A Vegan Day Out In Ho Chi Minh City. – Plant-Powered Nomad

There are plenty of places in Vietnam to get stuck for longer, but Ho Chi Minh City – or Saigon to some – isn’t one of them. It’s fast-paced, polluted, and bustling. Some love it, some hate it. Start early, and you can get a decent amount of things seen and experienced in just 24 hours. Here’s my guide to where to eat, what to do, and where to sleep if you have just one day in Ho Chi Minh City.

WHAT TO SEE

The War Museum should, naturally, be at the top of your itinerary. Get a jump start on the day by grabbing a coffee and heading to the cathedral and post office, which are quick to whizz round. I avoided Vietnamese coffee while I was in Vietnam as the beans are such poor quality they’re roasted in butter or animal fat to give them flavour (read more here) so I opted for a soy latte from The Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf. Expensive for Asia, but large, caffeinated, and vegan. We settled for just admiring the outside of the cathedral. From what I can work out, getting inside requires a tour and having seen the inside of the real Notre Dame, I doubt it’s worth the money and time. The outside is pretty spectacular though, and exceptionally un-Asia. If it wasn’t for the scooters whizzing around it would be easy to forget what city you’re in.

What to do in Ho Chi Minh in a day

Coffee and a cathedral. Good morning Vietnam!

Head into the post office after the cathedral. Find postcards, write them, and post them here too if you’re a decent enough family member to do that (I haven’t send my parents a postcard in far too long). You’re in the post office after all, so why not? You don’t need long to visit here (and it’s free!) so just wander round it staring at the majestic architecture of French-Colonial rule, then wander out and try to find your way to the war museum.

One day in Ho Chi Minh City

“Where? There? Where? Where are you going? Which museum?”

The war museum is open from 7.30am-12, then closes for lunch and doesn’t reopen till 1.30. Allow a couple of hours to read everything. I think I spent about two hours here and although I read everything I moved fast, so you might want to allow a little more just in case. The war museum is truly an unmissable part of Ho Chi Minh. If your dark tourism desire isn’t sated, then you can try to squeeze in the War Museum in the morning and then the Cu Chi tunnels in the afternoon. Because it was a beautiful day I enjoyed just wandering round in the sun and looking at the architecture – until it started raining, that is.

What to do in a day in Ho Chi Minh City

Photo bomb!

WHAT TO EAT AND DRINK

If you still have an appetite after seeing the results of Agent Orange, then head round the corner to Hum Vegetarian. It’s not vegetarian, not vegan, but there are a lot of vegan options and the staff are happy to help. It’s pretty pricy, but it’s one of the best places I’ve eaten in South East Asia as it blends modern vegan and raw vegan cuisine and Asian cuisine together in a wonderful mixture of colours and flavours.

Where to eat vegan food in Ho Chi Minh City

These asparagus skewers <3

Best vegan restaurants in Ho Chi Minh City

Baked spring rolls. These were DELICIOUS.

Vegan restaurants in Ho Chi Minh City.

This salad though. And I don’t normally rave about salads.

If you’re looking for somewhere to go later, then Saigon Vegan is right next to the main bar area and is a good place to watch the world go by from over dinner, before you head out yourself to get a drink and explore the area.

Vegan restaurants in Ho Chi Minh City

Food and cake at Saigon Vegan

WHERE TO SLEEP

I went for a little more luxury in Ho Chi Minh than I usually allow myself, and stayed at The Common Room Project which I highly recommend. It’s a gorgeous and luxurious hostel hidden away down an alley in a huge old house. It feels more like being guests at someone’s country house than staying in a hostel. There are kitchen areas attached to every dorm, large comfortable beds with mattresses that are one and a half that of a single, and the common area downstairs is beautiful and friendly. It’s an easy place to meet people and is definitely worth splashing out on. You can book your stay here.

Where to stay in Ho Chi Minh City

Photo courtesy of The Common Room Project.

What would you put on your must see/eat list if you only have one day in Ho Chi Minh City? Let me know in the comments below.

