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Ellen Kanner

Ellen Kanner

Posted: August 9, 2010 10:55 AM

Betsy Shipley has seen the future, and it is an eco-loving foodie's wet dream -- honest, local, sustainable, organic, free of genetic modification, green, delicious, affordable and accessible to all. Yes, you say, I want that, too. It all revolves around tempeh. Still with us?

Tempeh, the Indonesian soy superfood, dates back to sometime in the 16th century. And yet to the uninitiated, tempeh still provokes blank stares. Or fear.

"It's the mold," sighs Betsy's husband, Gunter Pfaff. "The moldy culture. Edible mold in cheese or sauerkraut is totally acceptable, but with tempeh, it's still a little weird."

Gunter knows weird. A former documentary filmmaker, he found himself at 50 overeducated and unemployed, a victim of the recession. Sound familiar? This happened 30 years ago.

"It was Michigan, 1980, the previous recession," says a wry Gunter. "You could either drink yourself to death, jump off a bridge or do something constructive. I decided to make tempeh."

Now you can find packaged tempeh at natural food stores and even some supermarkets. Back then, if you could get it at all, it was through small local co-ops and was often handmade and homegrown. That's how Gunter and Betsy discovered it in the 70s. Others may fear tempeh, but they were tempeh true believers from the start, mold and all.

"We thought it was great," says Betsy, a vegetarian trying "to get away from eating too much cheese."

"I was into sausages," says Gunter. "It was the substitute for my meat habit, my sausage habit. If it wasn't for Betsy and tempeh, I would have been dead a long time ago."

Distinctly not dead, Gunter is 77, "pretty healthy," as he says, and active. He and Betsy bike and play tennis every day. Good genes? Maybe. But a diet tipping more towards tempeh than sausage doesn't hurt.

Mild-tasting tempeh packs serious nutritional creds, with 20 protein grams per 4-ounce serving, beaucoup fiber and only about 200 calories. It's got chew and substance, it's a meat substitute with a million apps.

It is one thing to love tempeh. It is another to go pro with it. Betsy's Tempeh started small, with the couple buying organic soybeans from local farmers and making tempeh on their Ann Arbor farm. While larger companies sell tempeh in bricks, they shaped theirs into patties, selling to neighboring food co-ops and nearby restaurants, who couldn't keep up with tempeh burger demand.

"We've done demos in supermarkets where people gave us a hug and said, 'Oh, thank God, you saved my life -- I've got vegetarian teenagers or a husband with a triple bypass.' We've had other people say, 'I'll eat my meat and die early, thank you.'" Gunter sighs. "Being way ahead of our time is very lonesome."

If Betsy and Gunter had the vision -- and cojones -- to make tempeh before the world was ready, you can at least try eating it. Buy a brick. Better yet, try making it yourself via Gunter's DIY tempeh technique. Make it for personal consumption. Go into business and make a fortune. Though retired from the tempeh biz, the couple remain the Johnny Appleseeds of tempeh, wanting to spread the joy and the soy. They will consult and talk you through the process.

Tempeh has a long and illustrious history, but it's the future of tempeh Betsy has dreams about, with each community having " a worker-owned tempeh production unit. We would love to see small food coops start making tempeh for the local community while working with organic farmers to grow the beans."

"It's so useful, such green food," says Gunter. "And you don't have to kill anything for lunch."

Chili-Spiked Tempeh With Green Beans and Brown Rice

8 ounces tempeh, cut into bite-sized cubes
3 tablespoons fresh lime juice
3 tablespoons sriracha*
2 tablespoons sesame oil
3 tablespoons soy
1 teaspoon sugar
1 cup brown rice
2 cups water or vegetable broth
1-1/2 pounds green beans, tips trimmed, whole or cut into bite-sized pieces as desired
1/2 cup fresh mint, coarsely chopped
1/2 cup fresh cilantro, coarsely chopped
1/3 cup cashews

In medium-sized bowl, mix together soy, chili sauce, sesame oil. Stir in sugar until dissolved.

Add cubed tempeh, stirring a few times to coat. Let tempeh marinate in soy-chili mixture while you prepare brown rice and green beans.

In a medium-sized pot, bring water or vegetable broth to boil over high heat. Add brown rice. Cover and reduce heat to low. Let rice cook for 30 minutes, or until tender and all the liquid is absorbed. Return lid to pot and remove from heat. Let rice cool.

In a large pot, steam or boil green beans until crisp-tender and vivid green, about 7 minutes. Drain beans and immediately rinse in cold water and cover with a handful of ice. This stops the cooking process and keeps the beans at their vibrant best. When beans are cool, blot dry.

Toss green beans with tempeh and marinade. Gently mix in add cilantro and mint.

