A Paris-Inspired Vegan Egg Benedict, Made at Home

By Julie Tourangeau | julietour.com

Sometimes you don’t bring Paris home by recreating it… you bring it home by trusting yourself more.

There’s a moment that happens after Paris.

Not when you land, not when the suitcase is unpacked—but a few days later, standing in your own kitchen, when your body remembers something before your mind does.

The way food felt slower there.

The way nothing was rushed or optimized.

The way a simple plate could feel intentional instead of indulgent.

I always think I’ll bring Paris home with me in big ways—new habits, new routines, a whole new version of myself. But it never works like that. What actually comes back with me are small things. Textures. Instincts. The confidence to trust my taste.

Paris has a way of reminding you that pleasure doesn’t need permission.

Eating Our Way Through Paris

Part of what made Paris linger this time was the food my fiancé and I shared.

Not just the meals themselves, but the way they unfolded—slowly, attentively, without excess. Fresh vegetables that actually tasted alive. Delectable tarts and flans that were rich without being heavy, elegant without trying. Food that didn’t shout, but stayed with you.

One Sunday, we wandered into a quaint vegan restaurant in the 11th arrondissement—the kind of place you could miss if you weren’t looking for it. Small wooden tables. Soft light. Quiet confidence. No spectacle.

I ordered a vegan Benedict that tasted like something dreamed up, not engineered. Silky sauce. Perfect balance. Comforting without being dull. The kind of dish that makes you pause mid-bite, smile, and know you’ll be thinking about it long after the plates are cleared.

It wasn’t about novelty. It was about restraint. About trusting ingredients. About letting vegetables lead and seasoning support rather than disguise.

Sitting there together, sharing bites and glances and that unspoken this is good, I didn’t realize it at the time—but that meal would follow me home.

Vegan dreams are made of moments like that.

Je rêve.

Bringing the Feeling Home

Back in my own kitchen, that memory showed up quietly.

Buttered rustic sourdough toast. A bed of arugula. A soft vegan egg. And a sauce I didn’t measure.

I wasn’t trying to recreate Paris exactly. I wasn’t chasing “authentic.” I just wanted the feeling…that café-morning sense where food is made to be enjoyed.

So I made my own version.

A silky, lemony sauce built from vegan mayo, mustard, nutritional yeast, and black salt—warmed gently and loosened with a touch of water. A dusting of piment d’Espelette, because once you’ve used it in France, you never forget it.

Was it Parisian?

Not technically.

But it felt right.

That’s what Paris teaches you if you’re paying attention: you don’t bring it home by copying it. You bring it home by trusting yourself more.

By letting intuition lead instead of rules.

By choosing what feels good over what’s correct.

By understanding that my version isn’t a compromise—it’s the point.

This wasn’t really about eggs Benedict. It was about remembering that pleasure can live in your own kitchen. That you don’t need a reservation, or a plane ticket, or a €12 coffee to feel nourished.

Paris reminds you who you are.

Home is where you practice it.

And sometimes that practice looks like standing barefoot at the counter, sauce still warm, thinking:

Yeah. This is good. Magnifique.

Paris-Inspired Vegan Egg Benedict (My Way)

A flexible, intuitive recipe — adjust by taste, not rules.

Ingredients

• Toasted bread of choice, buttered

• Fresh arugula

• Vegan egg (such as Serve Yo Egg), prepared according to package instructions

Silky Vegan Hollandaise-Style Sauce

• ¼ cup vegan mayo

• 1½–2 teaspoons lemon juice

• ½ teaspoon yellow mustard (or more to taste)

• ½–1 teaspoon nutritional yeast

• Pinch of black salt (kala namak), to taste

• ½–1 teaspoon warm water (for silkiness and warmth)

• Piment d’Espelette, for finishing

Method

1. Make the sauce:
In a small bowl, whisk the vegan mayo and mustard until smooth. Slowly add lemon juice, then nutritional yeast. Add warm water a little at a time until the sauce becomes glossy and spoonable. Season gently with black salt.

2. Assemble:
Layer arugula onto buttered toast. Add the warm vegan egg. Spoon the sauce generously over the top.

3. Finish:
Dust lightly with piment d’Espelette. Serve immediately, while everything is warm and relaxed.

Bon appétit 😋

Truffle Glow Vegan Lasagna

A Signature Dish from The Freedom Kitchen Series

by Julie Tourangeau | julietour.com

There’s more than nourishment in a meal—there’s memory, healing, and story.

