Thursday, April 23, 2026

This Earth Day Burger Is Completely Vegan

From plantbasednews.org

This easy burger recipe helps reduce emissions by using plant-based meat! 

As BBQ season picks up, Earth Day is a good moment to rethink what goes on the grill. This Earth Day burger keeps the format people already enjoy but swaps in a plant-based option. It shows how small changes can shift everyday meals without losing familiarity. You still get a stacked burger, toasted bun, and classic toppings, just with a different base.

The burger itself is quick to cook and easy to assemble. The patty cooks in minutes and pairs with lettuce, pickles, and a slice of vegan cheese. Each serving delivers a solid amount of protein and fibre, which helps turn it into a proper meal rather than just a light option. It’s straightforward and fits into a regular dinner routine.

The dill-sriracha relish adds something extra. Blended white beans give it a thicker texture, while pickles, dill, and chili bring sharpness and heat. Add some homemade sweet potato fries to round everything out with a crisp side that works well with the softer burger and sauce.

This Earth Day burger works for spring meals, casual BBQs, or quick dinners at home. It’s easy to repeat and simple to scale up for more people.

This recipe was republished with permission from Redefine Meat.


Prep your Earth Day burger

An Earth Day burger offers a plant-based take on a BBQ classic, paired with a dill-sriracha relish and sweet potato fries for a complete meal.
Cut down on carbon emissions with easy swaps like meat alternatives and plant-based ingredients - Media Credit: Redefine Meat

Ingredients
Burgers
  • 1 pack Redefine Premium Burgers defrosted
  • 2 burger buns
  • 1 head of gem lettuce
  • 6–8 pickle slices
  • Sliced vegan cheese
High-protein burger relish
  • 30 ml ketchup
  • 15 ml vegan mayo
  • 5 ml sriracha or to taste
  • 10 g chopped dill
  • 1 pickle finely chopped
  • Chopped shallot
  • 50 g cooked white beans
Sweet potato fries
  • frozen sweet potato fries
  • 15 ml oil
  • Pinch smoked paprika & dried mixed herbs
  • Salt & pepper

Instructions

Make the sweet potato fries:

  • Heat oven to 200°C. Toss sweet potato fries with oil, salt, pepper, smoked paprika and dried mixed herbs. Roast for 20–25 minutes, turning once.

Make the dill–sriracha burger relish:

  • Blend white beans until completely smooth. Mix with ketchup, mayo, sriracha, dill, chopped pickles and diced shallot. Season lightly with salt and pepper.

Cook the burgers:

  • Heat a pan on medium-high heat. Toast the buns and set aside. Cook patties for 3–4 minutes per side until browned. Add the sliced cheese and cover with a lid or place into the oven to melt.

Build the burgers:

  • Spread relish on both sides of the toasted bun. Add lettuce, burger patty and pickles. Add more relish on top if you like. Serve with a generous portion of sweet potato fries.
Tips:
  • Always toast the buns: it improves flavour and protects against sogginess.
  • Let the patties rest 1 minute: they stay juicier and hold together better.
  • Spread relish on both sides of the bun: for that proper burger-shop feel.

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Venus Williams: Vegan Diet Changed Her Life

From wildbeimwild.com

Tennis star Venus Williams says the vegan diet has changed her life. For a decade, she has benefited from better skin and improved health 

Venus Williams has followed a plant-based diet for a decade, and she says it has improved her tennis performance, her skin, and her overall health.

After being diagnosed with the autoimmune disease Sjögren's syndrome in 2011 — which causes joint pain and fatigue — Williams' future in tennis looked uncertain. Switching to a vegan diet, however, proved to be a decisive turning point.

The plant-based lifestyle not only allows Williams to manage her illness without medication, but it has also improved her complexion, something backed up by research.

«The plant-based lifestyle has definitely changed my life — my skin has become fantastic«, Williams told insider.com. And she is not the only one who has found that cutting out dairy products and eating more fruit and vegetables improves one's complexion.

The diet was so effective that Williams threw herself into this lifestyle, founding her own vegan business and investing in others. Now, Williams says, other athletes ask her for advice on how to give up meat without compromising their athletic performance.


