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New cookbook celebrates The Plant-Based Foodie in Vancouver

Restaurants and food enterprises focusing on vegan or vegan-friendly fare are booming in Metro Vancouver, and now a beautiful new cookbook is celebrating that bounty.

Increasingly, Vancouverites are embracing the plant-based lifestyle--even if it's just for a meal here and there. Restaurants and food enterprises focusing on vegan or vegan-friendly fare are booming in the region, and now a beautiful new cookbook is celebrating that bounty.

 The recipe for Heirloom's Cauliflower Steak is included in the cookbook The Plant-Based FoodieThe recipe for Heirloom’s Cauliflower Steak is included in the cookbook The Plant-Based Foodie

North Vancouver-based photographer Brad Hill is behind The Plant-Based Foodie Vancouver, which marks the latest installation in his spotlighting neighbourhoods--and now niche cuisine--in the 鶹ýӳarea. The Plant-Based Foodie is Hill's fourth tome; last year he released The Gastown Foodie, and prior to that the North Shore Foodie and East Van FoodieǴǰǴǰ.

Like its predecessors, The Plant-Based Foodie includes recipes provided by local restaurants, cafes, and vendors. Participants include the revered Acorn restaurant and their sibling spot The Arbor, as well as vegan pizza virtuoso Virtuous Pie. There's The Naam's Vegan Lasagna, Heirloom's Cauliflower Steak, and Matcha Ice Cream from Say Hello Sweets, tapping into trends, comfort eats, and 鶹ýӳfavourites.

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Each restaurant or vendor comes with a story penned by writer Chris Dagenais (who, among his credits, for our sibling publication The North Shore News) that pairs with not only the food, but Hill's compelling photographs. The volume opens with a foreward co-written by 鶹ýӳplant-based icon Erin Ireland and animal rights lawyer Anna Pippus.

While going full vegan may not be in the cards for everyone in Vancouver, a beautiful (and giftable!) book like The Plant-Based Foodie certainly can make going animal-free for more of our meals much easier, whether we're inspired to get in the kitchen or go visit these local eateries.

"Put simply, the message of this book is that plant-based food is awesome," says Hill in his introduction.

You can find The Plant-Based Foodie for sale , as well as at and online via major booksellers.