WisePies Expands Vegan Cheese to All Locations

By Taylor Radig, Campaigns Manager

Vegan Cheese

Less than four months ago, WisePies worked with our campaigns team to add vegan cheese to their Tempe, AZ location. The option was so successful that WisePies agreed it was time to offer vegan cheese—Violife—at all ten of their locations.

“Our guests asked for a vegan and dairy-free alternative, and based on their feedback, it is now available in all of our locations,” stated WisePies Pizza & Salad VP of Marketing, Season Elliott. “The Violife brand of dairy-free cheese won overwhelmingly in our blind taste test with close to 70% of guests selecting it. We’re excited to add yet another healthy alternative to our menu.”

To order a vegan pizza at WisePies, order your pie on the traditional or wheat crust with their roasted red bell pepper marinara. Top it with a variety of delicious vegetable and herb toppings.

WisePies currently has locations in New Mexico and Arizona. Within the next year, they’ll be expanding to Nevada, Louisiana, and Texas, where they’ll also be serving the new cheese option.


Mack ARA Freeman—Biking for the Animals

By Lisa Rimmert, Director of Development

Mack with bicycle in lake
Mack ARA Freeman with His Bicycle in the Canadian Waters of Lake Superior

This summer, friend of Vegan Outreach, Mack ARA Freeman, rode his bicycle 880 miles to raise money for animals. Leaving Friday, June 16, he started on the Lewis & Clark Mississippi Bridge in St. Louis, MO, and biked all the way to Ontario, Canada, ending on Sunday, July 2!

I asked Mack about his trip, and you won’t want to miss what he had to say! And if you feel inspired, we’d love to accept a donation in his honor.

Lisa Rimmert: What made you decide to take this bike trip, and what inspired you to use it to raise money for animals?

Mack ARA Freeman: This 2017 Great Lakes/Canada ride was actually my fourth bicycle trip in the past five years. I’d been trying to find a way to help raise funds for valuable animal groups. And then it hit me, I could do it by riding my bike long distances—even though at the age of 58 I’d never done any kind of biking.

In 2013, for my first effort at raising donations for animal rights and welfare organizations, I rode the famous Missouri Katy Bike Trail from St. Louis to Kansas and back. The next year on my way from St. Louis to Mississippi, my ride was cut short due to a bike crash, so I tried again in 2015. That time I made it to Mississippi, reaching the Hope Animal Sanctuary on my 60th birthday!

Last year, I turned my bicycle north from St. Louis and didn’t stop riding until I reached the shore of Lake Superior between Wisconsin and Minnesota—an 820-mile ride. Last summer, I was invited to a Vegan Outreach fundraiser at the home of a friend, and it was then that I thought of riding for Vegan Outreach in 2017.

This year I wanted to “top” my 2016 ride, so I thought I would try to bike to the other end of Lake Superior and pedal all the way to Canada. And that is what I did! I rode through central Illinois and eastern Wisconsin, taking my bicycle on the S.S. Badger—a coal burning steamship—across Lake Michigan. I continued up the northwest side of lower Michigan, into the state’s Upper Peninsula. Finally, I rode across the International Bridge into Canada. I arrived on July 2—my 17th consecutive day of bicycling!

Lisa: What was the hardest part of your journey?

Mack: It would be impossible to recount a cross-state, multiple highway bicycle ride without acknowledging all the animals who had met their demise on the roads, shoulders, and brush along the way. Encountering animal misery while biking through endless rural counties takes a toll on even the most hardened traveler. I’ve made a point to always whisper sad “sorries” to every animal that had crossed over the Rainbow Bridge.

Mack ARA Freeman’s Bicycle Resting by a Fence in Eastern Wisconsin, while a Group of Cows Looks at Him Curiously

I was honored to visit with many peaceful, loving, gentle animals, and to say quiet affirmations as we looked each other in the eyes. I knew one of us would carry on with life and thrive—and the other would be heartlessly removed from the life they deserved to live.

Lisa: What was your favorite part of the trip?