Disclaimer: all the opinions in this are completely my own, but if you book through the booking link above I’ll make a tiny commission at no extra charge to you, which allows me to travel for a little longer and keep writing useful posts.

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Where to stay in Cambodia – Mad Monkey Hostels – Plant-Powered Nomad

Have you heard of the Mad Monkey hostels in Cambodia? Most people know them as party hostels. Particularly in Siem Reap, the rooftop bar at the Mad Monkey is the place to go for a late night drink. What fewer people know is that Mad Monkey also call themselves a family, and treat their staff like one. They’re also socially responsible, help the community, and are responsible to the environment. This means that you can sleep, eat, and party (if you like) in Cambodia, and merely your presence helps provide education and clean water.

Since they started in 2012, Mad Monkey have built around 170 wells and they’re now building a school. They work with a local monk – so you know that the money’s going to the right place. And if you like, you can arrange to go out and see the work that’s being done. More immediately obvious, though, is how happy the Khmer staff are. They’re laughing, smiling, joking, and their English is pretty good too, helped by Mad Monkey either by employing English teachers to help or by supporting them in their personal development and encouraging ambition.

It’s no surprise, then, that I jumped at the opportunity to stay in Mad Monkey when I was headed to Kampot. The Kampot hostel is beautiful, and feels more like a resort. The dorms are airy, the beds are bigger than the standard single, and there’s a huge blue pool to swim in. Every week there’s a trek to the waterfalls organised through the hostel that raises more funds for, you guessed it, water. There are many other tour options too – pepper farms, Bokor mountain, river cruise, the list is (almost) endless.

Where to stay in Kampot Cambodia

The massive pool at Kampot Mad Monkey

On our first full day we rented motorbikes and after swapping out the dodgy ones (remember to always check before you ride off) took ourselves off to the pepper farms, with an excellent insider tip given to us by Mad Monkey: find the hotel with the infinity pool. As long as you buy a drink, and say we sent you, you can swim in it for free. They grumbled a little and tried to make us pay, but when we said Mad Monkey sent us they let us go right ahead. With only one other party there (a group of Chinese teenagers taking endless silly photos) we pretty much had the pool to ourselves and found it hard to leave. That night we hung out on the rooftop bar, which isn’t as large as Siem Reap’s but has an amazing view across Kampot.

What to do in Kampot

Pepper fields and infinity pools

The next day is when my trip became a little different, and sadly not as different as it should be. We (independently – because of too many incidents like the one you’re about to read about Mad Monkey now recommend only going as a tour) took our scooters up Bokor mountain, and my luck finally ran out. Coming down a hill I miss the bend, came off, and the next thing I knew the bike was on my leg, trapping me. Cambodians appeared from everywhere, and luckily so did the guy I was with and an American man, who lifted the bike off me. There was a lot of bone showing on my knee, and I was bleeding, a lot. From multiple places. We put me on a bike, and got me down to hospital which was friendly, and cheap. They patched me up and sent me on my way, back to Mad Monkey.

Where to stay in Kampot Cambodia Mad Monkey

Up Bokor Mountain in Kampot

I extended my stay and postponed my next booking with the Mad Monkey on Koh Rong Samloem. And passing my days in a haze of pain and opiate induced sleep (and many more hospital trips), this is where I became really familiar with the Mad Monkey food. While vegan options are limited, they’re available. I ate a lot of spring rolls. They’re currently working on making the choices a little clearer as to what’s veggie and/or vegan, and a vegan menu will be appearing later this year.

Where to stay in Koh Rong Samloem Mad Monkey

My home for five days – the last hut on the left.

Next stop was Koh Rong Samloem. There is no wifi or data signal here, so make sure you tell your family before you go that you’ll be out of contact for a few days. There are no cash machines on the island, so budget well. It’s a beautiful place to just relax, and people who come for one day stay for a week. I spent a lot of time lying on the decking just staring into space, as I still couldn’t walk by myself so had to rely on my companion to bring me out each morning and take me back to the cabin at night. While I was there they added a Twister board to the decking, and there was a fire show which was good hearted but needs a little polishing. The stick of fire flying into the crowd definitely added a certain something, however. If you like night swims you can wade out under the full moon and millions of stars to see the plankton.

