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Owned by Dar

Share Food Love

48 members • $10/month

Novice to home cook you'll find your people here. Recipes, chat, videos and much more. Join this international community today and CONNECT over food.

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8 contributions to Plant-Powered Kitchen Club
This month's cooking class replay is up! 🥒
We made two recipes that are perfect for summer. The Crunchy Chili-Lime Cucumber Salad comes together in 15 minutes and no cooking required. Cucumbers are over 95% water so it's genuinely one of the most hydrating things you can eat right now. And the Musabaha — warm chickpeas in a tahini-lemon sauce — is one of my absolute favorites. It looks impressive but it's so simple. High in plant protein, high in fiber, and the lemon actually helps your body absorb the iron from the chickpeas. Together they make a really complete summer meal. [𝗹𝗶𝗻𝗸 𝘁𝗼 𝗿𝗲𝗽𝗹𝗮𝘆] Let me know if you make either of them. Also a big thank you to those who joined live! What's your summer go-to right now? 💚
This month's cooking class replay is up! 🥒
2 likes • 4d
That cucumber salad looks yum...
A question for my plant-based hosts
When you have company over and you're the plant-based one in the room, what are your go-to recipes that always seem to be a crowd pleaser, even with the omnivores at the table? And here's the part I really want to dig into: do you cater to guests who eat meat and dairy, or do you keep the whole spread fully plant-based? Personally, I have always chosen to make fully plant-based meals when I host. But something came up recently that got me thinking. A family member asked if I could order something non plant-based for them, and honestly, I didn't feel comfortable with it. My instinct was no. But then I found myself wondering, am I being too rigid? Should I be more open to this? I genuinely don't know. I love showcasing plant-based food and showing people how delicious and satisfying it can be. That feels important to me. But I also don't want to make people feel unwelcome in my home. So I'm bringing it to you all, because I think this is something a lot of us wrestle with. - What's your most reliable plant-based dish that wins over even the skeptics? - Do you keep everything plant-based when you host, or do you make accommodations? - Has a family member or guest ever put you in this position, and how did you handle it? Drop your answers below. Really curious how you handle this..👇
A question for my plant-based hosts
2 likes • 23d
I was raised to appreciate WHATEVER is put out to eat when invited to another's home. Am I plant based, no. Would I ever ask someone who is, to make me animal products, no. It's disrespectful. One meal of plant based food isn't going to make you starve or kill you. Worst case, if you KNOW you won't like or have allergies to what's being served, ask if you can bring your own meal. You are not going to a cafe, your friend is not a short order cook... don't be a dick.
1 like • 23d
@Nadia Quraishi 🫶
Yay I'm featured in a Skool ad
Skool has been running Meta ads to showcase several communities on here. And I finally saw ours while on fb (although I rarely go on fb these days). Yay! So excited 💖
Yay I'm featured in a Skool ad
4 likes • 26d
Yes! I started noticing it about 3 weeks ago. Right after Sam Ovens mentioned it in the skool news. 🥳
1 like • 25d
@Nadia Quraishi Very exciting.
Finish This Sentence 👇🏽
Finish this sentence in the comments. "I am doing everything right, but I still cannot fix my ______." There is no wrong answer. Energy, sleep, the weight around your middle, the brain fog, the bloodwork. Whatever comes to mind first is the one we should be talking about. I will be reading and replying all day.
1 like • 29d
Weight 😔
1 like • 28d
@Nadia Quraishi I've tried that, and pretty much every food plan under the sun. Currently, I eat clean. Grow my own produce, source meats form local farmers I know, and fish my self or source from people I know here in Alaska. It's a bit easier up here I think then out of Alaska. I just feel like my body doesn't work right. I've have weight issues since I was 14, I am now in my 50's.
I Wasn't Following My Own Advice
Many of us here are women in midlife, and we naturally start losing muscle each decade. The way to maintain and sustain muscle is doing two things: strength training and eating enough protein. Now I am not all about the obsession with protein that seems to take over every couple of decades (Atkins, South Beach Diet, and now the carnivore diet). However, it is important that we're getting more protein than we may have needed when we were younger. 𝗜 𝗼𝗳𝘁𝗲𝗻 𝘁𝗮𝗹𝗸 𝗮𝗯𝗼𝘂𝘁 𝗴𝗲𝘁𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝟯𝟬𝗴 𝗼𝗳 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝘁𝗲𝗶𝗻 𝗽𝗲𝗿 𝗺𝗲𝗮𝗹. And being plant-based, that may seem daunting. Not in a "where do you get your protein?" kind of way, but what forms of plant proteins should I use to balance out my day. Here's the truth. I wasn't doing it myself. Breakfast I had covered. Smoothie with protein powder, matcha with soy milk. I'm usually close to 30g before I even start my day. Really quick and easy. Lunch and dinner? I was winging it. Tofu, lentils salad. All good choices, but I wasn't tracking and I wasn't hitting my number consistently. When I actually did the math, I was probably landing around 20-22g at those meals. Not terrible. But not what I teach. The fix for me was simple: dried edamame as a non-negotiable side at lunch and dinner. One serving closes the gap. So easy, and it gives me that crunch I sometimes crave. I'm sharing this because I know a lot of you are in the same spot. You know what to do. You're just not doing it consistently. You don't need a perfect system. You need one small anchor. What's yours?
I Wasn't Following My Own Advice
1 like • May 29
Though I appreciate the non-animal eating styles, I am a eat most things kind of girl. Yes, we all need more protein as we age. I am very lucky here as I have access to plenty of good sources. I am glad you shared. Many forget or get too busy and important food choices go by the wayside.
1 like • 30d
@Nadia Quraishi yep. Living on a half-homestead brings clean food. I am very blessed.
1-8 of 8
Dar Brown
3
31points to level up
@darlene-brown-6217
I'm just trying to "SHARE FOOD LOVE". Pull up a chair to the kitchen island. Sample the cookies, feel the warmth, join in, have a coffee. Enjoy.

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Joined May 20, 2026
Alaska
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