Monday, May 18, 2026

These Vegan Cold Noodle Bowls Offer A 4-Day Meal Prep Fix

From plantbasednews.org

Just shake, eat, and act like you spent hours in the kitchen 

When the weather warms up, and the thought of switching on the oven feels like a stretch, cold noodle bowls quickly become the only sensible option. They’re vegan, healthy, refreshing, and ideal for prepping in advance, exactly the kind of approach Mark Thompson highlights in a recent video.

Thompson, known for his YouTube channel Sauce Stache, shares what he calls “the easiest, healthy plant-based meal prep I’ve ever made.” The concept is simple: cook one ingredient, prep everything else raw, and build a high-protein meal you can grab straight from the fridge for up to four days.

A one-ingredient base with flexible options

These cold noodle bowls are made with high-protein pasta, crispy vegetables like cucumber, carrot, and cabbage, and chickpeas and tofu for a balanced meal prep - Media Credit: YouTube / Sauce Stache

At the centre of these vegan cold noodle bowls is pasta, but not just any pasta. Thompson uses a high-protein version and explains why it works so well for meal prep. “I just like this particular pasta because after it cooks, it stays al dente,” he says.

That texture matters, especially when the noodles sit in the fridge for several days. A firmer pasta holds up better and keeps the dish from going soft.

He also offers an alternative: konjac noodles. These are dramatically lower in calories and carbs, with “5 calories per serving … zero fat, zero cholesterol.” But they serve a different purpose.

“These work really good if you’re making this recipe like on the spot,” he says. In contrast, if you want something that lasts, “use regular spaghetti or the high-protein spaghetti.”

The choice comes down to your goal: immediate, ultra-light eating, or a more filling, protein-focused meal prep.

A lighter peanut sauce

Thompson notes that konjac noodles work best for immediate meals, and traditional pasta is his choice for multi-day prep        YouTube / Sauce Stache

The sauce is where Thompson keeps things both simple and strategic. Instead of traditional peanut butter, he uses powdered peanut butter, explaining, “Peanut butter powder is 60 calories, two grams of fat, so it’s literally half the calories and … a fifth of the fat that’s in regular peanut butter.”

The powder is essentially defatted peanuts that rehydrate into a familiar flavour. “Once you hydrate it up, it tastes like peanut butter,” he says.

He builds the sauce with soy sauce, rice vinegar, a small amount of sesame oil, maple syrup, ginger, and garlic. The result is a balanced, slightly sweet and savoury dressing that coats the noodles without feeling heavy.

He even notes, “honestly, even if you’re not making this cool noodle salad, this sauce is incredible.”

Crisp vegetables and simple protein add texture

Once the noodles are cooked and cooled, Thompson places them in ice water to stop the cooking and improve texture. Everything else is about fresh prep.

He slices carrots into matchsticks, turns a cucumber into thin noodle-like strips, and shreds cabbage finely for crunch. Green onion adds sharpness, while chickpeas and tofu boost the protein content.

The tofu is handled simply. “We could just crumble this up … I just liked it to be kind of like almost like a feta,” he says, showing how texture can shift the feel of the dish without extra effort.

The combination creates contrast: soft noodles, creamy sauce, and crisp vegetables that “have a nice like crunch and pop to it.”

Made for convenience and consistency

These vegan cold noodle bowls are designed for real-life use. Thompson portions everything into containers by weight to track macros, but the broader idea is accessibility.

Each container gets noodles, vegetables, chickpeas, tofu, and sauce layered on top. Once sealed and chilled, the bowls are ready to go.

When it’s time to eat, there’s no reheating required. “You literally just pull it out of the fridge, shake it, and you have a meal,” he says.

The shaking step is key. “The sauce is going to get across everything … you really want to shake it up,” he adds.

High protein, make-ahead, and adaptable

Each bowl comes in at around 468 calories with 31 grams of protein and 13 grams of fibre, making it a filling option for lunch or dinner.

Thompson notes the bowls last “about four days in the fridge,” though the sauce may absorb over time. “After four days, you might want to add a little bit more sauce,” he says.

One of the strengths of this approach is how easy it is to switch things up. “You could put in other things like … shredded Brussels sprouts … zucchini,” he suggests, encouraging variation to keep meals interesting.