Heat oven to 400. Roast cashews for 8 to 10 minutes, until golden and fragrant. Coarsely chop.

Fluff rice with a fork. Serve green beans and tempeh over brown rice. Garnish with chopped cashews.

Enjoy room temperature or chilled. Refrigerated, it keeps several days

Serves 4.

*Asian chil sauce available in most natural food stores and all Asian markets.

 
Betsy Shipley has seen the future, and it is an eco-loving foodie's wet dream -- honest, local, sustainable, organic, free of genetic modification, green, delicious, affordable and accessible to all. ...
Betsy Shipley has seen the future, and it is an eco-loving foodie's wet dream -- honest, local, sustainable, organic, free of genetic modification, green, delicious, affordable and accessible to all. ...
 
 
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07:14 PM on 08/11/2010
Thanks, and I know you mean well, but I like having a healthy reproductive system and having my child grow normally and develop fully. I'll stick to meat.
07:58 PM on 08/11/2010
You're aware that vegan cultures (Buddhist monks, many Asian cultures, etc.) tend to live longer and healthier lives devoid of health issues, right? I'm not a practicing vegan or veggie but at least I can admit there are more health perks to it than being a carnivora.
08:47 PM on 08/10/2010
Please visit Eco-Eating at www.brook.com/veg to learn more about vegetarianism.
02:54 PM on 08/10/2010
Tempeh is delicious. I tried it for the first time this past weekend and made Mongolian Tempeh, a veganized version of a Chinese takeout favorite, Mongolian Beef. It was wonderful! It does have a meaty texture but not quite. You can probably veganize most meat recipes using tempeh.
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c-tom
Badges we don't need no stinking badges
10:31 PM on 08/09/2010
So what does tempeh taste like?
02:19 PM on 08/10/2010
Nutty flavor (mild) You can get different mixes--some with grains and wild rice, others with just soy.
08:09 PM on 08/09/2010
Can tempeh be prepared like tofu...stir fried with sesame seed oil in a wok...or does it really need to be doctored up to be edible? I've been on a strict vegetarian diet for over 2 years and am anxious to try something new and different.
02:18 PM on 08/10/2010
Yes, sauteed in a wok. Use Braggs or soy sauce, BBQ sauce, garlic, onions.....etc.
02:56 PM on 08/10/2010
I've seen tempeh at Trader Joes and Whole Foods and they are usually pre-cooked (it says "ready to eat" on the package). You can probably just heat it up and put it in a sandwich or add seasoning and prepare a tasty vegetarian dish!
07:32 PM on 08/09/2010
Great idea unless one is allergic to SOY! Quorn is OK! Linda McCartney created so many frozen foods w/out meat but only sold them in the UK...anyone here interested???? Market is wide open! She made billions!
01:37 AM on 08/10/2010
Quorn is also made of mold, specifically Fusarium venenatum grown in corn syrup. This species of mold when marketed as food has been protected by patent rights from 1985 through 2010, so the market is wide open starting soon.
07:04 PM on 08/09/2010
"But a diet tipping more towards tempeh than sausage doesn't hurt."

For awhile, I thought Ms. Kanner was actually going to write an article without making some unsubstantiated claim about the alleged benefits of vegetarianism.

There's no evidence that a vegetarian diet is any more healthy than a diet that includes animal protein, period.
04:37 AM on 08/10/2010
You are getting way too fact oriented again! It FEELs good to claim that a vegetarian diet is healthier, even if it's not 'true' - who needs those uncomfortable facts?
02:20 PM on 08/10/2010
Unless you factor in animal fats, cholesterol, steroids, hormones, chemicals, antibiotics that are in meat.
08:01 PM on 08/11/2010
There is actually a lot. I urge you to log on to JSTOR the next time you're at a resource that has it (unless you're a student or educator with access) and look into the clinical and medical studies that have been done on the topic. I've been reading up on the topic recently (out of curiosity) and it's actually kinda of overwhelming if you take the care to be unbiased at the start.
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ljmck
Stand Up, Show Up, Speak Up
05:08 PM on 08/09/2010
LIME JUICE is included in the list of ingredients but NOT MENTIONED in the procedure.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mundane Egg
Decency is the new black.
04:10 PM on 08/09/2010
I make a mean meal I call "The Tempeh of Doom." It's awesome!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
03:56 PM on 08/09/2010
Soy Allergy
Allergy to soy is a major allergy and one of the more common food allergies. Soy, which is called Soya outside the USA, is used in most manufactured ...
www.allergicchild.com/soy_allergies.htm
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mishal Zeera
11:18 AM on 08/09/2010
Tempeh bacon is really, really good. Even meat eaters agree, its really good.
11:08 AM on 08/09/2010
Re: "to make tempeh before the world was ready"

Oh, and which 'world' would that happen to be?