I became a vegetarian in the summer of 2008, and went vegan in the summer of 2019, which means I have not eaten meat for the majority of my life. And in a family that has its own โsecretโ pasta sauce and meatballs recipe brought over from Italy (or maybe found in some 1940s housekeeping magazine, Iโm not sure yet), it meant I had to learn how to cook a lot of my own food. So Iโve also been cooking for most of my life too.
And apparently, cooking is some great feat among most of my friends, all of whom seem to primarily subsist on ordering Taco Bell for every meal (even though everyone knows they should be ordering Del Taco).
Like, for fuckโs sake Julian, you DO NOT need to water down your pasta sauce to heat it up. What the fuck is wrong with you.
When I cook, I donโt really follow recipes. I just throw some stuff together and seem to be decent at using enough garlic to cover any/all sins. Still, my fiancรฉe wife has been trying to get a book of โourโ recipes together, which means I have to start writing down what I do. And what better place to write something down than here?
Iโm told that I should actually be doing that in the recipe book that we have for just this sort of thing, but whatever. Where am I supposed to put the life story section there? In the margins? No one will read it then. If I write it here, then theyโre forced to read it. In fact, if youโre reading these last few sentences, you just did exactly that.
Thanks.
Anyways, this is the semi-recipe thing that I follow to make vegan cheesesteaks.
So the first thing I do here is start on the peppers and onions. I season them to taste using a subset of the spices and whatnot that are part of this recipe; just the dry spices (excluding ginger), and vegan butter. So: garlic, salt, season-all salt, black pepper, and crushed red pepper. And also butter.
I season things to taste (read: put in enough garlic and season-all salt to kill a normal person) in a pan with some oil and butter, and then cook it on medium-high heat until this ends up nice and browned.
I actually set the burner to the highest possible setting, but thatโs just because my stove takes forever to actually heat up that high. So by the time it actually gets to 11, things are pretty much where they need to be.
They say a watched pot never boils, but apparently it still takes 20 minutes of total neglect before even the little bubbles start forming at the bottom.
So once the peppers and onions are mostly, but not all the way, done, I then add the vegan steak slices to the same pan. I break them apart, add more of the same dry spices, finally add a little bit of ginger (which I was out of and did not realize until after I had already started cooking so I did not get to use it this time), and then add the sauces (steak sauce, spicy brown mustard, and soy aminos). And again, more butter.
Iโll mix that all together in one half of the pan, and then throw it back on the heat. Once things have heated up a bit, I mix everything together, and let it cook through a bit more.
While everything in the pan is doing various cookings and sizzlings and whatnot, I then prep the bread. The rolls I bought were not pre-sliced, but thankfully thereโs an knife for that. Itโs not the kind that makes you run faster, but it works well enough to tear through bread.
I spread a little bit of butter inside and outside (top and bottom) the rolls, and then stick them in the oven at a low-ish temperature (~250F) for a few minutes.
You know, looking at how much (vegan) butter I use hereโฆ and everywhere elseโฆ and how much butter everyone in my family usesโฆ maybe our predisposition to heart disease isnโt that much of a mystery.
Eventually, the pepper-onion-steak mix will look pretty done. Thatโs when I know itโs done.
And once it is done, I pull the bread out of the oven and start topping the rolls with the pepper-onion-steak mix and tornt up slices of vegan cheese (about 2, 2 and a half, slices per roll).
Since the bread and sandwich fillings donโt always get along and stay in place, I use wooden toothpicks to hold things together. I then throw the sandwiches in the oven (at, like, 350F) for a bit (for, like, 10 minutes) to finish things off. Mostly to let the cheese melt.
But the meltiness of the various brands of vegan cheese is hit-or-miss, so it doesnโt always do whatโs expected of it in the oven. So a minute or two in the microwave helps finish off the finishing off.
Sure, if I had the time, I could make, like, a cheese sauce from the slices and some soy/oatmilk, and use that. Or maybe I could even just mix the cheese into the pepper-onion-steak mix. But, whatever. This way is good enough.
And yeah, it came out good enough this time. Pair with sweet tea. Because itโs good.
This โrecipeโ (in quotes and italics because can I really call it that if I, like, measured nothing and only have estimates for temperatures and times?) usually makes about 4 sandwiches, but thatโs just because thatโs how many rolls came in the bag I bought. I guess if you had more rolls you could probably thin out the sandwich fillings per-roll and make more sandwiches.