This lasagna was born on a night when everything fell apart—glass shattered, ingredients ran low, and I had to rebuild from what I had. And somehow? That’s when the magic happened.

This recipe is a layered metaphor for healing: messy edges, bold flavor, and comfort that rises from unexpected places. It’s vegan, gluten-free optional, and completely dairy-free—but nothing about it feels like you’re missing out. This is the kind of dish that warms the soul and opens the door to something sacred: a return to your own radiant wholeness.

Truffle Glow Vegan Lasagna

With Tofutti Ricotta, Kite Hill Cream Cheese, Roasted Red Peppers & Piment d’Espelette

A creamy garlic-truffle filling made with Tofutti ricotta and Kite Hill cream cheese is folded with sautéed spinach, roasted red peppers, fresh parsley, and bold nutritional yeast. The flavors are rounded out by thinly sliced onion, garlic and onion powder, and a warm, smoky kiss of Piment d’Espelette—a red pepper spice from the Basque region that brings subtle heat and beautiful depth.

You can finish this with either vegan liquid mozzarella or my signature béchamel sauce from julietour.com/bechamel for a golden, bubbling top that’s worthy of a celebration. No foil. No shortcuts. Just food that glows from the inside out.

Ingredients

Cheese Filling:

• 1 container Tofutti Ricotta

• 1 container Kite Hill Cream Cheese

• 1 cup Violife Mozzarella Shreds

• 3–4 tbsp nutritional yeast (go bold!)

• 2 cloves fresh garlic, minced

• 1–2 tbsp sweet onion, thinly sliced

• 1/2 tsp onion powder

• 1/2 tsp garlic powder

• 1 tsp truffle oil

• 1/2 tsp Piment d’Espelette (plus more for topping)

• 2 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped

• Sea salt and cracked black pepper, to taste

Add-ins:

• 1 cup sautéed spinach

• 1/2 cup roasted red peppers, chopped

Assembly:

• 1 box 365 Oven-Ready Lasagna Noodles

• 1 jar Bao Marinara Sauce

• 1–2 tbsp olive oil

• Topping Option 1: Vegan liquid mozzarella (about 1/2 cup)

• Topping Option 2: Julie’s Vegan Béchamel for added richness

Instructions

1. Make the Filling

Mix Tofutti ricotta and Kite Hill cream cheese until smooth. Stir in Violife, nutritional yeast, fresh garlic, sliced onion, onion powder, garlic powder, truffle oil, Piment d’Espelette, parsley, and season with salt and pepper. Fold in spinach and roasted red peppers.

2. Prepare Your Dish

Lightly oil a 9×13 dish and spread a thin layer of Bao marinara.

3. Layer It Up

Add oven-ready noodles, then a generous layer of the filling, then more sauce. Repeat until full, ending with noodles and marinara.

4. Top It Off

Choose your topping:

• Drizzle with vegan liquid mozzarella and a dusting of Piment d’Espelette

• or spread on a layer of my béchamel sauce for a deeper, richer bake

5. Bake Uncovered

Bake at 375°F for 45–50 minutes, until golden and bubbling. No foil needed—the top caramelizes beautifully this way.

6. Cool & Garnish

Let sit 10 minutes before slicing. Top with fresh parsley, more nooch, or a drizzle of truffle oil.

Why It Matters

This isn’t just a recipe—it’s a ritual. A reclaiming. A reminder that even in moments of chaos, you can create something beautiful, layered, healing, and deeply satisfying.

Welcome to The Freedom Kitchen. Where food is medicine, flavor is freedom, and joy is the secret ingredient.

This is what freedom tastes like. Warm, melty, deeply layered—and 100% plant-based. From my kitchen to yours.

The Women, the Wisdom, and the Animals: What We Forgot About Easter

By Julie Tourangeau | Good Friday, 2025

Before the tomb was empty…

before the stone was rolled away…

before the anointing and the rising and the glory…

there was a moment we rarely talk about.

And it didn’t happen on a hill.

It happened in the Temple.

It was there that Jesus walked in, looked around, and did what no one else dared:

He freed the animals.

The Cleansing of the Temple Was a Liberation

All four canonical gospels record the Temple cleansing, but what most people miss is why it mattered so much.

Jesus didn’t just flip tables to make a scene.

He drove out the sellers of doves. He freed the lambs and oxen being sold for sacrifice.

According to the Gospel of the Nazarenes, a lost early gospel aligned with the Essenes:

“He drove out the animals and said, ‘Cease your wicked sacrifices! Do you not see that innocent blood cries out from the earth?’”