Where to stay in Koh Rong Samloem, Mad Monkey

Beach, waves, sand, volleyball… paradise.

As Mad Monkey’s newest hostel, Samloem is still finding its feet but is definitely an amazing addition to the group. Don’t go here if you’re expecting a five star resort – they mention the jungle a lot for a reason. Every morning when we woke up, the game was finding what our rat had eaten. During our five day stay it ate: my soap, a jeans pocket, a bottle of aftersun, a pringles box, a medical bag, and probably a few other things too. Little trails of ants wandered in and out, and someone found a large scorpion at the foot of their bed. They didn’t take that one as calmly as we took the rat. For me, this added charm (although I didn’t have to deal with the scorpion) but I can see how it wouldn’t appeal to others, so make sure you go in aware. And if you need a clinic or hospital, don’t believe what they tell you on the island: there isn’t one on Samloem, or Koh Rong. We had to take a complicated series of boats to do a quick Koh Rong trip where we met Dennis, a topless doctor/barman who told us to go to the daycare English school/pharmacy, where an Australian girl who’d done a first aid course a few years ago changed my bandages in the dirty backroom. As a cat walked along the wall above my head, I rolled my eyes in pain at the iodine and questioned my life choices. Edit: I’ve now been reliably informed that the rodent issue is being dealt with an humane traps are being put down, so your room should have fewer furry visitors than mine did.

Where to stay in Koh Rong Samloem, Mad Monkey

Life’s hard, eh?

If you have the use of your legs, you can go on jungle walks to get through the trees to one of the other beaches, where you can scuba dive and pick up some wifi if you’re desperate. Mad Monkey is the only food option, otherwise, but the menu is excellent. The menu and food is similar in all the hostels, but this one was the best in my opinion. They have two vegan pasta options, a veggie burger (make sure to ask for no mayo) and a few other things. Beware the pizza night, the dough has eggs and milk in it. My favourite little touch here were the signs dotted around, which made me smile every time I saw them.

Where to stay in Koh Rong Samloem, Mad Monkey

Where can I get a drink around here?

After five days, it was time to head onto Siem Reap. The boat back was rough, and the bus was long. By the time I got to the Mad Monkey, I didn’t know what day it was anymore (probably not helped by the painkillers I was still on to deal with such a long trip). I was given a friendly welcome by Luke, who’s in training to manage the Mad Monkey they’re opening in the Philippines. My room was nice but a little sparse. Compared to the Koh Rong Samloem and Kampot Mad Monkeys the Siem Reap one is clearly older and more worn down. However, they’re currently refurbishing the bathrooms and working to do it up, and there are no complaints to be had about the size of the pool downstairs, or the rooftop bar upstairs. The whole hostel is a work of art, as artists stay for free and have covered the walls in their murals.

Where to stay in Siem Reap Cambodia Mad Monkey

Lazy days and artwork

There are multiple tours available through the Mad Monkey Siem Reap, including the infamous booze cruise which runs twice a week during high season. A tour of the floating village with all you can drink beer for $25. Despite it being a party hostel, however, I didn’t have a problem sleeping through the night as they close the party down and throw everyone out to pub street at midnight. Siem Reap is the only place where your dorm mates are more likely to be getting up at 4am than 10am as Angkor Wat at sunrise isn’t to be missed, and so there are usually at least a couple of people in the room turning in at 9pm.

This is the part where I would show you the pictures from Angkor Wat, except I must be the one person who did miss it. I spent my days taking a $1 Tuk Tuk to the coffee shop all of a 4 minute walk away, sitting there with my leg up, taking a Tuk Tuk back in the evening and then listening to how amazing the temples are. Although there are Tuk Tuk tours of Angkor Wat, from what I heard the best way to see the temples is by bike which will give you liberty to explore all the small ones that aren’t utterly crowded with people. I made the decision, therefore, to leave them until another year when I can actually walk. As cities to be unable to walk in go, Siem Reap is both good an bad. I missed out on a lot, but it’s also small and easy to get around cheaply by Tuk Tuk. The Khmer locals are much friendlier here than in Phnom Penh and don’t spend as much time trying to scam you. I also felt far safer here than I did in Siem Reap.

