The Vegan Pantry

The Vegan Pantry – Essential Ingredients in Your Vegan Kitchen

Essential Ingredients in Your Vegan Kitchen

Making the transition from eating meat to becoming a vegan can be a daunting decision to have to make. It does mean changing the way you eat: what to eat and how to eat them. It also involves restocking your pantry.There are a few essential basic ingredients in a vegan pantry. In fact, these items are indispensable!

Grains:

Short or long grain brown rice, basmati rice, wholegrain bulgur also known as cracked wheat, whole grain buckwheat or kasha, quinoa (white, red and black), barley and couscous. Grains are the backbone of a vegan diet.

Flours:

Unbleached wholemeal flour, buckwheat flour, rye flour and premium baker’s flour.

Pasta and Noodles:

Soba, mung beans vermicelli, rice vermicelli, whole meal pasta or Jerusalem artichoke paste.

Lentils and Pulses:

Red lentils, puy lentils, chickpeas, kidney beans, black eye beans, yellow lentils and split green lentils.

Dried Fruits and Nuts:

Figs, apricots, currant, sultanas, walnuts, almonds, cashew, pine nuts, sunflowers, sesame and pumpkin seeds.

Spices:

All spice, anise pepper/Szechuan pepper, black mustard seeds, black peppercorn, Cardamom pods, cayenne pepper, Chinese five-spice, cinnamon (ground and sticks), cloves (ground and whole), ground coriander, cumin (ground and whole), curry powder, fennel, garam masala, ginger, mustard, nutmeg, saffron threads and turmeric.

Cooking Oil:

Extra virgin olive oil, sesame oil and coconut butter.

Various Other Condiments:

A selection of fresh herbs and ginger, raw sugar, blackstrap molasses, miso*, Chinese rice wine or sherry, light and dark soy sauce, an assortment of vinegars (Chinese rice, cider, red wine, white wine and balsamic), desiccated coconut, dried shiitake mushrooms, coconut milk, tahini, pappadum, nori (dried seaweed sheets) and textured vegetable proteins (TVP). **

* This is an energetically balanced food for all seasons. According to Zen cooking tradition soybeans represent autumn energy, salt represents winter energy and spring energy is found in the grains, mainly barley or rice. Miso is traditionally fermented in wood, which represents tree energy and would have gone through all four seasons. It will keep indefinitely refrigerated.

** TVP is readily available from most Asian groceries. They are mainly prepared from soybeans and are a great in dishes requiring a meaty texture or bulk, like in lentil burgers or Chinese stir-fry.

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