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Making Vegan Easy Week 39 Round-Up

Another snapshot of my 2012 vision board.

Every day in 2012 I’m posting one tip on my Facebook page to make living vegan easier. It’s going to take an army of vegans to move the world in a more compassionate direction. Join us today!

Tip #266: Happy Autumn! Be sure to watch My Life as a Turkey this fall and share with others. Perhaps we can each get one less person to eat turkey at Thanksgiving this year. Small steps lead to big changes over time.

Tip #267: The DEA is holding a National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day this Saturday, September 29. They will safely dispose of any unwanted or expired medications. You can find a location near you on their website.

It’s important to dispose of medications properly, so they don’t contaminate our water supply or get in the hands of young people or criminals. CVS stores also collect unused, expired and unwanted meds for proper disposal each and every day.

Tip #268: Animal shelters, of course, need monetary donations but they also need items typically found around your house like clean rags, small rugs, towels and blankets. This week I’m dropping off a huge bag of clean rags to a local shelter. Do you have anything just taking up space in your home that your local shelter could use? Check your shelter’s website to see what they need.

Tip #269: Yesterday I picked up Vegan Cooking for Carnivores by Roberto Martin at the library. The forward by Portia de Rossi is quite moving, and the recipes look tasty and accessible for even the novice cook. This would make a great gift for a veg-curious person.

Tip #270: I don’t always respond to anti-veganism the way I would like. Sometimes I’m too preachy and other times I keep my mouth shut and regret not speaking up. Finding balance isn’t always easy, so I’m reading to learn more about the psychology of change, “Change of Heart: What Psychology Can Teach Us About Spreading Social Change”. Check it out if you want to be a better activist.

Tip #271: Check out this new website, Wish You Were Vegan.

Compassionate people from every walk of life are invited to share their wish lists and collaborate on ideas for products and fashion items that they wish were available in vegan friendly materials.

Maybe someone will finally make the vegan boots I’ve been dreaming about! What new vegan product have you been longing for?

Tip #272: If you live in Chicago, stop by Vegan Mania today. I’m looking forward to seeing some of the speakers, including the author of Artisan Vegan Cheese. Should be a fun day!

Check out my resource page for veg events (mostly in the US). If you haven’t been to one of these events, you should go. It’s fun to be with the tribe.

Hey friends, have you shared these tips with your family and friends yet? If not, do it today. Join me on Facebook to read these tips daily and to learn more about what’s going on in the vegan world.

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Making Vegan Easy Week 37 Round-Up

Every day in 2012 I am posting one tip on my Facebook page to make living vegan easier. It’s going to take an army of vegans to move the world in a more compassionate direction. Join us today!

Tip #253: Want to learn more about making your own vegan cheese? Mark your calendars then for the upcoming Vegan cheese Twitter chat hosted by VegNews on September 19. [Update: VegNews typically will post the transcripts post chat if you missed this event.]

Tip #254: Everything you do has an impact on the world. Understanding your impact is a great first step on the path to changing the world for the better. Learn about your impact here by first calculating your carbon footprint.

I hadn’t done this in a while and was surprised to see so much improvement in my impact. Give it a try and see where you’re at.

Tip #255: 7 (free!) Ways to Reduce and Reuse from VegNews.

Tip #256: More ways to reduce your impact on the environment.

Tip #257: After a summer-like day yesterday, it feels like fall in Chicago this morning. Soon winter will be here. Personally I’m looking forward to it after a summer without air conditioning. To stay warm, I wear coats made with Thinsulate. It’s a great alternative to wool or down.

Tip #258: Fleece is another one of my favorite stay-warm fabrics. To learn about other vegan fabrics and materials, check out Vegans of Instagram.

Hey friends, have you shared these tips with your family and friends yet? If not, do it today. Join me on Facebook to read these tips daily and to learn more about what’s going on in the vegan world.

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Recipe of the Week: Rice Pudding and a Giveaway

If you don’t have a slow cooker, you should consider getting one. You can make delicious food without much effort. I use my slow cooker often. It was only five bucks at a yard sale. (By the way, yard sales rock and so do used book sales. More on that later.)

Click to buy the book!