Where to stay in Siem Reap Cambodia Mad Monkey

Party on the rooftop each night

If you’re interested in socially responsible travel, I’ve been told that the show at the Children’s hospital on Saturdays isn’t to be missed, and they always need blood donations. Siem Reap is also packed with NGOs and cafes that employ and work to educate street children. If you want to do something for children but only have a few days or a week, please go this route rather than trying to volunteer at an orphanage. Orphaned children in particular need stability in their lives, and having Westerners come and go thinking they’re helping is very counterproductive to their development. If you want to set aside six months or a year to help, though, there’s lots here to get involved with.

As much as I wish I could tell you about anything to do outside the Mad Monkeys, I can’t think of a better place to be laid up with my leg in the air during my time in Cambodia. They treat their staff well, the environment well and the community well, and are a good place to party or chill, whatever you like. Go visit them, paint someone’s face fluorescent, and have a drink for me. Book through their site or through Hostelworld by clicking on the link below.

Book Hostels Online Now

 

Disclaimer: all the opinions in this are completely my own, but if you book through the link above I’ll make a tiny commission at no extra charge to you, which allows me to travel for a little longer and keep writing useful posts.

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Wear them with pride – 8 of the most awesome vegan t-shirts

It took me a long time to pluck up enough courage to buy and then wear a vegan t-shirt. I don’t know what I was scared of, people hurling steaks and abuse at me in the street, perhaps. And now I want more. They’re a great conversation starter, they’re a good way to show your vegan colours often in a humorous way, and they’re supporting hardworking vegan crafty types. And if you’re a long-term travelling like myself, they’re super versatile and tiny to pack. I use them when I do Yoga/hike/just go out with shorts and want to look more casual. So here, in no particular order, are my favourite vegan shirts – a mixture of the cute, the loving, the radical, and the artistic. As a bonus, a lot of the t-shirts in here are made from organic, sustainable cotton or bamboo and donate part of the profits to an animal charity. There’s no excuse not to be wearing them, really.

stylish vegan t shirt

Vegan T-Shirts – Love Peace Vegan

I couldn’t choose which of these I like most, so I’ve just linked to the whole shop. There are so many different styles here that, unlike most of the tops in this list, aren’t just a generic tank or tee. Off the shoulder, button up, crop, baggy, tight – these have to be the most stylish range of vegan t-shirts I’ve seen. Awesome.

Cute vegan t-shirts

This Little Piggy – VeganeseTees

I love the cute graphic on this one, plus the subtle but clearly vegan message that doesn’t scream aggression. It’s organic cotton and printed with non-toxic ink.

Awesome vegan t-shirt

Captivity is Cruel – Vegan Veins

Want to made a statement about animals not being used for our entertainment? This pretty nifty design says just that and makes a cute vegan t-shirt while it’s at it. Vegan Veins also donates $1 from every shirt sold to animal charities.

cute vegan t shirt

Someone Not Something – The Littlest Herbivore

For every t-shirt sold, The Littlest Herbivore will donate $1 to an NGO animal charity. This one’s for adults, but make sure you go onto her Etsy page and check out her range of t-shirts and onesies for toddlers and babies, they’ll make you want to raise a whole brood of little vegans… or start dressing your cat, whatever floats your boat.

moos not milk t shirt

Love Moos Not Milk – WinkinBitsyClothing

I love the graphic on this one. Again, it’s a little different and more stylish. I could easily pair this with heeled boots and skinny jeans to go to a bar.

Ferocious vegan t shirt

Ferocious Vegan – The Vegan Police

I own three tanks by The Vegan Police, and I love them. This is my favourite of all, but ‘I don’t eat pals’ gets a lot of compliments, and I love the colour. If this design isn’t for you go and check out the Etsy shop – you’ll be hard-pressed not to buy everything. Actually, you’ll make a massive saving on postage this way, so you should. They’re also super light and barely make a dent in my suitcase, perfect for travel.

cute vegan t shirt
I love therefore I am vegan – Little Atoms

Speaking of love – I love the message of this shirt. If you’re feeling a little too caught up in activist slogans in your wardrobe, go for this t-shirt to bring more warm fuzzy feelings to your day. You’re welcome.

