Wednesday, February 4, 2026

6 vegan versions of winter classics that taste like the originals remembered wrong

From vegoutmag.com

By Jordan Cooper

These plant-based takes on comfort food favourites hit different, and honestly, that's the whole point 

Here's the thing about food memories: they're unreliable narrators. That beef stew your grandmother made? Your brain has been editing that footage for decades. The mac and cheese from childhood? Nostalgia added a filter.

When we veganize winter classics, we're not trying to create perfect replicas. We're making something that scratches the same itch while being its own delicious thing.

The best vegan comfort food doesn't pretend to be something it's not. It leans into what makes plant-based cooking interesting. Different textures, unexpected depth, flavours that make you pause and think "wait, what is that?" These six dishes capture the spirit of winter classics while doing their own thing.

They taste like the originals remembered wrong, which is to say, they taste like something worth remembering on their own terms.


1) Mushroom bourguignon that's earthier than you expected

Traditional beef bourguignon relies on hours of braising to break down tough meat fibres. Mushrooms don't need that kind of convincing. A mix of cremini, shiitake, and oyster mushrooms gives you layers of texture that beef never could. Some meaty, some silky, all soaking up that wine-rich sauce like little flavour sponges.

The secret is treating your mushrooms with respect. Sear them hard in batches so they get golden and caramelized, not sad and steamed. Build your fond, deglaze with a decent burgundy, and let everything simmer until the sauce coats a spoon.

Add pearl onions and carrots because tradition matters. The result is deeper and more complex than the beef version you're half-remembering. It's what your brain thought bourguignon tasted like, even if it never quite did.

2) Pot pie with a flaky top and creamy filling that defies logic

Pot pie is essentially a vehicle for creamy sauce under pastry.

Good news: both of those things veganize beautifully. A roux made with vegan butter and flour, thinned with vegetable stock and oat milk, creates that thick, spoonable filling you're chasing. Load it with chunks of potato, carrot, peas, and whatever protein you like. Chickpeas work. So does shredded jackfruit or cubed extra-firm tofu.

The crust situation is easier than you think. Most puff pastry is accidentally vegan anyway. Check your labels, but Pepperidge Farm and many store brands skip the butter. Drape it over your ramekins, brush with oat milk, and bake until golden and dramatic.

When you crack through that flaky top into the creamy filling below, your brain won't register any difference. It'll just register comfort.

3) Shepherd's pie where the lentils actually make sense

Lentils in shepherd's pie aren't a compromise. They're an upgrade. French green lentils hold their shape while still getting tender, and they absorb the tomato paste, worcestershire (the vegan kind), and herbs in a way that ground meat never quite manages.

The filling becomes this savoury, almost meaty situation that sits perfectly under a blanket of mashed potatoes.

Speaking of those potatoes: don't be shy with the vegan butter and a splash of oat cream. Whip them until they're cloud-like, then pile them on thick. A fork dragged across the top creates peaks that turn golden and slightly crispy in the oven.

The contrast between that crispy top and the saucy lentils below is what makes this dish work. It's hearty in a way that feels earned, not heavy.

4) Creamy tomato soup that's richer than the canned stuff ever was

Canned tomato soup was a childhood staple for a lot of us. That slightly sweet, vaguely creamy, bright orange situation paired with grilled cheese. The vegan version can be so much better while still hitting those same nostalgic notes. Roasted tomatoes give you depth that canned never could. A can of full-fat coconut milk adds richness without any dairy weirdness.

Roast your tomatoes with garlic and a little olive oil until they're blistered and jammy. Blend everything with vegetable stock, a touch of maple syrup to balance the acid, and that coconut milk. The result is silky, warming, and tastes like what you thought Campbell's tasted like when you were eight.

Pair it with a proper vegan grilled cheese and suddenly it's a snow day and nothing bad has ever happened.

5) Chili that converts the sceptics

Chili might be the easiest winter classic to veganize because beans were always the star anyway.

A three-bean situation with kidney, black, and pinto gives you texture variety. Walnuts pulsed in a food processor until they're crumbly add that ground-meat mouthfeel without any weird processed ingredients. They brown up beautifully and soak up all that chili flavour.

