Nov. 22nd, 2018

pameladean: Photo of torbie cat from the side, looking winsome (Cassie)
Yesterday I made the Thanksgiving desserts. It was an extremely bad day for pie crust. It might still taste okay; I hope so. One mincemeat pie (mincemeat courtesy of Borden's, as per Dyer-Bennet tradtion); one vegan pumpkin pie; one pan of apple crisp for the mincemeat-averse and the pumpkin-allergic. I also still have some vegan hazelnut brownies and some gingerbread left over from hosting my tea group, if the pie crust is really awful.

There are approximately twelve thousand vegan pumpkin pie recipes on the internet, somewhat fewer if you eliminate the ones that don't use tofu. I got mine from the internet but it has gone down in the dust of history. My record of it is a printout of an email that I sent to David's mother in 2005.

When I was sifting all the recipes I'd need out of my battered folder, I could not find the tofu pumpkin pie one. I was resigned to poking around online and finding the right one, without the various weird additions that might be very tasty but are Not How We Do This.Then I had a vague recollection that there were two or three printed-out recipes in our copy of Marilyn Diamond's Fit for Life cookbook. This is an eighties cookbook that contains a number of very strange notions about food and how it should be eaten; however, they are probably no more off-base than most common notions about the same subjects amongst omnivores at that time. And Marilyn Diamond was a veganizing genius. She invented some really good recipes that I use regularly. I riffled through the book. The recipe printous had not been put in there because they were the same kind of thing as her recipes; they were there to mark pages containing recipes that had counter-intuitive names so that I could never find them in the index.

But sure enough, there was my tofu pumpkin pie email to Mary all those years ago.

After I had made the filling and the pie was in the oven, I started to put the recipe into my folder. But I didn't. I put it back into the book, marking a recipe for vegetarian shepherd's pie that is called Family Casserole, while the recipe called Shepherd's Pie is a probably delicious but diabetically unfriendly dish consisting of stuffing covered with a layer of mashed potatoes. (Whatever notions Marilyn Diamond may have had, she was not afraid of carbohydrates; though if you use her menu suggestions, you will get some carbs but mostly a whole lot of vegetables).

So the recipe lives in the cookbook. That is How We Do That here.

I hope you are all having the best day that you can under whatever circumstances obtain.

Pamela

Edited to remove annoying typos.

Profile

pameladean: (Default)
pameladean

January 2024

S M T W T F S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 17th, 2025 11:57 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios