Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Practice Not Perfection: Being Imperfect is Better Than Abandoning Morals Altogether.

From conversationalist.org

By Marianne Eloise

With my veganism and other important belief systems in my life, I’ve decided that being imperfect is better than abandoning my morals altogether

Three months ago, I ate a cheese pizza. This isn’t exactly headline news, but it mattered to me, because it broke a streak of many months, maybe years, since I’d last eaten dairy. I had been traveling and felt exhausted and defeated, and for whatever reason, the only thing that would soothe me in that moment was a real cheese pizza. I ate it, my tummy hurt, I felt bad. Then, I woke up in the morning and went on calling myself a vegan. 

It wasn’t the first time I’d faltered. Although I don’t make a habit of it, since going vegan seven years ago, I’ve eaten dairy a few times, including once, when a Shinto priest offered my husband and I two small cakes during a trip to Japan. (Vegan or not, it felt both rude and disrespectful to refuse.) 

These minor incidents could have been opportunities for me to give up my veganism entirely; proof that I’d “failed” or that my efforts were meaningless. But surprisingly, they’ve instead shifted my perspective: While I’ll never formally reintroduce dairy back into my diet, I’ve decided that being imperfect is better than abandoning my morals altogether.

Recently, I’ve begun trying to apply this grace to other guiding principles and belief systems in my life. There are so many things I care about that it can be difficult to do everything justice: the environment, disability, animal rights, poverty. Because of this, sometimes, it can feel as if living by any kind of set belief system is pointless, that our individual choices make no difference in the much larger fight. We are up against capitalism, war, the meat industry, violence, and some of the most anti-planet government policies we have ever seen. When you feel as if the world is crumbling around you, how much damage is an errant cheese pizza or Starbucks drink or Shein skirt really going to cause? But I believe this absolutism completely dismisses the power of our collective efforts to enact meaningful change, and how much we lose when we abandon our principles altogether. 

For me, my mistakes have become a re-centering reminder of why I became a vegan in the first place: as a commitment to limiting any damage to the earth and its living things, beginning with what I eat. While I ate fish until I was 10, I have never eaten meat, something that used to shock people more than it does now. My mother was a vegetarian, and when I was four or five years old, I was given the choice to add meat to my diet, but I said no. By then, I understood that it came from the same animals I liked so much, making a stance of ethical vegetarianism feel easy: I loved pigs, refused to watch Bambi, and had never even killed a bug

Throughout my teens and twenties, as I gained new knowledge and autonomy, my beliefs continued to evolve. I donated to animal charities regularly and started to learn more about the environmental issues we are collectively facing, including how the meat and dairy industries are accelerating climate change. I gave up eggs at 13 and dairy at 19. After seeing a plaice at an aquarium, I vowed to never eat seafood again. This was in the ‘90s and ‘00s, when being a vegetarian (let alone a vegan) was far more limiting than it is today, and not exactly a popular stance. Even within my family, my mother’s choice to raise me as a vegetarian was controversial. During these years, I was ostensibly quiet about my vegetarianism, and took a similar approach when I became a vegan in my twenties. Luckily, Leicester, my hometown in the UK, has a large Hindu and Sikh population, so there were many vegetarian restaurants and supermarkets where I could eat and shop. But elsewhere, I often found myself defending my dietary choices, even when I tried my best not to bring them up.

Over the years, when asked why I ate the way I did, I’d simply say that I did not want to eat animals. But inevitably, people would push back, probing, for example, whether I would eat grass-fed beef or free-range chicken, assuming that if animals had better living conditions for their short lives, I’d agree their consumption was more “acceptable.” But their logic always posited the rights of nonhuman animals in opposition to the rights of human animals, and to me, they’re inextricable: To reject violence and exploitation means to reject it against all living creatures.

My vegan philosophy is continuously changing, but this core belief has not, even as its parameters progress. Lately, for example, I’ve been worried that eating mushrooms might be cruel because of the growing evidence of their intelligence. I’ve also become increasingly aware that other animals such as insects die as a consequence of crop agriculture. It’s difficult to know where my boundaries are, because my veganism is about minimizing harm, which means as I garner information, I reassess my choices. Still, I’m not perfect, because nobody is—especially when our food and agricultural systems make it near impossible to make faultless ethical choices. But my imperfection is also what allows my beliefs to evolve and adapt: Without room to falter, we can’t have space to grow.

