Viva Vegan!: 200 Authentic and Fabulous Recipes for Latin Food Lovers (58 page)

BOOK: Viva Vegan!: 200 Authentic and Fabulous Recipes for Latin Food Lovers
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ecuadorianfooddelivery.com
—Not just for Ecuador anymore! An impressive array of Latin foods and frozen stuff from everywhere, with an emphasis on organic fruit
dulces
and gluten-free items.
latinmerchant.com
—A cute site with a nice selection of dried chiles, herbs, spices, and those gorgeous dried chile
ristras
, the perfect piece of Mexican flare for your
cocina
.
Vegan Products
Online shopping is ideal for stocking up on those long-lasting essentials such as nutritional yeast and vital wheat gluten flour.
Foodfight.com
—The rock ’n’ roll all-vegan grocery store in Portland that loves to deliver fresh and tasty vegan essentials to your door. Great selection of vegan cheeses, faux meats, and sweets.
cosmosveganshoppe.com
—Big selection of dairy alternatives and fake meaty things, too.
Bobsredmill.com
—Bob’s there for you when it comes to fine flours and grains. Check out their excellent garbanzo bean and vital wheat gluten flours. They also make a very nice Mexican-style masa harina.
SHOPPING LISTS, BY ME FOR YOU
 
You don’t need to buy everything at once on this list, just build your pantry slowly based on what appeals to you. Unless indicated, I recommend purchasing one package/jar/bottle/ unit at a time if you’re not cooking up an entire village fiesta.
This list is not conclusive by any means. You may have to make several shopping trips and not have just one place to buy all of your vegan ingredients. Or maybe you have an excellent grocery store that services a Latin community and regularly stocks plantains and masa harina in addition to all of the “regular” nonethnic stuff. I’ve just organized this list to reflect the Pantry chapter. Hope this helps!
 
Latin American Stuff
 
Dried Chiles
❑ For moles and sauces, earthy sweet flavors, and mild-to-medium heat, dark reddish-brown: ancho, pasilla, morada
❑ Hot and bright sharp flavors, red: costeño, piquín, chile de arbol
❑ South American chiles (ají): mild to medium: amarillo, panca, mirasol; hot to very hot: rocoto
Dried Beans
❑ Black, pinto
❑ White
❑ Cargamanto
❑ Central American/Salvadorian red
❑ Bola roja
❑ Canary
❑ Garbanzo
❑ Pigeon peas
Spices
❑ Achiote, a.k.a. annatto seeds
❑ Aniseeds or star anise
❑ Bay leaves
❑ Cinnamon sticks and ground cinnamon
❑ Cloves
❑ Cumin, ground
❑ Epazote, dried
❑ Mexican oregano, dried
❑ Oregano, dried
Grains and Flours
❑ Mexican masa harina
❑ Masa harina for tamales
❑ Masarepa, a.k.a. Harina PAN (Colombian/Venezuelan harina) for arepas
❑ Long-grain white or brown rice
❑ Quinoa, white, red, or black
❑ Amaranth (for polenta or soup)
❑ Toasted manioc flour for farofa (Brazilian specialty item)
Prepared Jarred/Canned Items
❑ Peruvian ají paste (crema): amarillo, panca, and rocoto
❑ Assorted hot sauces, Mexican: Tapatío, Yucatán, Valentina ; Ecuadorean: La Cholla ; and so on
❑ Costa Rican Salsa Lizano
❑ Canned black, pinto, kidney, and garbanzo beans
❑ Canned Latin specialty beans (see dried list) such as bola roja, cargamanto, and pigeon peas
❑ Achiote paste
❑ Coconut milk and cream of coconut
❑ Guava paste (canned or in a plastic container)
❑ Pickled jalapeños
❑ Pickled nopales (cactus paddles)
❑ Olives: green pimiento-stuffed, black kalamata
❑ Capers or alcaparrado (mixed olives, capers, and pimientos)
❑ Chipotles in adobo sauce
Fresh Produce
❑ Cilantro
❑ Other Latin herbs such as culantro, yerba buena, papalo, and epazote
❑ Yuca (cassava, manioc) root
❑ Other Latin root veggies: yautia, ñame, etc.
❑ Green onions
❑ Garlic
❑ Onions: yellow, red, Spanish, sweet/Vidalia
❑ Leeks
❑ Plantains, green or ripe
❑ Fresh chiles: Anaheim, jalapeño, serrano, poblano, chilaques, and so on
❑ Bell peppers, green and red
❑ Avocado (buy 2 to 3 days prior to using)
❑ Potato, waxy yellow, red, and purple
❑ Papaya
❑ Limes, lemons, oranges
❑ Tomatillos
❑ Ripe red tomatoes
❑ Calabaza (Latin pumpkin)
❑ Fresh nopales, spines removed (cactus paddles)
Frozen
❑ Tropical fruit purees: guava, passion fruit (maracujá), soursop (guanábana), pineapple
❑ Frozen pigeon peas
❑ Frozen fava beans
❑ Vegan empanada dough rounds (read ingredients carefully . . . lard may lurk here!)
❑ Frozen peeled yuca chunks
❑ Choclo corn kernels
❑ Frozen whole ají amarillo, rocoto
❑ Frozen banana leaves
Miscellaneous
❑ Beer (most Mexican beer is vegan)
❑ Vegan dry white wine and red wine for cooking
❑ Dried corn husks
❑ Panela brown sugar, any cone or cake shape
❑ Latin chocolate for drinking (Ibarra, Sol, Luker, etc.)
❑ Corn or flour (read labels to check for lard) tortillas
❑ Cotton kitchen twine for tamales (cheaper in Latin markets!)
❑ Parchment paper for wrapping tamales (ditto)
 
