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The Best BBQ Food Truck In America

January 28, 2014 by India Leigh

The Best BBQ Food Truck In America



This post needs few words.  Here in Austin, sits one of the best food trucks I’ve ever had the good fortune to stumble across.  It is BBQ. It is Vegan.  All those components on the plate are gluten free.  Is this nirvana?! I will say this now, I have never tasted potato salad so utterly, totally and incredibly good. I would eat it for breakfast, lunch AND dinner. The coleslaw and beans?….  well if I told you what I thought you’d think I was exaggerating. 

BBQ Revolution‘s food is so sought after that when I arrived to get my fill they’d sold out of their BBQ ‘No Bull Brisket’ and Smokey Curlz.  I’d had them before and the BBQ flavours were sensational!! But honestly, even without the BBQ ‘meats’ filling up the eco-friendly compostable plate, I was MORE than happy!

They are located up at North Loop.  In a near all vegan food trailer park.  I’m in love!





Blake.  The owner and genius behind BBQ Revolution.


BBQ Revolution Food Truck

701 53rd St

Austin, TX 78751

Filed Under: North America, Restaurant Reviews, Texas, Vegan Travel Tagged With: Austin, BBQ, BBQ Beans, BBQ vegan, Brisket, Easting out, gluten free, HOME, Potato Salad, restaurant reviews, Restaurants, Ribs, Texas, top vegan food trucks, Travel Austin, Vegan, vegan travel, vegetarian

Counter Culture. Food Activism At Its Most Delicious Best. Great Food Adventures In Austin.

January 24, 2014 by India Leigh

Counter Culture.  Food Activism At Its Most Delicious Best.  Great Food Adventures In Austin.


Whilst I was in Austin, this was the place I frequented the most for some good vegan comfort food.  It is on the East side of town and close to the Capital City Bakery, a 100% vegan bakery that had just opened it’s first retail space.  Pretty much like Capital City Bakery, Sue Davis, the founder of Counter Culture, began her vegan food business in a local food truck.  That is not to put food trucks on a lower rung or anything.  Austin’s food truck scene is pretty special, with several permanent food trailer parks around the city.  One park I encountered over on 1st Street even had it’s own heated covered area with rest rooms and community tables.  

Counter Culture is wholesome meatless food, cooked from scratch.  Some dishes are raw foods ALL are dairy free. At the weekends they offer special brunch menus, which is when I tried their kale & wild mushroom omlete, made with tofu. On the side was perched a generous stack of the most delicious gluten free bread from Misty Morning Bakery.  It ordered it with a side of  chunky roasted potatoes, just to be sure I was going to be completely stuffed! The omlete was light and the flavours were incredible, the seasoning of the tofu omlete was spot on.  

The founder Sue was usually around to say hello.  Sue had a varied career and travelled extensively before she decided to open first her food truck, and now her ‘brick and mortar’ cafe.  Just chatting with her briefly it was evident she puts her heart into what she does, and it shows (or should that be tastes) in her food. Actually, I spoke with many of the local vegan businesses and I really got a sense of close community between them and it was seemingly apparent they were having fun in their food ventures/adventures.




Raw donut holes.  Nice as a tiny morsel of sweetness to end the meal.




Their black eyed pea salad.  They call it Texan caviar!


Again, the bread was Misty Morning Bakrey.  I opted for the pac man salad as a side in an attempt to put a little colour on my plate.  The reuben was made from marinated tempeh, from local artisans The Hearty Vegan, with heaps of sauerkraut (perhaps a little too much for my taste) and creamy mustard.  




My friend had the spicy beet burger, and they really weren’t kidding.  Woo, such a kick!


Of course there was room for dessert!  Coconut cream pie with a chocolate crust and crumble topping.  

The service was always perfect. You’ve got to hand it to the people from Austin, they are good hearted, down to earth types, who make you feel like you are their most welcomed guest!  

Counter Culture Restaurant‎
2337 East Cesar Chavez Street

Austin, TX 78702

(512) 524-1540

Filed Under: North America, Restaurant Reviews, Texas, Vegan Travel Tagged With: diners, Engine 2, gluten free, HOME, plant based, restaurant reviews, Restaurants, restaurants in Austin, Texas, Vegan, vegetarian

Could Tempeh Eventually Replace Meat At Our Kitchen Tables? Let Me Hear Y’All Say Yee-Haw For Texas Tempeh

January 18, 2014 by India Leigh

Could Tempeh Eventually Replace Meat At Our Kitchen Tables? Let Me Hear Y’All Say Yee-Haw For Texas Tempeh
Beth & Becky founders of The Hearty Vegan

I arrived in Austin, promising myself I would lay low so I could complete a project I’ve been meaning to do for some time.  But, I guess my curiosity for vegan artisans runs too deep. I was at the natural foods store, filling up my basket with ingredients for a recipe I was creating and I could not help but notice, in the chilled foods section, a local Texan company making Tempeh.  After a brief search on the internet I find it is made by The Hearty Vegan, and run by a mom and daughter team, right here in Austin.  With numbers of people adopting a plant based diet increasing steadily year on year, and the increasing population highlighting issues of landmass, meat alternatives are becoming ever more popular (and innovative with flavours and their uses), I’m all for spreading the word. So,I wanted to meet them. I sent a message and asked if they would like to get together. Thankfully, they replied that they would.

