Friday, January 2, 2026

Veganuary can be a piece of cake: cooks and dietitians share 12 ways to make delicious plant-based food

From theguardian.com

By Sarah Phillips

Swap chicken for beans and avoid cheeze … From a MasterChef finalist to a maker of ready meals, high-profile vegans give their favourite recipes and tips


This new year, you may be embarking on Veganuary, or have resolved to eat less meat and dairy in 2026. What are some of the simplest switches to make and most nutritious dishes to try with minimum fuss? Vegans share their tips on how to eat a balanced plant-based diet.

Eat the world

Sophie Sugrue, who last autumn became the first plant-based finalist on MasterChef, says: “It has pushed me to experiment so much more with different flavours from all over the world, because there’s so much naturally plant-based food.” Her favourite cuisines are “Japanese, because although they use fish sauce, it can be subbed out, and they use a lot of tofu; Vietnamese food is incredible, because a lot of people follow a plant-based diet. If you go to a Vietnamese grocery store, you can find loads of substitutes.”

Ensure your diet is balanced

‘I tend to have a little jar of mixed seeds that go on practically everything,’ says Ian Theasby. Photograph: fcafotodigital/Getty Images

“Make sure that you’re hitting all of your food groups,” says the dietitian Reena Sharma, who suggests using the Eatwell Guide. Check that “you still have protein, you still have healthy fats, you still have omega-3”. Although you can also get plant-based omega-3 from things such as walnuts and flaxseeds, the rate at which it is converted to what our body needs is low, so Sharma recommends taking a supplement.

Ian Theasby, one half of the vegan meal company Bosh!, moved to a plant-based diet a decade ago; co-founder Henry Firth followed suit a few weeks later. “Mix up your plate so you’ve got a good variety of vegetables,” he says. “Colour is a great way to see if you’ve got variety on there, and then add little bits on. I tend to have a jar of mixed seeds that go on practically everything. It is about making sure that you’re getting a good variety every single day.”

Find your go-to protein sources

Tempeh is high in protein and easy to digest. Photograph: alvarez/Getty Images

Theasby gets most of his protein from tofu, lentils and beans: “Ten years ago, I would have looked at those and gone, ‘That is so boring and bland; why would I want to eat any of that?’ But actually, 50% of the protein that I get now is from those three ingredients and they are so wildly versatile.”

Don’t be put off if your uptake in beans initially has a gaseous affect, says Rachel Ama, the author of One Pot: Three Ways and founder of Ama’s sauces who went vegan nine years ago. “People always say: ‘The more beans you eat, the more you fart.’ But your body is adjusting, your gut is realigning. So if you do get gassy, it passes; it’s not a for ever thing. Your gut is enjoying it and it’s going to be able to handle it.”

“One of the big revelations for me was tempeh,” says Richard Makin, the food writer behind School Night Vegan and the author of Anything You Can Cook, I Can Cook Vegan. “Tempeh is a complete protein source, so it has all the major amino acids. It is much higher in protein than tofu. It tends to be closer to 25g of protein per 100g. Also, because it’s fermented, it is much easier to digest. I try to get tempeh in as many things as possible.”

“Stick a block of tofu or tempeh into your pasta sauce and blend, to add additional fibre, calcium and protein,” says Sharma.

Embrace tofu

“At first I really missed scrambled eggs, because it is just such a cheat code for quick nutrition and tasty meals,” says Theasby. “So we came up with the ‘two tofu technique’.” This involves blending silken and firm tofu with a few other ingredients including black salt (kala namak). “It gives you exactly the same mouthfeel, texture and satisfaction.”

“Tofu can get a bad rep,” says Ama, “but if you just cook it nicely …” How so? “Get firm tofu for starters, and either pull it apart or chop it into little pieces. Then toss it in a tablespoon of cornflour, get a non-stick pan, a bit of oil, and cook it. This crisps up the outside layer and makes the inside a bit softer, so you have two texture comparisons. Smother it in a sauce, and then you get the flavour, a bit of crunch and a soft centre, and it’s just a lot more enjoyable and fancy.”

“If you freeze tofu you can get an amazing texture,” says Sharma. “You thaw it, squeeze out all the water, and it becomes quite porous, so you can cook it in a broth and it will soak up the flavours. Then you can fry it, or cover it in batter. Or you can get blocks of silken tofu and just pour over chilli oil: it tastes so good and requires no cooking.”

