Category: Info Point

Birdhaus Preview Week 22-30 May

Celebrate the opening of this very special place with Birdhaus. Connect in conversation, practice yoga, enjoy something to eat, have a coffee, relax or go straight to work.

The Birdhaus is a member-oriented women’s club and coworking space. Founder Michelle has created a beautiful and functional environment where you can spend your days daydreaming, socializing or getting down to work. Membership is limited, and the application process ensures that the group has an inclusive space with women from all interests and industries.

Preview Week Schedule

Follow Birdhaus on Instagram @birdhaussocial

Webpage Birdhaus

SASU Juice Bar – The naked truth.

Sasu Juice Bar

The host trio. Claudia, José Mari and David, who also own the Saftlade in Niederdorf, have taken over the Sasu from Tiffany and have recently been at work behind the counter with enormous passion and warmth.

The pretty restaurant offers the ideal retreat from the hustle and bustle of Langstrasse and spoils you with a colorful variety of freshly squeezed juices and smoothies and delicious salads. Incidentally, purely organic and plant-based ingredients are used for these and all other homemade specialties, such as an excellent macadamia cheesecake.

Once you enter Sasu, you won’t want to leave in a hurry: The interior here is unique: beautiful wallpaper, a toilet full of flamingos, the delicate aroma of freshly prepared ingredients and numerous other pretty details.

The offerings, such as the generous salad bowls (16 francs) with a wonderfully light dressing and a dollop of homemade cashew cream cheese, taste fantastic.

Sasu Juice Bar, Neugasse 41, 8005 Zurich

Text sources

All pictures from the Sasu Facbook page

The black gang – Manifesto by Good food for you

It is an essential ethical ingredient of our new, gastrosophic cuisine that we would like to emphasize: Art in the form of an exploratory process that addresses questions about cooking and artistic staging. Inspiration for this comes from the chefs of the Nordic Food Lab, who report on food making through philosophizing and critical self-reflection: “Why do we work with the ingredients we do, why do we choose to work with them in the ways we do, and are these decisions, taken together, a ‘cuisine’?” Making food and creating an ambience not only require skillful craftsmanship, but above all the willingness to combine science and subtlety, human intelligence and creativity.

We use the tools of emotionalization, for example with background music, because the sound whets the appetite. Thanks to neurogastronomic experiments, we are following a recommendation from Oxford University, which has investigated in several studies how sounds sensitize our taste buds.

We not only smell, see and taste the food, we also feel and hear it. Our enjoyment is multisensory. For example, dinner plates are chosen in different colors to sharpen the subjective perception through complementary contrasts. We promise auspicious color associations of the food. With this scientific knowledge and with the help of a self-developed gastronomy method, we realize an ethical and aesthetic temporary restaurant concept. We always think of the act of eating as an artistic medium. Our multi-course menu achieves an ethical cleansing.

Picture: Part of the “Good food for you” collective.

The gastroethical imperative is not that all fine cuisine must necessarily be vegan. Such a maxim of renunciation is neither realistic nor factually correct. Nevertheless, chefs, artists and scenographers in particular should rise to the artistic challenge and devote themselves to this topic.

“We cook and stage in temporary spaces and in combination with science, ethics and creativity.”

All photos by Manuela Rüegg

Clean Food for Carnivores @ Food Zurich.

See, smell, taste and hear new things. The art collective “Good Food for you for free”, namely artists Claudia Marolf, scenographer Helen Prates de Matos and cooking activist and vegan Lauren Wildbolz, have noble intentions: In one evening, restaurant visitors are catered for on all sensory levels. The focus is on confronting our usual eating habits and consciously breaking down familiar thought patterns. The result is a narrative spatial experience with a scientific embedding of smell, taste and tonality.

Facts: Mon. 11.09.2017, 18:30 -22:30 Experimental, 6-course plant-based dinner for CHF 50 per person (excl. drinks).

Register for the dinner experiment at infogoodfoodforyou@gmail.com

Vegan soirée with Rike Schindler & Lauren Wildbolz

Vegan Soirée – Through the evening with Lauren Wildbolz & Rike Schindler.

Zurich chef activist Lauren Wildbolz meets Berlin chef Rike Schindler (NoTiers). As part of the Dinner Soirée series, we will be cooking for you with a one-course 6-course menu on August 24 in the Himmelreich (Loft) in the Supertanker in Binz Zurich.

Menu of the evening
1) Marinated summer vegetable triology with lemon and herbs from the garden
2) Raw lasagne with homemade V cream cheese and cedar seed parmesan
3) Fermented cucumber with iced pesto
4) Portobello mushroom burger with beetroot medallion on pea mash with fig jus and sour cherries
5) Three kinds of chocolate
6) Four kinds of fermented core cheese with roasted rosemary grapes

On this evening, Rike will tell us stories from Berlin and how she became a chef.