We arranged to meet in the cafe I ended up frequenting the most whilst I stayed in Austin, Counter Culture.  It is a homey, vegan cafe. The painted bright turquoise interior is as bright as it’s servers.  The owner, Sue, is a fellow world traveller who has put down her backpack and tied on her apron to share her love of food.  I was sitting watching the world go by and sipping on hot tea when Beth and Becky breezed in, armed with a box of their tempeh goodies for me to try.  They had that typical Austin warmth and easiness about them as I probed them with a million questions about their mutual tempeh obsession.

For those that don’t know.  Tempeh was first made in Indonesia as a food protein, made from fermented beans.  High in fibre, low in saturated fat and zero cholesterol, Tempeh is now becoming more and more popular as people seek tasty meat alternatives.  It is incredibly versatile, ‘meaty’, with a firm texture that absorbs flavours well. Many prefer it over tofu for it’s firmer, more substantial texture.  If you’ve not yet tried tempeh ‘bacon’ then do.  You’ve got a treat in store.

The Hearty Vegan 


Beth, the mom, told me how she turned vegetarian in college after choosing a topic to debate in class. She had to convince her classmates that being vegetarian was not only beneficial to health but morally responsible.  She researched this subject that she had previously known nothing about, and formed her argument so well that she ended up convincing herself and became a vegetarian.  Taking up many causes to help educate others to the vegetarian lifestyle.  It really opened her eyes and made her live far more consciously.  When Becky was born, she fed her a vegetarian, then vegan diet.  She also decided to ‘un-school’ her for the majority of her education.  Becky is a breath of fresh air.  Her confident, passionate nature is obvious and infectious.  My reserved British counterparts could benefit from her outlook and worldliness.  Un-schooling obviously did her no harm, or judging by her sparky exuberance, neither does her being vegan.  

Beth had been making tempeh for 25 years for herself and her family, and generously giving it to friends. Just over three years ago in 2010, she and Becky began forming a dream of selling their tempeh and their business becoming part of the local economy.  So they founded The Hearty Vegan which is steadily growing as word spreads.  They sell in many of Austin’s vegetarian friendly and vegan restaurants, food trucks, natural markets, local CSA’s and Whole Foods. Perhaps one day the big red heart logo of The Hearty Vegan’s Texas Tempeh will be as synonymous a lighted sign as that big old M used to be.  It doesn’t take too much of a paradigm shift to see this as a possibility. The Beth & Becky team obviously is working.  The girls have their own personal strengths that they bring to the company, and they clearly have a relationship that many mothers and daughters might wish they could have.

Over the years that awesome ‘at home’ baking and cooking has created a long list of recipes loved by many.  Beth and Becky decided it was time to share them, and so put together the Vegan Duet cookbook.  This news is fresh off the press, so I promise I will let you know when you can go buy the book for yourself.  I think you will want to, with recipes like Asian Meatballs, Spanakopita, Southern Fried Tempeh, Blackened Burgers and Beth famous and delicious Dill Tempeh (‘Tuna’) Salad.  They pride themselves on keeping it simple but delivering flavour with few ingredients.  Tuna salad and meatballs are Beth’s particular pride and joy. I tried the salad and I’d have to concur it is pretty darned good!  

They believe in offering people more choices. Alternatives to meat. They promise that they are never putting any weird stuff in their food and keep as close to the original Indonesian methods as practically possible.  Their beans are non GMO,  gluten free and 100% organic. I wondered what made their tempeh so delicious  Becky told me, 
‘We don’t pasteurise our tempeh. Instead, we sell it frozen. Freezing doesn’t kill this amazingly healthy fungus and so our tempeh is still alive. Our tempeh is white because it’s completely covered with mycelium. Beans are delicious by themselves, but the mycelium adds a a layer of rich, complex flavour that puts tempeh in a class by itself’.

Beth Taylor of The Hearty Vegan



After exhausting the girls with my barrage of questions it was time for us to part ways and for us to go back about our business.  I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. It is heartening to me when I see that businesses can be ethical, profitable, employment generating models, that can be a touchstone for all. I’m sure you will agree that’s happy making.  The Hearty Vegan are one of several local food artisans I came across in Austin that are run by families, couples and friends.  Their food served up with the characteristic joy and pride, bordering on obsession that food artisans usually embody.



Spicy sausage, sizzling in a pan.


I used the garbanzo tempeh for my original vegan and gluten free Haggis Neeps & Tatties recipe.  

Their spicy sausage tempeh was turned into sausage crunches and topped my vegan breakfast tacos (I will share this recipe soon!)

Do I really believe that tempeh can be the high protein choice of many that can eventually overtake consumption of animal products?  After tasting the likes of tempeh ‘bacon’, chewing down on a BBQ ‘rib’ made from The Hearty Vegan Garbanzo Tempeh, and my recipes of my own of Haggis, and Breakfast Taco’s with Sausage Crunchies, among others (not to mention the health benefits of plant based eating)…I’d have to shout out a whole hearted..’you bet ya’.   And, I am sure Beth & Becky will be doing their darndest to make it happen.

Filed Under: North America, Product Reviews, Texas, Vegan Travel Tagged With: Austin, gluten free, healthy eating, HOME, meat alternatives, plant based, product reviews, Products, tempeh, Texas, The Hearty VEgan, Vegan, vegetarian

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Hi, my name is India. Welcome to A Vegan Obsession. This site is for you to enjoy the delicious discoveries of a gluten free, vegan traveller and cook. Read More…

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