Pizza Bagels

These are my kids’ favourite after-school snack these days and they’ve made appearances at weekend brunches.  You probably don’t need a recipe to figure this one out, but here it is just in case…
Pizza Bagels

whole grain bagels
pizza sauce (try my BBQ sauce here)
Daiya shreds
Italian seasoning
your favourite pizza toppings

Slice bagels in half and place cut-side up on a cookie sheet.  Spread on pizza sauce, sprinkle on Daiya, Italian seasoning and your favourite toppings.   In the photo above, I’ve used Fieldroast Smoked Apple Sage sausage and fresh basil.

Broil under medium heat for a few minutes until the Daiya is golden and bubbly but watch it doesn’t burn.   Serve warm and enjoy!

Nice Krispie Squares

I finally got my hands on Dreena Burton’s Eat, Drink and Be Vegan and while most of the recipes are pretty healthy, the first one I tried was the “nice krispie squares”.  The rest of the recipes look amazing, I look forward to trying more soon!

Dreena actually shares two recipes for rice krispie squares: a traditional version with vegan margarine and marshmallows, and a “nicer” version with macadamia nut butter.  That recipe is found on her website here.  I’m sure I’ll try the latter eventually, but in the meantime, I made Dreena’s nice krispie squares using Becel vegan margarine, Nature’s Path rice cereal and Dandies vegan marshmallows.

Making rice krispie squares are always a fun activity with the kids.  Mine particularly enjoyed stirring the melting marshmallows on the stove, because if you’re a child, there is just about nothing as fun as turning something into goo.


The result?  A very authentic tasting rice krispie treat.  Sweet and gooey (with pretty much no redeeming nutritional value), they are just like the treats I grew up with and were a fun indulgence.  The kids gave them too sticky thumbs up!

Nacho crackers

Hi, friends!  I’ve been post-less for a week, having been on holidays, soaking up some sun and family time at a cottage in Muskoka.  It was a wonderful time.  We brought our own food with us, but there wasn’t room to bring my favourite food equipment like juicer, food processor and dehydrator, so I made as much food as I could ahead of time, like raw granola, and packed it with us.

I’ve only had my dehydrator for a few months so I’m still amazed at the variety of healthy food I can easily make with it and the taste quality.  I’m enjoying making raw crackers in my dehydrator lately.  Here’s my favourite so far: nacho crackers!

The idea came from my nacho kale chips recipe, which I selected as my entry for the first Healthy Vegan Fridays blog party this week.  Every week there will be a new list of delicious recipes featuring whole ingredients to peruse, so now I know where to head the next I’m looking for inspiration.  Check it out!

I also loved these crackers enough to send them to my vegan food swap partner Gabby @ The Veggie Nook this month.   Hope she likes them as much as I do!  I used to love store-bought crackers, now I can’t believe I ate all that sodium, sugar and preservatives, thinking they were a “healthy” snack.  These nacho crackers are about as healthy as you can get, plus they are raw, sugar-free and gluten-free.

Raw Nacho Crackers
2/3 cup raw nuts (I used a mix of Brazil nuts and almonds)
1/3 cup raw sunflower seeds
1 cup ground flax
1 cup chopped celery
1 cup chopped red pepper
1/3 cup sun-dried tomatoes
1/2 cup nutritional yeast
1 tsp Spicy Herbamare seasoning
1 tsp agave syrup
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper
1/2 tsp cumin
1/2 tsp garlic powder
1/4 tsp black pepper

Soak the nuts and seeds in 2 cups of filtered water for at least an hour and preferably several hours.  Empty the nuts and seeds including the soaking water into a food processor and combine.  Add the celery, red pepper and sun-dried tomatoes and combine again.  Mix the nutritional yeast, Herbamare and spices together in a separate bowl, then add the spice mixture and combine again until uniformly mixed.   Note: to be truly raw, you will want to choose sun or dehydrator-dried tomatoes and raw spices where possible.

Pour onto Paraflexx sheets and smooth out with a spatula so they are uniformly thin, like giant crepes.  Dehydrate at 105 degrees for several hours, until crispy.  After about five hours, when they are starting to firm up, flip them by placing another Paraflexx sheet and tray on top of the crackers, flipping upside down, peeling off the top sheet and returning them to the dehydrator on the new tray.   You can either pull the crackers out when they are nearly done but not crisp and slice them into rectangles with a knife and return to the dehydrator to finish crisping up, or wait until they are as firm and dry as you like and break them into small pieces, like the ones shown in my photos.

They were great on their own and awesome topped with Tofutti cream cheese and cucumber and olive slices and a dash of black pepper!  A perfect summer appetizer.

Root Vegetable Chips

I adore Terra Chips, but if you have a dehydrator, why not make your own version for a fraction of the price?  You could do these in the oven too, but the texture isn’t as great as with a dehydrator.

Root Vegetable Chips
Root vegetables of your choice (parsnip, potato, beet, yam, etc)
vegetable oil
sea salt or Herbamare seasoning

Root vegetables cook at different rates, so keeping the vegetables on separate sheets will allow you to pull out the vegetables from the dehydrator that cook first (like sweet potatoes) and leave the vegetables that take the longest to crisp up (like beets) in the longest.

Slice vegetables one a time, keeping them separated, as thinly as you can using a mandoline (I use the mandoline blade on my food processor) then transfer to separate bowls.  Pour oil over the vegetables and stir to coat.  Lay the vegetables on Teflex sheets, a different vegetable per tray, leaving a bit of room between each piece and sprinkle with salt or seasoning.

Dehydrate at 105 degrees for several hours (at least 8) until the vegetables are crispy.  Normally around the 6 hour mark I flip the chips by pulling out the trays, laying another tray on top of the veggies and turning upside down, leaving the veggies on the second tray, then pop back in the oven to crisp up the other side.

They made a great snack with salsa, guacamole or hummus!