Bad Manners: Fast as F*ck: 101 Easy Recipes to Pack Your Plate: A Vegan CookbookHardcover (2024)

Read an Excerpt

Everyone’s busy, we f*cking get it.

Whether it’s working multiple jobs just to make rent or chauffeuring your whole damn family around, we’ve all got too much sh*t to do with limited time to do it. You’re not alone. We wrote this book to tackle the #1 excuse we hear from people about why they don’t cook: time. Everybody seems to have enough time to be caught up on their Netflix queue or the sh*tload of sports on TV, but when it comes to cooking for yourself, suddenly everyone’s too goddamn busy. Maybe you never learned and don’t know where to start, or maybe you know how to cook but your time management is garbage. Whatever your exhausted excuse might be, we’re here to call bullsh*t and give you some advice. You can’t write three cookbooks in three years without getting good at this schedule sh*t.

So listen up, we know what the f*ck we’re talking about.

The first step to finding time to cook for yourself is to stop thinking of cooking as an expendable part of your day. It's not.

You don’t throw your clothes away when they get dirty and just buy new ones because there’s no time to do laundry, right? F*ck no you don’t, and if you do, you’re an asshole. But that’s how tons of people treat mealtime. Fast-food companies rely on this myth of “intelligent time management” for your repeat business and that sh*t has served them too well for too long. Dining out makes up nearly one-third of the energy intake by US adults each year and the nutritional quality of that food is almost always significantly lower than food prepared at home. So basically we’re all eating the nutritional equivalent of Styrofoam for a third of our meals but we’re still wondering why we have all these goddamn health problems. Go f*cking figure.

In 1929, away-from-home food consumption was only 13% of the average US household’s budget. By 2012, that amount had shot up to 43%, which corresponds to the rise in diabetes, heart disease, and obesity in the United States since the 1970s. And don’t start with that “but it’s always been like this” bullsh*t. McDonald’s first drive-thru opened in 1975, so we’ve got plenty of time to reverse this eatery epidemic before it becomes an ingrained way of life. If we changed once, then we sure as sh*t can change again.

We can already hear you saying, “but it’s cheaper than cooking at home!” Well we don’t know what the f*ck your budget is like but feeding a family of four at McDonald’s costs an average $28 per visit and ya know goddamn well there ain’t any leftovers. For $30 you could make most entrees in this book with a side or a big salad and have enough left over to eat for another one to two meals.

That’s a motherf*cking value meal right there.

So it shouldn’t be any surprise that it’s mostly the middle and lower-middle classes who frequent fast-food and sit-down restaurants, not the poor. Study after study has found that the number of visits to fastfood establishments actually rises directly alongside income. This is not a “them” kind of problem, this is an “all of us” problem, and the sooner people own up to sh*tty food habits, the better. You can act like money ain’t a thing, but to most of us, money is very much a thing.

As you’d expect, fast-food restaurants are only interested in your wallet. Your health and waistline mean f*ck all to them. They’ll keep peddling sh*tty food under the guise of efficiency until customers stop lining up to buy it and start cooking at home. The people who dream up the new items that land on fast-food menus are not chefs or dieticians. THEY’RE. MOTHER. F*CKING. MARKETERS. They want you to order their newest, most ridiculous sounding meal, talk about it on social media, and then just keep buying that garbage until they scheme up the next dish to push the limits of good taste and caloric density. The Doritos Locos Taco from Taco Bell is the best example of this. That travesty of a taco made over $375 million in its first year on the market. That one taco-pocalypse made Taco Bell more than 7,000 times the average household income in the United States in one goddamn year. ONE. DAMN. TACO. The over-the-top ad campaign, branding, name, and addictive tastes are all designed for one reason: to make those rich motherf*ckers even richer.

So stop handing over your hard-earned cash to those sh*tlords and start rewarding yourself with some of the best meals you’ve eaten in a long time.

Get on Team You. You work hard and deserve a diet that will support your asskicking lifestyle, not food that’s gonna cause you to self-sabotage. If you’re like us, you don’t need any help with that sh*t.