The key is building layers. Toast your spices in oil until fragrant. Add onions, peppers, and garlic. Let the tomatoes break down slowly. A splash of coffee or dark beer adds complexity that makes people ask what your secret is.

Top with cashew sour cream, green onions, and whatever else makes you happy. This is the kind of chili that wins cookoffs and starts arguments about whether it counts. It counts.

6) Hot chocolate that's somehow more chocolatey

Dairy milk actually mutes chocolate flavour. It's a coating thing, where the milk fat covers your taste buds and dulls the cocoa. Research on taste perception suggests that what we drink with chocolate affects how we experience it.

Oat milk lets the chocolate shine through in a way that feels almost too intense at first, then completely right.

Use good cocoa powder and real dark chocolate, melted together with your oat milk of choice. A pinch of salt, a tiny bit of vanilla, maybe a whisper of cinnamon if you're feeling fancy.

The result is hot chocolate that tastes more like chocolate than the dairy version ever did. It's what your brain thought hot chocolate tasted like during the best snow day of your childhood. Except this time, the memory is accurate.

Final thoughts

These dishes aren't trying to fool anyone. They're not pretending to be something they're not. What they are is delicious, warming, and satisfying in exactly the ways winter food should be. The fact that they're plant-based is almost beside the point once you're actually eating them.

Food memories are weird. They're shaped by emotion, context, and years of mental editing. When we make vegan versions of classics, we're not competing with reality. We're competing with nostalgia, which is a much easier opponent.

These dishes taste like the originals remembered wrong because the originals were never as good as we thought they were. These might actually be better. Or at least, they're good enough to become their own memories worth keeping.

https://vegoutmag.com/food-and-drink/s-st-6-vegan-versions-of-winter-classics-that-taste-like-the-originals-remembered-wrong/

Vegan Beauty's Next Claim: How Beauty Outgrew the Label

From beautymatter.com

Key Takeaways:

"Vegan" was once a differentiating ethical claim. Now, it has become a baseline expectation within clean and premium beauty.

Search interest in “vegan beauty” is declining, but demand for plant-based and biotech alternatives to animal-derived ingredients is accelerating.

As vegan formulations become standard, brands must compete on efficacy, formulation sophistication, and ingredient transparency.

For much of the past decade, vegan beauty stood as one of the industry’s most visible ethical markers, and an emblem of conscious consumption that aligned with animal welfare, sustainability, and personal values. Today, however, the category has recalibrated. While vegan formulations remain widespread and commercially relevant to the point of successful investments, the "vegan" label itself is losing some of its power as a primary consumer hook. Instead, it is increasingly viewed as a baseline expectation within clean and premium beauty rather than a differentiating claim.

The rise of veganism over the past decade, catalyzed by movements like Veganuary, mainstream celebrity endorsement, and a surge in plant-based product innovation, laid the foundation for vegan beauty’s growth. Data from analysts at Spate, Credo Beauty, and Pattern suggest that vegan beauty has not disappeared, although its role within the broader beauty ecosystem has fundamentally shifted.

Has Vegan Beauty Lost Momentum or Simply Evolved?

The wider cultural conversation around veganism appears to be influencing how people engage with vegan products, both in food and beauty. According to new data from Spate’s Popularity Index (US, ending October 2025), interest in “vegan beauty” as an explicit trend is declining. “Interest in ‘vegan beauty’ continues to cool,” said Mathilde Riba, Beauty Insights Analyst at Spate, to BeautyMatter. She noted that the trend is down 32.4% year over year (YoY), driven largely by declining engagement on social platforms.

In the food world, this has also translated into measurable declines. For example, sales of meat alternatives in the UK dropped by around 21% in the year to June 2024, interest in search terms like “vegan diet” has tapered off since its late-2019 peak, and the share of people identifying as vegan has reportedly fallen significantly in markets including Europe and the US as consumers revert to more omnivorous diets. In beauty, adjacent values-led categories are experiencing similar pullbacks, with cruelty-free down 60.8% YoY, organic down 33.0% YoY, and sustainable beauty down 47.6% YoY according to data retrieved from Spate.

At first glance, these figures could suggest waning consumer concern for ethical beauty, but Riba cautioned against that interpretation. “While ‘vegan beauty’ as a labeled trend is losing momentum, the appetite for alternatives to animal-based ingredients is rising quickly,” she explained. In other words, consumers may be moving away from the banner but not from the values embedded within it.

