Suzanne Somers' Boobs + THE Best Vegan Burger Recipe for Meat Eaters (2024)

My parents were hippies and they didn’t want my young brain filled with TV.

So I listened to movies and stories on vinyl.Annie was my all time fave and The Velveteen Rabbit made me cry each and every time. I painted rocks that I’d later sell to my neighbors. I played hide and seek outside until dark with my best friend, and if I was lucky my mom or dad would bring me home an Archie comic book.

On my super lucky days it would be a double digest.

We eventually got a black and white TV in the early 90’s and the screen was exactly 5 inches.

It had a lengthy pair of bunny ears attached to the top of it and it got one channel that sort of came in if I held the TV up towards one of our windows. This was a chore because even though the screen was only 5 inches, the f*cker was heavy.

If the channel came in clear enough on Friday night, my mom would let me watch TGIF (Thank God It’s Friday), a string of sitcoms that aired on Fridays. Perfect Strangers, Full House, Family Matters and Step by Step. Holy hell, did I love Friday nights!

So what if the tiny black and white picture had lines through it and the sound went in and out. I was entertained without having to do a damn thing.

It was brilliant.

Before we got the 5-incher, it was pretty much drought city up in the TV department.

There were four times a year that I could veg out in front of the coveted box, and I waited for these occasions all year long as if they were Christmas morning.

1. My uncle’s house
We visited him once a year and I would stay in his basem*nt for as many hours and days as my mom would allow, binging on VHS after VHS.

The Breakfast Club, Adventures in Babysitting, Sixteen Candles, Crocodile Dundee, Back to the Future, The Goonies, ET, Pretty in Pink, Dirty Dancing….is there ANYTHING better than movies from the 80’s?

I think not.

My marathon would last our entire trip. f*ck the zoo, screw bowling, pooh pooh the water park, I wanted John Hughes and I wanted a lot of it.

2. My mom’s aunt’s house
She was surly, but she had cable, so I was always game for a visit.

My great aunt never had kids and I don’t think she really knew what to do with them. This worked out in my favor because the extent my visit was her putting a towel over her Lazy Boy to protect it from “kid”, handing me the TV remote and telling me not to make a mess.

From there I had free reign.

I would go through all the channels, write down what was showing on each, and then decide what to watch. By the time I decided on what I would indulge in, the show would be over and I would have to start the process all over again.

It didn’t matter though, the possibilities were endless, and I was in heaven. My best show, the one worthy of halting all my browsing, was Three’s Company.

The first time I watched it, I knew that one day I would live in California, and I also knew that I really liked looking at Suzanne Somers boobs. I remember wondering if it was normal for girls to be so pleased looking at boobs. Normal or not, I loved them.

3. My neighbor’s house
My neighbor didn’t have cable, but he did have about 6 channels that came in clear and they were in COLOR. So when my mom cleaned his house once a year in preparation for his mom and dad’s yearly visit, I knew I had a good window to get in some screen time.

My mom would clean his house for 5 days in a row, from 9am to noon. I never felt right about going with her to veg out while she cleaned. That would have been be an asshole move.

I always asked her if she needed help, and then I would be selective about the jobs I would take on.

I only did the jobs that I could do in the living room, where conveniently, the TV was located. I would also make the super helpful suggestion that any living room vacuuming should probably wait until after 11:00am.

This was when The Price Is Right and Family Feud were over and, the boring Soap Operas began.

4. Short stint at my sister’s house
There is a 17 year age gap between myoldest sisterand I, so she was in and out of the the picture doing her own thing while I was growing up.

There was one particular period when I was 10 that she lived in the same little town as me, and every Thursday night was our date night. I would go over to her house, she would make us a Pour-A-Quiche and we’d watch Columbo.

I loved Thursday nights because POUR-A-QUICHE AND COLUMBO.

I anticipated going to my uncle’s, my great aunt’s, and my neighbor’s house each year, and I loved my Pour-A-Quiche Columbo dates.

But when it was time to come home, I couldn’t wait to take out my Annie album, place it gently on my dad’s record player, carefully put the needle on the outside edge of the black shiny album, and listen for that crackly worn vinyl sound before the narration began.

I would lay down, close my eyes and picture the scenes in my head.