In that moment, Jesus publicly rejected the sacrificial system—a system that normalized bloodshed and called it holy. He saw through the illusion of substitutionary violence and revealed the deeper truth:

The Holy Spirit is not found in the shedding of blood, but in the honoring of life.

And from that moment on, the system moved to silence him.

The First Step Toward Resurrection Was Setting the Innocent Free

Let this sink in:

It wasn’t the miracles that got Jesus killed.

It wasn’t the healings or the parables or even claiming to be the Son of God.

It was the moment he freed the animals that the wheels of execution began to turn.

This was the turning point—not just in his story, but in ours.

Because Jesus wasn’t just liberating animals. He was exposing a system—religious, economic, cultural—that had come to depend on suffering.

And he showed us what it looks like to say:

No more.

The Divine Feminine Knew

Many people associate Easter with the idea that Jesus died to pay for our sins—but that interpretation came later. The earliest followers of Jesus saw his life and death not as a blood payment, but as a revelation of divine love and a call to awaken the Christ within. Texts like The Gospel of the Holy Twelve remind us that his suffering was not about appeasing wrath, but about healing hearts, breaking chains, and showing us the path of compassion, even in the face of injustice.

What followed was suffering, yes—but also sacred initiation. And through it all, the ones who stayed near were not the theologians or temple authorities. It was the women.

Grief was his first initiation, through Miriam, the young woman with whom Jesus lived for seven years before her death. According to The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, it was her passing that opened his heart to the deeper path. According to this gospel, « Grief didn’t weaken him. It awakened him. »

Before knowing about this grief story of Jesus, I wrote about my own:

“Without my dark night of the soul, and without having challenging circumstances, I wouldn’t have grown my blessings… Painful change is sometimes exactly what we need to shake things up. Living through trauma, family drama, and the grief of losing a loved one can feel almost like an endless dark tunnel… Grief is just love with seemingly no place to go, but when you realize love shared is eternal, you can finally let go of the pain and gain the wisdom that is rightly yours.” — Free Yourself from Grief, Chapter 5

Compassion was his final anointing, through Mary Magdalene—not a sinner, but a priestess. She anointed his feet, honoring him with a sacred rite passed down through feminine lineages.

And when he was crucified, it was Magdalene who remained. While the male disciples fled, she stood at the cross, and three days later, she was the first to see him risen.

The resurrection was not first revealed to Rome or religion. It was revealed to her.

And wisdom—Sophia—was the soul behind it all.

The Spirit of God that hovered over the waters in Genesis.

The voice crying out in the streets in Proverbs.

The divine spark in all life, calling us home.

What if Easter was just the beginning?

While many see the resurrection as the end of Jesus’ story, ancient traditions—especially in southern France—tell a different tale. According to Provençal legend, Mary Magdalene journeyed to France after the crucifixion, carrying not only the memory of Jesus but the living essence of his teachings. Some say she preached love and liberation from a cave near Sainte-Baume, others believe she brought with her the sacred feminine that was erased from the official story. The Holy Grail Legends say she brought his bloodline to France, and they still walk Earth among us to this very day.

Easter Is the Unveiling of Compassion

This Easter, I invite you to see the resurrection not as a distant miracle, but a living pattern.

The pattern begins with letting go of violence.

It moves through grief.

It is held by the feminine.

And it ends in freedom—not just for ourselves, but for all of creation.

Resurrection isn’t just rising from the dead.

It’s refusing to live by death.

It’s refusing to justify harm.

It’s the choice to let the doves go free.

To Walk the Lost Path to Freedom This Easter Is To Remember:

• The animals were the first to be freed.

• The women were the first to understand.

• Sophia is the wisdom that lives in you.

• The Holy Spirit is the breath that animates all life.

• And love is not proven through suffering, but through liberation.

This Easter, may we not just celebrate a risen Christ,

but live like him.

May we be the ones who open the cages,

who hold the grief,

who anoint the new day.

May we rise—not above the world, but for it.

Free the animals.

Free the heart.

And the stone will roll away.

The Rapture That Wasn’t: Why Early Christians Didn’t Believe in Escaping Earth

BREAKING: RAPTURE RESCHEDULED DUE TO SUPPLY CHAIN ISSUES

Heavenly sources confirm that the long-awaited rapture has been delayed again—this time due to a shortage of cloud fuel and insufficient harp inventory.

An anonymous angelic spokesperson said, “We’re still trying to get the golden escalators functioning. Also, someone left the Book of Life in the copier tray again.”