Of course, I didn’t always see it this way. In fact, knowing just how difficult and conflicting our moral offerings can be, for a long time, despite mostly living as a vegan, I shied away from the label. I didn’t think I could live up to its standards and I didn’t want to feel any more cast out than I already had as a vegetarian. I couldn’t imagine giving up certain foods like cheese and chocolate for the rest of my life, and I felt embarrassed at the idea of falling short. But as my vegan philosophy evolved to leave room for faltering, I realized that my veganism could be an ideal to aim for, rather than a set state that binds me to guilt when I fail to meet it. Soon after, I encountered a Vox article titled “Vegans Are Radical. That’s Why We Need Them,” that both illustrated and illuminated this very point. 

                                                                                                       María Medem

The piece touched on something I have known my whole life: Vegans are unpopular. Part of the reason is because we shine a light on much of the general population’s cognitive dissonance when it comes to animals and food, which can be a slippery slope to exposing an individual’s broader moral hypocrisy. It also explains why, growing up, I pretended to be cool and apolitical about my vegetarianism, and later my veganism—despite both being inherently political. On the outside, I acted as if I didn’t care what anyone else ate or did, but I was lying. On the inside, I cared very much, and still do. 

The Vox piece also refers to veganism as an act of solidarity, which it is. By taking the stance that “animals are sentient beings with lives of their own” and imbuing “it into one’s body and everyday practice,” veganism relies on one of the most universal activities we all participate in to enact its politics: eating. But this stance of solidarity can put you at odds with those who ultimately don’t want to feel bad about what they do or eat—especially if you forgo quiet veganism, as I now have. The louder you are about your beliefs, the more you identify yourself with them, and the more shameful it is when you misstep. When I was quietly vegan, I had no one to answer to if I ate a chocolate bar in a moment of weakness. 

There is an assumption that, because I am loud about my ethical beliefs, I think that I am perfect and that everyone else should be, too. But this isn’t the case. Furthermore, this aspiration to an ideal while accepting your own shortcomings applies to other values or choices people may aim for, like eschewing fast fashion or boycotting particular brands or corporations. It’s also why our mistakes can so often inspire nihilism: If we can’t change the word on an individual level, why aspire to ethical principles at all? In the end, maybe it’s because our morals are personal, and when we stray from them, we have ourselves to answer to. 

When you care deeply about something, as I do, you want to solve the problem completely. And while I do not expect everyone to be vegan, I do want everyone to do what they can to reduce our collective suffering, whatever form it may take. This can feel insurmountable against the tidal wave of people, corporations, and governments that not only do not care, but seem to be actively campaigning to make the world worse than it is. But the good news is that even when you feel defeated or nihilistic, holding steadfast to radical beliefs is how we can push back. Because for every corporation lobbying against our collective well being, there is an organization or movement gaining ground or a small group of people somewhere fighting to make it better. Consider the huge wins achieved by activists against odds that once seemed impossible: improving factory workers’ conditions, regulating Big Tobacco, banning CFCs, and so many more. Small actions build into bigger and bigger wins.

Within my movement, I am inspired by those running small animal rescues and large organizations alike, from World Animal Protection and WWF to Sea Shepherd and the Animal Justice Project. Following and supporting the everyday work of farm rescues like Edgar’s Mission in Australia and Coppershell closer to home always fills me with pride. The work is often thankless, even when these movements achieve big wins, like banning animal testing in certain countriesrecognizing animal sentience in the UK or ending whaling for profit. But the love that humans can have for a single lamb rescued from a slaughter auction, despite knowing they cannot save them all, always stops me from giving up. 

Reflecting on my own activism over the last 32 years, while I’ve never had the stomach to hold vigil at a slaughterhouse or put my body on the line in a protest, I have stood with people who do. Veganism is, at its simplest, an act of political boycott. I put my money where my mouth is, donating regularly to vegan charities and organizations and frequenting vegan restaurants, supermarkets, and brands. I’ve also co-founded an agency that supports vegan brands and non-profits with branding and copywriting. While it never feels like enough, it’s the only way I know to live my life. 

These acts of resistance against the system may be small, but they’re also part of a larger global movement to enact change. The meat and dairy industries have needed to reimagine their advertising to reflect customers’ consciousness, sometimes even tapping celebrity sponsors to polish their image. Some companies have also released plant-based alternatives and reduced their meat offerings. Many others offer buzzwords like “grass-fed” or “regenerative” beef, attempting to tap into diligent meat consumers, despite evidence that it isn’t any better for the cow or the planet. Still, these changes reveal a transformation in societal thinking, and hopefully, there will be more to come. 

