Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Believe It or Not, But Nashville IS Vegetarian Friendly

            The days of restaurants serving a baked potato and steamed veggies to vegetarians are over in Nashville, and local restaurateurs are keeping up with vegetarians’ demand for more meatless choices.
The Wild Hare's "Girl" Salad
            Although Nashville has too many barbecue pits and chop houses to shake a stick at, many local restaurant owners are savvy to the fact that non meat-eaters want more variety in their dining options. Nashville even has two—Woodlands Indian Cuisine and the Wild Cow— 100 percent vegetarian restaurants. Even though Nashville’s a far cry from the South’s vegetarian Meccas like Asheville or Atlanta, local restaurateurs are wising up to it.
            As a vegetarian, I’ve come to be a discriminating diner—the type that does research on a restaurant before going to eat there. I don’t like sitting down, looking at a menu and having to leave because there’s nothing for me to eat. But, local restaurants like Jamaica Way, the Wild Hare, Sloco, Tayst, mÄmbu, the Wild Cow, Porta Via, Gojo Ethiopian Cafe, PM, Rosepepper Cantina, Woodlands or Anatolia are ready and able to accommodate me, my vegetarian fiancé, my vegetarian mother and my vegetarian friends.
            Chef Jeremy Barlow, owner of Tayst and Sloco, said he has embraced the growing demand for vegetarian cuisine in Nashville.
            “[We] saw the increased need and desire for vegetarian and vegan food at Tayst over the last eight years, and we just kind of embraced it,” Barlow said. “You can make some awesome vegan food. We always kind of prided ourselves on the fact that we knew that vegetarians could come in and eat just as well as everybody else.”
            According to Barlow, who has lived in Nashville since 1997, Tayst offers a variety of vegetarian options: The menu offers at least one vegetarian item for each dinning course, chefs will prepare special orders and they offer  3, 5 and 7-course vegetarian tastings.
            Barlow’s a meat-eater, but his wife is vegan, so he has a heightened awareness of the need for vegetarian—and vegan—friendly fare.
            Barlow took what he has learned from Tayst and applied it to his latest culinary endeavor: Sloco, a lunchtime sandwich shop with meat and meatless options like the shaved seitan or the vegan meatball sub.
            “It’s hitting a good segment of the population that doesn’t always have a great amount of options,” Barlow said. “To eat vegetarian every once in a while is good for your body, it’s good for your health, it’s good for the environment; it’s good all around.”
            Barlow’s sentiments are shared. Elizabeth Bills, who opened the Wild Hare with her husband, Brian Bills, this summer, said they quickly realized that they need to have more vegetarian items on their menu.
            “Questions about vegetarian and even vegan menu items are the most requests we get,”. Elizabeth said. “It became pretty clear—quickly—that that’s what people wanted, and we try to really tailor the restaurant not just to what we want and think people want, but what they tell us they want.”
            The Bills are Nashville natives. Before opening the Wild Hare, Brian formerly owned the original Blue Moon Café, and Elizabeth was a math teacher.
            “There definitely seems to be a strong presence of people who are pretty vocal about it,” Elizabeth said. “The main place I see it is in communication with people online.”
            Elizabeth said there are a number of vegetarians on staff at the Wild Hare who help create vegetarian menu items, like line cook Jennifer “Girl” Sanchez’s “Girl” salad. It features deep-fried avocado, quinoa, goat cheese, capers, aparagus, grilled carrots, garlic and a citrus vinaigrette. It’s not on the menu yet, but guests can request it.
            Jamaica Way’s Kamal Kalokoh, manager of his family’s Jamaican eatery in the Nashville Farmer’s Market, said that majority of the restaurant’s sales is its vegetarian items.
            “That’s the bulk of our business,” Kalokoh said. “It’s like more than 50 percent of our sales.”
Jamaica Way's BBQ Soy
            Kalokoh, who has lived in Nashville for 10 years, comes from a Seventh-day Adventist background, which influenced their decision to have vegetarian counterparts, like curry tofu or jerk gluten, of traditional Jamaican dishes.
            For Kalokoh, the spreading awareness of vegetarian food’s health benefits—and satisfying flavors—is a part of what’s moving Nashville in a more vegetarian-friendly direction.
            “The reason why our sales are so high in vegetarian [meals] is because of people who are not vegetarian,” Kalokoh said. “They taste it, and they enjoy it. They feel like they can eat this meal and enjoy it.”
            In addition to restaurants where omnivores and herbivores can dine in harmony, Nashville also has two vegetarian restaurants. The benefit for us vegetarians is that we don’t have to worry about meat accidentally finding its way in our food.
            Wild Cow owners Melanie and John Cochran vegan. When they opened the restaurant two years ago, they decided to make the Wild Cow’s menu “by default” vegan, with the exception of the gluten-free bread and an option to add dairy cheese to a meal.
            “That’s the reason we opened it, because we really didn’t have anywhere to eat,” Mrs. Cochran said. “It was more of a selfish motivation than anything else. [Nashville is] pretty vegetarian friendly, but [being] vegan, it’s pretty difficult”
            Melanie has lived in Nashville since 1995. She said that when she and her husband were still vegetarians—that is, still eating food made with either eggs, dairy or both—there were plenty of dining option available to them in Nashville, however, being vegan is still a challenge.
            “My husband and I were vegetarians for a long time, and we had plenty of places to eat,” Mrs. Cochran said. “But once we made the steps to become vegan, there was nothing. But, I think [Nashville] has gotten better as far as vegetarians, definitely.”
            The Wild Cow’s menu includes appetizers, salads, sandwiches like the Wild Reuben and entrée items like Quinoa Tacos.
            Other Nashville restaurateurs like Barlow and Bills are aware of vegan diners’ stricter dietary habits than egg-and/or-cheese-eating vegetarians. According to Bills, the Wild Hare is trying to come up with not only more vegetarian meals, but more vegan meals, too.
            “We want to come up with more options, including at least one vegan thing,” Mrs. Bills said. “It’s the most restrictive [diet]… so it’s trickier. But, we’re up to it.
            As Nashville continues to grow in vegetarian awareness, perhaps vegan awareness will come along with this naturally.
            Overall, Nashville’s vegetarians can dine out with ease and variety—from ethnic cuisines like Ethiopian, Indian, Jamaican or Turkish, to fine dining, to casual American fare—knowing that local restaurateurs are paying attention to our dietary needs in creative palette-pleasing ways.