This reframing is echoed at Credo Beauty, where vegan has increasingly been absorbed into the broader definition of clean. “We’re seeing fewer searches overall for vegan and adjacent claims on our digital site, which to me demonstrates that consumers are looking for more specific claims and that these broader claims are the baseline of what they’re prioritizing.” Vivi Posschelle, Associate Scientist at Credo Beauty, explained to BeautyMatter. In her view, “Vegan beauty, along with the other claims, have started to fall under the ‘clean’ umbrella for the consumer. It’s evolved into an expected attribute.”

This has led to the rise of questions of whether consumers still care. The answer may lie in how consumer behavior has matured. Rather than searching for ideological labels, shoppers are increasingly focused on performance, ingredients, and outcomes, assuming ethical standards are already in place.

Spate’s data illustrated this shift clearly. While animal-derived ingredients like polydeoxyribonucleotide (PDRN) (+763.0% YoY), beef tallow (+377.3% YoY), and collagen (+7.9% YoY) are surging in online conversations, vegan counterparts are also rising rapidly. Vegan PDRN is up 465.3% YoY, and vegan mucin has grown 136.4% YoY, signaling that even as animal-derived actives dominate attention, consumers are actively seeking high-performing alternatives.

“Consumers may not be prioritizing the vegan beauty banner,” Riba said, “but they are increasingly adopting plant-based and vegan-aligned actives as part of their skincare routines.” Ingredients like resveratrol (+367.9% YoY), curcumin (+168.5% YoY), and rice (+128.4% YoY) are further proof of how plant-based actives are reshaping the category without relying on explicit vegan positioning.

The Retail Reality: Vegan as a Given, Not a Differentiator

At Credo Beauty, where clean standards and ingredient transparency are central to the retailer’s identity, vegan formulations are often baked in by default. “The vegan label is secondary to our restricted substances compliance,” Posschelle explained. She highlighted that Credo’s standards include restrictions on animal-derived ingredients and strict transparency requirements, meaning that “many of our brands are inherently vegan, making it quite easy for anyone looking for vegan beauty to find a brand or product that aligns with their beliefs.”

Demographically, she noted that shoppers explicitly seeking vegan beauty often align with veganism as a lifestyle. “Based on my in-store experience, many consumers searching for vegan beauty tend to be those who are also vegan in their diet and lifestyle,” she said. For the broader customer base, however, vegan status is assumed rather than interrogated. This shift places pressure on brands that once relied heavily on vegan claims for differentiation.

This also poses questions on whether or not vegan formulations could compete with performance. From a scientific perspective, the answer is nuanced. While innovation has expanded the possibilities of vegan beauty, certain formulation challenges persist.

There are several [ingredients that are hard to replace], but the first ingredient that comes to mind is carmine,” Posschelle said. The insect-derived pigment is prized in color cosmetics for its vibrancy. “Vegan/synthetic alternatives are functional but don’t always provide the same color payoff and richness that carmine does,” she explained, which can impact the sensory and aesthetic experience.

Similar trade-offs exist with beeswax and other animal-derived functional ingredients. “At times, there are trade-offs to formulate vegan products, such as desired texture, color, and performance,” Posschelle continued. Importantly, she emphasized that safety is not inherently superior in vegan formulations. “It’s important that both synthetic or animal-derived ingredients are assessed for both human health and the environment before being used in a product.”

That said, biotech innovation is rapidly narrowing these gaps. Posschelle pointed to “a shift industry-wide toward biotech ingredients and formulations that prioritize reducing the impact and reliance on agricultural commodities and animal-derived ingredients,” driven by consumer demand for “high performance products that have strong sustainable and ethical supply chains.”

Marketplace Performance Tells a Different Story

While cultural buzz around vegan beauty may be cooling, commercial performance, particularly in e-commerce, remains strong. According to Pattern, a global e-commerce accelerator and marketplace performance company, vegan beauty has generated $668 million in trailing twelve months sales on Amazon, growing 16% YoY, just slightly behind the broader beauty category’s 18% YoY growth. “We are seeing steady growth YoY within vegan beauty and don’t anticipate that to slow down any time soon,” Cali Johnson, Category Lead at Pattern, told BeautyMatter.

