Put These Food-Centric Novels on Your Winter Reading List
It's peak 'curl up under the blanket and read' season. These 12 books with food and drink themes are worth sinking your teeth into.
It's peak 'curl up under the blanket and read' season. These 12 books with food and drink themes are worth sinking your teeth into.
A conversation with scholar, activist, and author Carol J. Adams about being a target for Rush Limbaugh, the meat-eater's identity crisis, and the intersection of feminism and plant-based eating
This time, when kids are so young and are such new eaters, is critical to establishing a food foundation that’s healthy and ethically sound
Some practical advice for putting a lid on seasonal stress
In 2014, our team spoke with eco-celeb Ed Begley Jr about his famously green lifestyle and his first advice to anyone going solar
When your family sees giving up meat as 'hipster,' but your culture gets called 'barbaric' in white-dominated vegan spaces, where do you fit in?
Living in a van simplifies the complicated and it complicates the simple. Not having electricity, a fridge, or running water can be a big complication.
When time isn’t on your side, get a helping hand from one of these tried-and-true products
Clean up your beauty routine with these clean-ingredient products
Warm up your self-care practice with an artisan tea blend from these Black- and woman-owned companies.
Nut butters on the go!
Adventure meals: At the campsite or on a plane
Make room in your fridge: these protein drinks are powered with prebiotics, electrolytes, and energy-boosting MCT oil to give you the best recharge
Tasty and chewy plant-based protein bars for your camping adventures and busy life
Nurture yourself with hearty and healthy soups to fuel your camping activities.
Healthy and hearty breakfast cereal for your camping adventures
Crunchy vegan snacks for the trail (or office).
Upgrade your trail chocolate from M&Ms to these decadent protein bites.
After being diagnosed with several autoimmune diseases, Amy Lacey switched to a Paleo diet, and, in the process, discovered a love of cauliflower—and a calling to bring great-tasting pizza crusts and flatbreads to the marketplace.
Meet food blogger Haile Thomas
Now that Amazon has acquired Whole Foods Market - which joins Amazon Prime Pantry and Amazon Fresh - there are multiple deals for food lovers through Amazon Prime.
Emilia Terragni, cookbook publisher at Phaidon Press, shares the key to success for vegetarian cookbooks.
Check out Vegetarian Times Editors's author page.
Check out Vegetarian Times Editors's author page.
Check out Vegetarian Times Editors's author page.
Kate Shaffer, co-owner of Maine-based Black Dinah Chocolatiers and author of Desserted: Recipes and Tales from an Island Chocolatier, shares some tips for cooking with chocolate.
Check out Vegetarian Times Editors's author page.
Check out Vegetarian Times Editors's author page.
In response to a VT story, "Can Dogs and Cats Go Vegetarian?"
The designers showcased here are all committed to making practical-yet-chic accessories with no animal products.
Casey Easton pairs cauliflower and cardamom for a simple snack to eat plain or dipped in hummus.
The executive Chef of Gramercy Tavern and Untitled restaurant in New York City took a time out from the kitchen to chat with VT about making vegetable-centered meals.
Tell us the vegetarian ingredient you're most thankful for! And read below what others have to say.
Check out Vegetarian Times Editors's author page.
Emily von Euw, blogger at This Rawsome Vegan Life, author of 100 Best Juices, Smoothies, and Healthful Snacks, shares her favorite culinary pairing: cantaloupe and vanilla.
An oasis of wellness in the downtown Arts District of Los Angeles, The Springs welcomes stressed urbanites. The one-stop shop for healthful, sustainable living encompasses an organic juice bar, a 40-person yoga studio, a spa and wellness center, a vegan wine bar, and a raw vegan restaurant. Here's why you should go.
Food trucks are making way for bicycles as a nimbler, greener vehicle for mobile meal service. Employing souped-up bikes—and even trikes—food entrepreneurs are delivering culinary pleasures to peckish pedestrians. Here’s a tasty selection.
Got a super-tasty and creative way to top your meatless patty? We want to hear about it! Share your comment below, and see what others have to say. Our favorite responses will be published in the next issue of the magazine.
Each month, we highlight a different reader's "vegiversary"—the anniversary of when they went veg. Read this one, then share yours for a chance to be featured in the magazine.
Nestled in a lush tropical valley in Costa Rica, this hotel and restaurant is so much more than a place to enjoy plant-based meals with flair. It’s also a sanctuary for nearly 350 rescued animals. Here's why we're in love.
Fans of Cinnamon Snail, rejoice! While the beloved NYC-based food truck recently called it (mostly) quits, chef/owner Adam Sobel has served up a new cookbook, so you can re-create truck favorites at home. Don’t know where to start? We’ve got our eye on the New England–Style Chickpea “Crab” Cakes with Lemon Dijon Tartar Sauce, excerpted here.
