The Sunday Times Magazine • 45
Irina Linovich’s
recipes will help you
bring comfort and joy
to guests who want
to liberate the turkeys
this Christmas
D
espite the howls of
protest it still elicits
from some people,
veganism has gained an
unstoppable momentum over the
past couple of years. It means that
many of us, no matter how much
meat, fish and dairy we may
consume, know someone for
whom such things are strictly off
the menu. So what to do if they’re
coming to dinner over Christmas?
Anyone who cooks can probably
rustle up a few vegan dishes almost
by default, but what’s good for a
kitchen supper doesn’t always cut
it at this time of year. That
chickpea casserole just doesn’t
quite scream “celebration”, does it?
It’s something 36-year-old
restaurateur Irina Linovich has
given plenty of thought to. As a
former Vogue executive, aesthetics
have always been important to
her, and when she became vegan
three years ago, she felt strongly
that plant-based dishes should be
as visually enticing as meat dishes.
“When Michelin-starred chefs
use animal products that aren’t
very attractive, they use flowers,
colourful vegetables and herbs to
make the plate look pretty. So why
can’t those same things be the
hero of the dish?” she asks.
At Holy Carrot, the vegan
restaurant she launched this year
in Knightsbridge, the food is
healthy, nutritionally balanced and
visually appealing. “I take all the
customs and traditions of Italian,
French and British cuisines and
reproduce it with vegan produce,”
she says. So a a lemon tart gets its
richness from coconut milk
instead of eggs, for example, and
risotto is made with grated
parsnip instead of rice. It shows
how easy it is to recreate anything
if you use a bit of imagination.
Visit holycarrot.co.uk
Parsnip risotto
Parsnips are an essential part of
Christmas, and here I’ve used
them to replace the rice in an
update on risotto. It’s so light it
leaves you full of energy to party.
SERVES
4 people
INGREDIENTS
For the risotto
600g parsnips, peeled and chopped
100ml vegetable stock
50ml white wine (optional)
250ml soya cream
1 tsp truffle oil
4 tsp nutritional yeast
For the garnish
80g soya butter
3 tbsp red miso paste
200g king oyster mushrooms,
cut into small cubes
Dill and
tarragon oil
20g tarragon, leaves
only, roughly chopped
20g dill, fronds only,
roughly chopped
100ml sunflower oil
Put all the ingredients
in a food processor
and whizz together at
high speed for 3 min.
Strain through a
triple-lined cheesecloth
or fine sieve into a jug.
Any leftover oil can be
kept in the fridge for
10 days, but bring it up
to room temperature
before using.
6 radishes, thinly sliced
Dill and tarragon oil (see left)
01 Put the parsnips in a food
processor and pulse until they
look like rice.
02 Put the stock, wine (if using)
and parsnip rice in a large
saucepan and cook over a
medium heat for 3 min, stirring
occasionally.
03 Stir in the cream and truffle
oil and cook for a further 3 min.
Add the yeast and cook for a final
3 min, stirring until smooth.
04 Meanwhile make the garnish.
Mix the soya butter and red miso
together in a bowl, then cook in
a large frying pan set over a
medium to high heat. When soft,
add the mushrooms and cook for
3 min, until golden.
05 To serve, put a couple of
spoons of risotto in warmed
bowls and top with the
mushrooms, followed by the
radish, so that the risotto is
entirely covered. Finish with
a drizzle of the dill and tarragon
oil around the edge of the risotto.
1
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