Mack: Switching gears—pun intended—some of my favorite times included:

  • I bicycled 13 miles at breakneck speed—for me—from Sheboygan to Cleveland, WI. I took no water breaks and beat a major evening thunderstorm. I biked into the driveway of my bed and breakfast just as the first heavy raindrops began pelting the ground.
  • The next day, June 25, I took the 60-mile ferry ride across Lake Michigan. How great it was to relax and enjoy the great ride across that Great Lake!
  • I treasured meeting all the farmed animals that made it to the fences and gates to say “hello.” I stopped for every individual and herded animal. Many of them walked—and some even ran—to meet me! Talk about an unforgettable experience. I met mostly cows, but there were also horses, mules, goats, ducks, and even feral cats.
  • And, of course, it felt amazing to bike over the bridge into Canada and reach my goal after 17 perfect days on the road. My air pump never left my bike rack! Tears began streaming down my face in contemplation of my accomplishment.
Mack ARA Freeman’s Bicycle on the Sault Ste. Marie International Bridge between Michigan and Ontario, Canada

Lisa: What did you eat on the road?

Mack: You guessed right if you think it’s hard to find vegan food on the road while biking through Corn Cob, America, but I prevailed! For breakfast or lunch in motels or diners, I’d have my standard fare of unbuttered toast with jam, baked potato, or hash browns cooked in veggie oil, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and lots of fruit cups and vegetable slices.

For dinners, I ordered spaghetti with marinara whenever I could—often double orders for carbohydrate building. If no spaghetti was available, then I’d eat meatless chili or milk free soups. Sometimes I would hit Subway for a foot-long Italian bread sandwich, stuffed with tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuce, and covered in mustard. If a store was near my lodging, I would see what vegan food was available. Once I bought a package of Gardein burgers and ate all four patties! Another time I found a half gallon of Blue Diamond chocolate almond milk. I filled my two bottles with it for the road and drank the rest right there!

Lisa: Do you have plans for any future rides?

Mack: Yes. In 2018, I hope to raise money for animals by riding from St. Louis to the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. In 2019, at age 65, I plan to ride to the Florida Gulf Coast. I’ll bike along the entire stretch of the panhandle—all the way to the Atlantic Ocean! And if I have any breath left in 2020, maybe Mexico!

Lisa: Thank you, Mack, for your longtime activism and dedication to making the world better for animals!

Please consider making a tax-deductible donation to Vegan Outreach in honor of Mack’s activism for animals. Thank you!


WisePies Now Testing Vegan Cheese

WisePies Logo

Following conversations with regional pizza chain WisePies, their Tempe, AZ location is now testing out Daiya’s vegan cheese.

Campaigns Manager, Taylor Radig, explained that with vegan cheese becoming a staple in the pizza industry, cheeseless pizza is now a thing of the past for dairy-avoiders. We couldn’t be more excited to work with the WisePies’ Tempe store to bring vegan cheese options to Arizona. We hope that when their corporate team sees its success, they’ll roll out vegan cheese to all of their locations!

To try this delicious new option simply visit or call for pickup (or order for delivery on Grubhub) and ask for a pizza in any size on their wheat crust with Daiya cheese.

Location Information

521 S. College Ave.
Tempe, AZ 85281
Phone Number: (480) 275-5197


Vegan Pregnancy and Parenting

By Josie Moody, Office Manager

Vegan Pregnancy and Parenting

Vegan pregnancy and parenting—it’s a hot topic for vegan and non-vegan parents alike. Once an inconceivable idea, it’s now becoming more widely recognized as a safe and healthy diet for children of all ages. And in today’s tech savvy world, that information can be made available within seconds.

Today we have the privilege of interviewing one of the many people who help make that information accessible. Not only does she make it accessible, but she also holds space for conversation, questions, and advice. Let’s meet Janet Kearney, a vegan parent herself and the administrator of the Vegan Pregnancy and Parenting Facebook page.

Josie Moody: How did the Vegan Pregnancy and Parenting Facebook page get started?

