This summer marks my fourth year since I started experimenting with vegan recipe development. In what feels like the blink of an eye, I’ve shared over 400 recipes (and many more photos) with you on this blog. When I started out I didn’t know how to cook a simple potato or chop an onion. Seriously. Thankfully, the wondrous internet reassured me that I was not the only person to ever type such a question into a search engine. Whew. Aside from cooking, I’d never shot a picture of food in my life, nor did it ever cross my mind to do so. Now, a day doesn’t go by when I don’t pick up my camera or chef’s knife.
Eric, who claims he does not like cooking (but loves eating), mentioned how he hates when recipes say “season to taste”. [I don’t know what it’s supposed to taste like if I’ve never made it before!] I can’t help but smile when he says this because I used to be in his shoes, scared to make a simple ingredient decision for fear of ruining the entire thing. It gets easier though. My biggest mistake starting out was probably under-seasoning my food or avoiding salt all together. Now I know that adding salt to taste is something you get a sense for with experience. When the flavours pop, I know I’ve hit the sweet spot.
So while I don’t quite believe the saying that practice makes perfect, I do think that practice builds experience and confidence. This is true for so many things in life. The more I work at it, the more fun it becomes. Now when I cook for pleasure, it’s fun to throw things into a bowl and trust my instincts.
Another surprise for me on this journey has been about the food itself. I’m in awe of the recipes that I can make using simple plant-based ingredients. Each week brings about new inspiration and new discoveries. I feel like I’ve only touched the tip of the iceberg as to what I can create. It’s exciting to look down and see a plate of food that looks as vibrant as I feel on the inside. Being able to share this passion with you, is really what I enjoy the most.
The base of this salad is made with plump soaked almonds. As I mentioned in my last post, soaking almonds in water for several hours allows the nutrients in the almonds to be absorbed better in the body. After soaking and rinsing, I processed the almonds into a flaked texture as the base for my salad. It worked perfectly and the salad has such a great, chewy texture.
To bulk up the flaked almonds, I added celery, garlic, and green onion for more flavour and crunch. Finally some oil-based mayonnaise, Dijon mustard, salt, pepper, and lemon juice brought everything together. The end result is creamy, crunchy, a bit tangy, and seriously, seriously hard to resist. I couldn’t stop eating it straight from the bowl! It got to the point where I was worried that I wouldn’t have enough salad left to photograph. hah. This happens to me a lot actually. I’d be horrible on a cooking show because I’d just want to stuff my face the entire time while trying to pretend like I’m a civilized human being.
If you’re looking for a fun summer finger food, you can serve it on top of cucumber slices for a refreshing, light appetizer. I used a metal teaspoon to carefully scoop a well into each slice. We enjoyed this for lunch and it was so refreshing! The only thing I would change next time is to peel the cucumber first. The skin was a bit hard to chew through.
You can also serve this mixture on top of a salad (love), stuffed into a pita or wrap (also love), or as a hearty dip for crackers (such as during a 10pm fridge raid).
Rather than using tuna fish to create this salad, my plant-based version uses raw almonds which are soaked until plump and then processed until flaked in texture. Once the flaked almonds are mixed with some vegan mayo, Dijon, celery, green onion, lemon, garlic, salt, and pepper, it turns into a creamy, fresh, and crunchy topping for a salad, crackers, sandwich, or wrap. Flaked Almond "Tuna" Salad
Yield
Serves 4Soak time
3 to 9 hoursPrep time
Cook time
0 minutesTotal time
Ingredients
Directions
Tip:
Nutrition Information
(click to expand)
The 2013 VegNews Veggie Awards are going down once again! I’m delighted to be nominated in the Favorite Blog category for the second year in a row. Once again, there are all kinds of incredible prizes up for grabs such as a week long, all expenses paid Caribbean Cruise (!), Breville juicer, weekly cookie deliveries, and more just by filling out the survey. If you think Oh She Glows is worthy of such an award, I would be so grateful for your vote of support (Favorite Blog category is found on page 5 of the survey, by the way).
Oh, Angela! You are always creating recipes that are out-of-the-box, and so delicious! Thanks for another great vegan lunch!
Mmmm…looks yummy!
So beautiful and looks delish!
This is SO good, and I had everything on hand! Thank you!!
Hi Angela! I had some soaked almonds in the fridge per the suggestion of your last post so I decided to make this for lunch today. It turned out fantastic-I was out of celery so I used carrots and I added tomato and a splash of vinegar. I will be making this again-thanks for the post and looking forward to your cookbook!
Hey Nicole, so glad it worked out for you! Thanks for letting me know.
Just made this… it’s amazing! I think it just became my “favorite lunch of the moment” too!
Awesome to hear, thanks for trying it!
What a journey! I can relate a lot. I went vegan 4 years ago and prior to that didn’t know how to cook a thing. Now I love cooking so much and have just started blogging to share that passion.
The looks a fantastic dish. I love the little cucumber cups but am probably more likely to just pile a heap on a big leafy salad for lunch :)
Angela,
This almond tuna salad just blew my mind…you are totally awesome.
My husband will be so-o-o happy!
THANK YOU!
I just made this for lunch today. O.M.G! Amazeballs! Thank you so much for sharing this delicious recipe x
So happy you enjoyed it Jenny!
Oh I love this! I’ve not made it in a while. Yum!
Done! Vote officially cast for you. I love your blog and find you so inspiring. I am grateful for the work you do. Hope you win!
Thanks for the great recipe Angela! I am going to make “tuna melts” out of it tomorrow… bagel, garden fresh tomato, tuna, vegan cheese, and a little broil… mmmmm!
I love that you make my old meat favourites (yes, I really liked tuna melts!) accessible again!
I have SO many cucumbers from my garden that I’m eating two a day!!! What a great idea for little cucumber sandwiches!!
Love the close up foodie pics, very food-porn-ish ;) definitely made me hungry!
another amazing recipe!
CONGRATS on your nomination, much deserved :) I love the fact you scooped out the cucumber what a great idea! I had always had a hard time getting my hummus to stay on top of the cucumber but now I see scoopin it makes it happen ;) Thanks for sharing this delish recipe! Love + Shine CourtStar
I love this recipe! We just added it (along with homemade hummus) to our salad for lunch. Thank you, Angela, for creating such creative and consistently GOOD recipes. The vibe of this blog is really positive and life-affirming. Good luck with the contest. I just voted for you. :)
Thank you Cheryl, that means a lot to me!
Thanks for this! My garden has produced an abundance of cucumbers and I have been looking for other ways to serve them! This looks wonderful!
This is so delicious! Wow, I have only used garbanzo beans for a salad like this. Soaking almonds is a whole new world. thank you.
Looks yummy! I love the beginning part of this part — you are such an inspirational photographer and recipe creator. Thanks for sharing your awesome recipes and doing what you do!
Mmm…it’s great to be reminded of a forgotten. I’ve made a few chickpea mock-tuna recipes, but soaked almonds sound great! xxx