Skincare is leading the category, with the fastest-growing vegan subcategories including eye masks, eye treatment balms, facial skincare sets, and body oils. Johnson attributed this momentum to social media-driven discovery and ingredient literacy. “Shoppers are actively seeking familiar, understandable ingredients, especially for sensitive areas like the eyes,” she said, adding that consumers are increasingly aware of, and avoiding, ingredients they perceive as harmful.

Interestingly, pricing has remained stable. Pattern’s analysis showed just a 0.2% pricing increase YoY among the top-selling vegan beauty brands on Amazon, suggesting that vegan positioning no longer commands a meaningful premium on its own.

Data suggests that vegan beauty has not declined so much. It once functioned as a loud, values-driven differentiator but has quietly become part of the industry’s infrastructure, particularly within clean, premium, and prestige beauty. Vegan is no longer a signal of niche ethics, as it is now increasingly assumed, embedded in formulation choices, sourcing strategies, and retailer standards.

Ultimately, vegan beauty’s next chapter is less about visibility and more about integration. The industry is no longer asking whether beauty should be vegan but how vegan formulations can be better, more advanced, and more competitive. In that sense, vegan beauty has not lost cultural relevance; it has only matured. And in a market increasingly defined by sophistication rather than slogans, that may be its most enduring impact.

https://beautymatter.com/articles/vegan-beautys-next-claim-how-beauty-outgrew-the-label 

Berlin: Three Years of HAPPA Days

From the-berliner.com

Sophia Hoffmann on vegan comfort food, zero-waste cooking and celebrating her restaurant’s third birthday 

In Marianne Vlachists’ ‘Schweinehimmel’ painting above HAPPA’s dining tables, pigs happily lounge on a cornucopia of vegetables. It mirrors the gentle warmth that pulls people in through the restaurant door. Warm woods, red and pink upholstery, an open kitchen and books on display: the interior invites you to take a seat and stay for a while. 

Sophia Hoffmann, founder of the all-vegan, zero-waste restaurant,  shares that “‘Happa’  in German is the first word a child uses for eating, similar to a phrase like ‘nom nom’. It works internationally because it’s fun, it has ‘happy’ in it and it’s easy to remember.’’

Hoffmann is a vegan chef and cookbook author with years of experience in zero-waste cuisine. Instead of regarding plant-based eating as a lifestyle, for Hoffmann, it’s knowledge to tap into. “Plant-based eating has been around for ages in food cultures and culinary traditions worldwide. Often, that knowledge is lost. Living in the Global North, considering how much we, with our consumption, exploit certain parts of the world, it’s a conscious decision to cut down on animal products – a choice that is inevitable.’’

                                                                                                      Makar Artemev

Hoffmann and her co-founder, Nina Peterson, have made that inevitable choice and shared it with Berlin in their colourful, seasonal menu. HAPPA’s new starter – their sticky, umami, soy-glazed pumpkin – does an amazing job at showing just how comforting vegan comfort food can be. Served with peanut sauce, spring onions, micro greens and dusted with tomato, the dish makes you forget you ever wanted anything other than plant-based food. It also makes you wonder where tomato dust has been all your life. But that’s just one example of how creative and delicious the menu is at HAPPA. Hoffmann shares how the team comes up with ideas for their dishes: “It’s definitely teamwork. I love bouncing around ideas. We get started by asking, ‘What do we have in our storage? We still have peanuts! Can we do something with peanuts?’ We also have a small kitchen. It has to be easy, effective. We’d have to raise our prices for the menu if it got too complicated, and that would be against our philosophy. A combination of all these factors builds our menu.’’ 

Hoffmann and her team’s dishes are seasonal, warm and creative. The Alpine-Mediterranean cuisine is influenced by her childhood in southern Germany, as well as by her childhood upbringing, where she was taught not to let food go to waste. For Hoffmann, this was when the myriad of ways that you can use a vegetable became apparent. There’s a term for using as much of the vegetable as possible: ‘from leaf to root’. But what does that actually mean? Having worked on the topic of zero waste for years, Hoffmann is the person to ask. “Vegetable leaves – just bite into them. If it’s woody or not tasty, it goes into the compost. Almost every part of a vegetable is edible, with a few exceptions. It starts with knowing the value of food. To nourish that knowledge, you can start in kindergarten, or you can start with people who are 60 years old. As soon as you get that spark into people, the value of food will grow. We all have too much food at home. Have a look at your pantry before you go shopping.’’