Fuel well for fitness

Peanut butter and jam bagels are an energising breakfast. Photograph: LauriPatterson/Getty Images/iStockphoto

“People say that you can’t get enough protein or energy on a plant-based diet – that is nonsense,” says Theasby. “I run ultra marathons.” How does he fuel himself for that? “For races, which are 31 miles and up, I prep by loading myself up with carbohydrates at least three days before. So that would be a big plate of pasta, sweet potato, or rice. And then on race day, my standard breakfast would be bagels with a good amount of raspberry jam and peanut butter, for fats, proteins and sugars and carbs. During the actual race, it’s just nailing loads of gels.” Afterwards, and during training, he has plant-based protein powders and shakes.

Use plant milk and oil

When baking, says Makin, “I tend to use plant milk as an alternative to eggs. I swap 50ml for a large egg, because it pretty much does exactly the same thing. I tend to use unflavoured, unsweetened soya milk because soy is the plant milk highest in lecithin, which is a naturally occurring emulsifier in soya beans – and also in egg yolks – and it mimics the way an egg binds quite closely.”

With regards to butter, says Makin, “Unless you really do need a plant-based butter for buttercream, it is easily replaceable with either vegetable oil or extra virgin olive oil. What I learned from Philip Khoury, an incredible vegan baker and chocolatier, is that if you’re replacing the butter in a recipe with oil, whether it’s vegetable, sunflower or olive, you only need 80% of the butter’s weight because a lot of butter is water. So if you’re trying to convert a recipe, keep that in mind.”

Snack well

Make sure you are organised when you are out and about, in case plant-based options are limited. Sharma says she “always carries nuts”.

“I’ve become one of those vegans who will eat raw tofu or tempeh as a snack to hit a macro target for my protein,” admits Makin. “It doesn’t bother me any more, whereas I think five years ago that would have been unthinkable.”

Leave the cheese

Ama says cheese is the thing she missed the most: “There are some really nice nut cheeses that are super cheesy and umami. But as far as melty vegan cheese, I’m not the biggest fan.”

“I still don’t think that we have nailed vegan cheese,” agrees Makin. “There are some products where the flavour is there, but the texture isn’t. I tend to just do without.”

Focus on versatile veg

Before going vegan: “Me and aubergine did not know each other, and now we are best friends,” says Ama. “Because it has that unique texture, you can use it to thicken stews or a bolognese, or you can smother it in a teriyaki and have a silky pull-apart texture. It can be used in many different ways and makes a main feast or a side.”

“I wasn’t a big fan of mushrooms when I was a kid, because they used to remind me of slugs,” says Sugrue. “Now I’ve opened up to the world of mushrooms: there are so many different types, and you can do so much with them.”

Veganise your favourite meals

“I like to think that we all have eight recipes that we rotate, and maybe sometimes we’ll switch up the ingredients a bit,” says Makin. “My advice is always to just try to veganise those things, then you tend not to feel quite so dislocated in your diet when you’ve made that switch.”

Use the same formula as you would when cooking your favourites, says Ama. “I like to use coconut milk, cumin, turmeric and onions. Instead of adding the usual chicken or whatever meat you’d have, just put beans in it and more vegetables, so it’s not a completely unfamiliar recipe.”

When lacking in week-night inspiration, try …

“I have a tofu tikka masala recipe on my blog,” says Makin. “It calls for vegan cream, which is probably the only processed ingredient in there. But what I found recently is that you can actually just blend silken tofu with a stick blender and it replaces the cream completely. It is delicious and really high in fibre and protein, so it gives an extra nutritional boost. I’ve got a cauliflower cheese recipe as well, which I am obsessed with. It teaches you how to make a really creamy white sauce that doesn’t require any vegan cheese. And then obviously you can use that as a bechamel, in a moussaka or lasagne.”

Ama recommends “a big bean dish with black beans, kidney beans, brown beans and beluga lentils. Cook them with cinnamon, paprika, cumin, ground coriander and tomato paste. Add some onions, peppers, tomatoes, veg stock, salt, pepper, then just leave that to simmer on low and let the flavours infuse. It will last you a few days and you can serve it with different things like a jacket potato, pasta, or rice and avocado.” She also rates sweet potato brownies: “They are full of superfoods, like the sweet potatoes, cacao, almond butter and dates,” and even small children go wild for them.