In the meantime, believers are advised to:

• Keep one foot off the ground, just in case.

• Practice skydiving without a parachute.

• And definitely ignore that whole “meek shall inherit the Earth” thing—it was probably just a metaphor, right?

Meanwhile, Jesus is reportedly walking around the temple with a sign that reads:

“Free the lambs, not enslave them.”

He also added, “Y’all really thought I died so you could throw barbecues and wait for space Uber? C’mon.”

Seems a little ridiculous, right?

Have you ever played a game of telephone? One message whispered from person to person slowly becomes distorted, until the final version barely resembles the original.

That’s exactly what happened to the teachings of Jesus.

One of the clearest examples?

The Rapture.

Modern-day evangelical churches teach that Jesus will one day return in the clouds and snatch up all the “true believers,” leaving the rest of humanity to suffer a horrific tribulation on Earth. But here’s the truth:

The earliest Christians didn’t believe in that kind of rapture. Not even close.

Where Did the Rapture Come From?

The word rapture never appears in the Bible. The concept was first systematized in the 1830s by John Nelson Darby, a British theologian who founded a movement known as Dispensationalism. His teachings were later popularized in America through the Scofield Reference Bible (1909) and reinforced by pop culture hits like the Left Behind series.

Darby’s idea was this: the world is going to get worse and worse, and before God pours out judgment on humanity, Christians will be “caught up” into the sky—based on one ambiguous passage in 1 Thessalonians 4:17:

“Then we who are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air…”

But this passage, when read in context, refers to a welcoming party—not an escape. In ancient Greco-Roman culture, people would go out to meet a visiting king and escort him back into the city. This passage wasn’t about leaving Earth—it was about welcoming the divine presence to dwell among us.

What Did the Earliest Christians Believe?

Early Christians, particularly those tied to Jewish followers of Jesus like the Ebionites and Nazarenes, didn’t long to escape the world—they longed to transform it.

They believed in the coming of the Kingdom of Heaven—but on Earth.

“Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.” (Matthew 5:5)

This was not a metaphor. It was a promise. The Earth wasn’t something to flee—it was something to liberate.

In The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, a restored early Christian gospel aligned with the Essenes (a mystical, peace-centered Jewish sect believed to be close to Jesus), the message is even clearer:

“The kingdom of God is within you and around you. It is not in buildings made by hands, nor in the sky to be awaited, but is now, wherever love and truth dwell.”

This aligns with Luke 17:21 in modern-day scripture:

“The kingdom of God is within you.”

Why Would Modern Evangelicals Promote the Rapture?

It’s simple: control.

If you believe the world is doomed, you won’t try to change it.

If you think Jesus is coming soon to evacuate you, why fight injustice?

Why care for the Earth, animals, the poor, or future generations?

The rapture theology promotes passivity and dependence, not liberation or courage. It also supports a form of Christian nationalism that aligns with certain interpretations of the modern state of Israel—not the people who wrestle with God (the true meaning of “Israel”)—but a political power masquerading as divine destiny.

And yet Jesus said:

“The last shall be first.” (Matthew 20:16)

“Woe to you who are rich now, for you have already received your comfort.” (Luke 6:24)

This is not about domination or escape—it’s about a sacred upside-down revolution.

The People Who Wrestle With God

The real “Israel”—in its original, spiritual meaning—is not a nation-state.

It’s a name given to Jacob, who wrestled with the divine and refused to let go until he was blessed. (Genesis 32:28)

It is those who wrestle, question, and seek truth out of the goodness of their hearts, not blind loyalty to human institutions.

Jesus was not calling people to bow to empire. He was calling people to wake up.

Returning to the Source

Modern theology is often a product of empire, fear, and control.

But the earliest teachings—those closest to the Source—are radically different.

They’re about justice. Love. Peace. Awakening.

Not escaping Earth, but redeeming it.

So the next time you hear about the rapture, ask yourself:

Is this a teaching from the heart of Christ…

or just a distorted whisper passed down through centuries of empire?

In The Lost Path to Freedom, I explore these forgotten teachings—not as history, but as living truth for today. Because the veil is lifting. The kingdom is near. And the ones who wrestle with God in love are the ones who will help heal the world.

The Forgotten Gospel Reclaimed: A New Look at The Gospel of the Holy Twelve

I read The Gospel of the Holy Twelve front to back after having a spiritual moment in France that made me question the origins of Christianity. I couldn’t put it down. It resonated with the Holy Spirit that dwells within me, deeper than any sermon or scripture I had encountered growing up. I was raised a vegetarian Catholic, yet I never knew there were early Christian teachings that not only supported this lifestyle but embodied it. I had never been told that reincarnation was plausible… or that a vegetarian Jesus was very likely. These truths had been hidden… but once I saw them, I couldn’t unsee them.