The seed of starting a gastronomy business was embedded in Hoffmann when she was young, playing make-believe restaurant as a kid. She started working in hospitality when she was 16, but it took her a while to figure out that this could be a career path. “Looking back now, there was definitely a lack of female role models. Nobody told me in high school that I could be a chef. I only started working in kitchens professionally in my early 30s. Before that, I worked in music as a DJane and as a journalist. After working in nightlife for around 10 years, I needed a change and started doing internships and apprenticeships. I worked as a chef at Isla in Neukölln, a cafĂ© known to have a circular, zero-waste concept. Then, I did a diploma programme in Cologne at a place called Bio-Gourmet Club. The woman who runs it, Mayoori Buchhalter, has definitely been a mentor for me. She had a vegan restaurant in Cologne long before people knew what vegan was.’’

Plant-based eating doesn’t mean limiting yourself. In Hoffmann’s world, the possibilities are so rich that she can’t pick just one favourite ingredient. “My team would probably say I really like tahini. I use it for everything, from sweet to savoury dishes. I also really like potatoes. If I had to choose one vegetable, it would probably be potatoes. And I love bread. One day I want to write another book just about bread! In every culture, there are recipes for what to do with stale bread, and there are a million ways to use it up, from cutting and freezing it so you can just put it in the toaster, to making croutons, bread crumbs or cheesecake crusts.’’

Even if the possibilities are limitless, there was and might always be pushback against vegan eating, but Hoffmann thinks, “It’s ridiculous to say veganism is just a trend. We have very limited resources. During our lifetime, we will probably experience a shortage of water, and animal farming uses a lot of water. Plant-based eating is a necessity.’’

                                                                                                    Makar Artemev

Hoffmann and her team also believe that plant-based eating should be for everyone. They work hard to keep their menu affordable and accessible. HAPPA has kept the price for their seasonal three-course menu at €38, although they will have to raise it to  €40 in 2026. Looking back on the past three years, Hoffmann shares some of the challenges the restaurant has encountered. “It has been quite a journey. We’re in the middle of a recession and hospitality is struggling. But we have amazing customers. We’ve been able to create a community here and we value that a lot. Berlin has always had this image that food has to be super cheap, but I can tell you that if food is super cheap, someone along the line is probably being exploited. It’s important for people to understand the work that goes into making food and running a place like this. We see so many restaurants closing these days. Don’t take it for granted.’’ 

HAPPA is on Schlesische Str. 35A, Kreuzberg. Book via happa-berlin.com and follow on IG @happa_restaurant.

https://www.the-berliner.com/food/three-years-of-happa-days/

America's Best Vegan Wings for Super Bowl LX

From peta.org

Just in time for kick-off at Super Bowl LX, PETA drafted its picks for the game-day hotspots serving up some of the nation’s best vegan wings—and is now sharing all the delicious details about the winners.

Where Football Fans Can Enjoy Bird-Free Wings During Super Bowl LX


No Fowl Plays at Life on Mars in Seahawks Territory

In the heart of Seattle, vegan cocktail bar Life on Mars serves up beer-battered cauliflower wings that score big on flavour without sacking any birds. With multiple sauce options, including buffalo, BBQ, mango habanero, or garlic-butter parmesan, this meal is perfect fuel for fans settling in for kick-off.

Eat No Birds While You Shout ‘Go Birds’ at Triangle Tavern in Philadelphia

Eagles fans can dry their tears from this year’s season while enjoying the savoury seitan wings at Triangle Tavern in Philadelphia, which come smothered with either buffalo or country sweet sauce.

Strong Hearts Delivers Big-League Vegan Wings Upstate

Bills fans can root against the Patriots while they chomp on the perfectly battered, crispy wings at Strong Hearts in Syracuse, New York. Served with celery sticks and a line-up of sauces ranging from buffalo to General Tso’s, these wings will keep you coming back for more.