Serena Williams suggested Venus try a «raw vegan» lifestyle

Williams' diagnosis was the initial motivation to change her diet, and it was her sister Serena who suggested she eat raw vegan — meaning only raw, plant-based foods — which she did before transitioning to a more relaxed plant-based approach.

«Living with an autoimmune disease can be a little challenging, and you can end up taking a lot of medication, and that's not something I want», she said. «So it is a godsend that through my diet I can control as much as possible — what happens in my body, my inflammation levels.

Today she is a passionate advocate of a plant-based diet that can support the active lifestyle of a professional athlete, and in 2020 she founded her own vegan protein brand, Happy Viking.

«I need to quickly supply my muscles with protein after training in order to recover and maintain muscle mass«, she said. «Happy Viking was therefore created to fuel the inner fighter, the inner Viking, while feeling happy and content with what you put into your body.«

Williams is taking her commitment to veganism even further by investing in PlantX, a plant-based food store vying to become the go-to destination for all vegan needs in the US — or, as Williams puts it: «the vegan Amazon«.

Being a plant-based athlete can be challenging when travelling the world for competitions, Williams said, so much so that other athletes ask her for tips.

Her advice? It’s all about balance.

While a vegan diet can largely consist of whole foods, fruits, and vegetables, there is also plenty of vegan “junk food”, from Oreos to Doritos.

Consuming large amounts of heavily processed vegan foods is unlikely to produce the positive effects on the skin that Williams has experienced.

«If you eat vegan and mainly consume simple carbohydrates, I think the benefits of a vegan diet become fewer. Eating pasta with sweetened tomato sauce all day, without other beneficial vegan ingredients, won’t help much«, said dermatologist Papri Sarkar.

However, most health and fitness experts advocate a balanced diet with everything in moderation, as cutting out all your favorite foods is not sustainable for most people.

The «80/20 rule«, advocated by Denise Austin among others, states that you eat nutrient-dense foods 80% of the time and enjoy less nutritious things like junk food the remaining 20% of the time.

«I’ve never seen a french fry that wasn’t vegan«, said Williams. «I am definitely not a robot. You can reward yourself and also have fun with food. There are so many athletes who do that, and sometimes they ask me how to do it. Then I tell them: Hey, sometimes you just have to eat a piece of cake«.

Williams describes herself as »Junk-Food Junkie». In the past she loved donuts, today she is obsessed with cake, especially apple pie. However, she does not bake her own, because she would eat it constantly, she says.

https://wildbeimwild.com/en/venus-williams-says-switching-to-a-vegan-diet-changed-her-skin-and-health/

The Best Bacon, Egg And Cheese Is In Brooklyn. It’s Vegan.

From forbes.com

Eggs. Bacon. American cheese. Two pieces of soft, toasted, buttery bread. Maybe a dash of hot sauce, not too much, just enough to give it a little zip while still tasting that wonderfully melted cheese.

​There is no better way to start the day than with the perfect bacon, egg and cheese (BEC), and no breakfast more synonymous with life in New York City. It’s the reliable grab-and-go sunrise feast found at every corner bodega, the routine morning repast of the 9-5 subway straphanger and a key ingredient of any tried and true hangover cure.

​The sandwich’s history is ambiguous. Its ties to Industrial Revolution London street vendors, 19th-century Chinese rail workers and Basque immigrants who worked as miners and shepherds in the Nevada Territory make its heritage as diverse as the country that birthed it and as cosmopolitan as the city that made it an iconic, daily ritual.

Every person has their favourite spot to order one, and many restaurants, delis, bakeries and coffee shops throughout Manhattan have been touted as making some of the best.

So, when Romeo Regalli, chef and co-owner of RAS Plant Based, a popular Ethiopian-inspired restaurant in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, decided to add his own plant-based interpretation to the table, he did so with that heritage firmly in mind.

“When you’re working with such a classic dish, that people know so well, you have to be very careful,” Regalli says in a phone interview.

​“My goal was to make something that wasn’t gimmicky, that respected the classic aspects of a bacon, egg and cheese.”

And the work behind any good sandwich starts with bread.