Theasby says he lives by the mantra “chop, toss, roast”: “Take a block of tofu. Cut it up into 2cm chunks. Take a vegetable of your choice, be that tomato, aubergine or carrot. Chop that into roughly the same size as the tofu, then toss it in the seasonings of your choice. I always add a little bit of nutritional yeast, because it gives a really beautiful, umami flavour, but also is really good for B12. Toss it with a bit of olive oil. Roast it for about 30 minutes, put it on a plate with some kimchi, hummus and salad. What you’ve got is a plate of excellent food, but also loads of fibre, protein and plants. It is very easy and there is minimal washing up.”

Sharma swears by a dish her mother used to cook for her. “It’s an Indian dish called kitchari, and it’s just lentils with rice. You stick it in a slow cooker, or a saucepan on a low heat, and add some spices like turmeric or garam masala, cumin and salt, and you just boil it until it’s like a risotto. You can have it for breakfast as congee, or for lunch or an easy dinner, and you can add extras to it, like pickles, to make it a bit more exciting.”

Kitchari (rice and lentils) with a few extra ingredients. Photograph: Nikolay_Donetsk/Getty Images/iStockphoto

Sugrue likes to make a pot pie with whatever is left in the fridge: “mushrooms, leeks, onion, garlic, and then I use soy cream to make the sauce. You can add in plant-based chicken alternatives or chickpeas.” Homemade pastry? “No – we haven’t got time for that midweek. It is store bought.” Surprisingly, some of the ready to roll varieties are dairy-free anyway: “There are some good things that you wouldn’t ever think are vegan, that are.”

Don’t worry if you have occasional lapses

“Don’t beat yourself up if you find it too difficult and occasionally fall off the wagon,” says Theasby. “Most people will find the immediate restriction very difficult, because it is new to them. So give yourself the opportunity to have that cheeky bacon sandwich every now and again, or a plate of scrambled eggs. It is about introducing a lot more plant-based food into your diet, which is great for your health and the planet.”

https://www.theguardian.com/food/2026/jan/01/veganuary-can-be-a-piece-of-cake-cooks-and-dieticians-share-12-ways-to-make-delicious-plant-based-food

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Scientists turn carrot waste into protein people prefer

From sciencedaily.com

Scientists have discovered a clever way to turn carrot processing leftovers into a nutritious and surprisingly appealing protein. By growing edible fungi on carrot side streams, researchers produced fungal mycelium that can replace traditional plant-based proteins in foods like vegan patties and sausages. When people sampled the foods, many preferred the versions made entirely with the fungal protein over those made with soy or chickpeas 

As the global population grows, the pressure to produce nutritious food more efficiently continues to increase. At the same time, food manufacturing generates large amounts of leftover material that often goes unused. Scientists reporting in the American Chemical Society's Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry investigated whether waste from carrot processing could serve a new purpose. By feeding carrot side streams to edible fungi, the researchers created a sustainable protein source.

They then used this fungal protein in experimental vegan patties and sausages. When these foods were tested, volunteers rated them as more enjoyable than comparable products made with traditional plant-based proteins.

"This study is a significant step towards a circular economy by transforming valuable food side streams into a high-quality protein source, highlighting the potential of fungal mycelium in addressing global food security and sustainability challenges," says Martin Gand, the corresponding author of the study.


The Global Need for New Food Solutions

The urgency for alternative protein sources is clear. According to the United Nations, about one in 11 people worldwide experienced hunger in 2023, and more than three billion people could not afford a healthy diet. These challenges point to the need for food systems that deliver more nutrition while using fewer resources.

Edible fungi offer one possible solution. Previous research has shown that fungi can grow on food industry leftovers such as apple pomace and whey from apple juice and cheese manufacturing, respectively. Building on this work, Gand and his colleagues set out to recover nutrients from carrot side streams and reuse them as a growing medium for fungi.

Instead of harvesting mushroom caps, the team focused on fungal mycelia. These root-like structures grow faster and take up less space, while still producing nutrients that are beneficial for human diets.