Fifth House Puts Points on the Board With Sichuan Hot Honee Wings

At Fifth House in Omaha, fans can dig into Sichuan Hot Honee Wings. Balancing sweet and heat, these crispy vegan wings are a standout option for any Super Bowl spread.

Radical Rabbit Is a Go-To Stop for Titans Fans in Nashville

Deep-fried and sauced to perfection, Radical Rabbit’s Carolina Gold Fried Jackfruit delivers Southern flair to every bite with its tangy, mustard-based BBQ flavour.

Detroit Street Filling Station Brings Buffalo Heat to Lions Country

The Buffalo Cauliflower Wings at Detroit Street Filling Station are perfectly crisped, while the bold buffalo sauce and cooling dairy-free ranch work in harmony for a balanced heat and flavour.

Karelyn’s Vegan Serves Wingz That Can Handle Overtime in Orlando

Karelyn’s Vegan in Orlando serves up Florida Wingz, which are made from crispy, southern-fried oyster mushrooms. To prove their MVP status, these vegan wings can also be prepared gluten-free.

Everything’s Bigger in Texas—Including Bird-Free Flavor at Korny Vibes

Houston’s Korny Vibes serves Drumstick Wyngs, made on a sugarcane “bone” and served with vegan ranch. Both the buffalo and BBQ sauces deliver Texas-sized flavour, making this wing spot a touchdown.

Watercourse Foods Scores Big With Bird-Free Wings in Broncos Country

The Seitan Wings at Watercourse Foods in Denver are tossed in a delectable BBQ or perfectly spiced buffalo sauce that will have you cheering after every bite.

Piper Down Pub Scores a Touchdown With Its Bird-Free Wings 

The Spicy Tiger Wings at Piper Down Pub in Salt Lake City are made with seitan and served with carrots, celery, and vegan ranch. You’ll have to draft your top picks from a promising line-up of sauces like spicy buffalo, teriyaki, orange chicken, and agave sriracha.

https://www.peta.org/lifestyle/food/best-vegan-wings-super-bowl-2026/

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Omnia, the vegan restaurant that focuses entirely on taste: the rise of Aggeliki Charami

From reportergourmet.com

In the heart of the Dolomites, the restaurant at the Paradiso Pure.Living Hotel offers an ethical and highly personal take on contemporary vegan cuisine, combining experimentation, tradition, and continuous research

At an altitude of over two thousand meters, on the Alpe di Siusi, in the heart of the Sciliar-Catinaccio Nature Park, the Paradiso Pure.Living Hotel offers a distinctive and consistent vision of hospitality and fine dining. Here, in the Dolomites, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the concept of luxury moves away from ostentation and towards a more conscious idea, where sustainability, well-being, and aesthetics coexist naturally.

The project stems from the vision of brothers Alexander and Maximilian Spögler, who built the hotel's identity around the Pure.Living philosophy, divided into three complementary areas: Pure.Food, where the completely plant-based cuisine focuses strongly on the organic origin of raw ingredients and an ethical approach to catering; Pure.Art, the cultural heart of the hotel, which houses a constantly changing contemporary art gallery and artist residency programs; and finally Pure.Energy, the element dedicated to Alpine-style wellness, which includes indoor and outdoor yoga, regeneration rituals, an indoor pool, saunas, a gym, and an outdoor hot tub overlooking the mountains. 

The hotel, open during the winter season from December to April and during the summer season from June to September, is designed as an immersive destination: direct access to the Dolomiti Superski slopes during the cold months, a dense network of trails during the summer, and a concept of hospitality that aims to be transformative and respectful of the natural environment.

The culinary offerings of chef Aggeliki Charami

Leading the entire gastronomic offering, from breakfast to dinner, is Aggeliki Charami, a Greek chef originally from Sparta, with experience in Greece, Italy, and Dubai. Specializing in plant-based cuisine, Charami is involved in some of the most important projects in the sector, including La Vimea, the first vegan hotel in Italy owned by the Spögler family.

1 Owners Alexander Maximilian Spogler and Chef Aggeliki Charami
 

Charami's style is certainly influenced by her origins, as can be seen in her use of spices and her bold, intense flavours. Perhaps what is most surprising is that the expectations of a delicate, light, and simple plant-based vegan cuisine are completely overturned. The chef aims to experiment with techniques, but it is certainly her personal memories that shape her gastronomic identity. Breakfast boasts a wide range of pastries: cakes, croissants, and bread are all made in-house, as are the jams and spreads that accompany them.