For centuries, Christianity has been presented through the lens of empire, tradition, and convenience. But what if the original teachings of Jesus were far more radical… far more compassionate… than we’ve been led to believe? What if Christianity, at its very roots, was a vegan movement?

That’s the bold yet spiritually grounded claim made in The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, a recovered text translated by Reverend Gideon Jasper Ouseley in the late 19th century. Ouseley claimed he had access to ancient Aramaic manuscripts preserved by a secret brotherhood, which offered a truer, unedited version of Jesus’ life and message. While the origins of the manuscript remain controversial, the gospel’s teachings align strikingly with what we know of early Jewish-Christian sects, particularly the Ebionites and the Essenes (Eisenman, James the Brother of Jesus, 1997).

In this gospel, Jesus stands not only as a healer and teacher but as an advocate for all sentient life. He does not bless the slaughter of animals… he condemns it. He does not multiply fish… he frees them. And he declares, “They who partake of benefits which are gotten by wronging one of God’s creatures, cannot be righteous: nor can they touch holy things, or teach the mysteries of the kingdom.” (Ouseley, The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, Lection XLVI)

Rooted in Early Tradition

Though The Gospel of the Holy Twelve is not part of the modern biblical canon, its tone and teachings are not without historical merit. Ouseley and others believed it to reflect the original Hebrew Gospel referenced by early Church Fathers like Jerome, who wrote of a “Gospel of the Hebrews” used by Jewish-Christian groups (Jerome, De Viris Illustribus, 3).

These groups, including the Ebionites and the Nazarenes, believed Jesus came not to abolish Jewish law but to fulfill it through love and nonviolence (Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, Book III). They rejected blood sacrifice, practiced vegetarianism, and upheld a mystical form of Judaism centered around compassion and purity. The Church Father Epiphanius, though critical, confirmed the Ebionites’ vegetarianism and rejection of temple sacrifice (Panarion, 30.15.3).

The broader context of these communities was later supported by discoveries like the Dead Sea Scrolls. Found between 1947 and 1956 near Qumran, the scrolls revealed a rich diversity of Jewish sects in the Second Temple period, many of whom—especially the Essenes—emphasized spiritual law, nonviolence, ritual purity, and apocalyptic expectations. Scholars such as Geza Vermes and Elaine Pagels have argued that the scrolls lend credibility to the existence of early traditions outside the later Christian orthodoxy (Vermes, The Complete Dead Sea Scrolls in English, 2004; Pagels, The Gnostic Gospels, 1979).

When Empire Meets Religion

The Jesus portrayed in The Gospel of the Holy Twelve is far removed from the sanitized, empire-friendly figure canonized under Constantine. By the fourth century, Christianity was institutionalized under the Roman Empire. With the Council of Nicaea (325 AD) and subsequent imperial sponsorship, the faith became increasingly aligned with hierarchy, sacrifice, and patriarchy.

This shift has been documented by historians such as Bart Ehrman and Karen Armstrong, who show how early diversity in Christian theology was gradually suppressed as the church merged with imperial power (Ehrman, Lost Christianities, 2003; Armstrong, The Battle for God, 2000). The radical, liberating message of the original Jesus movement—rooted in inner transformation and justice for the marginalized—was traded for control, conformity, and obedience.

The teachings found in The Gospel of the Holy Twelve directly challenge this evolution. In one passage, Jesus drives the animal sellers from the temple—not merely for commercializing religion, but for desecrating life itself. “Ye have made the House of Prayer a den of thieves, and filled it with cruelty and blood,” he says (Ouseley, Lection XXXIV). Notably, the word “thieves” in the original Hebrew could also be rendered as “violent ones” (Strong’s Concordance, H2555 – chamas), reinforcing this interpretation.

A Logos of Compassion

In the text, Jesus speaks of the “Holy Law” written not on scrolls, but in the heart—echoing the Jewish prophetic tradition (Jeremiah 31:33). He embodies the Logos not as doctrine, but as a way of life grounded in reverence for all creation. This connects not only to early Jewish mysticism, but to figures like St. Francis of Assisi, who called animals his brothers and sisters, and rejected worldly power in favor of divine simplicity.

