What are the foods that everyone here eats day to day?

I’m looking for more to add to my arsenal.

In my head there’s a big difference between staple foods and the kind of food that you make when guests come over.

I suppose it’s an increased emphasis on being easy/practical to make, or make in bulk as well as as nutrition. I guess it’s the staples that largely decide how the kitchen is stocked too.

  • ExNihil0x8@lemmings.world
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    1 month ago

    I make batches of seitan to throw into meals, sometimes I’ll make ‘steak style’ that goes with stirfry and noodles, or sausage styles that’s for spaghetti or other red sauce based dishes. It’s easy to make and stores well in the fridge too.

    Also tofu, of course. Easy to make white sauces using the silken kind and can just mix up in a basic blender.

    Variety of rices. I prefer black rice and wild rice. I used to think I didn’t like rice becuz all I was exposed to was basic long grain white, but then I found wild rice and recently black rice, and what a game changer. If I’m making sushi or a ‘red beans & rice’ I’ll use jasmine, which is the only good white rice to me lol

    Beans. Black beans for tacos & bowls, pintos for soups, kidney for chilis and kidney bean salad, and chickpeas for falafel and what-have-you. I don’t like white beans or lima.

    Canned/frozen fruit. Fresh doesn’t last and attracts pests. Can toss frozen into a smoothie, pancakes, oatmeal, or mix some frozen raspberries with plain vegan yogurt for a nice little ‘wet snack’. Canned fruit I buy the most is pineapple and mango. I like tossing some pineapple into certain stirfry or red sauce things like lasagna for a tropical twist. Fresh lemons always tho, I’m obsessed with lemons and use them in my tea and water, grated for certain dishes.

    Lemon juice becuz I love it lol

    Frozen vegetables—spinach chopped & okra, primarily. I don’t really like broccoli but it goes well with some stirfry I make so I’ll use it every now and then. Frozen peas for soups and stews.

    Flours—basic white flour for dumplings, the old style drop dumplings using oat milk, or for making pizza dough, or flouring things like eggplant, and occasionally I’ll have a small bag of specialty flours like tapioca or chickpea. Bob’s Red Mill egg replacer is handy too.

    Cheapass margarine that doesn’t have any animal milk, a big tub of that and if I find it on sale or crave it muchly, then miyokos oat milk butter.

    Oils & vinegars. Olive oils for flavour and sunflower/olive mix in a big jug for frying. Apple cider vinegar with the mother for lots of things like dressings and adding tangy to sauces and things, balsamic for red sauces and dressings, white for multi-purpose uses.

    Lapsang souchong loose leaf tea, becuz smokey is also one of my top flavour profiles that I love.

    Canned tomato sauce, cheaper than using full tomatoes for a sauce base and easily customisable, especially for bbq sauces.

    These are my basic restocks aside from things like tofurkey slices and plant cheese slices, spring mix and romain lettuce, and spices.

  • Bob@feddit.nl
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    1 month ago

    Surprised no one’s saying tempeh. I’ve been eating a laughable amount lately. You can cut it en julienne and poach it in stock with some spices for a protein-rich grain replacement, so I often have that with some rocket in a wrap.

    • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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      1 month ago

      +1 tempeh.

      I didn’t used to like it that much - I find it has this kind of pungent bitter note amongst the nuttiness.

      That is until I started absolutely blasting it (200C) in the toaster oven before any kind of prep. Then I’ll do sesame oil and toss around in some kind of spicy dry rub and cook for real.

      Basically just more oil and seasoning and crisping if it’s for company lol.

      • Bob@feddit.nl
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        1 month ago

        Hm, don’t think it should be bitter at all. Try steaming it first too!

    • meeshen@vegantheoryclub.org
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      24 days ago

      Tempeh is great but kinda expensive where I live so I only buy it occasionally. But I love it otherwise, could eat a whole slab “raw” (as far as a fermented food can be raw)

  • arcane potato (she/they)@vegantheoryclub.org
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    1 month ago

    I have three meals on rotation:

    1. Oatmeal = instant oats, Chia seed, hemp hearts, and either jam, fruit (fresh/frozen/dry) or sugar.
    2. Noodles (rice or vermicelli) + peanut/soy/hot pepper sauce + veg
    3. Rice + bean slop (also includes legumes) + veg
    • Sashin@vegantheoryclub.orgOP
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      1 month ago

      These sound great!!! Our breakfasts are very similiar, I have oats with chia seeds, hemp seeds, sliced banana and cinnamon usually!

      How do you make your bean slop? Just fry them with a bunch of spices?

  • AnEilifintChorcra
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    1 month ago

    I do the majority of my cooking on a sunday evening so I don’t have to do much during the week, it takes ~2 hours.

    • Pancakes for breakfast.