The result is a flexible system rather than a fixed recipe, one that fits neatly into warmer days, busy schedules, and the need for something quick, balanced, and ready when you are.

https://plantbasednews.org/lifestyle/food/vegan-cold-noodle-bowls/

People Are More Likely To Say They’re Vegan Than Be Vegan, Finds Study

From plantbasednews.org

The study found an "identity-behaviour gap" between how people self-identified and how they actually lived 

A new study has found that people are more likely to say that they’re vegan than to actually follow a vegan diet.

The study also found that most nationally representative data on vegan diets comes from Europe and North America, despite those regions representing just a fraction of the global human population, while other regions are significantly underrepresented.

“The Aspirational Plate: Mapping The Gap Between Vegan & Vegetarian Identity And Global Behaviour,” is the new study from Faunalytics, a non-profit research and analysis organization that uses its data and insights to support animal advocacy.

Researchers investigated dietary rates across 58 countries over 10 years by conducting a systematic review of 837 nationally representative sources. The data they gathered indicates a “gap between vegan identity and global behaviour.”

While veganism rates have “risen significantly” over the last decade, the researchers described it as more of “a crawl than a sprint.” Europe appeared to be driving global growth, while uptake in other regions either plateaued or could not be estimated.

The ‘identity-behaviour gap’ and meat-free diets

                   The study also found that veganism rates have “risen significantly” over the last decade - Media Credit: Adobe Stock

The study also found that people are “significantly more likely” to self-identify as vegan or vegetarian than they are to follow an animal-free diet. Faunalytics said that in practice, this means that while an average of 1.65 percent of Europeans claim to be vegan, only 1.01 percent actually follow a vegan diet. In North America, while 3.24 percent of people claim to follow a vegetarian diet, just 0.75 percent follow one.

Furthermore, the study found that the “vast majority” of the nationally representative data on veganism came from Europe (69 percent) and North America (18 percent), even though those regions only make up roughly 16 percent of the global population. 

While 87 percent of the data came from Europe and North America, there was no data for Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, two regions that represent nearly 40 percent of the global population. The researchers found only “extremely limited” data on vegan diets in Latin America, the Caribbean, the Middle East, and North Africa.

‘Veganism is something worth aspiring to’

In The Aspirational Plate, Faunalytics made several recommendations to close the gap between vegan and vegetarian identity and behaviour.

The non-profit encouraged researchers to “fill the Global South data gap” by prioritizing funding and local collaboration in underrepresented regions; to pair self-ID with intake measures to get a better picture of people’s actual lifestyles; and to clearly define terms like vegan, vegetarian, and flexitarian, which can be misinterpreted.

Faunalytics also recommended treating self-reporting “with caution,” not assuming Europe’s plant-based growth is universal, and seeing the identity-behaviour gap as “an opportunity,” as it implies that “veganism is something worth aspiring to.”

https://plantbasednews.org/news/people-more-likely-say-vegan-study/

Eat Your Greens: 5 Types of Broccoli and the Best Ways to Cook Them

From vegnews.com

From broccolini to purple sprouting, broccoli has several relations and subtypes. Here are some of our favourites and the best ways to cook them

The Etruscans brought many things to the world. Without this long-buried ancient civilization of Tuscany, the Romans likely wouldn’t have worn togas, learned the alphabet, or gained the important engineering and building skills they needed to run their sprawling empire. And they probably wouldn’t have eaten broccoli either, and neither would any of us.

The Etruscans, who were also horticulture and agriculture experts, were big fans of wild cabbage, and it was likely their widespread cultivation of the crop that led to the existence of broccoli, as well as other cruciferous vegetables like cauliflower and kale. 

According to the Royal Horticulture Society, the Romans held broccoli in high regard. In fact, the heir to the Roman emperor Tiberius loved broccoli so much he ate nothing but the vegetable for an entire month.

broccoli in waterPexels

Today, broccoli is still loved all over the world. In fact, it is regularly crowned one of America’s favourite vegetables by an annual survey conducted by Green Giant. “Broccoli is the favourite vegetable in 29 states,” the company says. And from broccolini to purple sprouting, its many subtypes are loved, too. 