Carrot processing waste can be used to grow edible fungi that produce a high-quality protein. In taste tests, vegan foods made with fungal mycelium were preferred over those made with common plant-based proteins. Credit: Shutterstock


Selecting the Best Fungus for Protein Production

To identify the most promising option, the researchers tested 106 different fungal strains grown on side streams from orange and black carrots used in natural colour production. Each strain was evaluated for growth performance and protein output. One fungus emerged as the top candidate: Pleurotus djamor (pink oyster mushroom).

After selecting this species, the researchers adjusted growth conditions to increase protein yield. The resulting protein showed biological values similar to those of animal and plant proteins, meaning it could be efficiently used by the human body. The P. djamor mycelia were also low in fat and contained fibre levels comparable to other edible fungi.


Taste Tests With Vegan Foods

To see how the fungal protein worked in real foods, the team prepared vegan patties that replaced soy protein with different amounts of mycelia. The patties contained 0%, 25%, 50%, 75% and 100% fungal protein. Volunteers evaluated the patties based on texture, flavour, and aroma. A key finding was that participants preferred the patties made entirely with mycelium over those made entirely with soy.

The researchers also produced vegan sausages using either soaked chickpeas or fresh mycelia. In these tests, volunteers generally favoured both the smell and taste of the sausages that included fungal mycelium.


A Low-Waste Path to Future Protein

Overall, the findings suggest that fungal mycelia could serve as a sustainable and appealing protein source. The process makes use of food production materials that would otherwise be discarded, without requiring additional farmland, and offers nutritional benefits similar to existing plant-based proteins. Gand adds, "utilizing side streams as substrate for mycelium production reduces environmental impact while adding value and supports food security by enabling an efficient and sustainable protein production."

The authors also note that the research was supported by institutional resources and GNT Europa GmbH, a company that produces natural food colours.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251220104557.htm

India: Brands and workplaces gear up for Veganuary

From bignewsnetwork.com

New Delhi [India], December 31: Veganuary, the global campaign that inspires and supports people to try vegan, is just around the corner. It is the season when millions of people around the world try a plant-based diet for better health, to help the environment and animals.

The campaign has been a hit among Indians, with more than 300,000 people taking the pledge since its launch in 2022. It has drawn equal interest from the food service industry, with 174 brands participating in the campaign last year alone. With conscious consumerism on the rise in India, brands are catering to the increasing demand with new vegan products, menus and special offers.

Leading brands supporting the Veganuary 2026 campaign include Nature's Basket, Super You, Yoga Bar, TBH (To Be Honest), Only Earth and Chinita Real Mexican Food. Nature's Basket, India's leading speciality food retailer, will be hosting a vegan cook-along workshop at its flagship store in Bengaluru.

Salloni Ghodawat, CEO, Ghodawat Consumer Ltd., says: "TBH (To Be Honest) has been vegan at its core, reflecting the growing preference for plant-based and conscious eating among Indian consumers. Through our participation in Veganuary, we are encouraging people to explore vegan food that is flavour-led, accessible and easy to integrate into everyday diets - supporting healthier choices and a more sustainable future."


January 2026 is poised to see an influx of vegan products in the market, in India and globally. These include alternatives to meat, dairy and eggs, helping those who are looking to transition to a plant-based diet. Indian brands have focused on millet-based and locally focused products that are culturally relatable.

"Veganuary does a great job of creating awareness around plant-based food. At The Brooklyn Creamery, we are happy to be part of that conversation with a plant-based range that has been widely loved by our vegan and plant-forward consumers - without losing the joy of indulgence," says Shivaan Ghai, CEO, The Brooklyn Creamery.

Workplaces are using the Veganuary season to encourage employee health and well-being. Various initiatives aimed at promoting healthy plant-based eating are planned throughout the month.

Navya Gugnani, President, Rotary Club of EARTH, says: "Veganuary month is a time to reflect on how our everyday choices shape the planet and our health. Through food, we are reminded that compassion, sustainability and well-being can thrive together. One conscious choice at the table can create a lasting impact for our planet and the way we care for it."

Anyone can participate in Veganuary for free. Participants can now choose to receive 31 days of support emails, meal plans, nutrition tips and more in English or in Hindi.

https://www.bignewsnetwork.com/news/278783900/brands-and-workplaces-gear-up-for-veganuary

8 contradictions in vegan culture no one wants to talk about

From vegoutmag.com

By Avery White

Every movement, every lifestyle choice, every community has its contradictions. And vegan culture is no exception 

I've been vegan for nearly a decade now, and I love it. The ethics align with my values, the food makes me feel great, and I genuinely believe it's better for the planet.