Indeed, The Gospel of the Holy Twelve suggests that spiritual awakening is inseparable from ethical living. This idea, though controversial to institutional religion, resonates with mystical traditions across faiths—including Kabbalah, Sufism, and Eastern philosophies, all of which honor the sacred interdependence of life.

A Christianity Worth Returning To

What would Christianity look like if we re-centered it around this compassionate Christ? Around a Jesus who called for mercy, not sacrifice (Hosea 6:6, quoted by Jesus in Matthew 9:13)… who broke chains, not breaded fish… who lived in harmony with creation rather than domination over it?

Many are beginning to ask this question—not out of rebellion, but out of a deep spiritual longing to reclaim what was lost.

We may never fully prove the historical origin of The Gospel of the Holy Twelve. But history alone doesn’t determine truth. As Jesus said, “Ye shall know them by their fruits” (Matthew 7:16). And if truth bears good fruit—if it leads to greater compassion, justice, and unity—then the gospel’s message is one worth listening to.

Whether we call it the Holy Spirit, the voice of conscience, or divine wisdom… something is guiding many of us back to this lost path. And perhaps that’s not a coincidence—but a resurrection of something long buried.

Knowing what we now know about early Christianity, if Jesus were here—reincarnated, as some traditions suggest, with his radical compassion intact—would modern Christianity even recognize Him?

Vegan French Onion Soup with Homemade Fettunta

The best vegan French onion soup I’ve ever had—rich, comforting, and made with love. Instead of traditional cheese and beef broth, this version brings deep umami flavors and a beautifully melted vegan mozzarella topping. Served with homemade Fettunta using sourdough and ancient grains for extra nourishment.

Ingredients:

For the soup:

• 5 large onions, thinly sliced

• 1 tbsp sugar

• 1 tsp salt

• 3 tall glasses of hot water (~6 cups)

• 1 small scoop vegan bouillon (or mushroom broth) to taste

• 1 tbsp Vegemite (for depth and umami) (faux beef flavor)

• 2 tbsp olive oil or vegan butter

For the cheese topping:

• 1 ½ cups Violife vegan mozzarella (or any melty vegan cheese)

• 2 tbsp vegan butter

• 1 tbsp tapioca flour (for stretch)

• ¼ cup plant-based milk (for creaminess)

Thyme spice for the top as desired.

For the bread:

Homemade Fettunta: Rustic sourdough (50% ancient grain emmer flour)

• OR stale/toasted bread if preferred

Instructions:

1. Caramelize the onions – Heat olive oil in a large pan on low heat. Add onions, sugar, and salt, stirring occasionally for 2 hours until deep golden brown.

2. Prepare the broth – Mix hot water with vegan bouillon and Vegemite until dissolved. Pour into the pan with onions and let simmer for 30 more minutes.

3. Make the cheese sauce – Melt vegan butter in a saucepan, whisk in tapioca flour, then slowly add plant-based milk and mozzarella, stirring until smooth and stretchy.

4. Assemble & broil – Preheat the broiler on high. Place 4 small soup bowls on a baking sheet. Fill each with 3 ladles of onion soup, top with half a Fettunta slice, and drizzle with the vegan mozzarella sauce. Add Thyme if desired on top.

5. Broil for 5 minutes – Until golden and bubbling.

6. Serve & enjoy – The flavors deepen with every bite. Bon appétit!

Ancient grains nourish the body, compassion nourishes the soul. Missing Paris, but bringing it home one bowl at a time.

Here’s how to make Fettunta (Tuscan Garlic Bread):

🥖 Brush rustic sourdough with olive oil.

🔥 Grill until golden with perfect char marks.

🧄 Rub with a raw garlic clove while warm.

🌿 Drench in high-quality extra virgin olive oil.

🧂 Sprinkle flaky sea salt & enjoy!

Was Jesus a Vegetarian? Exploring Scripture, Mistranslations, and His Compassion for Animals

For centuries, the image of Jesus as a compassionate healer and teacher has been at the heart of Christianity. But was he also an advocate for a plant-based lifestyle? Evidence from modern-day translations of the Bible, alternative gospel texts, and linguistic studies suggest that Jesus may have opposed eating animals and even challenged the way we interpret certain food references in scripture.

God’s Original Plan: A Plant-Based Diet

In the very beginning, God created a world where humans and animals lived in harmony, sustained by plant-based foods:

“Behold, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is on the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit. You shall have them for food.”Genesis 1:29

This verse suggests that in God’s ideal world, food was meant to come from the earth, not from killing animals. Even the prophetic visions of Isaiah describe a future where animals live in peace and do not harm one another:

“The wolf and the lamb shall graze together… They shall not hurt or destroy in all my holy mountain, says the Lord.”Isaiah 65:25

If God’s vision for creation was one without bloodshed, could it be that Jesus, as the ultimate teacher of love and mercy, followed this principle?