Janet Kearney: A few years ago, when I was pregnant with my son, I tried to find some information on veganism and pregnancy. I found the Vegan Pregnancy and Parenting page, but it was full of spam and only had a few hundred members. I contacted the administrator of the page, and she eventually let me take over.

The group has over twenty-five thousand members now, and I still learn new information every day! Who knew baby poop was such a highly discussed topic?

Josie: What are some of the biggest issues vegan parents discuss on the page?

Janet: The topic of vegan baby formula comes up a lot because it’s just not available. I try to remind parents that as vegans we do our absolute best to avoid animal exploitation, but sometimes we have to make peace with the fact that there’s literally no other choice.* I try to encourage the parents by telling them that they’re doing the best they can.

Vegan parents also express frustration about others’ disapproval of their decision to raise their children vegan.

The best advice I’ve heard—and provided—is to just give it time. Vegan parents don’t need to light the bridges and never look back. Most of the time these comments come from well-intentioned family members or friends who genuinely care about the well-being of the children. I try to remind parents that the majority of us were not born vegan, so we need to try to be understanding of others’ fears.

*There are soy formulas available, but almost all brands are not strict 100% vegan formulas due to processing vitamin D3 with sheep’s wool.

Janet Kearney’s Vegan Children, Millie and Ollie (Photo: Janet Kearney)

Josie: What’s the biggest shift you’ve seen in vegan parenting since becoming a mother?

Janet: The biggest shift is just a growth in veganism in general. A few years ago, telling someone my husband and I planned to raise our children vegan would lead to an inbox full of emails—sent by concerned friends who’d pass along links to pages that discussed how raising children vegan was a bad idea. Now, we tell people our kids are vegan and they engage in a positive conversation. They’re usually quick to tell us about other vegan families they know.

Josie: I’ve heard a lot of parents express concern that if their kids are vegan they will “miss out” on “normal” life experiences, such as Halloween or friends’ birthday parties. Is this something that comes up on the Facebook page?

Janet: Yes, it does. Personally, my kids haven’t missed out on anything. Put simply, other people adapt. And if on the occasion my kids go to a party where I know there won’t be anything for them to eat, I just bring along a cupcake and snacks. If it’s a pizza party, I’ll ask the host if I can chip in a few dollars for some vegan slices or I’ll bring some of my own.

Josie: I heard you’re going to be starting a Vegan Pregnancy and Parenting website. When will that go live?

Janet: Hopefully we’ll launch the site in August. We’ll have a vegan doctor, midwife, doula, and nutritionist on board, along with recipe developers. We’ll also feature other people who just write their own amazing blogs and vlogs. It’s all coming together.

Josie: One last question—what are your and your kids’ favorite snacks?

Janet: My kids and I love crackers with hummus, strawberries, or any kind of fruit. Nice cream is a big hit in our house—so big that I’ve wondered if I could grow bananas in the snowy climate of New York. I make baked tots for them by mashing sweet potatoes up into little balls. I bake them in the oven until they’re crispy on the outside and soft on the inside. Apple slices dipped in peanut butter, covered in fine coconut dust always leaves an empty plate.

Josie: Thank you for taking the time to chat, Janet, and for the time and effort you put into making online resources available for vegan parents.


Limited Edition Shirt—”Protect Me. Go Vegan!”

protect the earth shirts
For a limited time, you can sport this exclusive shirt that benefits Vegan Outreach’s work and spreads the message that veganism helps protect the planet.

Proceeds will help fuel our outreach—through leafleting college campuses, feeding delicious vegan food to veg-curious community members, providing nutrition information and recipes to help ease the transition, and more!

Options include two styles each of tees and tanks—plus, we have kids’ sizes!

Purchase yours by Wednesday, August 9 and be one of the only people to have this one-of-a-kind shirt!

Order now before time runs out! Thank you!