Most people who dine out frequently don’t realize that businesses have manufactured their meals specifically to keep consumers coming back for more. Customers have had their taste buds sandblasted to sh*t by the aggressive amounts of sodium and sugar that get packed into commercially prepared meals. People in this country consume 2,000 to 8,000 milligrams of sodium a day when they shouldn’t have more than 1,500. HOLY F*CKING FRENCH FRIES. GUYS?! ARE YOU OKAY?!

Let’s table all the unhealthy side effects of that sh*t because that’s in our other books, Bad Manners: Eat Like You Give a F*ck and Bad Manners Party Grub, and let’s talk about how you’re f*cking with your palate. When you suck down that much sodium on the daily, you’re f*cking up your ability to enjoy healthier foods. Too much salt overstimulates your taste buds and then you can’t taste the subtle flavors in food anymore, especially fruits and vegetables. Ya know, the kinda sh*t we should be eating. Without realizing what’s happened, people combat the dulling of their palates by reaching for the saltshaker, making the whole goddamn problem even worse. And when most healthy food is bland and spiceless, nobody’s craving that sh*t. And that’s exactly what these fast-food companies want. It’s tough eating at home when everything tastes like flavorless mush.

And it’s the same damn thing when it comes to sugar. The average American eats 2 to 3 pounds of sugar per week. That’s at least 1 cup of sugar a day. Walk into your kitchen right now and measure out a cup of sugar, then take a hard look at that sh*t knowing you’re probably eating one of those every day. It’s not entirely your fault though. Sugar sneaks its way into every commercially prepared food like bread, salad dressings, and pasta sauces in addition to the cookies and other sugary sh*t that we already obsess over. Sugar has the same effect on the palate as salt, so we crave sweeter and sweeter stuff to achieve the same kind of satisfaction that we used to get from a ripe peach. This has gotten out of hand and we gotta take back control of what goes into our food before we start just licking sugar and salt off rocks like a bunch of goddamn goats. It’s not a good look.

Even just getting in the kitchen is gonna help your overall health. It’s really that easy. Don’t just trust us because we’re Internet famous.

We've brought facts motherf*cker.

Bad Manners: Fast as F*ck: 101 Easy Recipes to Pack Your Plate: A Vegan CookbookHardcover (2024)

FAQs

Is Bad Manners Cookbook vegan? ›

The New York Times bestselling duo behind Bad Manners gives you a home-cooking reboot with this fresh collection of more than 100 great-tasting, good-for-you plant-based recipes for any occasion.

What is surprisingly not vegan? ›

Honey. Honey is a controversial food for many vegans. Bees do produce it, and it is also a food source in the hive. Because bees produce it, and bees have died to make it, honey is not considered vegan.

What is the strictest vegan? ›

Level 4 vegan

Level 4 vegans are incredibly committed to veganism, and follow a strict dietary regime. A level 4 vegan's diet is likely to contain more fruits, vegetables and nuts. Level 4 vegans will often only eat out at vegan restaurants, or if that is not an available option they will only choose a vegan option.

What is the controversy with Thug Kitchen? ›

Thug Kitchen took to Instagram on June 4 to express solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement and acknowledged that its use of “thug” was problematic, which sparked the same criticisms as it received back in 2014, including from Afro-Latina vegan activist Jessica Schoech—founder of North Hollywood, CA-based event ...

Is bad vegan fiction? ›

Not many naughty vegans are accused of embezzling millions of dollars, go on the run for nearly a year and only get caught when they order a pizza from Domino's. That's the deal with Bad Vegan (Netflix), the latest stranger-than-fiction true-crime docuseries from the people who brought us Tiger King. Subtitled “Fame.

Is bad manners same as Thug Kitchen? ›

In that spirit, we will change the name of our company and website; discontinue the use of Thug Kitchen as the title of all our previous cookbooks; and closely re-evaluate the content of each book. These changes are underway but will take a little while longer while we finish the work.

Are there any vegan chefs on Food Network? ›

Jumping into the game, The Food Network produced the first mainstream vegan cooking show with It's CompliPlated. Recently, host Tabitha Brown took to Instagram to let her fans know that nothing with her had changed, despite her show moving from Thursday evenings to Tuesday afternoons.

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