5 types of broccoli, and how to cook with them

Each variety of broccoli has its own unique benefits and flavours, but they’re all just as versatile and easy to cook with as the original broccoli. Find out more below—plus we’ve got five delicious vegan recipes, too.

VegNews.BeefyTempehIsa Chandra Moskowitz

1Calabrese broccoli

This is the type of vegetable you think of when someone mentions broccoli. It has that signature bright green head, which is made up of small densely packed florets (technically, this is the flower of the plant). Calabrese broccoli is easy to come across in stores, and it’s incredibly versatile—you can steam it, fry it, bake it, or roast it, depending on your preference. Plus it’s nutritious, too. One cup of raw broccoli contains just over two grams of fibre, as well as vitamins and minerals like vitamin C, vitamin K, and vitamin A.
Try it in a recipe: Beefy Vegan Tempeh and Broccoli

VegNews.FirecrackerTofuBroccoliniBri Beaudoin

2Broccolini

Broccolini has become increasingly popular in recent years, largely for its slightly sweet taste and slimmer, tender stem. This vegetable is actually a hybrid—it was created in the 1990s in Japan when two plants (broccoli and Chinese broccoli) were bred together. Broccolini can be cooked in many different ways, but one of the most popular is to bake it or fry it in a stir fry. One hundred grams of broccolini contains around five grams of fibre, as well as iron, calcium, and potassium.
Try it in a recipe: Vegan Firecracker Tofu With Broccolini and Chili Garlic Oil

Quick Veggie Ramen With Purple Sprouting BroccoliLowly Food

3Purple sprouting broccoli

BBC Good Food once described purple sprouting broccoli, which, you guessed it, has purple florets, as the “untidy-looking, colourful cousin of broccoli.” But the differences don’t stop at its appearance. This variety of broccoli also has a slightly more intense, nuttier flavour than regular broccoli, plus, due to its purple colour, it contains a potent antioxidant called anthocyanins. Purple sprouting broccoli is a little more tender than regular broccoli, so it’s usually eaten raw, steamed, or quickly sautĂ©ed.
Try it in a recipe: Quick Veggie Ramen With Purple Sprouting Broccoli

Chinese broccoli with Tofu Stir-fryWoon Heng

4Chinese broccoli

Chinese broccoli technically isn’t broccoli, but it is closely related to the vegetable, which is why it has made its way on to this list. Like the original, it is green in colour and has thick stems, although its florets are smaller than the Calabrese variety. It’s also incredibly versatile, and is often used in traditional Chinese stir-fries and noodle dishes. Chinese broccoli also contains many beneficial nutrients, including vitamin C, vitamin A, and folate.
Try it in a recipe: Easy Gai Lan (Chinese broccoli) With Tofu Stir-fry

Vegan Roasted Romanesco PastaVeggies Save the Day

5Romanesco

Romanesco is another engineered Italian vegetable, which was likely first bred selectively in Lazio back in the 15th century. It’s closely related to broccoli and has a similar growth pattern, but it’s a little different in taste and texture. Romanesco is mild and nutty, with a firmer, crunchier texture than the original broccoli. It can be steamed or roasted, and it’s a good source of fibre, vitamin C, vitamin K, iron, and folate.
Try it in a recipe: Vegan Roasted Romanesco Pasta


https://vegnews.com/types-of-broccoli-recipes

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Why Isa Chandra Moskowitz Is Done With Restaurants—and Turning Focus to Sandwiches and Tim Robinson

From vegnews.com

By Charlotte Pointing

Isa Chandra Moskowitz is back with The 29-Minute Vegan. The cookbook icon opens up about quick recipes, fresh starts, and life after restaurants

For Isa Chandra Moskowitz, there’s nothing quite like cooking. “As a kid, flipping through a box of recipe cards was just as fun as rollerskating,” she writes on her vegan recipe blog, Post Punk Kitchen.

Cooking has long been Moskowitz’s love language, and her passion for veganism and food has taken her in many directions. She hosted her own cooking show in the early 2000s and opened two vegan restaurants under the Modern Love banner—one in her native Brooklyn and another in Nebraska—but sharing food through the written word may be her truest calling. Alongside her blog, Moskowitz has authored multiple cookbooks. In fact, the vegan chef is now on her 12th title: The 29-Minute Vegan: Real Food, Real Vibes, Anytime.