When I take the long view, even of my own life, there are many more vegetarians and vegans today than there were when I was a child. What’s more, there are more vegan friendly options at restaurants and bars, and fewer eyerolls when you request something plant-based, because even non-vegans might enjoy their morning coffee with oat or soy milk more than they ever did with a cow’s. It isn’t only the availability of options, but shifting attitudes. It has been years since I have sat with a group of people in a restaurant and endured a probing about why exactly I’m ordering a plant-based burger. My choices just aren’t weird or interesting anymore, and that’s a wonderful thing.

When the world isn’t changing as fast as you’d like it to, and when you know the powers that be are against you and your politics, it can be so hard to try, and to keep trying. But the combination of relinquishing perfection, alongside pursuing community and solidarity with like-minded individuals, is how we fight on, slowly and clumsily, knowing there will be missteps. Staying on a path of reducing harm and aspiring to live by our ideals does far more for our individual and collective well-being than giving up after we’ve faltered. This is how we refuse to give into nihilism. This is how we refuse to let the corporations and militaries and lobbyists win. They want, or rather, need you to believe you can’t make a difference, and so you shouldn’t even try. But before we can begin or continue persevering in any radical change in earnest, we must first reject this lie, and continue to aspire to our ethics, each and every day.

https://conversationalist.org/2026/01/13/morality-imperfection-practice-veganism-vegan-diet-lifestyle-belief-systems-guiding-principles-individual-collective-choice-food/

8 things people who've been vegan for 5+ years do differently in the kitchen that beginners never think of

From vegoutmag.com

By Avery White

The habits that transform vegan cooking from a daily challenge into second nature have little to do with fancy recipes and everything to do with quiet, practical wisdom 

When I first went vegan at 35, I approached my kitchen like I approached everything in my finance career: with spreadsheets, meal plans, and an almost aggressive determination to get it right.

I measured every ingredient, followed recipes to the letter, and felt a small wave of panic whenever I opened the fridge to find we were out of something crucial.

Now, eight years later, my kitchen runs on intuition more than instruction. The shift happened gradually, through countless meals and quiet experiments. And when I talk to other long-term vegans, I notice we've all developed similar habits, ones that seem obvious in hindsight but took years to discover.

These aren't glamorous tips. They're the unglamorous truths that actually make plant-based cooking sustainable for life.

1. They build meals around what needs to be used, not what sounds exciting

Beginners often start with a recipe and then shop for ingredients. Long-term vegans flip this entirely. We open the fridge, assess what's about to turn, and build from there.

That half bunch of cilantro becomes the base for a quick green sauce. The slightly soft carrots get roasted with whatever grains are in the pantry. This shift from recipe-first to ingredient-first thinking dramatically reduces food waste and grocery bills.

It also builds genuine cooking confidence because you learn to trust yourself rather than relying on someone else's instructions.

What would change if you let your vegetables guide your meals instead of the other way around?

2. They keep a running "flavour bomb" station

Every experienced vegan kitchen has some version of this: a designated spot for the ingredients that transform bland into brilliant. Mine includes white miso paste, nutritional yeast, sambal oelek, tahini, and a jar of caramelized onions I make in big batches.

These aren't specialty items you use once and forget. They're workhorses. A spoonful of miso in soup, a drizzle of tahini on roasted vegetables, a sprinkle of nutritional yeast on literally anything.

Beginners often wonder why their food tastes flat compared to restaurant vegan dishes. The answer is usually umami, and these flavour bombs deliver it consistently.

3. They batch-cook grains and legumes without a specific plan

I spent my first year as a vegan cooking exactly what I needed for each meal. It was exhausting. Now, every Sunday, I cook a big pot of whatever grain sounds good and a pot of beans or lentils. No recipe in mind. Just cooked, cooled, and stored.

This simple habit means dinner is always 15 minutes away. Those lentils become soup on Monday, salad on Wednesday, and taco filling on Friday. The grains show up in breakfast bowls, stuffed peppers, and quick stir-fries. Having these building blocks ready removes the mental load that makes people give up on cooking altogether.