Quick and Easy Red Bean Veggie Burgers

By Jenny Engel and Heather Bell, Guest Contributors

Red Bean Veggie Burger
Quick and Easy Red Bean Veggie Burger (Photo: Kate Lewis)

Beans are one of the vegan foods that wear many hats. They can disguise themselves as burgers, dips, and even meringue. We use red beans as the main ingredient in this burger because the color is spot on, the texture comes out meaty—in the most vegan-y way possible—and it’s a fantastic base for a wide variety of toppings.

Quick and Easy Red Bean Veggie Burgers

Yields 4-6 patties.

Ingredients

  • 1 (15 oz) can kidney beans, rinsed and drained
  • 1 teaspoon dried minced onion
  • ¼ teaspoon garlic powder
  • ¾ teaspoon sea salt
  • ½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 3 tablespoons vegan Worcestershire sauce
  • 2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • 1 tablespoon brown rice syrup
  • ½ cup rolled oats
  • ½ cup unbleached flour or cornmeal
  • 1 to 2 tablespoons neutral-tasting oil
  • 4 to 6 vegan buns, split
  • 4 to 6 (4″ square) pieces romaine lettuce
  • 4 to 6 slices tomato
  • Choice of ketchup, mustard, pickle relish, barbecue sauce, or other toppings

Directions

  1. In a food processor, combine beans, onion, garlic powder, sea salt, pepper, Worcestershire sauce, lemon juice, and brown rice syrup. Pulse 5 times. Add oats and flour or cornmeal, and pulse until mixture holds together.
  2. Heat a large skillet and add oil. With damp hands, form the burger mixture into patties and place in pan. Cook for 3 to 5 minutes on each side, or until browned.
  3. Toast buns until golden brown. Place a burger on each bun bottom, top with lettuce, tomato, other desired toppings, and remaining bun half.

Recipe Tips and Variations

  • Always thoroughly rinse and drain canned beans. They’re much more digestible after the bubbles are washed away and it will prevent your belly from hurting.

Jenny and Heather are co-owners of Los Angeles-based vegan cooking school Spork Foods, which travels to universities, health care companies, hotels, markets, and restaurants all around the world to teach chefs how to prepare tasty vegan meals.

You can learn more about Spork Foods and Jenny and Heather’s cookbook on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.


Alamogordo Vegan Shopping Tour

By Victor Flores, Greater New Mexico Community Engagement and Events Coordinator

NM_Grocery_Store_Tour1

Vegan Outreach recently hosted a vegan grocery store tour at Albertson’s Market in Alamogordo, NM. The purpose of the tour was to show veg-curious folks how easily the grocery store can be navigated when shopping for a plant-based lifestyle.

My wife Karla and I spent 2 ½ hours in the store with the attendees. We joyfully walked up and down each aisle, pointing out the plant-based alternatives—such as non-dairy milks and vegan meats and cheeses. We introduced the group to food products they hadn’t heard of before, like Textured Vegetable Protein (TVP), vital wheat gluten, and nutritional yeast. It was fun explaining how each one can tastefully be incorporated and/or substituted for animal food products.

As vegans who enjoy snacking, we wanted our new friends to know that there would be no need to give up good-tasting snack foods! We were not shy in pointing out products like Lenny and Larry’s Complete Cookies, Annie’s Bunny Fruit Snacks, and SkinnyPop Popcorn.

NM_Grocery_Store_Tour2

Most importantly, we took time to explain how many cuisines—such as Italian and Mexican food—can be easily veganized by leaving out the meat and dairy and bulking up on the veggies and beans! We also emphasized common food items that are “accidentally vegan” to make sure no one felt as if they’d need to completely alter their grocery list.

Many left the event with a very different outlook on what a vegan lifestyle looks like. We had people tell us that they felt empowered to make changes now that they know about the wide variety of vegan foods available to them in their local grocery store.

NM_Grocery_Store_Tour3

We want to thank Albertson’s Market in Alamogordo for letting us host the tour and for donating reusable shopping bags—which had a few vegan food samples and coupons inside!

If you are in New Mexico or the El Paso, TX area and would like a store tour for your community, please email me at [email protected].