Breakfast 1


Savoury options include scrambled tofu, cooked and raw vegetables, plant-based cheeses, and even smoked seitan, placed on a jamonero, to be sliced on the spot as a plant-based alternative to cold cuts. The hotel's lunch and dinner menu is interesting, offering, among other things, risotto with mushrooms, spätzle with basil pesto, salads, and naturally leavened pizzas that surprise with their light dough and creative toppings.

Breakfast 8
 

OMNIA Plant-Based Restaurant, vegan fine dining by chef Charami

OMNIA has only six tables, set in an elegant winter garden overlooking the spectacular peaks of the Dolomites. The experience is designed as an intimate and immersive journey in which contemporary vegan cuisine, the local area, and ethical principles speak a single common language. Charami works very carefully with fermentation, starting with koji and scoby, which she uses to create plant-based cheeses and many other ingredients that she incorporates into her recipes. Hers is a process that is constantly evolving and always in the experimental phase.

The menu offers a single ten-course tasting menu, entirely plant-based, designed to enhance the raw ingredients and transform them into a very personal gastronomic narrative. The pairing, curated by Anna Giusti, focuses on kombucha, which is prepared here with initial fermentations based on different types of tea and then, in a second fermentation, calibrated with local ingredients and more. Charami's cuisine focuses on depth of flavour and long and meticulous technical research, which is evident in all of his dishes. The tasting menu is always composed of at least two dishes per course and, in many cases, a broth is also served to replace the accompanying kombucha.

17 Chef Aggeliki Charami
 
The tasting begins with From Sea to Soil, a lower shell containing a faux oyster of crème brĂ»lĂ©e with orange and grilled Greek mushrooms. Next to it is a jar of mushrooms with celery foam, hazelnut, truffle, and mushroom demi-glace. The combination of sea and soil reflects the chef's origins and current life. The dish is intense but manages to maintain a good balance and a certain delicacy.
Next comes Deep in the Hay, Egg, another composite dish that looks like an egg yolk surrounded by caviar. It is a fondant of mountain potatoes, truffles, seaweed caviar, fermented pumpkin yolk, and chamomile. It is accompanied by a thick broth of burnt potatoes that opens the palate with a pleasant savoury flavor—an element that often characterizes many of Charami's dishes.

One of the most interesting dishes on the menu is Earthbound Roots, Brioche, a surprisingly soft brioche bread considering that it contains no butter or yeast. The bread, flambĂ©ed at the table, is accompanied by a delicate foam of lemon, oregano, and salt.

Earthbound Roots Brioche 1

What does the cheffe eat when she's at home?” Warm Simplicity Ramen was born from Charami's answer to this question. She honestly admits that she doesn't cook at home and often finds herself eating instant noodles. So, noodles (which look more like tagliolini in shape) arrive at the table with a slow-cooked mushroom broth with an intense umami flavour, into which the diner dissolves two sachets, one with chestnut powder and the other with a mix of 12 herbs.

Echoes of Memory, Squid is one of Charami's signature dishes. Born into a family of humble origins, as a child she would complain to her mother that she always served the same cheap canned fish. Once, to please her, her mother prepared rice with the contents of the can, and today the chef is inspired by that simple yet loving gesture. Inside a replica tin can, there is a fake cuttlefish stuffed with plankton rice and fennel oil, seasoned with seaweed bisque and finished at the table with black sesame ink. The textures in this dish are delightful, interspersed with the crunchiness of the fake fried tentacles. Undoubtedly spectacular to look at.

Echoes of memory Squid 2
 

Another interesting dish is Ode to the Dolomites, Chicken of the Woods, where the mushroom recalls the texture and appearance of chicken fillet and a souvlaki with a truly amazing texture.

Ode to the Dolomites Chicken of the Woods 1
 

The dessert is round, balanced, complex: koji rice pudding with burnt almond milk, miso caramel, porcini powder, cinnamon, and a pine sorbet and musk syrup with mini leaves of very thin bergamot shortcrust pastry. A masterpiece of technique.

