BBC Food blog: Retro recipes: 1970s Vegetarian (2024)

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Post categories:vegetarian cooking

Fiona Beckett | 09:58 UK time, Wednesday, 16 November 2011

The Hairy Bikers new series Best of British this week is a real blast from the past, particularly when it comes to vegetarian food. I well remember their two featured dishes - Glamorgan sausages and Homity pie - the first learnt from Delia, the second from Cranks just off Carnaby street where you were lucky to get in without a queue. Who queues for a veggie meal these days?

Vegetarian restaurants were popular just because everywhere else was so meaty. The standard response to a request for a veggie dish was a cheese omelette, as it still is in many parts of rural France. It’s no coincidence that Dave and Si’s chosen veggie dishes contain cheese. You found it in everything from salads to nut loaves and vast sodden baked potatoes (remember Spud-u-Like?) a lunch that lingered heavily on the stomach. Beans, lentils and grains like millet were compulsory too. No wonder one of Oxford’s most popular restaurants (still trading today) is called The Nosebag. Let Delia show you around the food on offer at Cranks in the 1970s (especially if you've got back trouble...)

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If it was a tough time for vegetarians it was even harder for vegans or the dairy intolerant (not that that term was coined in those days). Apart from veggie Indian restaurants round the back of Euston and in neighbourhoods like Southall, Tooting and Wembley there wasn’t a lot else. Japanese food hadn’t come on the scene. There were no noodles (apart from chow mein), no miso, no edamame, no veggie sushi, no Thai green - or yellow - vegetable curries. There weren’t the great fistfuls of fresh herbs you can buy nowadays to make your own pesto. (What was pesto?). You were lucky if you found one variety of hummus let alone the half dozen you now find on every supermarket shelf. No couscous. No quinoa . . .

Vegetarianism wasn’t just perceived as a dietary choice but a lifestyle one. If you were veggie you were a hippie. My husband still has his dog-eared copy of the Tassajara bread book from which he produced dense home-baked bricks which he used to slather with nut butters. (These were the days before sourdough). My first copy of The Vegetarian Epicure - well thumbed for it’s ‘Potatoes Romanoff’ recipe, a very seventies concoction of cubed cooked potatoes, cottage cheese, sour cream, spring onions and - rather daringly - garlic - actually fell apart and had to be replaced. Oh, and it was topped with grated cheddar. Of course.

BBC Food blog: Retro recipes: 1970s Vegetarian (2)

Vegetarian Eccentric: Delia Smith demos vegetarian cooking to Kate Bush in 1979.

Maybe that sweat-inducingly heavy, cheesy food is the reason that a lot of people didn’t and still don’t stick with vegetarianism – one friend swears to it. (I even remember an Asian veggie restaurant in San Francisco called Betelnut (also still going) which had a notice on the door proudly proclaiming 'No Cheese'.) Has the perception of vegetarianism changed enough so that we can eat our vegetables without racing for the grater?

Five more veggie recipes with a seventies flare:
Cheese, onion and potato pasties
Lentil, chard and roast plum tomato gratin
Puy lentil lasagne
Veggie sausage and pineapple canapés
Carrot spelt cupcakes with cream cheese frosting

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  • Comment number 1.

    At 19:54 16th Nov 2011, looksalot wrote:

    "Dense home made bricks". This was my introduction to wholemeal bread in the seventies by a well meaning older hippy relative. Still have an aversion to wholly wholemeal bread! I am an omnivore but veggie food has changed beyond all recognition and for the better - I have enjoyed some really good vegetarian and vegan food recently. In the seventies it seemed to be various kinds of stodge - root vegetable pies made with wholemeal flour (inside and out) and dhal that could have been slices into pieces are two examples that spring to mind. The emphasis seemed to be on recreating meat and two veg style meals with vegetables or pulses.

    Complain about this comment (Comment number 1)

  • Comment number 2.

    At 21:12 16th Nov 2011, fionabeckett wrote:

    Totally agree @cooksalot. I often choose the veggie option when I got out to eat these days. And bread is so, so much better

    Complain about this comment (Comment number 2)

  • Comment number 3.

    At 15:51 18th Nov 2011, Paul Brook wrote:

    I can't stand cheese - it smells and tastes vile! Along with its villainous sidekick, mayonnaise, it ruins the vast majority of sandwiches intended for vegetarians, and blights many a 'vegetarian dish of the day' in British pubs. Down with that sort of thing!

    Complain about this comment (Comment number 3)

  • Comment number 4.