In my head, Annie was always blonde.

During my second year of College I had a friend who helped me steal cable from my neighbor. It was the first time in my life I could watch whatever I wanted, whenever I wanted to watch it.

I sat in front of my TV and “my” cable every chance I got for a month straight. And then I got sick of it and moved on to the art of drinking.

And that’s an entirely different post that I’ll save for another time.

As sh*tty as it was at times, I’m grateful to my parents for making the decision to be free of TV while I was growing up.

It made me use my imagination, it forced me to play and exercise, it helped build my connection to the outside, and it made me accept moments of boredom.

I also have zero memories of eating dinner in front of the television and a ton of memories of my mom and dad telling each other about their day and all of us laughing together while we ate dinner.

Suzanne Somers’ tit* were great, but remembering the wagon wheel table at dinner time in the hippie house that I grew up in trumps any set of boobs (and that’s coming from a lesbian).

Let’s all start eating dinner with the people that we love at the table and turn off the screens and devices. Ideas might spark, we might learn something, and I guarantee that dinner will taste yummier.

If there’s someone special in your life who you really want to help eat better, but they’re being all “But I love meat and vegan food is gross. Join PETA and leave me alone.”, make them THIS vegan burger recipe andburger sauce, and then stack on their favorite fixings.

After they devour the entire thing, they won’t eat their words for dessert, they’ll lick them clean.

When they’re done eating, share your win with us over in our private Facebook group.

Suzanne Somers' Boobs + THE Best Vegan Burger Recipe for Meat Eaters (1)

Stupid Simple Bean Burgers with Garlic Paprika Burger Sauce

Print Recipe Pin Recipe Rate Recipe

Author: Molly Patrick

Ingredients

  • 1 cup chopped red onion 130g
  • 4 garlic cloves minced
  • 1 red bell pepper, diced
  • one 15oz can black beans, drained and rinsed well
  • one 15oz can white beans, drained and rinsed well
  • 1 teaspoon coriander powder
  • 1 teaspoon cumin powder
  • 1 teaspoon chili powder
  • 1 teaspoon dried red chili flakes
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • ¼ cup brown rice flour 35g

Garlic Paprika Burger Sauce

  • ¼ cup raw cashews, soaked in water for at least 10 minutes 30g
  • ¼ cup tahini 60g
  • 1 garlic clove, minced
  • ½ teaspoon 100% pure maple syrup
  • ½ teaspoon brown rice vinegar
  • ½ teaspoon smoked paprika
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • ½ cup water 120ml

Instructions

  • Pre-heat the oven to 350°f (175°c).

  • Heat a skillet over medium heat for 2 minutes and then add the onions. Cook for 5 minutes, stirring frequently and adding 1 tablespoon of water if they start to stick. Add a bit more necessary.

  • Add the garlic and red peppers and cook for an additional 4 minutes, stirring frequently, adding a little water if things start to stick.

  • Add the black and white beans, coriander powder, cumin powder, chili powder, red chili flakes and salt. Stir and cook for an additional 2 minutes.

  • Turn off the heat and transfer the mixture to a large mixing bowl. With a potato masher, mash the mixture just until the beans are mashed (they don’t have to be mashed all the way).Add the rice flour and stir until everything is combined.

  • Shape into 6 equal-sized patties and place on a parchment covered baking sheet.Place in the oven and bake for 20 minutes on one side, flip, and bake for another 20 minutes on the other side.

Make the Garlic Paprika Burger Sauce

  • Drain the cashews (discard the water) and place them in your blender, along with the tahini, garlic, maple syrup, rice vinegar, paprika, salt and water.

  • Blend on high until creamy and smooth.

Assemble Your Burger

  • Place a burger patty on a toasted bun or a pile of greens and top with your favorite toppings and plenty of Paprika Burger Sauce.

I hope you have the perfect week. May you dance naked without catching a cold (even if you live in the Southern Hemisphere. Those summer colds are a bitch).

Suzanne Somers' Boobs + THE Best Vegan Burger Recipe for Meat Eaters (2024)

FAQs

What binds a vegan burger together? ›

Use Silken Tofu, a Flax Egg, or Aquafaba as a Vegan Binder.