-> Reservations by e-mail are urgently required as places are limited in the Lofft on the roof of the Supertanker.

You can take part for 75.-CHF (food without drinks)
You will receive details of the payment method with your booking confirmation.

Please send your reservation request to info@vegankitchen.ch with the subject “Vegan Soirée with Rike”. Quite simple 🙂

We are looking forward to it!

Vegan Soirée with Rike Schindler & Lauren Wildbolz on August 24 /19:3023:00 in the Himmelreich of the Supertankerat Binzstrasse 23, Zurich 8045

Alex is cooking @ July 7th & 8th

Join Alex and her crew for a long table pop-up dinner in an industrial warehouse in Zurich. Due to the special location, space will be limited!

Two dates to keep in mind, Friday 7th and Saturday 8th July. The 5 course tasting menu will be entirely plant-based and will feature locally grown and organic ingredients. The main concept of this pop-up is to introduce you to a different gastronomic experience that she hope will be as inspiring to you as it was for Alex. She will be partnering with amazing people that she can’t wait to introduce you to.

Alexiscooking is actually her Instagram account where it all started. You can follow her adventures there and see what up to the last few months. alexiscooking

LOCATION

Circle 2 in Zurich.

TWO DAYS AVAILABLE
Friday 7th & Saturday 8th July 2017, at 7pm.

COST
CHF 85 for the 5 course tasting menu and a few more surprises. The payment will be done in advance via TWINT/PAYMIT. Wines and drinks will be charged on consumption at the event.

RESERVATION
If you want to book, please use the “Going” button in Facebook or email her the date you want to join, your name and phone number at hello@eatbyalex.com. She will confirm your spot with further details about the location.

And invite your friends to that next upcoming plant-based event, please!

 

Our vegan wedding catering

Sustainable, plant-based, organic and simply good: Vegan Kitchen provides great delicacies from the region that will enchant all wedding guests at the vegan wedding dinner.

The Vegan Kitchen team works with the aim of offering delicious and healthy cuisine in Switzerland. The Vegan Kitchen team is now increasingly cooking for Swiss bridal couples and realizing their dream of a vegan wedding in Switzerland and abroad.

As Vegan Kitchen always uses regional products, the catering on offer is always fresh and varied – just drop by and find your dream wedding meal to enchant your guests!

Among the first, you are in first place. We no longer run Switzerland’s first vegan restaurant. But a catering service that celebrates vegan cuisine with the utmost conviction. With a variety of dishes, unusual menus, created from organic ingredients. Whether for weddings, business events, aperitifs or birthdays – our spirit is always the same: We want to inspire you and your guests.

Get in touch for a nice, enlightening conversation.

Contact us for an individual consultation and quotation on 079 541 41 66 or electronically at info@vegankitchen.ch

32649692 – pyramid of champagne close-up

The ethics of eating

My book tip of the month: Ethics of Food by Harald Lemke. Introduction to gastrosophy
(2nd edition – revised new edition)

How do we eat responsibly? Nutritional ethics is one of the latest developments in practical philosophy. In the face of the global food crisis, she asks the inevitable questions: How can humanity feed itself? How “well” should we eat so that everyone can enjoy good food? How can gastroethics be justified?
Far more than criticism of capitalism or the expansion of international protest movements, the food revolution is based on our thinking – on a gastrosophical rethink. Harald Lemke makes it clear that it is high time to lay the necessary foundations and start with a radical self-criticism of the Western philosophy of food.
New edition – with a detailed foreword on the question: “What do people eat?”

Excerpt from the interview with Lemke on SRF on July 14, 2015

Does this mean that we all have to become vegetarians or even vegans?

Harald Lemke: “I would say: live as much veganism as you can. It shouldn’t be a ‘thou shalt’. I advocate a gastrosophical hedonism. This consists of taking more time to eat again. This also means that we may all have to become part-time farmers. In my opinion, urban gardening is not a short-term trend. When I produce some of my own food, I have a completely different relationship with what I eat.”

But isn’t this all a little cynical in view of world hunger?

Harald Lemke: “This is directly related. Around 800 million people in the world still suffer from hunger. One step towards lifting them out of poverty would be to stop buying cheap products in our supermarkets. Because that means that these people continue to be poorly paid and still have too little money to eat. This is about fair trade. If we change our eating and consumer behavior, we can influence the big food companies.”

But how do you reach people with these messages?

Harald Lemke: “The big picture is that we are fundamentally devaluing food from an early age. Because food brings us close to animals. So we act as if food is secondary. But we don’t have food instincts like animals. So we have to use our brains to know how to eat properly. So we should all try to rediscover the great importance of food. Everyday. Anthropologically.”

Watch the full interview on SRF.

 

PDF Link to Ethics of “good food”: Gastrosophical plea for a sustainable food culture

 

Neni Testing at the 25 Hours Hotel.