The future of food is in peril, warns the documentary film Seeds of Time. Gorgeously shot, the film follows the global odyssey of agriculture pioneer Cary Fowler to help ensure food security for the world’s population. Here, we dig a bit deeper with Fowler about what makes for a sustainable food system.
“When you learn that an average American discards 4.5 pounds per day of trash, you realize we are the problem because we are not aware of where our trash is going and what it does to the environment and ultimately to our health,” says Philippe Carillo, co-director and co-producer—with his wife, Maxine—of the documentary Inside the Garbage of the World. The film aims to correct this lack of awareness by showing the scourge of plastic pollution. Here, Philippe passionately responds to questions the film prompts.
Backed by a globally diverse band of musicians—aptly named The United Nations—Australian musical artist and eco-activist Xavier Rudd this spring released a new album, Nanna. Rudd chats with us just as he’s about to kick off a North American tour with the band.
T. Colin Campbell’s groundbreaking 2004 book The China Study has inspired another film, this one closer to home. Campbell’s son, Nelson, is executive producer and director of PlantPure Nation, a film that documents the younger Campbell’s demonstrating the health benefits of a plant-based whole-foods diet in his hometown of Mebane, North Carolina. Here's our chat with Campbell.
Here’s a surprising ally in clean living: activated charcoal, a natural ingredient turning up everywhere from bar soaps to toothbrushes. Here's why you should give the trend a try.
The result of a three-year odyssey in what director/cinematographer Costa Boutsikaris calls his “veggie-oil-solar-powered-filmmaking-mobile-unit” (a converted VW van), this film documents ecological design systems in action across the U.S. Northeast and Midwest. Here's our chat with Boutsikaris.
Anchor/correspondent for MundoFox National Network News, this three-time Emmy Award winner is also co-author of the true-crime book Dancing on Her Grave: The Murder of a Las Vegas Showgirl. An animal lover who’s adopted two cats and two dogs, Sarassa went vegetarian three years ago and is now vegan.
One of the greenest things you can do in your kitchen is to invest in good-quality cookware and tools and then maintain them with care so that they last a long time. Here’s how to keep your cooking equipment sparkling clean and in tip-top condition—without using harsh chemicals.
Off the beaten path in Ojai, Calif., you’ll find this organic vegetarian market and restaurant, the realization of Steve Sprinkel and Olivia Chase’s farm-to-table dream. Since 2001, it has offered produce from Sprinkel’s 16-acre farm and a Mexican-inspired daily menu from Chase’s kitchen.
Each month, we highlight a different reader's "vegiversary"—the anniversary of when they went veg. Read this one, then share yours for a chance to be featured in the magazine.
Helming Spanish-language versions of such iconic game shows such as The Price Is Right, this Mexican broadcaster currently hosts 100 Latinos Dijeron on MundoFOX. Regil went vegan in September 2006, after watching the PETA documentary Glass Walls. Here's our chat with him.
Got a tried-and-true way to eat vegetarian or vegan for less? Share your comment here, and see what others have to say. Our favorite responses will be published in the next issue of the magazine.
Best known for her roles in Romy & Michelle’s High School Reunion and Disney’s The Parent Trap, this actress has a reputation as a matchmaker—a pet matchmaker, that is. So much so that she’s teamed up with Sideshow Network for The Pet Matchmaker Podcast. The vegan and animal activist here answers questions about pets and the people who love them.
Sisters Catherine and Bo Fortney's cover of “Hanging Tree,” from The Hunger Games: Mocking Jay Part 1, put their musical duo at the top of the Music Audio Chart. Here's our Q&A with Catherine, 14, and Bo, 17, who taught themselves how to play guitar (and are both vegetarian).
The name Karyn Calabrese is synonymous with the vegan and raw food movements in the Midwest, but along with her delicious fare, it’s Calabrese’s ability to defy aging that has people flocking to Karyn’s spa, health-food store, and raw-food restaurant in the Windy City.
Each month, we highlight a different reader's "vegiversary"—the anniversary of when they went veg. Read this one, then share your own!
Justin Bua’s art spans not just galleries and museums, but also the street. Additionally, he serves as host, co-judge, and executive producer on Oxygen's Street Art Throwdown. A longtime vegan, he recently developed the Bua Bar. We chatted with him about making stone-ground chocolate, raising his daughter vegan, and more.
Got a go-to dish that you make ahead and freeze? (We love freezing homemade casseroles like Sweet Potato Shepherd's Pie!) Share your comment below, and see what others have to say. Our favorite responses will be published in the next issue of Vegetarian Times.
