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Lifestyle the vegan way

West Hollywood bans fur

West Hollywood is the first city in USA to ban the selling of fur in fashion.
http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/story?section=news%2Flocal%2Flos_angeles&id=8360921
After the Oslo Fashion week that last year decided to go fur free, now it’s Hollywood accepting the challenge of a more compassionate fashion.

No Fur

No Fur

The decision is surely goning to piss off a lot of people especially in that fringe of the fashion industry that still believes you need to kill, torture ans steal animals’ skin to look gorgeous. Anna Wintour and other witches: get a life, you are so out, move on and leave your thrones, on with the new, stylish and compassion kings and queens of fashion.

Filed under: animal rights, anti-fur

Berlin’s best kept raw secret: La Mano Verde

On my short stay in Berlin I had the chance to dine out at La Mano Verde, a vegan/raw restaurant in the ever trendy German capital. I have been flirting with raw food for about five or six months now and it’s been a rewarding trip in which I learnt to tune (and listen) more directly into my body’s needs. What amazes me about raw food is that it’s incredibly quick to make, it tastes delicious and it does feed your body with everything it needs to keep in good health. I say this from personal experience, not because I have read it on some raw propaganda websites or books. The feeling you get after being on a raw diet even for a short time (a week) is that of increased clarity, energy and concentration. The effects of foods on our psychology have been widely demonstrated so it’s not up to me to show you the ethical and health benefits behind our eating choices. Go out and get all the relevant information or simply try it for yourself: what better way to walk into a raw restaurant and put your taste buds to the test? If you are in Berlin, the choice is obvious: La Mano Verde.

Tools of the trade

Tools of the trade

So here I am, in a city that is increasingly being veganized, at this nice restaurant hidden away in a pleasant courtyard in chic Uhlandrstrasse, West Berlin. It is marked as a high end vegan restaurant and when I look at the menu I am a bit disappointed by limited choice of raw dishes, it seems like you are somehow forced into choosing between option A and option B on any dish. Stoically I complete my raw order and endure the temptation to side-track into cooked. I try to order the Cannelloni Non Forno, but I am told they don’t make them tonight so, disappointedly I fall back on the Raw Raviol (I had heard of them but I have never experienced).

When the dishes start to come I begin to realize that I am in for a big surprise: we’re talking the high end spectrum of raw cooking here! Everything tastes delicious and leaves me with the feeling of having discovered Berlin’s best kept secret.

Here is what I have ordered. I started with a Lime Almond Gazpacho that tastes simply heavenly, maybe the best raw soup I’ve ever had: a delicate balance of coconut sweetness blended into a soft avocado texture, with hints of chilli and refreshing lime.

Lime Almond Gazpacho

Lime Almond Gazpacho

The standards of the dinner are set very high by this more than delicious soup, so I eagerly await the next dish: Raw Mediterranean Quiche made with fennel, mushrooms, pimentos, black Kalamata olives and thyme crust.

Raw Mediterranean Quiche

Raw Mediterranean Quiche

The taste is fulfilling under every point of view and while I am still wondering how the hell the chef reached such a good balance for the soup. I delve into the quice, a bit afraid to spoil the perfect composition sitting in front of my dish and I indulge into the epicurean (raw) feast: tomatoes, black olives, thyme and nuts hold together by a mix of essential oils. Essential oils in the kitchen: it’s a prime for me and I love it.

I am very curious to know how they make raw ravioli and when the waiter brings this, he gets the wow effect right on the spot: parsnip ravioli with pears, ginger and red cabbage salad.

Raw Turnip Ravioli

Raw Turnip Ravioli

If I was afraid to ruin the composition of the previous dish, imagine the guilt I feel to bring my fork and knife close to the plate…obviously it tastes even better than it looks! I want to marry the chef here, so I look into the open kitchen and see a middle age man, he may not be the head chef but he certainly knows the secrets to the soup and the sweety flavour of the ravioli. Not my type but he’ll do if he can bring me to heaven and back.

I am approaching the end of the main dishes with a Timballo of Salsa Verde and Aubergine Terrine.

Timballo of Salsa Verde and Aubergine Terrine

Timballo of Salsa Verde and Aubergine Terrine

I remember reading raw aubergine aren’t supposed to be very healthy but I am too curious to taste them and pretend I don’t remember what I had read. Once again, nuts, basilic, summer squash, tomato kirsch: it all tastes very good and is cleverly put together by someone that obviously has been practising the art of raw food!

I feel obliged to finish off with a dessert even if I am not hungry anymore. It’s a cashew nuts cheesecake, a bit too rich and sugary. Mine (thanks to Any Phyo’s recipe) tastes better! Little sad satisfaction of a raw chef wannabe like me.

I leave the restaurant and I head back to the hotel, very satisfied with my new Berlin discovery: the whole dinner was incredibly fresh, well prepared and tasted delicious. That’s what I associate Berlin with now: the fresh taste of ginger, lime and coconut of a multicultural city where gourmet food is accessible, and you don’t need a mortgage to shop organic!  Well done Berlin, it’s a city I certainly would like to live in and on my way back to underground I feel sorry for all those people I know that still think culinary art is ruled by strict rules based on animal exploitation and slavery.

Filed under: Berlin, La Mano Verde, Lime Almond Gazpacho, raw food restaurant, Raw Mediterranes Quiche, Raw Ravioli