It is nice and thick, firms up similarly to how an egg cooks, and it's almost impossible for anything to fall apart when using it. It does need to be blended with water first; not a big deal, just a little less convenient.

How can I make my burgers more flavorful? ›

Blue cheese, grilled pineapple, or avocado will add a lot of flavor to a classic hamburger. Many, if not all, of these ingredients can already be found in your kitchen and pantry.

Why are vegan burgers better? ›

"Quite often they're lower in fat – particularly saturated fat (with a few exceptions)," says Dynan. "And a number have added fibre, which you won't get from meat." So swapping out a regular commercial meat patty for a plant-based alternative at a barbecue or when eating out might leave you nutritionally better off.

Which vegan burger bleeds? ›

Then came Impossible Burger, science's answer to the herbivore's dilemma: a patty that supposedly tastes, and bleeds, like real meat. Impossible Burger's secret ingredient is “heme,” the molecule that gives blood its crimson color and meat patties their distinctive flavor and aroma.

What makes a vegan burger taste like meat? ›

Researchers at Impossible Foods discovered that by adding heme to their plant-based burgers, they could capture a lot of the aromas we associate with meat. They call it their "magic ingredient," and, combined with yeast extract, it does seem to do a pretty good job.

How do you make veggie burgers taste better? ›

Spices and tomato paste: Smoked paprika, chili powder, salt, and pepper combine to make these burgers a little smoky and incredibly delicious. Tomato paste adds color, sweetness, and an umami flavor to the burgers (highly recommended!). Cooked rice: Adds more texture to the veggie burgers.

Why vegan meat substitutes are the worst junk food? ›

Foods are more processed if they contain artificial ingredients or "natural flavors." In meat substitutes specifically, ingredients such as soy protein isolate, soy protein concentrate and textured vegetable protein are processed ingredients. That's bad news because ultraprocessed foods increase your risk of: Obesity.

What tastes like meat but isn't meat? ›

Mushrooms are delicious, nutritious, versatile, and pretty meaty too. King oyster mushrooms, in particular, have a soft, meaty texture, and they're rich in fiber and protein, as well as vitamins and minerals. Portabella, lion's mane, and chicken of the woods are a few more examples of meaty mushrooms.

What is a dirty vegan burger? ›

The Original Dirty Vegan Burger with a spicy twist. A 1/4lb Moving Mountains® patty split and grilled as two patties for extra crispness, topped with 2 slices of melted vegan cheddar, pickled cucumber, and caramelised onions. Served with shredded lettuce and our homemade spicy sauce in a soft vegan bun.

Which is the healthiest vegan burger? ›

Amy's Organic California Veggie Burger

While Amy's has several veggie burger options, the California Veggie Burger is one of the company's healthiest options as it has a short ingredient list with mostly whole foods, along with 4 g of fiber and 150 calories per patty.

Why is blood coming out of my burger? ›

Given that meat has a fairly high percentage of water in the lean portions (muscle tissue), the amount of reddish watery discharge from the meat, called the “purge,” could be affected by the ratio of lean to fat, the coarseness of the grind, whether the meat was dry aged or not, the temperature and humidity at which it ...

What is the best binder for vegan meat? ›

Typically, one egg can be replaced by a quarter of mashed avocado. Not only does it help as a binder, but it can also help to add and retain moisture. In addition, avocado is quite fatty and can help vegetable-based burgers to closer mimic the density of a meat patty.

What is a vegan egg substitute for binding burgers? ›

Combine a tablespoon of ground flaxseed with 3 tablespoons of water, stir to combine, and let stand for 5 minutes to thicken. Ground flaxseed emulates eggs' binding qualities in breads, cakes, muffins, cookies, burgers, and vegan meatballs.

What is a good vegan binder? ›

Chia seeds

Similar to flax seeds, chia seeds can be mixed with water and left to thicken, creating what is commonly called a chia egg. The gel-like texture of a chia egg makes this a brilliant binder.

How do you bind vegan food? ›

Chia seeds act in the same way as flaxseeds in a recipe. They can help bind ingredients and are best used in recipes such as breads and wholemeal cookies. Mix 1 tablespoon of ground chia seeds with 3 tablespoons of water, then leave to sit for around 20 minutes.

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