Cute vegan t-shirt
Ninja Vegan – My Uni T

How cute is this t-shirt! I’m a bit of a sucker for pink, although whenever I try to wear it with my blonde hair I look far too Barbie. Something I try to avoid at all costs to maintain the illusion of dangerous badass traveller (hahaha). Not a strictly vegan t-shirt, this is still an adorable addition to any wardrobe.

vegan for the animals t-shirt

Vegan for the Animals – Drama Patrol

What more need be said? Vegan for the Animals, with a good graphic.

What have I missed off the list? Do you have any t-shirts already? Let me know in the comments below, and get some Comment loving.

Trotting around Japan in 'I don't eat Pals' from Vegan Police.

Trotting around Japan in ‘I don’t eat Pals’ from Vegan Police.

Disclaimer: I own some of these and wouldn’t recommend them unless I thought they were awesome. If you click on the links and buy something I’ll make a tiny commission that’s free for you, which allows me to travel for a little longer and keep my shirts from having too many holes in them.

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Hitchhiking in Hokkaido, Japan – a solitary excursion to the lakes – Plant-Powered Nomad

It was early afternoon, and I was sitting on the train going from Tokyo to Hakodate, the first of three trains to Sapporo where I was planning on spending the night. Relatively well organised for once, I already had a couchsurfing host organised for this part of my trip round Japan. I sat back in my extremely cosy seat on the Japanese Shinko high speed train, and Google mapped how to get from Sapporo train station to my host’s apartment. The answer: an 8 hour train to the far North of the island. Shit.

Maybe it’s just me, but I have an unfortunate traveller’s habit of looking at a country on a map and vastly underestimating the size of the country and the time it will take to cross from one end to the other. I’ve done this countless times, and it’s resulted in some rather frantic and exhausting situations – from a 36 hour bus journey from Bogota to Quito to attempting to hitchhike Berlin to Munich when I didn’t start out until early afternoon, and having to spend a night in a tent by a gas station somewhere in rural Saxony.

Hitchhiking in Hokkaido, Japan

Good morning from my tent in a field in Saxony.

On this occasion, I was lucky enough to have reliable data on my phone and I spent the next half hour sending out a frantic copy and paste couchsurfing request to around 12 hosts in Sapporo – which pretty much exhausted the remote city’s supply of active users with references. It certainly didn’t help that I was travelling during Golden Week, a holiday in Japan where Japanese head back to spend time with their families, and foreigners living and working in Japan use their rare time off to go travelling themselves.

Sure enough, the replies soon started coming in: “Sorry, but no…” “Sorry, I’m not here…” “Sorry, I’m going camping in the North…” until, about an hour after I sent the request, I received a “Yes! You’re welcome!” Just in time, too, I was Googling fields around Sapporo that were suitable for camping in, and the local laws on the legalities of doing so.

Hitchhiking in Hokkaido, Japan

Lake Shikotsu as the sun started to set.

A shy, sweet, quiet girl who barely came up to chest height on me (she was so tiny that when I weighed myself on her electronic scales, they had her height programmed and so told me bluntly that I’m obese) my host met me at the station that evening. When I explained that I had been thinking of nothing but food for the past 5 hours, she kindly drove me to a supermarket where I bought tofu, noodles, some vegetables and a few things to take with me when hitch hiking and camping that weekend. We got back, I cooked, we talked a little and then slept.

The next morning I set off a little later than planned, and found myself waiting extreme amounts of time for the trains. I was heading for two lakes, lake Toya and lake Shikotsu. After taking the train (free using my Japan rail pass) to a more remote area a little out of Sapporo, I found a likely looking piece of road where plenty of cars going in the right direction and a spot where they would be able to pull over. Then I stood with large smile on my face, and my thumb held jauntily out.