Jalapeño Bacon Cornbread

Jalapeno_Bacon_Cornbread

Our friends at Tofurky certainly know their way around the kitchen! This cornbread is just one of their unique and savory recipes we’re literally drooling over!

Jalapeño Bacon Cornbread

Yields 12 servings.

Ingredients

  • 6 tablespoons vegan butter spread, melted and divided
  • 1 package Tofurky Smoky Maple Bacon Tempeh, diced into ¼” cubes
  • 1 ½ cups cornmeal
  • ½ cup conventional or gluten-free all-purpose flour
  • 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • 1 cup non-dairy milk
  • 3 tablespoons pure maple syrup
  • 1 small jalapeño, seeds removed and minced

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 400˚F. Lightly grease a cast iron skillet or 9” glass pie pan.
  2. In a large skillet over medium heat, warm 1 tablespoon vegan butter. Pan-fry tempeh until browned, about 4-5 minutes. Remove from heat.
  3. In a large bowl, whisk together cornmeal, flour, baking powder, and salt. In a separate mixing bowl, whisk together milk, syrup, and remaining melted butter. Add to the dry mixture and stir just until combined. Fold in the tempeh and minced jalapeno.
  4. Pour into prepared skillet or pan, and bake until golden brown, about 20-25 minutes. You can test that a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Allow to cool for 10 minutes in the skillet or pan before slicing into wedges.

Click here for the original recipe.


Vitamin B12 to the Rescue!

By Jack Norris, Registered Dietitian, Executive Director

I’m pictured above in the B12 jersey that VO’s Director of Outreach, Vic Sjodin, recently bestowed upon me.

If you’re new to veganism, or VO’s work, you may not know the history of vitamin B12 and its importance for vegans. This article will bring you up to speed!

Vitamin B12 is the one nutrient that can’t be supplied by plant foods. That’s an inconvenient fact, but the good news is that vegans can easily get enough vitamin B12 from fortified foods or supplements—and if you follow the recommendations (below) you can have even better vitamin B12 status than meat-eaters.

Like many nutrient deficiencies, B12 doesn’t present itself suddenly—in fact, people who’ve eaten animal products their entire lives typically have a store of vitamin B12 that will last them for a significant amount of time. It can be years before a vegan shows signs of deficiency. Due to this slow progression, a controversy has always surrounded whether vegans actually need a dietary source of vitamin B12.

All vitamin B12 is produced by some specific strains of bacteria and the vitamin B12 found in supplements is made from bacteria cultures—it’s not obtained from animals. But animals collect it in their tissues while plants don’t. And before vitamin B12 was discovered in the late 1940s, people’s attempts to be vegan often ended in a state of fatigue or neurological damage. Once discovered, vitamin B12 quickly became available in supplement form and the final piece of the nutrition puzzle was in place for a vegan lifestyle to spread.

The term “vegan” was coined by Donald Watson, one of the founders of the U.K. Vegan Society. The Vegan Society formed in 1944, but it’s not clear to me when they started pushing B12. One of the earliest studies on U.K. vegans from 1955 (1), described significant B12 deficiency with some vegans suffering from nerve damage and dementia.

In 1976, the BBC television show, Open Door, ran an episode on the Vegan Society and interviewed Dr. Tom Sanders who said a vegan diet should be supplemented with vitamin B12.

I became involved in animal rights advocacy and veganism in the late 1980s. Although the American Dietetic Association’s position was that a vegan diet could be healthy if supplemented with vitamin B12, that news didn’t seem to be reaching most of the U.S. animal rights movement. To the extent that movement leaders realized the need for vitamin B12, it was played down so as not to make the vegan diet appear unnatural.

My activism was focused almost solely on spreading veganism, and I started to come across ex-vegans who had failed to thrive on a vegan diet. In my attempt to understand this problem, I started reading the scientific literature and writings by vegan dietitians like Ginny Messina. These writings stated that vegans should supplement with vitamin B12. At the same time, I was alarmed by the case reports of vitamin B12 deficiency in vegan infants, children, and adults—some of which led to permanent damage and death.