Did “Fish” Get Mistranslated?

One of the strongest arguments against Jesus being vegetarian is his feeding of the multitudes with “loaves and fish” (Matthew 14:13-21). But what if the word fish was mistranslated?

• The Greek word Ichthys (ἰχθύς) not only means fish but was also a symbolic acronym for “Jesus Christ, Son of God, Savior”—suggesting that the references to fish might have had deeper meanings.

• In Aramaic, the language Jesus likely spoke, some plant-based foods such as seaweed, legumes, or even pressed figs could have been confused with “fish” in later translations.

• Many early Christian sects, including the Essenes, were vegetarian and believed that Jesus was as well.

This raises the question: if Jesus was compassionate toward all life, would he have condoned the killing of fish for food, or was this a later addition to align with changing cultural norms?

Jesus Sets the Animals Free in the Temple

One of the most powerful moments of Jesus’ ministry was when he overturned the tables in the temple and set the animals free:

“And He found in the temple those who were selling oxen and sheep and doves… and He poured out the coins of the money changers and overturned their tables.”John 2:14-16

Modern-day translations of the Bible often say Jesus condemned the merchants for turning the temple into a “den of thieves.” However, the original Hebrew word used in Jeremiah 7:11, which Jesus was quoting, actually means “violent ones” rather than “thieves.” This suggests his anger was not just about corruption but about the violence being inflicted on innocent animals in a place of worship.

Rather than allowing the continued sale and sacrifice of animals, Jesus set them free—a powerful statement that aligns with a plant-based, non-violent philosophy.

Daniel’s Vegetarian Diet and Spiritual Clarity

Daniel, a prophet highly respected in both Jewish and Christian traditions, refused to eat the king’s rich food (which likely included meat) and instead requested a plant-based diet:

“Test your servants for ten days; let us be given vegetables to eat and water to drink.”Daniel 1:12

After ten days, Daniel and his companions were healthier and wiser than those who ate the king’s food. This passage suggests that a plant-based diet was not only physically beneficial but also spiritually purifying.

Jesus’ Teachings Align with Compassion for All Beings

While modern-day translations of the Bible do not explicitly state that Jesus was vegetarian, many of his teachings align with the principles of nonviolence and mercy toward all living creatures.

• He taught that God cares even for the sparrows (Luke 12:6).

• He healed and showed kindness to animals (Matthew 12:11).

• He overturned the tables of those selling animals for sacrifice, condemning the violence done to them.

If Jesus preached love, mercy, and a return to God’s original vision for creation, wouldn’t this include sparing animals from suffering?

Conclusion: A Call to Rethink Tradition

Throughout history, translations and cultural shifts may have altered how we interpret Jesus’ relationship with food and animals. By examining scripture more closely, we find strong evidence that:

• God’s original plan was a plant-based diet.

• Key biblical words, like “fish,” may have been mistranslated.

• Jesus actively opposed animal sacrifice and set animals free.

• Vegetarianism was practiced by early followers like Daniel and the Essenes.

Whether or not Jesus was fully vegetarian, his message was clear: compassion, mercy, and peace should extend to all of God’s creation.

Could embracing a plant-based lifestyle today be a way to honor his teachings and return to God’s vision for a world without harm?

Are We Meant to Eat Meat? How Vegetarianism Impacts Your Teeth & Oral Health

35 year old vegan, perfect teeth, no cavities in lifetime. No dental work history.

When it comes to oral health, we often focus on brushing, flossing, and the occasional dentist visit. But what if your diet could be doing even more for your teeth than toothpaste ever could? Specifically, a plant-based diet—especially vegetarianism—might be influencing the health of your teeth and gums in surprising ways.

Recent studies show that a vegetarian diet can positively affect the microbiology of your mouth and even alter the composition of your saliva, which plays a crucial role in keeping your mouth clean and free from harmful bacteria. Saliva is not just water; it’s filled with enzymes, proteins, and minerals that help fight tooth decay, neutralize acids, and support the overall health of your oral environment.

For people on plant-based diets, the types of foods consumed—rich in fruits, vegetables, and fibers—can boost saliva production and encourage the growth of beneficial bacteria. This microbiome shift could potentially help reduce plaque buildup and lower the risk of cavities, gum disease, and even bad breath. By contrast, diets high in animal products often contribute to higher acidity in the mouth, which can damage enamel and promote the growth of harmful bacteria.