                                                   The best bacon, egg and cheese in NYC.    Photo Courtesy of RAS Plant Based

Bread and Butter

The bread used for a BEC can be anything from the standard sandwich roll found at most bodegas to the browned pretzel roll or fluffy brioche bun often preferred by restaurants and coffee shops.

​Picking bread is a seemingly simple decision that shapes the entire first-bite experience of any sandwich. If it’s too dry, too flimsy, too soft or too crisp, bread can ruin texture, scrape the inside of someone’s mouth or just turn into a soggy mess on the plate or in someone’s lap. If it’s too dense, it will affect the important bread-to-filling ratio, and if it has too much flavour on its own, it will overpower the other ingredients entirely.

At RAS, Regalli keeps things simple, choosing a traditional whole-wheat bread that is then brushed with a house-made vegan take on Niter Kibbeh, a traditional Ethiopian clarified butter mixed with cardamom and an herb called koseret. Lightly toasted, the bread is perfectly crunchy and warm, with a rich, buttery aroma and flavour reminiscent of a favourite neighbourhood diner.

​The koseret, with its minty, herbal taste and hints of sweet basil and oregano, adds a layer of savoury sweetness to every bite. Regalli then adds a spread of rich, creamy plant-based aioli, mixed with berebere, a fiery, Ethiopian spice blend featuring chili peppers, garlic, ginger, basil, and a myriad of other spices, for a subtle yet delightful pop of relishing heat.

​It is an exceptional and delectable union, then scaffolded by the crisp, chewy, and wholly comforting texture and flavour of bacon.

Bacon Me Crazy

Good plant-based bacon has long been considered an oxymoron within the diet. Too often, when chefs and restaurants attempt to replicate the pork protein, they fail to capture that specific, complex, and crispy texture of rendered animal fat, resulting in replicas that are either soggy, rubbery or overly dry, and also taste inauthentic or even chemical. Thus, most plant-based bacon alternatives fail to meet the standards that bacon lovers, i.e., most people, have come to expect.

​Regalli’s bacon exceeds those expectations. Built on a plant-based protein prepared and seasoned in-house, he uses a measured ratio of liquid smoke, berbere for warmth and depth and korerima (Ethiopian cardamom) for a more aromatic, slightly floral note. The plant-based bacon excellently balances smokiness with savouriness, while delivering a texture that is a perfectly rendered crispy-chewy combo.

​“We spent a lot of time refining how the bacon cooks, so that it has that balance people expect: a bit of crisp on the edges, some chew in the centre, and enough richness to carry through the whole sandwich,” says Regalli.

​The end product is nearly indistinguishable from the real thing. Ordering an additional side is almost mandatory. Meanwhile, Regalli’s pursuit of near-perfect mimicry through painstaking manipulation of flavour is further expressed in the eggs.

As Sure As Eggs Is Eggs

​Made from pureed and seasoned mung beans, a protein-rich legume that condenses and stiffens when cooked, these plant-based eggs look strikingly similar to their real counterparts thanks to the generous use of turmeric, which gives them a natural and pleasantly golden colour. And although many BECs often come with their eggs scrambled, Regalli wanted to provide his guests with a tidy, less messy dining experience and instead chose a delicately folded omelette for his sandwich.

​The plant-based omelette is firm and fluffy, providing a pillow for the delicious, crispy bacon, which is blanketed with a silky, rich, melted plant-based American-style cheese, made from potato protein, and finally topped with thin wedges of tender avocado and bright, fresh arugula and served with a side of house-spiced fries.

The flavours are vibrant, complex, bright, subtly sweet, gently smoky and warm, and they all work together. Regalli has created not only a uniquely delicious breakfast sandwich but also one of the city’s best, and captured the familiar, craveable experience of a New York staple—without meat, eggs, or dairy.

​“New York runs on bacon, egg and cheese,” Regalli says.

​“I wanted to deliver the same simple satisfaction and nostalgia of that sandwich, while using plant-based ingredients and Ethiopian flavours to make it RAS.”

https://www.forbes.com/sites/isidororodriguez/2026/04/21/the-best-bacon-egg-and-cheese-is-in-brooklyn-and-its-vegan/