    At 17:38 18th Nov 2011, Debbie wrote:

    Came across this recently and it got me wondering:

    https://www.iijiij.com/2011/11/15/congratulations-you%E2%80%99re-eating-the-world%E2%80%99s-first-humane-hamburger-011560

    So - is this stuff okay for vegetarians or not? As a vegetarian, I'm quite used to not eating meat - I haven't eaten it for 25 years and I find the very idea off putting. I don't miss meat at all and don't think I'd even want to try this stuff. How about other vegetarians - would you eat it or not? What about the people who want to be vegetarians but struggle with the idea of going without meat?

    Complain about this comment (Comment number 4)

  • Comment number 5.

    At 10:08 19th Nov 2011, lizzie wrote:

    I still have my Tassajara bread book. The beat veggie food i ever eat was at Tassajara. It has the best nut laof recipe i have found

    Complain about this comment (Comment number 5)

  • Comment number 6.

    At 10:32 19th Nov 2011, fionabeckett wrote:

    Goodness, Debbie that sounds totally bizarre. I never quite get vegetarians wanting dishes that look - or taste like - meat.

    Can't agree with you though about cheese, Paul. It has its place - just not in cooked veggie dishes. Or only occasionally.

    Lizzie - you must obviously get together with my husband ;-)

    Complain about this comment (Comment number 6)

  • Comment number 7.

    At 15:07 19th Nov 2011, Derek wrote:

    "rather daringly - garlic"!! Garlic with everything. It has made my vegetarian life a nightmare. Why Oh why. My mother never used it. I have tried it, usually against my will and find it unbearable! At least Delia never included it in her recipe for custard [I think!] I have to read the list of ingredients on supermarket ready made meals very carefully, some of which are initially tempting for someone who has to fend for himself; but most are rejected. Linda Mac's sausages being an exception. Eating out at a restaurant or chez somebody, is now virtually impossible without having to ask whether the dish contains GARLIC.

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  • Comment number 8.

    At 17:01 19th Nov 2011, food4ever wrote:

    Where do people still queue for veggie meals nowadays? Food for Thought in Covent Garden still had queues up the steps the last time I visited. And rightly so! https://foodforthought-london.co.uk/

    Complain about this comment (Comment number 8)

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BBC Food blog: Retro recipes: 1970s Vegetarian (2024)

FAQs

What is a vegetarian BBC? ›

According to the Vegetarian Society, a vegetarian is someone who lives on a diet of grains, pulses, nuts, seeds, fruit and vegetables with or without the use of dairy products and eggs. A vegetarian does not eat any meat, poultry, game, fish, shellfish or by-products of slaughter.

Is there a BBC Good Food vegetarian magazine? ›

Amazon.co.uk: BBC Good Food Magazine - Vegetarian & Vegan Cooking / Food & Drink: Books.

Is it healthier to be vegan or vegetarian? ›

Both plant-based diets offer health benefits, however, vegetarianism offers more protein-dense food options over vegan diets, along with calcium and vitamin D sources.

Is being a vegetarian healthier than eating meat? ›

Vegetarian diets tend to have fewer calories, lower levels of saturated fat and cholesterol, and more fiber, potassium and vitamin C than other eating patterns. Vegetarians tend to weigh less than meat-eaters, and to have lower cancer rates.

What is the most famous vegetarian dish? ›

Originating in the Middle East, falafel is one the most popular vegetarian foods in the world! As one of the most popular vegetarian foods in the world, falafel needs no introduction! However, the origin of these beloved patties is rather controversial.

Which celebrity is pure vegetarian? ›

Anushka Sharma: Actor Anushka Sharma and her husband Virat Kohli are vegetarians. Sharma believes that abstaining from meat keeps you physically and mentally strong. Aamir Khan: Actor Aamir Khan turned vegetarian after his former wife Kiran Rao showed him a video about how eating meat is harmful to you.

Who is the best vegetarian chef in the world? ›

Once a master rôtisseur, French chef Alain Passard has spent the last 16 years leading a revolution in vegetarian world cuisine. It's a little disconcerting to meet a world-famous three Michelin star French chef when he's dressed in just pyjamas and slippers.

What is a vegetarian? ›

A vegetarian diet is one that does not include any meat or seafood. However, there are many variations to this – some people following a vegetarian diet may eat eggs and dairy foods, while others may avoid one or both.

What is the difference between a vegetarian and a vegan? ›

Vegetarians don't eat any food products made from meat, fish, shellfish, crustacea (such as prawns or crab) or animal by-products (such as gelatine or rennet). Vegans don't eat any food products that come from animals, including dairy products and eggs.

Is Mark Zuckerberg a vegetarian? ›

This isn't the first time Zuckerberg has shared his bizarre eating habits. In 2011, he told Fortune that he would only eat animals he had slaughtered himself, before also choosing a vegetarian lifestyle.

What does the term vegetarian stand for? ›

: not containing meat : consisting wholly of vegetables, fruits, grains, nuts, and sometimes eggs or dairy products.

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