But here's what I've learned in those years: we don't talk about these contradictions honestly. We either pretend they don't exist or we get defensive when someone points them out. And that defensiveness doesn't serve anyone, least of all the cause we care about.

I transitioned to veganism at 35 after reading about factory farming. I couldn't unsee what I'd learned. But coming from nearly two decades as a financial analyst, I also couldn't turn off my tendency to notice inconsistencies and gaps in logic.

These contradictions don't make veganism wrong. They make it human. And I think acknowledging them openly makes the movement stronger, not weaker.

1) Preaching accessibility while promoting expensive alternatives

Walk into any vegan gathering or scroll through vegan social media, and you'll hear passionate arguments about how plant-based eating is accessible to everyone. And then in the next breath, someone's recommending a $15 superfood powder or a $40 specialty cheese.

I see this constantly at the farmers' market where I volunteer every Saturday. Someone asks about going vegan, and well-meaning people immediately start listing expensive products. Cashew cheese, nutritional yeast, specialty meat alternatives, organic produce.

The reality? Beans, rice, lentils, and seasonal vegetables are genuinely affordable. But that's not what gets promoted on Instagram. What gets promoted are the beautiful smoothie bowls with imported acai and the elaborate cheese boards with artisanal vegan products.

I'm guilty of this too. I spend probably three times as much on groceries as I did before going vegan, not because plant-based eating is inherently expensive, but because I buy premium products. And there's nothing wrong with that if you can afford it. But let's stop pretending we're all just eating beans and rice when many of us are dropping serious money at Whole Foods.

2) Claiming environmental superiority while ordering cross-continental produce

One of the strongest arguments for veganism is environmental impact. And it's a good argument. Animal agriculture is genuinely devastating for the planet.

But then I watch people order cases of cashews from Vietnam, coconut products from Thailand, and quinoa from South America while criticizing someone for eating local eggs from their neighbour's backyard chickens.

The carbon footprint calculation gets complicated quickly. Is it better to eat imported avocados year-round or locally raised meat once a week? I honestly don't know. But I do know we can't claim environmental superiority while ignoring the impact of our own consumption patterns.

I had to confront this personally when I realized my trail running shoes, which I replace every few months, probably have a worse environmental impact than many people's occasional meat consumption. The cognitive dissonance was uncomfortable.

This video captures exactly what I'm talking about when it comes to the gap between vegan principles and actual environmental impact:

The example about almond milk and bee deaths hit me hard when I first learned about it. Here I was, proudly avoiding honey to protect bees, while the almond milk in my coffee contributed to killing billions of them. That's the kind of contradiction we need to talk about honestly.

3) Emphasising compassion while being cruel to other humans

The foundation of veganism is compassion for animals. It's about reducing suffering.

Yet some of the cruellest interactions I've witnessed have been vegans attacking other vegans for not being vegan enough. Or attacking non-vegans with a level of vitriol that seems wildly disproportionate.

I've seen someone reduced to tears at a potluck because they brought a dish with honey. I've watched online pile-ons of people asking genuine questions about nutrition. I've witnessed the kind of judgment and shame that pushes people away rather than inviting them in.

If the goal is reducing animal suffering, alienating potential allies seems counterproductive. But somehow the pursuit of ethical perfection can override basic human kindness.

I fell into this trap early in my vegan journey. I was so sure I'd found the moral high ground that I looked down on everyone who hadn't. It took my partner Marcus gently pointing out that my self-righteousness was exhausting before I started examining my own behaviour.

4) Focusing on individual choices while ignoring systemic issues

Vegan culture puts enormous emphasis on personal responsibility. What you eat, what you wear, what products you buy.

And individual choices matter. I'm not suggesting they don't.

But the fixation on individual consumption can distract from larger systemic problems. The same corporations destroying the planet for animal agriculture are also destroying it for monoculture crops. The same systems exploiting animals are exploiting human workers.

Yet I rarely hear vegans discussing labour conditions in agricultural industries or the environmental devastation of certain plant crops. The conversation stays focused on individual dietary choices rather than the economic and political systems that make ethical consumption so difficult.