About 90 percent of the varieties of fruits and vegetables grown 100 years ago no longer exist. "Open Sesame: The Story of Seeds" explores efforts worldwide to promote crop diversity and help secure our food supply. Here's our Q&A with the film's producer/director, Sean Kaminsky, about the longstanding practice of seed saving.
When you think piracy, Greenpeace doesn’t immediately come to mind. Yet that was the charge leveled against 30 of the non-profit’s activists in 2013 by the Russian government—after Russian special forces seized the team from the Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise during its protest of the first-ever oil drilling operation in Arctic waters.
With its tantalizing, yeasty aromas and daily output of nearly 10,000 loaves and rolls, Hot Bread Kitchen might seem like any busy New York bakery. But there’s a satisfying twist: every worker is an immigrant or low-income woman getting on-the-job training and basic English-language instruction as part of her employment.
“Wildlife isn’t agriculture,” says Brooks Fahy, executive director of the non-profit Predator Defense. Sounds obvious, and yet the Federal government agency known as Wildlife Services falls under the authority of the USDA. Here's our Q&A with Fahy about a new doc he co-directed and co-produced, which exposes the scandal that is Wildlife Services’ predator control program.
Our Q&A with journalist Angela Sun, who set out to investigate Midway Island in the middle of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a massive trash heap in a remote part of the Pacific Ocean. As seen in Plastic Paradise, the film documenting her odyssey, plastic stuff makes up most of the debris. And as this non-biodegradable stuff breaks down, it leaches out pollutants—only one of the ways it threatens sea life.
Joshua Katcher has a reputation as a rebel wunderkind in the fashion world, thanks to the elegant and animal-product-free clothing he designs for his brand, Brave GentleMan. We asked him about how he got started in fashion, and what he loves to cook at home.
Each month, we highlight a different reader's "vegiversary"—the anniversary of when they went veg. Read this one, then share your own.
What do you love most: Kale? Spinach? Collard greens? Swiss chard? Share your answer here, and see what others have to say. Our favorite responses will be published in the next issue of Vegetarian Times.
Looking for a last-minute dish to feed a crowd? We're here to help! VT editors hand-picked our best vegan and vegetarian holiday recipes for a new Kindle e-book. Psst: it makes a sweet present for all your friends and family.
Our Q&A with Lesley Chilcott, producer and director of the documentary film A Small Section of the World, about the Asociacion de Mujeres Organizadas de Biolley (ASOMOBI), a group of women coffee suppliers in Costa Rica.
Each month, we highlight a different reader’s “vegiversary”—the anniversary of when they went veg. Read this one, then share your own.
We chatted with this New Yorker contributor, children's book author, and musician in the band The Hostages about humor, vegetarianism, and "bacherloresque" cooking.
The cartoonist/illustrator/children’s book author, who's a New Yorker contributor, reveals why he gave up eating meat, what he loves to cook, and who makes him laugh.
Each month, we highlight a different reader's "vegiversary"—the anniversary of when they went veg. Read this one, then share your own.
When you’re feeling all warm and glowy after feasting with family and friends this Thanksgiving, consider tuning in to this show, which spotlights rescue dogs. Here's our Q&A with executive producer Michael Levitt.
From adopting a turkey to visiting a farm sanctuary to dining out at a veg restaurant, here's how to give the holiday a compassionate revamp that benefits humans as much as the (spared) animals.
Premiering this Tuesday on Animal Planet, Saving Africa’s Giants with Yao Ming doesn’t flinch from showing the mutilation perpetrated by poachers of ivory and rhino horn. But it also offers hope in the form of animal survivors of black market profiteers, and the people committed to rescuing them. Using the wattage of his global stardom to shine a light on the scandal of wildlife trafficking, basketball icon Yao Ming hosts the documentary. Here, we pose questions to Peter Knights, executive director of the nonprofit WildAid, which advocates an end to the illegal wildlife trade; WildAid co-produced the program.
Appearing in NBC’s Parenthood, Matt Luria also co-stars in the DirecTV series Kingdom, another family drama, but with a difference: it takes place in the hard-bitten world of mixed martial arts. Debuting this fall, Kingdom has already been picked up for additional episodes, airing in 2015 and 2016.
We're pretty proud over here at VT headquarters: our September 2014 article "The Gleaners" was just nominated for a Nook Readers' Choice Newsstand Award. Not sure what gleaning is? Read the story here to learn more about this food-waste-fighting movement—then vote for us!
What’s your go-to dish for impressing non-vegetarian dinner guests? (We've had lots of luck with the Sweet Potato & Black Bean Enchiladas, pictured above!) Share your comment below, and see what others have to say. Our favorite responses will be published in the next issue of Vegetarian Times.