At the new Neni Restaurant in the 25 Hours Hotel on Langstrasse, we were invited to try the Balagan Vegan Style (vegan mezze, main courses and desserts). Countless plates of delicious vegan creations from North African and Asian cuisine are served on our table in a colorful mix. Balagan, by the way, translates as sympathetic chaos. Of course, it’s most enjoyable when enjoyed as a couple, so I conveniently shared the delicious dishes with my lovely photographer Roland Soldi.Almost all dishes are first smoked in the Josper oven before they are further processed. More about the Josper oven here. As an aperitif, we enjoyed a babaganoush (Lebanese specialty: mashed eggplants) served with NENI’s pita bread. The waiter recommended a dry Riesling from Germany called Just.The selection of soft drinks is huge and NENI’s homemade iced tea is highly recommended! The products on the spirits menu also seem to be deliberately chosen, with the wines all coming from Europe with the exception of Lebanon, which fits in quite well with the Neni food. The waiter also assured me that the best olive oil within a radius of 20 km was found especially for the NENI on Langstrasse. So I didn’t understand why it said on the menu that the lamb came from Australia or New Zealand and the prawns from Vietnam! Since, as we all know, vegetables still don’t have to be declared in Switzerland as to where they come from, I’m no longer so sure how sustainable our vegan balagan really was.The vegan balagan consisted of Fatoush, Mashawsha, Chickpea Salad with Har Bracha Tahina and lots of fresh herbs and Nuriel’s Favorite Falafel with Har Bracha Tahina Zhug. Pictured in the back of the vegan balagan: Curry mango hummus, sweet potato from the oven with roasted almonds and rocket and spinach salad with citrus vinaigrette. As well as the muhammara, a Syrian specialty made from oven-roasted red peppers, walnuts and pomegranate syrup. We were served NENI’s pita bread again.Fatoush: Oriental bread salad with date tomatoes, radishes, snow peas, kohlrabi, sumac and herbs.Sabich is a street food specialty from Tel Aviv. Baked eggplant, hummus, tomato salsa, har bracha tahina with amba (vegan without egg) on laffa bread.My favorite was the caramelized eggplant with ginger, chili and roasted sesame seeds on Japanese rice.For dessert, we had a caramelized pineapple carpaccio with chilli threads and olive oil. The special thing about the wafer-thin sliced pineapple carpaccio was that the pineapple was also smoked in the Jasper oven for several hours beforehand. The waiter assured us that only one other restaurateur in the city of Zurich had a Jasper oven like this! The oven impressed me, especially because I thought about how many other delicious, vegan dishes could be baked and smoked in it, beyond meat.NENI – these are the first letters of the first names of Nuriel, Elior, Nadiv & Ilan Molcho – the four sons of Haya Molcho – the acronym reflects the philosophy of her family, as family is an essential part of her life. We always eat at a big table with the whole family and lots of friends. And this is precisely the principle on which the NENI is based.

Contribution by Lauren Wildbolz

Photos by Roland Soldi

 

NENI Zurich / 25HOURS HOTEL, Langstrasse 150, 8004 Zurich, Neni Webpage

 

 

Green light for a vegan diet.

A vegan diet for pregnant women and small children is possible without any problems, as long as important things are taken into account, such as vitamin B12 supplementation. This statement is supported by three medical specialists who have contributed to my new book “Vegan Love”.

  • Cookbook and guide for pregnancy, breastfeeding, baby and toddler.
  • Basic knowledge and over 80 vegan recipes for a balanced diet.
  • With contributions from three medical specialists on medical safety.

Plenty of vegetables, fruit, nuts, pulses and wholegrain products in the daily diet provide the little body with all the important nutrients. In order to rule out health risks, sound nutritional knowledge, the involvement of nutritional experts and vitamin B12 supplements are required. This book provides the basics. The 80 recipes are well-balanced, of particularly high organic quality and can be prepared in a short time without the need for ready-made products. Starting with the ideal diet when planning to have children, during pregnancy and breastfeeding, through to porridge and solid foods up to the age of three. With valuable contributions from three expert doctors as well as many practical tips and hints for everyday use. Lauren Wildbolz has been meat-free since she was fourteen and now eats a vegan diet with her husband and three-year-old daughter.

Lauren Wildbolz, entrepreneur, food activist, cookbook author and one of the pioneers of vegan food in Switzerland with her “vegan kitchen and bakery”, which opened in 2010. Organizer of vegan cooking courses, blogger and operator of a catering company.

Photos: Andrea Diglas

“Vegan Love” is now available in bookshops. Insights into the book right here.

  • Cookbook and guide for pregnancy, breastfeeding, baby and toddler.
  • Basic knowledge and over 80 vegan recipes for a balanced diet.
  • With contributions from three medical specialists on medical safety.

ISBN: 978-3-03800-921-4
Binding: Hardcover
Length: 240 pages
Weight: 1015 g
Format: 19.5 cm x 26.5 cm

Order online right here.