This brings up an interesting question: Are we even meant to eat meat? Given the overwhelming dental health benefits of a vegetarian diet—especially when looking at the example of someone in their late 30s without a cavity versus meat-eating relatives with serious dental issues—one might argue that a plant-based diet could be more beneficial for your teeth than any toothpaste on the market.

If your diet is affecting the health of your mouth in this profound way, maybe it’s time to rethink what we put on our plates. It’s not just about brushing twice a day—it’s about nourishing your body and mouth with the right foods. After all, what you eat literally changes the composition of your saliva, which directly impacts your oral health. So, perhaps the best “oral care routine” starts with what’s on your fork, not just in your bathroom cabinet.

In the end, maybe it’s time to ask: Can vegetarianism be the natural tooth care you’ve been searching for? Or better yet—should we be questioning if a diet that includes meat is truly the healthiest choice for our teeth?

Disclaimer: Not Medical Advice

The information shared in this post is intended for general informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical or dental advice. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider or holistic dentist to address any concerns or questions about your oral health and diet. Your dentist can provide personalized recommendations tailored to your specific needs.

Rose Sourdough Shortbread Cookies

Rose Sourdough Shortbread Cookies using sourdough discard.

• ¾ cup vegan salted butter softened (I used Miyokos Oatmilk butter)

• ¾ granulated sugar

• 133 grams sourdough discard, at room temperature

• 1 Tablespoon rose petals

• 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

• 1 teaspoon rose extract

• 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour

INSTRUCTIONS

• In the bowl, cream the butter and sugar with a hand mixer for a few minutes until fluffy. Add sourdough discard, dried rose petals and, vanilla and rose extracts, mixing until combined.

I added optional elderberry syrup.

• Add flour slowly during mixing until a dough forms.

Formed dough after mixing with hands a little after the mixer.

• Using a scale, divide the dough in half. Shape the dough into loaf shape or whatever shape you want to cut your cookies into. Put the dough into plastic bags, then chill in the fridge for at least an hour.

Loaf shaped dough ready for the fridge.

• Preheat the oven to 350℉. Place parchment paper on a cookie sheet.

• Take out the chilled dough loaves and use a large knife to cut into 1/2-1 inch thick slices.

• Transfer the slices to the baking sheet.

• Bake one sheet at time for 15 minutes or until the cookies are just becoming golden brown at the bottom edges. They will still be very light. Let the cookies cool before plating.

Mom’s Gingerbread Molasses Cookies

Mom’s Gingerbread Molasses Cookies (makes 24 cookies) but vegan!

This cookie was a staple growing up. We’ve almost lost the recipe multiple times so in an effort to immortalize the best family Christmas cookie, I had to share!

1 cup sugar

½ cup vegan butter softened

1/3 cup molasses

1 vegan egg

2 teaspoons grated orange peel

2 cups all purpose flour (I used organic 365 brand)

1 ½ teaspoons baking soda

1 teaspoon cinnamon

½ teaspoon ginger

¼ teaspoon salt

¼ teaspoon cloves

Buttery Decorator Icing

½ cup vegan butter, softened

½ cup shortening

1 teaspoon vanilla

4 cups powered sugar

2 to 4 tablespoons soy milk

Bake in oven for 10 minutes, 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Each step requires the use of a mixer.

In a mixing bowl, start combining the butter and sugar for the dough.

Add molasses, vegan egg to mixture.

Add orange rinds.

Mix dry ingredients and eliminate clumps of flour. Slowly add dry ingredients to mixing bowl of wet ingredients until dough is formed.

Place the sticky dough in a ball in plastic wrap and leave in the fridge for one hour.

While your dough chills, start whipping the butter and shortening until fluffy and white for the frosting.

Add approximately 4 cups of powdered sugar. I used a bag which had slightly less than 4 cups.

Add vanilla. Add soy milk as needed until texture is whipped. Set aside.

Preheat oven.

Sprinkle flour on flat surface or cutting board. Roll out gingerbread. Cut shapes as desired.

Line a cookie sheet with baking paper. Place cookie cuts on top. Leave about an inch of space between each cookie.

Cook for ten minutes. Let cool for three on sheet before moving. Move to cooling rack.

Once cool to the touch, spread the icing on top. Decorate with sprinkles as desired.

Yum yum. 💚🎄🌱✨ Just like mom used to make.