Spur of the moment vegan nachos
Nachos are always on my mind….I’m serious. They’re definitely my “food of the moment”. I could eat nachos every day of the freaking week and never be sick of them. Well…maybe after a week of them I’d finally be sick of them. The best thing about nachos is that you can use every single chip in the bag–even the bottom crumbs; that is exactly what I did for these nachos. We had three partial bags of chips that had been sitting on top of the fridge for a hot minute and I was sick of looking at them so I spread them out on top of some aluminum foil on top of a cookie sheet.
Well, let’s not let me get ahead of myself. Before I started any of this I submerged a bag-o-brown rice in some water on the stove top. Instant rice is super quick–its amazing (10 mins tops). I added some cumin and cayenne to the water while the rice was cooking in hopes that it would soak up some of those flavors. When the rice is almost done, preheat your oven to 350 degrees (you want it hot enough to melt your vegan cheese). In a small skillet I put some extra virgin olive oil spray and about 2 T of soy sauce and heated to medium heat. To it I added 1/2 a block of tempeh cut into cubes. You want to cook the tempeh until its colored throughout (from the soy sauce). It’s going to get some more heat added to it once you put the nachos in the oven.
On top of the chips I put some black beans (opened the can, drained and rinsed them), diced jalapeno (fresh out of the garden!), the brown rice and the tempeh. Then I sprinkled some vegan cheese (pepperjack and mozzerella). After the last sprinkle of cheese, I added a light dose of cumin and cayenne pepper and put the nachos into the oven, keeping my eye on them…you just want the cheese to melt slightly. Vegan cheese has a tendency to get really rubbery if cooked for too long. It will string if you catch it at just the right temperature. While the nachos were heating, I diced up some red onion, banana peppers, tomato (out of the garden!) and kalamata olives to put on top once they came out of the oven.
You can make a good set of nachos in my vegan kitchen–all of the above ingredients are staples. When I go grocery shopping I’m simply replacing the staples. In the near future I’m going to post “Vegan Kitchen Staples” as well as a “Raw Kitchen Staples” and “Vegetarian Kitchen Staples”. Should be helpful for those of you who are trying to eat healthier and stay away from the fatty convenience foods. Don’t get me wrong, there are a TON of fatty vegetarian and vegan foods too; the trick is to know what you’re looking for and what you’re NOT looking for. Like I said before, reading ingredients is a very important part of buying and eating food.









carol rustin lives in a shoe in the small city of decatur, ga. you might think that there’s not enough room in a shoe for a full size kitchen, but you’d be surprised what she can make in a little bit of space.
yum yummy yummer… nachos!