I own one slow cooker recipe book, Fresh from the Vegetarian Slow Cooker: 200 Recipes for Healthy and Hearty One-Pot Meals that are Ready When You Are by Robin Robertson. I’ve only cooked one recipe in my slow cooker that wasn’t from this cookbook. One of my favorite recipes in this book is a rice pudding. It’s easy to make and Robin gave me permission to share it with you.

Before I do that, I want to mention that Robin has a new slow cooker recipe book coming out soon called Fresh from the Vegan Slow Cooker: 200 Ultra-Convenient, Super-Tasty, Completely Animal-Free One-Dish Dinners. Notice the difference in the title? Love it!

Brown Rice Pudding with Golden Raisins and Toasted Almonds
Serves 4 to 6
Slow cooker size: 3-1/2 to 4 quarts
Cook time: 3 to 4 hours
Setting: Low

2-1/2 cups cooked brown rice
1-1/2 cups vanilla soy milk
1/2 cup firmly packed light brown sugar or a natural sweetener
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Pinch of salt
1/3 cup golden raisins or other dried fruit
1/2 cup sliced almonds, toasted

Combine all the ingredients, except the raisins and almonds, in a lightly oiled 3-1/2- to 4-quart slow cooker, stirring to mix well. Cover and cook on low for 3 to 4 hours, stirring once about halfway through — add the raisins at this time.

Serve warm or cold garnished with the toasted almonds.

It’s Easy Being Vegan Note: I have made this recipe numerous times and have made the following adaptations with success:

  • Used unsweetened vanilla soy milk
  • Used dark raisins
  • Used an equal amount of maple syrup instead of brown sugar
  • Skipped the salt
  • Used raw almonds, skipped the toasting.
  • Added the almonds when I mixed in the raisins.

Now for the Giveaway Just for Subscribers!

As I mentioned I got my slow cooker at a yard sale. I have found some great things at yard sales. I also love used book sales. The Newberry Library in Chicago hosts a huge annual used book sale. This year I found a copy of Fresh from the Vegetarian Slow Cooker for a steal. It looks brand new. Since I already have a copy, I would like to give it away to a subscriber. For a chance to win the book, subscribe to receive blog post updates by email (not RSS feed) below. If you are already an email subscriber, you are automatically entered — lucky you! Contest closes on Wednesday, September 12, 2012 at 5:00am CDT. I will notify the winner via email. Contest open to US residents only.

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A Day in the Life of a Vegan: Meet Sally

Vegan Library Display by Sally

Have you ever wondered who is typing the captions for live TV? I know I have. Well, meet Sally. I met Sally last year at the VegNews Yoga Retreat in Mexico, and now I’m happy to introduce this passionate activist to my readers. Be sure to read about her vegan library display below. It’s impressive!

Name: Sally Bennett

Where do you live? I divide my time between Cambridge, OH and Savannah, GA.

How long have you been vegan? Seven years

Wake up: I usually wake up at 5:15 AM. Sometimes it’s 3:30 AM., but only occasionally.

Breakfast: It’s always evolving. Usually I eat leftovers warmed in the toaster oven, or more recently since I purchased a high-powered blender, I’ll turn foods from my garden into a nice, warm soup. For a quick breakfast on the run, it might be a Tim Hortons bagel with Tofutti cream cheese and home-grown chives.

Sally Bennett

Activities/work: I get up early to start my job as a broadcast captioner. I provide real-time captions on live TV, so I usually start off with three hours of a morning show. I work from home.

Lunch: This is where I’m trying to turn my habits for lunch and dinner around. I’m trying to have a bigger lunch and a smaller dinner, so I have more time to burn calories. Sometimes I’ll eat out for lunch and enjoy some Indian Aloo Mutter or go to Loving Hut. I’ll almost always take some home to have for lunch another day. If I’m home, I’ll either warm up leftovers or just start tossing things together to make either a soup or stew of some kind. My son calls it my “Whatever’s-in-the-Fridge” soup. I have shelves full of onions, garlic, celery, carrots, kale, peppers, pomegranates, figs, mangos, kiwis, oranges, pears, tomatoes, eggplants, star fruits and cabbage. I either make a plate using a mixture of those foods, or I turn them into soup. Other times, I’ll enjoy some delicious home made Thai food made by my son who’s amazing in the kitchen.

