Plant-based Egg Salad Sandwiches

Plant-based Egg Salad Sandwiches

Lisa Le, over at TheVietVegan.com has a great recipe for a plant-based egg salad. And, I quite love it.

So, before last weekend, I’d dutifully made up some plant-based mayo, baked some bread, and got some ingredients, although this recipe is pretty easy!

You just create a sauce with ingredients like plant-based mayo, turmeric, black and celery salts, and a few other things like green onions and celery. And, although the recipes just calls for some dill pickle BRINE, I go ahead and add several Tablespoons of dill pickle relish! This addition makes it really great!

Then, crumble a big block of firm tofu, mix together, and give it some time for the flavors to meld.

It doesn’t look that great here, and the lighting and colors are off, but believe me, it’ll be delicious.

After several hours, or by tomorrow, it’s amazing!

So, I was pretty proud of myself! I’d baked the bread, used my homemade hummus as a spread on my bread, added the homemade egg salad, topped with homemade cheese, and sliced a tomato, and voila! I had an amazing lunch!

Plant-based Egg Salad Sandwiches
Everything homemade, except that tomato!
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Deep Dish Enchiladas

Deep Dish Enchiladas

Each day I want to take a healthy, plant-based lunch to work. Lunch is my main meal of the day, after a big breakfast, and virtually no dinner. So I don’t want so skimp out on making something hearty, tasty, and delicious! But, those time constraints!

So, again, in my typical “how-to” fashion, here’s an incredibly simple, but incredibly tasty, how-ya-do-it, as fast as making a sandwich, in a 4-cup Pyrex bowl.

Deep Dish Enchiladas

Easy dish for one for homemade lunches with a Mexican flair!
Last updated August 8, 2019.
Prep Time10 minutes
Cuisine: Mexican
Keyword: lunch
Author: Plant-Based-Bear.com

Equipment

  • 6" Pyrex Bowl

Ingredients

  • 5 corn tortillas
  • 1 can no-oil refried beans
  • 2 cups cooked rice any variety
  • 1 small can enchilada sauce or tomato sauce seasoned as you desire
  • pico de gallo or salsa optional
  • bell peppers diced, optional
  • plant-based cheese or cheese sauce shredded, optional
  • plant-based sour cream optional

Instructions

  • If using tomato sauce, prepare with some spices and seasonings that suit you. A little chili powder, salt, and diced bell peppers such should make it more exciting! No need to heat it, unless you want to heat up the bell peppers into the sauce to better spread flavor. Green chilies would work here too!
  • Add a little of the enchilada or tomato sauce (the sauce) to the bottom of the bowl. This is mostly so the tortilla doesn't want to stick!
  • Add a corn tortilla, flat in the bottom of your Pyrex bowl. It might be slightly larger than the bowl. These are usually naturally oil-free, and are shelf stable for a long time.
  • Layer refried beans (I do mine in clumps), rice, salsa, peppers, and more sauce. Add plant-based cheese or sauce in each layer, if desired.
  • Add another corn tortilla and repeat until the bowl is filled. I like to end with a corn tortilla on top, so things don't stick to the lid.
  • When time to eat, heat 4-6 minutes in the microwave. This is thick and heavy, so it takes awhile to heat. Bowl will be hot when removing from microwave.
  • Top with plant-based shredded cheese and sour cream!

Notes

Use a glass Pyrex bowl, as tomato-based sauces and plastic bowls don’t really work too well. We also need some depth here.
Because of splattering, use some sort of lid or paper towel. Don’t use the plastic Pyrex lids, as they’ll often melt and misshape with that much microwaving.  I eat at the office, so can usually find a paper plate or paper towel to cover during cooking!

In my Deep Dish Enchiladas for today, I had some corn I wanted to use up, and some pico de gallo. A dollop of quacomole would’ve been great, and the shredded cheese or sauce would have been nice too, but I didn’t have any fresh in my fridge. Nonetheless, these enchiladas really hit the spot and were amazing. Also, it’s hard to “overnuke” these in the microwave, as that seems to give them more of a “baked” consistency.

Yeah, I don’t know if I can really call these “enchiladas,” as I don’t know the first thing about authentic Mexican cuisine (except how to eat it!), but, they do use the same basic ingredients, I think, so I’m sticking with it! Don’t like it? Comment below!

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