For Moskowitz, the new cookbook is about more than quick, easy, and delicious plant-based recipes (though it certainly delivers plenty of those). It also reflects a new chapter in her life. Like many restaurant owners, the vegan chef has faced challenges in recent years. Modern Love’s Nebraska location closed in 2024, followed by the Brooklyn restaurant in 2025.

                                     The 29-Minute Vegan: Real Food, Real Vibes, Anytime is out and available to purchase now

Moskowitz had seen the signs for some time. Before the closures, she joined other vegan business owners in speaking with VegNews about the difficulties of keeping a vegan restaurant afloat in the current economic climate. “I don’t think the storm is over,” she said at the time. “What are these tariffs going to do to us? Where does the avocado come from? Where does the tofu come from? Will we have to raise prices?”

Modern Love isn’t alone. Oakland’s Millennium recently announced its closure after more than three decades in business, while Brooklyn favourite Toad Style shuttered suddenly in May.

But Moskowitz isn’t dwelling on the past. Quite the opposite, in fact. She’s embracing a newfound freedom away from restaurant ownership and focusing on The 29-Minute Vegan. Below, she shares more about the new book, including the recipes she makes on repeat, why she wants to cook for Tim Robinson, and why she’s feeling content in this latest chapter of her life.

                                                                 Moskowitz’s new cookbook is full of easy, quick recipes

VegNews: What inspired you to focus on quick, under-30-minute meals for this book?

Isa Chandra Moskowitz: It was basically life deciding for me. I had a very busy and stressful few years (was I the only one?), and I still wanted really delicious food, so it was this natural process of figuring out how to get there. It happened very naturally, and I hope that it’s what makes the book really work, because it worked for me. 

VegNews: Do you have a personal favourite recipe from the book right now? 

Moskowitz: I am loving the sandwich section, maybe it’s this transitional spring weather, but a sandwich manages to be both warm-weather and cold-weather food. So I love the first recipe in the book, the Stacked Tofu Deli Sammy, with all the thinly sliced tofu slices and balsamic mayo and the usual sandwich suspects. I also make the Chickpea Salad BLT a lot because it has tons of protein and my favourite flavours: dilly chickpea salad and smoky tempeh bacon. 

Okay, and just one last thing, the Pad Thai from the Pasta & Noodles chapter. I know I have Pad Thai in every book, but somehow this is my favourite yet. I have been on a yuba kick.

VegNews: Many people associate vegan cooking with time or complexity. How does this book challenge that perception?

Moskowitz: As Yoda said, there is no try, there is only do. Once you make the recipes, you will understand that it’s not that deep. Vegan cooking can be as easy as you let it be. I think vegans like to have fun and make seitan roasts and cashew cheese sometimes, but these are not for those times. Even though there are a few quick cashew cheeses in the book. 

VegNews: If you could cook a 29-minute meal for anyone (past or present), who would it be and what would you make?

Moskowitz: Well, off the top of my head, and if I am being totally honest, it would be Tim Robinson (I Think You Should Leave). First of all, it seems like he has been leaning vegan lately, and maybe that will be the final straw. He will say, “It’s simply TOO GOOD.” But also, I just need to laugh. And if I were able to make him laugh without making it look fake, that would just carry me through the rest of my life.

VegNews: Since the closure of Modern Love, how has your day-to-day life and creative focus shifted?

Moskowitz: Well, I mean, how hasn’t it?

It’s night and day. It’s kind of impossible to explain, but I am able to be a person again. 

VegNews: What have you learned from stepping away from the restaurant world?

Moskowitz: That there are sunsets, and I can call my mother and spend time with my cats, and go to the movies, and that it’s okay to just breathe and exist. 

                                                                               Moskowitz’s go-to? The sandwich section


VegNews: Do you see yourself returning to restaurants in the future, or are you excited to focus on other avenues?

Moskowitz: I don’t see myself returning to restaurants in the future. It would have to be the exact right situation, and I don’t see that happening in our current climate. I’m excited to focus on other things. I am still healing from the psychological trauma of the whole situation. 

