Tiki Central / Tiki Drinks and Food
Vegetarian food for Tiki Nite?
Pages: 1 24 replies
C
chase_317
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Jan 11, 2004 12:15 AM
Any suggestions? Im really new to the whole tiki thing. I got the drinks all set, but what about the proper dishes? More than half of my friends are vegetarians or near-vegetarians. Help! |
BK
Basement Kahuna
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Jan 11, 2004 12:43 AM
Our very own tikifish has developed a smashing vegetarian luau... http://www.tikifish.com/tikirecipes.html |
C
chase_317
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Jan 11, 2004 1:08 AM
BINGO! You guys are really great! Less than an hour and my question answered. Bravo |
G
GECKO
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Jan 11, 2004 1:13 AM
I serve my guest fish. Do they eat fish? I usually put some Hawaiian seasoning on the fish (Salmon or Mahi Mahi) and wrap'em with a banana leaf and throw it on da grill. The leaf steams da fish. You can use wat eva fo' da seaonings but try wrap'em in a banana leaf. Just tear off da banana leaf from da tree, then wrap da fish and tie it with rope or wire to hold in da steam. If you go to your local Asian food store they might have da Ono seasoning? Unless you have a Hawaiian food place. I love the ONO seasoning with garlic pepper on grilled steak, AUUUWWWWWEEEEEE ONO!! |
FG
Futura Girl
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Jan 11, 2004 3:53 AM
when you're trying to figure out what to serve a vegie - vegetarians usually don't eat anything "with a mother" or that "has eyes to look at you." and fishys are very much live animals. these days, there are so many great meat substitutes, it's not that hard to just substitute any recipe you have with 'meatless' meats. i personally think veat is the best commercial product on the market for most applications. - good to cook up and use in lieu of shredded pork, etc. (use the veat "bites" as opposed to the "nugget" variety). You'll find it in the frozen section - occasionally i have seen it trader joes and some regular markets. otherwise try your local health food store. also don't forget to use vegetable stock instead of chicken stock!!!!! that's a big no no. unless they are hardcore vegans - a little dairy in the mix probably will be tolerated, but think twice before you use eggs. in the case where it's being mixed in something for texture - you can use silken tofu. if you need eggs for coagulation - use potato starch. You'd be surprised what you can find at your local health food store. we've thrown a few cocktail parties now with tastey vegetarian canapes and nibbles and many meat-eater friends didn't even know they were eating vegie - so it can be done. good luck. what a wonderful host you must be to be so considerate - on behalf of your vegie friends i thank you. |
T
Tikitronic
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Jan 11, 2004 12:16 PM
Veat is great - we've also become very fond of Seitan, which seems to be in the same family... |
A
atomictonytiki
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Jan 11, 2004 1:06 PM
Quorn (now its legal in the US)is my fravorite for replacing meat when cooking for veggies, but i do have a friend that makes a respectable vegan Spam. |
FG
Futura Girl
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Jan 11, 2004 5:01 PM
Quorn is great stuff - so is seitan... is there someplace online that talks about (non-vegie) luau food? can't remember if it's been here on t.c. or not? [ Edited by: Futura Girl on 2004-01-11 17:02 ] |
D
DawnTiki
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Jan 11, 2004 5:53 PM
Is this it Futura Girl, this Low Carb Luau link is from a post by Tikifish? Yummy Stuff! http://hometown.aol.com/Terranova0/recipe1.index.html |
FG
Futura Girl
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Jan 11, 2004 11:42 PM
thanks dt, that's a good site with lots of links to other luau sies/recipes |
M
mahalomo
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Aug 2, 2005 6:05 PM
I was looking for information on this same topic, so I thought I resurrect an old thread... I received a book as a present a few years ago called "Party Food for Vegetarians". The book has a very few seafood recipes (nice, since the only meat I do eat is seafood), but is mostly vegan or vegetarian. And I think it's one of the best veggie "party food" books out there - everything from cocktail bites, appetizers, to full course meals. In it there are lots of tiki-esque foods that work really well with mai-tais, zombies, and the like. I'd recommend buying it if you can get your hands on it for entertaining those that don't eat animals - or like me, that only eat finfish/shellfish when consuming things that have eyes (although potatoes have eyes, don't they?). There are some more hearty and substantial dishes in there, but these are some of my favorites. I'd be happy to post these recipes for anyone interested, but recommend buying the book. Good food for veggies and non-veggies alike. I've hesitated buying the "Taboo Table" to go with my other Berry books only because I fear it's loaded with red meat and poulty recipes. Can anyone tell me definitively if it's worth buying for seafood/veggie/drink recipes alone? ~muchos mahalos [ Edited by: Humuhumu - Fixed overly long link - 2005-08-02 18:06 ] |
P
pablus
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Aug 2, 2005 7:25 PM
