Cooking/ Recipes

Go Potatoes! Inspiration From Argentina

vegan paparella cheeseIn the urban US, I enjoy easy access to a vast vegan pantry—Earth Balance sticks, coconut milk and oil, affordable raw nuts, and magical powders like agar and xantham gum await me at the market down the street. For cheeses, I can get all the ingredients and make my own nut cheeses; grab DaiyaFollow Your Heart, or Chao; or purchase a variety of gourmet cheeses: Kite Hill, Punk Rawk Labs, Heidi-Ho, Miyoko’s, and more.
In other places, like Argentina, it’s prohibitively difficult and expensive to get those products. Yet, I recently had awesome vegan pizza with a melty, delicious mozzarella alternative in Buenos Aires, and it’s something that could be made anywhere. The secret is simple: stop underestimating the humble potato.
“Paparella” is featured at Buenos Aires’ Pizza Vegana, the new restaurant vegans and vegetarians visiting Argentina cannot miss. It’s a vegan co-op where they’ve perfected the potato-based cheese and share unlimited pizza (pizza libre), and good vibes, with the world. While Pizza Vegana created their own secret recipe for Paparella, anyone can make potato cheese. It’s affordable and easy!
POTATO CHEESE
This basic recipe results in a plain, soft, fondue-consistency cheesy sauce you can store in the refrigerator, perfect for pizza or dipping. Try adding herbs, garlic/onion powder, or other flavorings to make it your own!
vegan paparella cheeseDirections:
-Add the following to blender:
  • 2 medium potatoes, peeled, cut into pieces and boiled like for mashing (we’ve used Russet and Gold)
  • 1/2 cup water (use what you boiled the potatoes in)
  • 2 T lemon juice
  • 3/4 cup vegetable oil
  • 1/2 cup nutritional yeast (this is very worthwhile to buy)
  • Salt and pepper to taste
-Mix until forms a sticky paste—taste and adjust as necessary.
vegan paparella cheese
About the author: Ashley lives in wonderful San Francisco with her partner Diego and dog Potato (all vegan), so she has an obvious bias towards the tuber. They frequently travel and have found that celebrating vegan food usually enhances experiencing other cultures, rather than being too hard and making everything suck (like people told her when she was younger). Ashley and Potato have tested and approved these recipes.

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