Coming from finance, I learned to look at systems, not just individual actions. A hundred people changing their diet matters far less than one policy change affecting agricultural subsidies. But that's a harder conversation to have than telling someone to stop eating cheese.

5) Celebrating processed foods while criticizing "unnatural" diets

There's a strand of vegan culture that promotes "natural" eating and whole foods. And I appreciate that perspective.

But then turn around and you'll find vegans celebrating ultra-processed meat alternatives, heavily fortified nutritional products, and laboratory-created supplements as innovations.

Which is it? Are we eating naturally or are we embracing food technology?

Both positions are defensible. But they contradict each other. You can't simultaneously argue that eating animal products is unnatural for humans while promoting foods that require advanced chemistry and industrial processing.

I cook elaborate vegan meals most nights, and I use both whole ingredients and processed alternatives depending on what I'm making. I'm not saying one approach is better. I'm saying we need to be honest about the contradiction.

6) Demanding purity while making constant exceptions

Vegan culture has a purity problem. There's intense debate about whether honey is vegan, whether you can call yourself vegan if you own leather purchased before going vegan, whether plant-based diet and vegan are the same thing.

But almost everyone makes exceptions somewhere. The medications we take were tested on animals. The vegetables we eat involve harvesting practices that kill insects and small animals. The cars we drive, the phones we use, the buildings we inhabit all involved animal exploitation at some point in their production.

Perfect veganism is impossible in our current system. But instead of acknowledging that and focusing on harm reduction, there's constant policing of who's vegan enough.

I struggled with this all-or-nothing thinking early on. I'd beat myself up over tiny infractions. Eventually I realized that striving for perfection was making me miserable and wasn't actually helping animals. Progress matters more than perfection.

7) Promoting health while ignoring nutritional nuance

Talk to some vegans and you'll hear that a plant-based diet cures everything. Cancer, diabetes, heart disease, you name it.

The research does show benefits for many people. But it's not magic, and it's not universal.

Some people genuinely struggle to get adequate nutrition on a vegan diet. Some have medical conditions that make it difficult or impossible. Some find their health declines without animal products.

But acknowledging this reality is seen as betrayal. There's intense pressure to present veganism as nutritionally superior in all cases for all people, even when that's not supported by evidence.

I feel great as a vegan. My energy is good, my digestion is good, my health markers are good. But I also take B12 supplements and track my nutrition carefully because I have the knowledge and resources to do so. Not everyone does.

8) Claiming moral clarity while navigating constant ethical trade-offs

This might be the biggest contradiction of all.

Veganism presents itself as a clear ethical choice. Don't exploit animals. Simple.

Except it's not simple. The farm worker conditions for harvesting almonds are horrific. The environmental impact of certain crops is devastating. The accessibility issues mean veganism remains largely a privilege of the wealthy in many parts of the world.

Every choice involves trade-offs. Buying organic means supporting better farming practices but often means less accessibility. Buying local means lower carbon footprint but potentially supporting small-scale animal agriculture. Buying conventional means affordability but supporting industrial farming systems.

There's no purely ethical consumption under capitalism. And veganism, for all its benefits, doesn't exempt us from that reality.

I believe veganism is a meaningful step toward reducing harm. I believe it matters. But I've also learned to hold my choices with more humility. I'm doing my best within a system that makes ethical choices difficult for everyone.

Conclusion

None of these contradictions mean veganism is wrong or hypocritical or not worth pursuing.

They mean it's a human movement, practiced by imperfect people, within imperfect systems.

The question isn't whether these contradictions exist. They do. The question is whether we can acknowledge them honestly and work through them together, or whether we'll keep pretending everything is simple and straightforward.

I've found that talking about these issues openly with other vegans who are willing to engage thoughtfully makes me more committed to the cause, not less. Because it moves beyond dogma into genuine ethical reasoning.

If you're vegan, sit with these contradictions. Notice where they show up in your own life. Be honest about the complexity.

And if you're not vegan but have been put off by the culture, know that not all of us think there's only one right way to do this. Some of us are just trying to reduce harm where we can while acknowledging how messy and complicated that actually is.

https://vegoutmag.com/lifestyle/k-8-contradictions-in-vegan-culture-no-one-wants-to-talk-about/