After barely 5 minutes, a jovial middle-aged American lady with a large car full of Japanese children pulled over and asked where I was going. “Lake Toya,” I replied. “Oh, we can go that route,” she replied, and rearranged the children to make room for me. She introduced them as her foster children, adopted children, and children of her foster daughter from twenty years ago. Now a widow after her Japanese husband of 20+ years died suddenly from a heart attack five years previously, she clearly had no shortage of love in her life and was happily integrated into the sleepy North island of Hokkaido.

Hitchhiking in Hokkaido, Japan

Lake Shikotsu, this time without people.

When she dropped me off at my first lake, I felt much happier about my decision to hitchhike. I arrived at golden hour, and it was beautiful. I wandered around for a while, although my large bag stopped me wandering as much as I would have liked. Do hikers who are on the go for months at a time get used to these things?? I ate a late lunch. Then I decided it was time to hitchhike out before it got too dark.

Apparently, the route I wanted to go was the opposite of the one drivers go in. Eventually, after a lot of cars stopped and were sent on their ways without me, I decided it would be best to be taken to a train station, any train station, from where I could catch a train to the next place. I had wasted a lot of time at this point, and it was really beginning to be dark. Unperturbed, I cheerfully answered the curious questions that the Japanese couple asked me using their translation app. The questions started out simple: “where are you from?” “How long are you here?” But soon got more complex: “You are how many years without people?” “Why you climb mountain don’t catch squirrel?” (I may have made that last one up, but you get the idea – the questions got weird).

By the time I had been dropped off at the station and then waited for a while for a train, it really was getting dark. I cheerfully forged ahead and arrived at the other end, in the town closest to Lake Toya. Using my phone I navigated my way out of the city and onto a road leading out towards the lake. It was a very dark road – it was now around 9pm. Occasionally a car would pass and I would turn around and stick out my thumb hopefully. A man stopped and indicated he’d take me to the campsite I pointed out to him. I told the voice inside my head saying I was silly to get in the car with a man at night in rural Japan to be quiet, and I hopped in the car. It was fine. And he gave me a map when he dropped me off at the other end (a map that I carried for longer than I wanted to before guiltily throwing it out a week or so later).

Hitchhiking in Hokkaido, Japan

Beautiful Lake Toya.

A man with no English (I was getting used to this) checked me in took and my 400yen for the night. As he walked me to my spot he pointed out the bathroom (toilets and sinks with freezing water, no showers) and I sidestepped round the Japanese children running around everywhere with sparklers. Much like the campsites of my childhood that we went to in Wales where everyone else was British, everyone else here was Japanese. I pitched my tent (I have a little one like this) and climbed into my sleeping bag with my kindle and my head torch. The wonderful thing about really tiny tents is they warm up fast.

After breakfast of soy milk I’d brought in a bottle and cereal (about all I could find in a Japanese supermarket that was vegan, but you can read about being vegan in Japan here) I packed up and went on my way. I could not. Get. Into. The. Lake. There were bushes, fences, and private land signs everywhere. So much for my idea of waking up and just wandering down to the water. I stuck my thumb out again and a family picked me up ten minutes later, and drove me for fifteen minutes to another campsite where I could finally get access  to the lake. It was beautiful, and peaceful, and tranquil.

Hitchhiking in Hokkaido, Japan

Swans by Lake Toya.

I hitched back in the early afternoon, managing to get a ride with a man who took me most of the way and even bought me tea at a convenience store. We couldn’t communicate with anything other than okay, and after a while he gave up trying to speak Japanese to me, but it was a pleasant enough ride. He put me out at a lay-by by the side of a mountain pass when it was time for him to go a different way, and ten seconds later two students pulled up and took me right into the city. They had been driving up for the past two days, something I didn’t envy, but I had come across them at the right moment. They took me back to my host in time for dinner.

If I went back did it again…

This weekend was one of my favourite parts of my three weeks in Japan, but here are the things I would change:

I’d plan my route better. I’m not the most organised person at the best of times, but waiting for an hour between trains, getting lifts in the wrong direction because I’d become stranded, not knowing where the entrance to the lake was… it all added to the adventure, but wasted a lot of time.