4. They've stopped trying to perfectly replicate meat dishes

There's a phase most vegans go through where we desperately try to recreate the exact taste and texture of animal products. I made some truly terrible "cheese" in 2016. We don't talk about it.

Long-term vegans eventually realize that plant-based cooking shines brightest when it's not pretending to be something else. Instead of a sad imitation burger, we make a black bean patty that celebrates what black beans do well. Instead of fake chicken nuggets, we make crispy baked tofu that's genuinely delicious on its own terms.

This mental shift is liberating. You stop chasing an impossible standard and start appreciating what plants actually offer.

5. They understand protein combining happens naturally

New vegans often stress about getting "complete proteins" at every meal, carefully pairing rice with beans or bread with nut butter. Research has shown that as long as you're eating a varied diet throughout the day, your body handles the combining on its own.

Experienced vegans know this intuitively. We don't obsess over amino acid profiles at dinner. We eat a variety of whole foods, we feel good, and we've stopped treating every meal like a chemistry equation. This relaxed approach makes the lifestyle sustainable rather than stressful.

6. They treat the freezer as a strategic tool, not a graveyard

My freezer used to be where good intentions went to die. Now it's organized, labelled, and genuinely useful. I freeze ripe bananas for smoothies, vegetable scraps for broth, leftover soup in single portions, and homemade veggie burgers for busy nights.

The key shift is freezing with intention. Those bananas aren't forgotten; they're waiting for Saturday morning. That container of dal isn't buried; it's Tuesday's lunch. Long-term vegans learn to see the freezer as an extension of meal prep, not a place to hide our failures.

7. They've memorized a few "back pocket" meals

Every experienced vegan has three to five meals they can make with their eyes closed, using ingredients they always have on hand. Mine include coconut curry with whatever vegetables exist, pasta with garlic and white beans, and a grain bowl with tahini dressing.

These aren't impressive dinner party dishes. They're Tuesday night survival meals. Having these memorized means you never stand in front of the fridge wondering what to eat. You just start cooking.

Beginners often think they need to master dozens of recipes. In reality, you need a handful of reliable ones that you can make without thinking.

8. They've made peace with imperfection

Perhaps the biggest difference I've noticed between new vegans and those of us who've been at it for years is our relationship with "good enough." Early on, I wanted every meal to be Instagram-worthy, every ingredient to be organic, every choice to be optimal.

Now? Sometimes dinner is rice and beans with hot sauce. Sometimes I eat cereal for dinner because I'm tired. Sometimes I buy the conventional produce because that's what fits the budget. Long-term vegans understand that sustainability comes from flexibility, not perfection. We've stopped letting perfect be the enemy of good.

Final thoughts

The kitchen wisdom that develops over years of vegan cooking isn't about becoming a better chef. It's about becoming more relaxed, more intuitive, and more forgiving of yourself. The habits I've described aren't revolutionary.

They're practical adaptations that emerge when you stop treating veganism as a test to pass and start treating it as a life to live.

If you're newer to this journey, give yourself permission to develop these habits slowly. They can't be rushed or forced. They come from showing up in your kitchen, day after day, and paying attention to what actually works.

What's one small shift you could make this week to bring a little more ease into your cooking?

https://vegoutmag.com/lifestyle/s-bt-8-things-long-term-vegans-do-differently-in-kitchen/

UK: 7 vegan-friendly places in Exeter you need to try this Veganuary

From torbayweekly.co.uk

Looking for the best vegan food in Exeter this Veganuary 2026? From plant-based cafés and restaurants to vegan takeaways, discover the top spots for brunch, lunch, and dinner in the city, including healthy, palm-oil-free, and eco-friendly options


Exeter is embracing Veganuary this year, and whether you’re fully plant-based or just looking to try something new, the city has plenty of options to explore.

From cosy cafés to long-standing vegetarian restaurants, these are some of the best vegan and vegan-friendly spots in the heart of the city.

                                      61% of people considering veganism after Veganuary, says survey by top food app

1. Sacred Grounds – McCoys Arcade, Fore St, EX4 3AN
Sacred Grounds is a fully vegan café serving waffles, toasts, sandwiches, wraps, smoothies, salads, and more. All meals are palm-oil free, and the café runs on green energy. Table service is available, walk-ins are welcome, and bookings are taken for parties of six or more. Open Tuesday to Sunday, 10am–3pm. See their website for the current menu.