    I’m not a big fan of the texture of oatmeal so instead, I make pancake batter with blended up oats, soy milk and flax seeds and keep them in the freezer until the night before. Then just heat them in the microwave and add fruit and syrup.

    • I eat dinner at lunch in work.

    I find it easier to just bring it in a microwaveable container rather than bringing in a sandwich that just ends up soggy.

    Lentils, rice, potatoes, chickpeas, kidney beans, black beans, onions, bell peppers, broccoli, peas, carrots, sweet corn, spinach etc

    Mix them all together, enough to last 5 days then the night before add whatever spices, black pepper, paprika, chile, curry, garam masala, bbq, cajun, piri piri etc and sauces, sweet chili, curry, sweet and sour, BBQ, tikka masala, szechuan, pad thai sauce etc. This way I can have a different flavours every day of the week but only have to cook once.

    This also works well in wraps and as pizza toppings.

    • Kind of healthy dessert

    I loosely follow this recipe https://rainbowplantlife.com/no-bake-nutella-fudge-bars/#wprm-recipe-container-6608 but I swap out the hazel nuts for mixed nuts and seeds, and I swap dates for raisins and a bit of water. Cheaper and easier to find for me. I also add soy milk to the dark chocolate when I melt it to make the chocolate softer.

    • Lunch?

    After work, I usually throw some frozen mock meat in the oven and make a sandwich with it and have some fruit and nuts. While its cooking, I prepare my food for the next day.

  • Most days I eat pretty much the same thing for breakfast and lunch and only really vary my dinner

    Breakfast its oats with a banana microwaved then I add frozen berries to it

    Lunch I eat beans and rice.

    I’ve described it in other posts but I like to take 1 cup of beans and 3 cups of water and blast it for 1 hour in the pressure cooker. Then I open it and put it into saute mode and add mix-ins and let it simmer for 20 minutes. I use a rice cooker for rice.

    Some of my favorite mixes are can of chopped tomatoes, home made taco seasoning

    Tomato paste, curry powder, ginger garlic paste and frozen vegetables

    I do not feel well or satiated if I don’t eat at least some rice and beans every day!

  • qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website
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    1 month ago

    Pressure cooker stuff (Instant Pot here, but anything works)!

    Beans are dirt cheap and homemade refried-style beans are fantastic. Don’t be shy with the oil (neutral/canola, avocado, refined coconut all great). MSG also helps. Play around with pinto and black ratios (or go more exotic!).

    Add to that some Mexican style rice — toast in a pan (before putting in rice cooker) with tomato paste, veggie bouillon, salsa, whatever, and then cook in rice cooker as usual. I like jasmine the best for this.

    Can’t go wrong with Mexican style beans and rice IMHO. (And in addition, you can feed them to dinner guests if you like — who doesn’t like to build their own burritos?).

  • JoYo@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    mostly seitan, i just fry a little and add it to whatever else i have.

      • JoYo@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        the dry vital wheat gluten keep for years, freezing would just be an extra step.

        i just add water until it’s a thick paste and scoop bits into an oiled frying pan on med.

    • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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      1 month ago

      That sound good… I need to work in more seitan. I usually only have it on special occasions

      • JoYo@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        vital wheat gluten makes it easy. 100g vwg, 30g chickpea flour, 30g nutritional yeast, whatever spices.

        add water until it’s a thick paste and scoop bits into an oiled frying pan on med.

          • JoYo@lemmy.ml
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            1 month ago

            it’s easier for me than making a protein shake and it goes well woth any kind of veggies or whole grains. ill even use it in bolognese or curry

  • meeshen@vegantheoryclub.org
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    24 days ago

    My slavic blood might be showing, but I consume plenty of root veggies. Carrots, potatoes, beets, parsnips, kohlrabis, what have you. Also cabbage. All these are usually dirt cheap too.

    I can share one pseudo-recipe, for carrots. A super easy but very comfy side meal: cube the carrots, put in some (not too much) water with salt, cook for like 15-20min. Throw in green peas (frozen or canned), then add some potato starch (preferably by premixing it with water before adding it to the cooking pot so it doesn’t clump). Stir vigorously to make sure the water gets a nice creamy consitency. You can add herbs like marjory too. Very tasty, sweet side for savory dishes.

  • 31337@sh.itjust.works
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    1 month ago

    Tofu, large bag of mixed frozen vegetables, and rice -> stir fry

    Bread and avocados -> avocado toast

    A variety of root vegetables, squash, and canned chickpeas -> I make something similar to this often: Sheet Pan Vegetable and Chickpea Bake

    I try to eat what’s in-season locally, so what I eat varies throughout the year.

  • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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    1 month ago

    Aside from the usual bread n beans etc, I also eat a lot of chia seeds - usually soaked in soy or oat milk. I find it really satisfying as a like just getting off work snack, before making dinner.