 
 
Vegan Ingredients
 
❑ Vegetable broth or bouillon (avoid very “green” cabbagy-tasting brands)
❑ “Chicken”-flavored vegetable broth, cubes, or concentrated pastes
❑ Vital wheat gluten flour
❑ Tofu, Chinese (firm) for savory, Japanese silken (soft) for desserts or crema
❑ Soy sauce; use lighter Chinese-style sauce over strong tamari or shoyu varieties
❑ Nutritional yeast flakes
❑ Vegetarian Worcestershire sauce
❑ Tempeh
❑ Vegan mayonnaise
❑ Nonhydrogenated shortening and margarine
 
 
 
General Ingredients
 
Most any supermarket should have these groceries in stock.
❑ Tomato paste
❑ Canned diced tomatoes, preferably organic
❑ Canned crushed tomatoes or plain tomato sauce
❑ Red wine vinegar, white wine vinegar
❑ Olive oil, and vegetable oil for frying and baking
❑ Almonds, peanuts
❑ Pine nuts
❑ Raisins
❑ Fresh produce: corn, kale, radishes, green or red cabbage, lettuce, summer squash (zucchini, yellow squash), garlic, Italian parsley, carrot, eggplant, and so on
 
 
APPENDIX C
 
COOKING TERMS AND TECHNIQUES
 
I
f you’re a newbie cook, browse through the following terms so that you know what to expect . . . especially if it’s news that mincing not only applies to words but also garlic!
BASIC COOKING TERMS
 
Chop:
A loose term for taking your knife to innocent vegetables and other items. I use
chop
to indicate that shape or size isn’t necessarily important, typically because the chopped items will eventually be pureed, mashed, or otherwise not served in their current state. As a general rule, keep chopped pieces less than 1½ inches across.
Deglaze:
Start throwing around this term when you want to really impress your friends with what a master chef you’ve become. Deglazing happens when a relatively small amount of liquid is added to sauté items in a hot pan once most of the juices have cooked off. Simmering with a little broth or wine lifts of the caramelized bits from the bottom of the pan, dissolves them, and distributes their lovely, improved flavors back into your food. Not to mention it handily removes the gunk from the pan, making your eventual cleaning job all the easier.

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