2. Sprout – 1 Cathedral Yard, EX1 1HJ
Located opposite Exeter Cathedral, Sprout is a cosy plant-based café offering seasonal salads, warm sourdough dishes, savoury pastries, and homemade treats like cookies and Portuguese custard tarts. Perfect for a wholesome lunch or brunch during Veganuary.

3. Veg Box – Piazza Terracina, The Quay, EX2 8GT
Situated on Exeter Quay, Veg Box serves vibrant wraps, salads, smoothies, and specialty roast coffee. Its relaxed waterfront atmosphere makes it an ideal spot for a casual plant-based meal while exploring the Quay.

4. Herbies – 15 North St, EX4 3QS
A staple of Exeter’s plant-based dining scene since the early 1990s, Herbies continues to offer creative vegan and vegetarian dishes. While not exclusively vegan, it provides a wide range of plant-based options for lunch or dinner in the city centre.

5. The Flat – 142 Fore St, EX4 3AN
Known for its excellent vegan pizza options, The Flat is a casual spot perfect for sharing with friends or family during Veganuary. Its plant-based pizzas are a favourite among locals.

Other vegan-friendly options:

  • Pho Exeter – Vietnamese restaurant with a variety of dishes that are naturally vegan or easily adaptable.

  • On the Waterfront – Quayside eatery offering vegan pizza, veggie burgers, and plant-rich options.

  • Crave – Scenic restaurant on the Quay serving vegan-friendly mains alongside its regular menu.

Veganuary is the perfect opportunity to explore Exeter’s plant-based scene, whether you’re a full-time vegan or just trying a few meals without animal products. Many of these cafés and restaurants offer creative dishes that are sustainable, healthy, and full of flavour.

Tips for visiting:

  • Check opening hours before visiting, as some spots have limited hours or take bookings for larger groups.

  • Many places are walk-in friendly, but larger parties should reserve ahead.

  • Share your experiences on social media and tag local spots, many cafés are featuring Veganuary specials.

With so many vegan options across the city, Veganuary 2026 is shaping up to be a delicious month for Exeter residents and visitors alike.

https://www.torbayweekly.co.uk/news/around-devon/1988160/7-vegan-friendly-places-in-exeter-you-need-to-try-this-veganuary.html 

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

This Chinese-Vietnamese plant-based influencer makes even haters love tofu

From scmp.com 

Wendy the Food Scientist is on a mission to make plant-based eating simple, healthy and satisfying – no ultra-processed ‘fake meat’ required

January used to be about detoxes and gym sign-ups. Now, for millions, it is about giving up meat, eggs and dairy – at least for a while, as more people taste-test the vegan lifestyle.

A study last year by YouGov and non-profit organisation Veganuary – both based in the United Kingdom – found that 25.8 million people worldwide took part in the month-long challenge to avoid animal products in January 2025, even if they did not hold out for the whole month.

Since its launch in the UK in 2014, the Veganuary movement has spread globally, with official campaigns in 20 countries, including Australia, Brazil, Canada, Germany, India, Malaysia, Peru, Singapore and the United States.

Last year saw the first Chinese equivalent of Veganuary, albeit held in March, following Lunar New Year. According to the World Population Review, an independent platform focused on demographics, mainland China is the world’s largest meat consumer, with consumption reaching 102.9 million tonnes in 2022, nearly five times the 21.3 million tonnes eaten in second-place Brazil.

Hong Kong is also a meat-lovers’ Mecca, with the average Hongkonger consuming 123kg (271lbs) of meat in 2022, the fourth-highest per capita intake globally.

According to a survey by Veganuary, in 2025 nearly half of the participants cited animal welfare as their main motivation, followed by health and the environment.

Luong holds a pan of crispy lentil crackers that are simple to make. Photo: Instagram/wendythefoodscientist
Luong holds a pan of crispy lentil crackers that are simple to make. Photo: Instagram/wendythefoodscientist

If they knew how to cook delicious plant-based food, even more people might be inclined to adopt a vegan lifestyle, food scientist and author Wendy Luong believes.

This belief prompted the Netherlands-based long-time vegan, known as Wendy the Food Scientist, to share her tips and tricks on social media. She has since attracted a huge audience, with more than 400,000 followers on Instagram alone.

“The messages I get from people make me so happy: ‘I finally love tofu!’ they say,” says the 27-year-old, referring to her viral video showing her boiling tofu in salted water. “People who thought tofu was bland finally understand how to cook it deliciously.”