VegNews: How does this new cookbook reflect where you are in your life right now?

Moskowitz: I think it’s bright and happy, and I hope that my future is that way, too. I am in my fifties now and starting everything over, so that is a pretty wild place to be. I think a lot of women are in that same position. I hope that these quick, yummy meals help everyone get a little more time back in their day to do what they want with the time we have. And have fun doing it.

Want more of Moskowitz’s recipes? Find some of our favourites below:


Jamie Oliver is right – this is how much fruit and veg we really should be eating every day

From The Conversation UK

By Catherine Norton

Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver has stirred debate by calling the familiar five-a-day message “a lie”. Speaking to the Times, he argued that the real health benefits of fruit and vegetables only start to add up at seven, eight or even 11 portions a day.

He’s not wrong that more is better. Research shows us that the more servings of fruit and veg we eat per day, the more benefits we see to our health. But the story of how five servings became the standard recommendation is one of science meeting pragmatism.

When the five-a-day campaign was launched in the UK and Ireland more than 20 years ago, it was never meant to be the “perfect” target. Instead, it was a compromise – a number that struck a balance between the nutritional evidence and what public health experts thought people might realistically manage. Five portions was judged by researchers and marketeers to be a simple, memorable and achievable slogan – one that wouldn’t scare people off.

Today, five-a-day is one of the most recognisable public health messages – even if most UK adults still fall short of it.

But it may be time for this messaging to change, as a growing body of research shows that higher fruit and vegetable intakes are associated with lower risk of chronic diseases.

A meta-analysis of over 2 million people found that while five portions lowered risk of chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease and cancer, the greatest benefits were seen at around ten portions of fruit and veg daily. Another UK study found that people eating seven or more portions of fruit and veg each day had a 42% lower risk of death compared to those eating less than one portion.

Excellence rarely comes from doing the bare minimum – and the evidence suggests we should be aiming higher.

                        It’s clear that eating more fruit and veg daily has health benefits.leonori/ Shutterstock© The Conversation UK

Japan has long recommended ten (and more) portions of fruit and vegetables a day. Mediterranean countries, too, traditionally eat diets rich in fresh produce, beans, and legumes. Research suggests that populations that follow these dietary patterns tend to have lower rates of heart disease and longer life expectancy. Similar associations between higher intakes of fruit and vegetables and lower risk of death from any cause are reported in Japan, too.

The research is clear: higher intake of fruits and vegetables everyday brings tangible health benefits. So while five portions is a good starting point, aiming to include more fruits and vegetables into your daily diet will bring even greater health benefits.

What counts as a portion?

But some confusion lies in what a “portion” really means. The World Health Organization defines one portion as about 80g – roughly a handful. That could be an apple, two broccoli spears, three heaped tablespoons of peas or half a tin of beans. When you break it down like this, eight to 11 portions across three meals and snacks becomes less intimidating.

There are also many easy ways to add more fruit and veg every day. For breakfast, try adding berries to your cereal, a banana to your porridge or spinach in your omelette. For lunch, add salad to sandwiches, beans to your soup or extra veg into wraps.

Double up portions at dinner by eating two or three sides of veg, or bulk up sauces and curries with lentils, peppers or mushrooms. Snack smart by reaching for fruit, veggie sticks with hummus or roasted chickpeas instead of crisps.

You should also aim to eat a rainbow of different fruits and vegetables across the week, as variety is associated with even greater health benefits.

There’s a common myth that only fresh fruit and vegetables count. In reality, frozen, tinned (in water or natural juice) and dried all have a place. They can be cheaper, last longer and often retain just as many nutrients as fresh produce.

Juices and smoothies count too – but only as one portion a day because of their sugar content.

The five-a-day message is a starting point, but not the finish line. Anything is better than nothing – and if you’re eating just one or two portions now, getting to three or four is progress.

But the science is clear: more really is better. Jamie Oliver may be ambitious in suggesting 11 portions, but he’s right that aiming higher could bring big health gains.

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/health/other/jamie-oliver-is-right-this-is-how-much-fruit-and-veg-we-really-should-be-eating-every-day/ar-AA1LTqH0?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=HCTS&cvid=6a0563fd008a49309ea15af40df924b8&ei=11