Childhood Reverie Rice Pudding 1
 

Charami's cuisine is certainly noble in both concept and technique. It is not a watered-down cuisine; it speaks with a loud voice and explodes with flavour. Meat, fish, eggs, and dairy products will not be lacking on the palate, which will be continually pushed upward without ever turning back. When I asked the chef why a vegan cook would seek out so many elements that are commonly associated with meat and fish, she replied that “cuisine and flavours are memories, and I haven't always been vegan.” TouchĂ©.

Contacts and info

Omnia Plant-Based restaurant

Via Joch, 17 – 39040 Castelrotto (BZ) 

Phone: +39 0471 727 905

Email: info@paradiso-pure.com      Website: https://paradiso-pure.com/it/

https://reportergourmet.com/en/news/9705-omnia-the-vegan-restaurant-that-focuses-entirely-on-taste-the-rise-of-aggeliki-charami

5 Comforting Dhal Recipes

From plantbasednews.org

Spice up your meal prep with these flavoursome dhal recipes 

These five comforting dhal recipes all use a lentil base, but each puts a unique twist on the classic dish.

Dhal (also known as daal, dahl, or dal) is a term used on the Indian subcontinent for dried, split pulses like lentils, peas, and beans. “Dhal” is frequently used as shorthand for any lentil-based curries and soups, incorporating diverse recipes, flavours, and ingredients.

Being lentil-based, many traditional dhal recipes are naturally vegan-friendly, as well as cost-effective, nutritious, and easy to customize to taste or availability.

Lentils have been cultivated by humans for thousands of years. While each classification – the most common being brown, green, red, and yellow, plus specialty varieties like beluga and puy – has its own unique profile, all are high in protein, fibre, and other nutrients.

5 comforting dhal recipes

These five dishes all incorporate lentils and a spiced base, but the different recipe creators each incorporate unique ingredients alongside the basics, including apples, coconut, and squash. Don’t be afraid to experiment, and add or subtract spice to your preferred level.

Apple and coconut dhal

A pot of apple and coconut dahl cooked to a vegan recipe
Adobe StockThis dhal recipe incorporates fresh apples

Cooking the lentils and apple together gives this dhal a slightly sweet, fruity flavour and vibrant colour. JAZZ Apple created the recipe, and its ingredients take just 10 minutes to prepare before cooking. This version serves eight people.

Find the recipe here.

Spicy red lentil dhal

BOSH!Try topping this spicy red lentil dhal with crispy onions

This spicy red lentil-based dhal takes just half an hour to make, and includes a spicy temper containing zesty lemon, fresh coriander, and crispy fried onions. It’s inspired by Sri Lankan flavours, and also comes to us from BOSH!. Pair with flatbread or serve over rice.

Find the recipe here.

Lazy lentil dhal

Photo shows the "lazy lentil dhal" by BOSH!
BOSH!You can prepare this flavourful dhal recipe from BOSH! in a single pan

BOSH! created this super easy dhal recipe. It incorporates the classic South Asian flavours of rich coconut and tomato and requires a single pan to prepare. Depending on how much time you have available, use dried or canned lentils – though each has its own unique texture and nutritional profile – and serve with vegan yogurt and flatbread.

Find the recipe here.

Apple and ginger dhal

An vegan high protein apple and ginger dahl recipe
Happy Skin KitchenThis dahl recipe also includes apple, giving it a vibrant green colour

Happy Skin Kitchen created this dhal, which features a unique combination of lentils, ginger, coconut, and apple, which gives the dish its vibrant colour and mouth-watering flavour. Finish with a squeeze of lime juice, some vegan yogurt, chopped coriander, and chili flakes. 

Find the recipe here.

Butternut squash dhal

Photo shows a white bowl of butternut squash dhal served with quinoa
Rise Shine CookSquash gives this dhal recipe a unique colour, texture, and flavour

Ashley Madden, the chef behind Rise Shine Cook, created this recipe by combining red lentils with a creamy cashew milk, kale, and butternut squash sauce. It’s warming and comforting, and super simple to cook in bulk and freeze for the week ahead.

Swap in your go-to variety of lentils and plant milk, if preferred, though take note of any difference in cooking or soaking times. Serve with pickles, chutney, and yogurt or raita.

Find the recipe here.

https://plantbasednews.org/veganrecipes/dinner/comforting-dhal-recipes/