3 pepper, pineapple and pistachio fried rice. Also I've posted a recipe for Island Slaw (bad name - good flavor) over on the TIki Food and Drinks forum, where this thread should be. I enjoy lots of vegetarian and vegan food and cook it often even for those cranky carnivores who never seem to miss meat when the time comes to eat. Then again, there isn't a dish any better than Sabu's Coconut Chicken, also in the Food and Drinks forum. Whoa. |
Z
zombiepops
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Apr 19, 2007 7:40 PM
wow, those look like some really good dishes. I'm going to have to try some out. zombiepops |
D
davealmost
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Apr 20, 2007 10:55 PM
nice, i'll definitely be trying the tropical quesadillas this weekend and bringing them to a murder mystery luau. thanks! |
UB
Unga Bunga
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Apr 20, 2007 11:25 PM
Who is this Tikifish? |
A
atomictonytiki
Posted
posted
on
Sat, Apr 21, 2007 10:03 AM
|
C
Chinarose
Posted
posted
on
Sun, Jul 6, 2008 2:36 PM
I just found this old thread, and thanks Tikifish, for the luau recipes. Does anyone have any new ideas for more pupu recipes, finger-food, appetizers? I was thinking of making some of those rice paper salad rolls with peanut sauce and maybe veggie wontons. |
T
Tabu
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Jul 11, 2008 5:37 PM
I just had veggie Vietnamese salad rolls. Super cheap and easy to make. Rice paper wraps are about $2.00 a pack. Just soak for a minute till soft then stuff and wrap with your favorite fillings. Japanese rice or thin rice noodles are good for filler with shredded carrot, lettuce, cilantro, mint, soy sprouts, shredded radish, your favorite seaweed(mines dulse) and a slice of firm tofu. If you live near a big city China town you can get gluten mock shrimp. For a dip we mix peanut butter and Hoi Sin sauce or go for Thai chili dip sauce. |
W
woofmutt
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Jul 11, 2008 9:23 PM
Some time ago in the thread What food do you serve at your tiki bar? I posted this: Edamame...Green soybeans in the pod. You can buy the frizzed bags of them at Asian grocers and usually in the health food section of big grocery stores. Dump a bag into boiling water, boil 'til the beans is hot (not cooked), give 'em a quick rinse in cold water (just to cool 'em down a bit so they don't bite fingers), dump into some swell monkeypod bowl you bought but never used for anything and sprinkle big salts over the top. Have another bowl for the shells. They're easy as heck to make...Even with a buzz on...And everyone I've served these to have loved 'em. In that same thread the following recipes were posted by Caber-Net: *No Ka Oi Maui Onion Souffle (Dip) Recipe By : KTA 2 large Maui onions -- chopped Combine all ingredients in an ovenproof dish. Bake at 375-degrees for 25-30 A crowd favorite -- any sweet onion will do -- and any tobasco instead of tiger sauce is fine* *Sweet Potato Cakes Recipe By : KTA Combine all ingredients except oil. Form pancake-sized patties. In a large In the Food: Puu-Puu Platter thread Tikifish posted this recipe found in a vegetarian cookbook: *Mushroom Rumaki 24 canned water chestnut slices
Serves 6 to 8...* |
T
tikiwinebear
Posted
posted
on
Sat, Jul 12, 2008 7:55 AM
Aloha! Sabu's is a winning recipe, and can work with just about any "meaty" substance. Try it out. |
TM
tiki mick
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Jul 23, 2008 1:11 PM
Being that I am a vegetarian 80% of the time, I know a little about some of the foods. Seitan (Mican in Vietnamese) is wheat gluten, and provides a meat-like consistency similar to meat. They add it to a lot of products, like Hamburgers, but they call it "Texturized vegetable protein". The problem for vegetarians is that it is not a complete amino acid, as is Soy. Also, it is hard to digest. You will however, lay HUGE cables after eating it. I usually fry some oil, add shaved garlic, and then fry a huge slab of silken tofu. You can add shaved Bonito on top, if fish is not a problem for you. Tiki food is a hard one. It is really meat based. But a good dish of cubed tofu with pineapples, bell peppers, tomato and soy sauce can be somewhat "tiki". |
C
Chinarose
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Jul 23, 2008 10:25 PM
thanks for all the suggestions. I have one comment about authenticity in Chinese restaurants. Buddhist vegetarian cuisine has a long history of using faux meats. So many Asian cultures include these faux meats as part of their traditional cuisine and they can be just as "authentic" as dishes made with real meat. |
TM
tiki mick
Posted
posted
on
Thu, Jul 24, 2008 10:10 AM
Well, I live near little Saigon, so I have had access to both kinds of restaraunts. For example, if you go to Au Lac, on Brookhurst, it caters mostly to american vegan gothic types (Lot's of piercings and mop top haircuts) and it is entirely meat simulation. The sweet and sour "Pork" looks like the real thing. It is my understanding that they use a pre-packaged meat subtitute. |
IDOT
I dream of tiki
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Nov 14, 2014 11:10 PM
Years and years later, tiki fish's site is gone. Did anyone keep copies of those veggie recipes? |
W
wizzard419
Posted
posted
on
Sat, Nov 15, 2014 10:55 AM
Interestingly, when I needed to make a vegetarian thing for a party, I found that cheese is not always vegetarian. If it is a type (as most are) that requires rennet and they do not indicate it coming from a vegetable source then it came from the slaughter of a cow. So read the labels... That was quite a surprise when you realize that most places pile on the cheese for veg dishes. |
Pages: 1 24 replies