I’d give myself more time. Maybe this is a bit of a no brainer considering what I said above.

I’d use that time to hitchhike over the whole island. Because Hokkaido is really, truly, beautiful. And peaceful. And friendly. Actually… I just want to go back and hitchhike all of Japan.

I’d carry less. If possible. But that’s a general life goal of my travel. Still, I was carrying a ridiculously heavy bag for a lot of it.

If you want to be really organised and book places in advance, you can do so through booking.com, which has a good selection for Hokkaido.

Disclosure. Clicking on the links will take you to buy/book things. If you do so I’ll get a small percentage at no extra cost to you, whatever it is. This is massively helpful to me and will help pay for my next latte as I compile more hopefully helpful and amusing posts for you to read. I only ever recommend products I use or at some point want to buy.

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6 vegan meals you need to eat in 2016, and where to find them – Plant-Powered Nomad

I asked 5 vegan other travellers to tell me where the vegan meals we need to eat in 2016 are – from Brighton to vegan food in Africa, the results might surprise you.

A VEGAN BUFFET AT THE FOOT OF MOUNT KILIMANJARO, AFRICA

Some of the best vegan food we’ve ever had has been at Ol Tukai Lodge in Amboseli Park, at the foot of Mount Kilimanjaro, in Kenya, Africa.  The chef prided himself on the vegetarian cornucopia in his kitchen.  As a matter of fact, when we arrived for our first meal at Ol Tukai, and asked the dining room host about vegetarian food, he introduced us to the chef who, he was excited to tell us, always prepared a bounty of dishes without animal products.

As it turned out, a good 70% of the food at the Ol Tukai buffet was vegetarian or vegan.  Vegetable dishes outnumbered meat dishes three to one! The chef was more than please to pose for some photos with me at his extraordinary colorful buffet.

Pictured are pasta with marinara, sweet pea sauce, ugali and traditional dark greens, dal and rice.  And that doesn’t count the salad bar, out of frame in this picture.

We have been to Africa on safari twice for two weeks at a time and the situation at every lodge has been similar.  Plenty of vegan fare, and high quality at that.  More Africa safari lodge food photos here.

Lani can be found on her website:  http://www.lanimuelrath.com, and is author of The Plant-Based Journey.

Vegan food in Africa Vegan food in Africa

VEGAN TAPAS IN BRIGHTON, UK

In 2016, you need to eat vegan tapas! There is so much delicious vegan food all over the world nowadays that it’s actually quite difficult to pin down the best. However, I personally love sampling lots of different foods, and as many in one meal as possible. So, I’m naturally drawn to tapas, but they’re rarely all vegan. On a trip to one of my most beloved cities, Brighton, England, I heard about Rootcandi, the UK’s first 100% vegan tapas restaurant, and I had to check it out.

Six small plates of vegan delicacies on a three-tiered display stand is nothing short of a delight for all your senses. The world-inspired cuisine, like the Pan-Asain tapas platter I had, which is delicious, nutritious, and beautiful, really makes this place stand out. I’m sure this spot will mature nicely, so I definitely recommend a visit here in 2016.

Amanda is a vegan solo full-time traveler who puts the burger in Burger Abroad.

Rootcandi vegan tapas
BBQ SAUCE ROASTED CAULIFLOWER AND NOODLE SOUP IN HANOI, VIETNAM

Luckily, on this particular mission to find vegan food I had a companion. I say luckily because it was hidden down a tiny alley, off a totally different section of street than the one to which Google Maps had directed me. We eventually wandered past the sign we were looking for “Com Chay” and the word “vegetarian”. A scruffy kitten let itself be picked up and cuddled as we ordered and were told that they didn’t have half the things on the menu.

Fortunately, they did have this ‘beef’ vermicelli soup and BBQ sauce (or something similar and Vietnamese) roasted cauliflower. Despite the scruffy surroundings it stands out as one of the best meals I ate in 2015. There are many little places like this down alleys in Vietnam, just keep your eyes open and see what you find. Read more about my vegan in Hanoi discoveries here.