Activities/work: More captioning work or perhaps hanging laundry on the line or walking around our orchards and woods to meditate (a valuable lesson I learned while at the vegan yoga retreat with VegNews last year) or reading or harvesting tomatoes or giving a dog a bath. It’s always different. I’ll usually make a blender drink and now I’m using organic aloe juice, celery, peanut butter and a banana. I might toss in a piece or two of kale.

Sally’s a well-read vegan. She displayed her vegan books at her local library for one month.

Dinner: Usually a plateful of fruit and maybe a generous salad of spring greens, julienned beets, apple and carrots, a scoop of organic (canned) beans, avocado if I have it and a few walnuts, topped with some Bob Evans Colonial salad dressing. I know Bob Evans is not a very vegan-friendly restaurant, but I love its Colonial salad dressing. I buy it by the quart to take home. Since attending Summerfest this year, I picked up a tip to keep an open can of organic beans in the fridge and spoon some in all kinds of things. So if I make tomato soup, for example, I’ll toss a spoonful of beans in the VitaMix along with all the other ingredients. It makes it easy to get the health benefits of beans.

Activities: Catching up on the Young & the Restless (a habit I’ve had for 23 years) or watching reruns from TVLand or a movie with my family. I take yoga classes twice a week and really should do it daily, but it’s a challenge to do yoga in a house with cats. They like to get involved!

Lights out: Never early enough. I try to get to bed by 10 PM, but I’m happy if it’s before Midnight.

Sally’s display is beautiful. She used a lot of decorative touches to draw people in.

Favorite Cause/Current Project: I support many groups which are working hard to protect animals. I only donate to groups which also promote veganism and whose members live the vegan lifestyle. I prefer to donate to smaller, grassroots groups which appreciate every dollar they get and take nothing for granted. On a personal level, I’ve participated in several informational protests including at an embassy, a fast-food giant and a department store that still sells fur. A few months ago I was able to put together a beautiful display of my collection of vegan and animal-rights books at my local library. It stayed there for a month, and they said that they had more compliments on that display than any other they’d had. I hope it caused people to rethink their eating habits and to start their journey to a compassionate lifestyle.

This display rocks!

What else do you want people to know? I’ve never been happier than I am every day now that I’ve grown stronger as a vegan animal advocate. I came to the vegan lifestyle because I despised animal cruelty and was disgusted by the thought of eating animals. I’ve evolved as a vegan by learning that while it’s easy to be a lazy vegan and not care about nutrition, that there really is a better way, and it’s fun to learn how to be healthier.

What is the best part about being vegan? The peace of mind it gives me — knowing that I’m not responsible for the suffering or death of any animals. I appreciate the feeling I get from just being in close proximity to animals. I live in the country where there are many farms where animals will one day be killed. I see them as blessings to brighten my life as they go about theirs. And as a bonus, my health is good! I spend $0 on prescription medications.

If you would like to participate in the “Day in the Life” series, send an email to itseasybeingvegan@gmail.com. We’d love to get to know you too.

Want to Set Up Your Own Library Display

A library display is a great way to raise awareness for veganism and I wanted to know more about Sally’s efforts. So I asked her about it.

When you set up the library display, was it just a matter of approaching that particular branch and working with them? Yes, all I did was go to the library and ask if I could do a display of my collection of vegan and animal-rights books. The head librarian is who they told me to speak with.  It’s a small town and he remembered me from when he started working at the library. I was taking my then-young children in for story hour. I described the kind of books I wanted to display and he said that would be fine. He told me what month was available and that was it. I added photos taken from an old Farm Sanctuary calendar to add color to the sidewalls, and I added some toy animals to attract even more attention hopefully from young visitors, and also included a big selection of decorative vegetables and fruits for even more color throughout the shelves of books. I categorize them, somewhat, with medical/scientific books on one end, vegan cookbooks in the middle, and animal-rights to vegan lifestyle books on the other end. But there’s plenty of overlap.

Read how to set up your own library display from Mercy For Animals.

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Resources: Vegan Job Boards

Want a vegan job? Then check out these job boards to see what is available. Good luck!

VeganJobs.org

Vegan Mainstream

VegNews

Treehugger

@veganjobs on Twitter

Tip: Set up a search on Indeed using the keyword, vegan, and you will receive emails when a job with your search criteria is found.

If you know of a job board that should be added to this list, send it to itseasybeingvegan@gmail.com and I will update this page. Thanks!

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