating animal products, cooked or raw - which are not good for you, you had an immense increase in your health. Your likelihood to get osteoporosis has plummeted; your likelihood to get cancer has plummeted; and as a whole food vegan, your likelihood to get heart disease is almost non-existent.

Now whole food meaning, you're not just eating white sugar, white flour, and hydrogenated oil - all of which are vegan, but all of which are absolutely abysmal for you. A whole food vegan would eat things like millet, amaranth, quinoa, chick peas, you know, grains, beans, legumes, fruits, vegetables - actual food, unadulterated by nature. You're also eating an organic diet, when you tend to go raw, and organic is huge. These things are just additives, and you don't just eat a whole food, organic, vegan diet, you also change completely the types of foods you're eating. For example, you don't go from eating, let's say a frozen vegan pizza, cooked, to a raw frozen vegan pizza. You change your food completely. You go from eating, let's say a frozen vegan pizza, or a regular pizza, to broccoli, and cauliflower, and fruits, and sprouts, and flaxseeds, and actual foods that are completely different types of foods. So the amount of nutrients you are getting by being a raw fooder, unless you're fruitarian, is dramatically higher. You're also usually consuming more water, unless you're doing lots of dehydrated things, or lots of cacao, you're more hydrated, which is immensely beneficial. Some diets include lots of raw vegetable juice, which is tremendously beneficial. And, you are also eating a lot of your food raw, which there is a benefit to actually having things raw too, but it's just one of the many benefits.

In raw food teaching, there is often taught, usually taught, that there's two categories of food: foods that are raw, and foods that are cooked, and there is nothing in between. So if you're eating something cooked, well it might as well be cheese lasagna, rather than tofu lasagna, because in the raw food world, there's really no difference. And I've seen that information devastate peoples health, and I seen it have people leave the raw foods movement who would be having, let's say, 80, 90% of their health has improved, and like "Wow, I love this." And maybe 10 or 20% hasn't, or 10 or 20% may have gotten worse, for some reason, some deficiency cropped up somewhere. And, if they usually talk to the raw food leaders or look at raw food text, they say, "Well, there's a problem with you, you're cleansing, you're this, you're that, blah blah blah blah. You've got to stay raw, because all cooked food is poison." Even the, you know, sometimes even with macrobiotic diets, which the healing macrobiotic diet is an all-cooked food, vegan diet, there are many people who have overcome cancer with that. Now you can't overcome cancer on poison, and by no means am I an advocate of macrobiotics, by any stretch of the imagination, because I think macrobiotics is very depleting long term but far better than the standard American diet.

So I think it's important to be a whole food vegan at some point, and get a good basis of that. And if raw foods is not working for some reason, don't throw the baby out with the bath water.

Kevin: So some of the deficiencies that you encounter, with raw food are, maybe...

Jameth: I'm not saying they're widespread, I just want to make sure it's clear. I've met 20 plus year raw fooders who, for the most part, were following that regime, and who appear to be vibrantly healthy and they're in excellent health, and I have no interest in trying to change their diet whatsoever. I just want them to live optimally and have the creatures of the planet live optimally and the planet as well. But for those who do, there's some - there's a group of raw fooders - I don't know how to necessarily define the types yet - but it might be, people who tend to be vata, it is, in my experience, don't necessarily thrive on 100% raw foods. And it could be that there's possibly deficiencies of a type of protein, because it's not a deficiency of protein, because on raw foods, if you eat an appropriate amount of nuts and seeds - and I think you can eat way too much of those - but an appropriate amount, let's say, one handful or so, you can get tons of protein doing that. But there's some vata types, with my experience, take a long time to recover from working out, and it has a much harder time building muscle, just on nut and seed protein. And you can't really eat enough broccoli, because broccoli has, I think 20 or 30% - protein, very high. But to get that much grams of protein from broccoli, it's virtually impossible. To eat that many calories, you would actually have to juice a couple of cases of stalks of broccoli to get sufficient protein - and you would get sufficient protein in that case. But broccoli's also a cruciferous vegetable, and I love cruciferous vegetables for the liver detoxifying, for their anti-cancer benefits and they have some hormone balancing benefits too. They're phenomenal foods. But raw broccoli, or any raw cruciferous in a large quantity, is really, really hard to process. It's hard to deal with. So in cases like that, I've seen, if people move over to the legume family, it does not have to be soy beans. Soy beans are one of hundreds of different legumes. If you don't like soy beans for some reason, just don't eat them - not necessary. Lentils, chick peas, mung beans, adzuki beans, things like that. Now you can certainly do those raw, but it's ironic that one of the reasons that soy is indicted amongst the raw foods communities is because research on raw soy shows that it is very difficult to digest. It has enzyme and protein and other inhibitors in it that make it hard to deal with and hard to grow on, but that's when the soy beans are raw. Now when you sprout any legume, any legume sprouted still has a lot of these anti-nutrients in them and it's harder to digest and get everything out of a raw legume sprout. Now it's almost ironic though, when you steam those legumes you do destroy all those enzyme inhibitors and the enzymes as well. But at least you're enzymatically neutral now. You have not cooked it, or charred it, or burned it so there's no lucocytosis raising of the white blood cell count, with steamed legumes or any steamed vegetable. For those people who don't thrive on raw, if they do that, sprouted and steamed legumes, not lightly steamed you've got to steam it the whole way. Raw is just hard to digest. Most people don't even make raw hummus anymore with raw chick peas. Have you noticed that?

Kevin: Yes.

Jameth: Because they are notoriously difficult to digest raw. I've made lots of raw chick pea in my day, lots of raw sprouted things and always the thing I used to do and still do is the stuff that's left over, a dip or pate or something, well you throw it in the dehydrator and make raw chick pea burgers and eat them the next day for dinner. I did that one time and I ate the things in the morning, the raw chick pea hummus we had the day before, a whole bunch of them, I brought them to my seminar and man, I had a hard time even being in the seminar because I had so much volume of gas, that smelled so bad and I was in so much pain that I couldn't actually socially be in the actual building. I had to walk outside.

Kevin: Wow.

Jameth: Now that was because I had a concentrated, dehydrated version. Now if you sprout chick peas, and chick peas can be hard to sprout. Sometimes they just go bad before they sprout. Now I don't mean soak. So actually sprouted chick peas that are steamed then mixed with raw tahini, no reason in any way shape or form to cook your tahini, is phenomenally digestible. Really, really awesomely digestible and to get back, if you sprout your legumes, steam them and put a little bit of flax oil on them and salt them whether it be Himalayan salt, Celtic sea salt, a little bit of gluten free tamari or miso, some sort of good quality source of organic sodium, in my experience I have never seen that not take away someone's craving or desire for flesh. That is so much better for you nutritionally than eating a piece of flesh, raw or not. By any measurement that science has currently come up including [indecipherable] photography, it's far superior to do that than it is to eat raw flesh. So what I'm saying is rather than throwing the baby out with the bath water and being 100% raw, if you're eating an animal product because you're better off not. You're better off eating a whole food vegan cooked food like sprouted, steamed, salted, flax oil, legume that I talked about. That's my experience.

About the Author

To read the rest of this transcript as well as access The Renegade Roundtable experts just like Dr. Jameth Sheridan please
click here!
Kevin Gianni is an internationally recognized health advocate, author & film consultant. He has helped thousands of people take control of their own health naturally. For more information visit
raw food diets and holistic nutrition
.