I went back to school and became a registered dietitian in 2001. Vegans with health issues started turning to me for help, and I saw a slow trickle of vegan activists with B12 deficiency symptoms—typically tingling in the fingers and toes.

A few others and I made it our mission to inform the animal advocacy movement of the need for vegans to take vitamin B12. In 2003, a group of vegan health professionals and organizations signed an open letter to the vegan community, What Every Vegan Should Know about Vitamin B12, urging vegans to get a reliable source of B12.

Our efforts were largely successful—there are almost no mainstream animal advocacy or vegan organizations that do not acknowledge that vegans need B12. Today, I encounter much fewer cases of vitamin B12 deficiency, but there are still many vegans who haven’t received the news or neglect it.

B12 presents two problems for animal advocacy.

The first problem is that requiring supplementation implies a vegan diet is unnatural. In my mind, this is easily solved—humans didn’t evolve as vegans. In my view, the vegan movement isn’t an attempt to bring humans back to their prehistoric ways of being, but rather to move humans forward in evolution to a more humane diet. We’re lucky to live in a world that makes it possible for us to live without killing animals for food—societies before us have not been so lucky.

See Can a Natural Diet Require Supplements? for more thoughts on this.

The second, more practical problem, is that before we do vegan advocacy in a new region, we need to make sure that vitamin B12 fortified foods or supplements are available. For example, a recent study from Pakistan found that Hindu vegetarians who were eating small amounts of dairy had a high rate of vitamin B12 deficiency with some suffering neurological impairment (2).

Vegan adults can get enough vitamin B12 by following one of these options:

  • Eat B12-fortified foods twice per day
  • Take a daily multivitamin containing 25-100 µg of B12
  • Take a 1,000 µg B12 supplement twice a week

Please see the Daily Recommendations for other age groups.

Vitamin B12 meme

There are a variety of other options and amounts of vitamin B12 that will work. The amounts I recommend are formulated to have a safety factor for people who might not efficiently absorb B12 or might forget to take it now and then.

Vitamin B12 supplements come in a variety of forms and these recommendations are meant for the most common and most tested form, cyanocobalamin. For information on other forms, see Methylcobalamin & Adenosylcobalamin.

A common reaction to learning about the need for vegans to take vitamin B12 is to wonder if you should go get your B12 levels tested. If you’re apparently healthy, then this isn’t necessary—just make sure you follow the recommendations.

May you live a long and healthy vegan life—be well and B12!

Reference

1. Wokes F, Badenoch J, Sinclair HM. Human dietary deficiency of vitamin B12. Am J Clin Nutr. 1955 Sep-Oct;3(5):375-82. • Link

2. Kapoor A, Baig M, Tunio SA, Memon AS, Karmani H. Neuropsychiatric and neurological problems among Vitamin B12 deficient young vegetarians. Neurosciences (Riyadh). 2017 Jul;22(3):228-232. • Link


Spicy Seitan Buffalo Wings

Breaking news! You can go vegan and still have delicious tasting wings!

Spicy Seitan Buffalo Wings

Yields about 6 servings.

Ingredients

  • 1 pound seitan, sliced into strips—Upton’s Naturals and WestSoy are a few suggested brands
  • 2 teaspoons garlic powder
  • 1 teaspoon onion powder
  • Vegetable or canola oil for frying—or any other kind of cooking oil
  • ⅓ cup margarine, melted
  • ½ cup hot sauce or wing sauce—double check labels to make sure it’s vegan

Directions

  1. Coat the seitan with the garlic and onion powder.
  2. Lightly fry the seitan in oil over medium-high heat for five to seven minutes, or until lightly browned on all sides.
  3. In a medium sized bowl, mix together the melted margarine and hot sauce.
  4. Place the seitan in the bowl and cover with the margarine hot sauce mix. The coating will firm up as the seitan cools down.

Recipe Tips and Variations