In August 2024, she began posting videos of her cooking techniques on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube and TikTok. Last November, she published her nearly 300-page cookbook, Tofu Mastery.

Her mission is to teach people the technical side of cooking vegan dishes from scratch, especially plant-based staples such as tofu (made from soy milk, coagulated with lemon juice, then pressed), seitan (made from vital wheat gluten, considered a “vegan chicken” substitute) and fermented foods.

“Once someone understands that making a healthy meal can take less than 30 minutes, it becomes easier to choose that,” she says.

                                                                                                  Photo: Wendy Luong

With growing awareness of ultra-processed foods and the harm they can cause, people are increasingly open to cooking from scratch.

Many vegan convenience options, however, come in the form of ultra-processed nuggets and packaged meat alternatives, which are also unhealthy.

“We live in a time where convenience is sought,” Luong says. “Not everyone has time to cook from scratch, but I’m seeing a shift. As people learn more about home cooking, they understand how simple it can be.

“The key is that the shift comes through understanding, not through guilt or preaching. I never tell people what to eat. I show them what I eat and how I make it.”

Luong became a vegetarian in college; she attended Wageningen University & Research in the Netherlands, where she earned a master’s degree in food technology.

As she learned the science behind food, which she infused with the roots from her Asian upbringing, she would experiment with tofu and seitan in various ways.

“At some point I ate so much plant-based [food] that I decided to go all in” and become vegan, she says.

Her friends were her guinea pigs. Many had never tried vegan food and gave rave reviews of her cooking, encouraging her to share her recipes on social media, which is how Wendy the Food Scientist was born.

Growing up in the Netherlands with Chinese-Vietnamese parents, Luong developed a fascination with food almost as soon as she could walk. Like most immigrants, her parents worked tirelessly; her father was a chef in a local Chinese restaurant, and the only evening they could have dinner together as a family was on Monday, his day off.

“On Mondays, my parents would cook something more elaborate and special,” she says. “I’d come home from school and help them in the kitchen. Even as a toddler, I was there watching, learning, absorbing how food was made with intention and care.

“Those Monday kitchen moments are where my love for cooking was born. It wasn’t just about making food. It was about time together, about recreating home, about showing love through cooking.”

They bought staple ingredients at the Chinese toko, a speciality shop, but when something was unavailable, her parents adapted.

“That taught me something crucial: cooking isn’t about having perfect ingredients. It’s about understanding principles and being resourceful,” she says. “That resourcefulness is actually what I try to pass on now. It’s not ‘follow this recipe blindly’. It’s ‘understand this technique, and you can adapt it to what you have.’”

How to get enough protein as a vegan is a common question.

Luong points to her home-made firm tofu and seitan, which offer about 17 grams and 30 grams of protein per 100 grams, respectively, making them an effective way to reach typical daily protein goals of 0.8 grams per kilogram of body weight.

“I grew up with tofu because it’s part of my culture, but what fascinated me is that once you understand the technique, the possibilities are endless,” she says. “You can make hundreds of different tofu dishes just by varying the technique, seasoning and preparation, using food science to transform tofu into doughs, meat-like textures and elegant desserts.”

Her most compelling advice? Take “small steps, learn the basics and cook one dish at a time”.

“The biggest fear I hear is: ‘I will not be able to sustain this diet,’” she says.

People are afraid of failing and worry too much before committing to a diet or lifestyle change, but it is not about perfection.

“If you try, and you eat plant-based 80 per cent of the time, we’re all better off,” she says.

Luong insists she is not reinventing the wheel, but opening people’s eyes to 2,000 years of healthy food production.

“This knowledge has been forgotten in the West,” she says. “When people make these, they understand this isn’t a new trend. It has been around and it works!”

Vegan chocolate mousse recipe

Those who think vegan is “difficult” may want to try this two-ingredient recipe from Luong’s cookbook, Tofu Mastery.

2 parts silken tofu (400g/14oz)

1 part (200g/7oz) melted chocolate*

Blend together until smooth and slightly airy.

Refrigerate until set, and enjoy.

*For a vegan dessert, use chocolate that does not contain milk products. Most high-cocoa dark chocolate, rated 50 per cent or higher, does not. Check the label.

https://www.scmp.com/lifestyle/health-wellness/article/3339367/chinese-vietnamese-plant-based-influencer-makes-even-haters-love-tofu?module=perpetual_scroll_0&pgtype=article