Amelia (that’s me) from Plant-Powered Nomad wanders the world alone teaching English and Yoga, and eating awesome vegan food along the way.

Vegan food in Hanoi Vegan food in Hanoi

VEGAN JAPANESE CURRY IN LUODONG TOWNSHIP, TAIWAN

Whenever I think back to the time I spent living in the small township of LuoDong in Taiwan, where I taught English for a year, I always think of this small vegetarian restaurant where we used to go to eat vegan Japanese curry, a sweet, yellow apple-based curry. It was full of fresh, seasonal vegetables and served with stream wu-gu fan (five grain rice, or purple rice).

It’s a small, local but exquisitely designed vegetarian restaurant hidden amongst sprawling apartments near to the rice paddies at the edge of town and is run by a local family who grow all their own food on their organic farm, including growing their own rice, seasonal vegetables and even making their own cheese (very rare in Taiwan).

We used to wander down on a summer’s evening after work and went by scooter in the cold and torrential rain, pleased to be welcomed in by the friendly family and ready to fill out bellies with hot curry. Even after going there every week for over 6 months, we never found out the name of the restaurant but it’s located at 54 Jingye Road opposite the Beicheng Elementary School.

Charlie is a long-term traveller from the UK who writes about simple ways to travel sustainably, including house sitting, slow travel and eating local. Check out her slow travel blog Charlie on Travel and follow her travels on Facebook.

Vegan curry in Luodong Taiwan

VEGAN BRUNCH IN TOULOUSE, FRANCE

South-western France, the home of foie gras, is not exactly the most vegan-friendly travel destination. While the staff in local restaurants were eager to help once I explained what vegans do and don’t eat, sadly, they sometimes had trouble scrounging up enough vegetables from the kitchen to make even a decent salad. But none of that mattered, because it made the experience of dining at La Belle Verte in Toulouse all the more memorable. While La Belle Verte does serve meat, the cuisine offered here could best be described as “plant-strong”. The owners give priority to using organic, local and seasonal ingredients, and they are knowledgeable about veganism and happy to cater for vegan diners.

On Sundays, they offer a brunch that is out of this world. The menu changes each week depending on what’s available at the nearby farmers’ market, but any non-vegan items can always be substituted with vegan ones. I was presented with a plate stacked so high that a piece of toast had to be balanced on top of my pumpkin soup! It was way too much food for one person, but that didn’t stop me from eating every last morsel.

Wendy Werneth is an intrepid traveller, vegan foodie and polyglot who is on a mission to show the world how fun and fulfilling vegan travel can be. You can follow her adventures at The Nomadic Vegan and download her free ebook, 8 Steps for Fun and Easy Vegan Travel.

Vegan food in Toulouse

VEGAN CHURROS IN BRIGHTON, ENGLAND

All the food at vegetarian restaurant Terre a Terre is brilliant and inventive. They are famed for their unusual descriptions and wacky names – to the extent that sometimes reading their menu doesn’t even help you understand what a dish is. But it’s well worth the confusion…even on occasions when I haven’t been able to deduce from the menu what my dish might be, it’s still been delicious. Case in point, a description from the menu of the dish Soubise Soubise: “Blasted buckwheat basted Roscoff onion bunged to the brim with hazel herb onion caramel nut mince served with cranberry juice kraut, radicchio pear pickle, toasted cream swede pie, roast parsnip and potato pave.”

However, Terre a Terre’s dish that set me over the edge into rapture (including noises that should not be made in a restaurant with polite company!) was their churros, or as they call the dish, Churrisimo.  The cinnamon sugar dusted doughnut sticks come with traditional thick chocolate sauce but also a few of Terre a Terre’s own unique additions: vodka soaked cherries and sea salt caramel dipping sauce.

Caitlin can be found at The Vegan Word. Caitlin is a vegan food and travel writer who has travelled to 30 countries (and counting) and just published her first book, The Essential Vegan Travel Guide.

vegan churros terra a terra

Have you eaten anywhere that you think should be on this list? Tell me about it in the comments below.

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