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Nothing's cooking at this Toms River eatery

Posted by the Asbury Park Press on 02/26/07

BY BOBBI SEIDEL

STAFF WRITER

 

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TOMS RIVER — Early on a recent overcast Friday afternoon, a steady

stream of customers is in and out of the East Coast Vegan restaurant.

 

Many are picking up take-out food. Some enjoy lunch in the small,

light-filled eatery whose front wall is floor-to-ceiling glass.

 

But East Coast Vegan is unlike other restaurants.

 

You won't find burgers, roasted chicken or french fries on the menu.

No fish, either. In fact, you can't even get a hot meal here.

 

Owner Michael Pollack says the three-year-old restaurant on West

Water Street is the only raw-foods-and-vegan restaurant in New Jersey

as far as he knows.

 

" I have no competition, " Pollack says. " I wish there were some

because people would be eating healthier. There are restaurants that

give you vegetarian or vegan choices. A lot are ethnic, such as

Indian or Malaysian. But this is purely vegan. "

 

A vegan diet is vegetarian — no animals, including fish — but it also

excludes dairy products and eggs. At East Coast, there's also no

gluten, soy, beans or refined sugar, says the 43-year-old Island

Heights resident.

 

" When I first opened, it was a cooked-vegan restaurant. When it

switched to raw, not only did people love the taste, but going raw

has increased business three or four times, " Pollack says.

 

Dishes made from fruits, vegetables, nuts and seeds are fresh,

organic and almost all raw. If anything is cooked, the temperature

never goes above 105 degrees.

 

" Nature has given foods in their natural states the enzymes that your

body needs. Once you cook over 105 degrees, it kills the enzymes.

Some people say it causes us to age, causes obesity, " he says.

 

Choices include a sweet curry mango chutney, salads, soups, smoothies

and granolas. A peaches and cream pie is made with germinated nuts,

raw fruit and agave syrup.

 

" We make everything fresh. My raw living bread is made with

germinated flax and buckwheat, vegetable pulp and seasoning. It's low-

dehydrated at 105 degrees, " Pollack says, holding up a piece of the

crackerlike flat bread, which is crispy and has a tasty seasoning.

 

" I try to mimic foods so people are comfortable with what they're

eating, " he adds, saying a " burger " there is a big seller. " It's made

with a " living' sweet tomato ketchup, pumpkin and sunflower seeds,

walnuts and veggies. It's low-dehydrated and topped with our pinenut

cashew cheese sauce. "

 

Cindy Aldrich of Berkeley eats at East Coast Vegan at least three

times a week.

 

" I'm not a vegetarian. I just eat organic, " says Aldrich, 31. " All

the nutrients and vitamins come out of food when you cook it. This is

the way God intended.

 

" The food here is really good, " she says. " The salads are excellent.

Even the salad dressing is from fresh fruit, fresh herbs. "

 

Pollack opened the restaurant because he needed someplace to eat, he

says with a smile.

 

" I used to weigh 350-plus pounds. That was about six years ago, " says

Pollack, who was then a caterer in Atlanta. " I did every diet. You

lose the weight, then you go back to your old ways. "

 

A friend told him about a 10-day detox fast. He fasted, then became a

vegetarian, but he was still eating white flour, dairy and sugars.

 

" The magic started when I became a vegan. Over three years, I lost 75

pounds, " he says.

 

After another fast and reading about raw foods, he became a raw-foods

vegan. In six months, he lost another 85 pounds. That was about two

years ago.

 

" I used to have gray hair. My hair is almost back to brown. I wore

glasses my entire life. I don't wear glasses anymore, " Pollack says.

 

Food fromThe Farm

San Benito chef shares healthy eating on Guam

By Sun Kang

Pacific Sunday News

sakang2

 

Have you ever held phosphoric acid in your hand? As one of the many

Americans who drink soda, I have, and poured it directly into my

system according to the ingredients listing on my soda can.

 

Such dietary habits have people turning to places such as The Farm at

San Benito in the Philippines. Located in Batangas, The Farm is a two-

hour drive from Manila, and is helping to spread the word of holistic

healing and raw food.

 

" We're getting more sick because of our lifestyle habits, our eating

habits, " says The Farm's executive chef, Felix Schoener. " So a really

powerful and efficient way to change it is with your diet. "

 

The Farm also employs meditation, yoga, and other holistic methods.

Many come for detoxification to cleanse their bodies and for the raw

food menu to feed them afterwards, which is where chef Schoener takes

over.

 

" The emphasis on The Farm is raw food, eating good foods and

(detoxing), " says Schoener. " As much as I can do raw, I do raw. If I

can't do that, I steam it, or use healthy cooking techniques. "

 

Schoener designed The Farm's unique fare and will help create a menu

for the Hilton Guam Spa & Resort. You can also be witness to his work

in a raw food cooking class from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mar. 3.

 

All the foods in the pictures accompanying this article are raw

foods. It's hard to believe some measure of cooking wasn't involved,

but Schoener assures it's true.

 

" Cooking food for a long time over a certain temperature loses enzyme

values, vitamins and minerals, " says Schoener of traditional methods

like frying of baking.

 

Hailing from Bremen, Germany, the 30-year-old started on the culinary

track working at hotels and restaurants, receiving training for

nearly 10 years. About two years ago, his focus shifted after

exposure to the raw food movement.

 

At The Farm, he uses ingredients such as nuts, legumes, seeds,

grains, spices, fruits and vegetables. Instead of cooking, he

prepares raw foods in various ways, using blending in a high speed

blender, marination and dehydrating items at a low temperature to

mimic the effects of cooking. He's also working on new methods year

round.

 

Schoener boils his menu down to this:

 

" It's basically preparing everything in the whole state, the whole

food using less process as possible and using new techniques to

prepare food. "

 

 

Blissed be, Annie

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Thanks for this!

 

Judy

 

In a message dated 2/26/2007 7:42:34 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,

bodybybliss writes:

 

Nothing's cooking at this Toms River eatery

Posted by the Asbury Park Press on 02/26/07

BY BOBBI SEIDEL

STAFF WRITER

 

Post Comment

TOMS RIVER — Early on a recent overcast Friday afternoon, a steady

stream of customers is in and out of the East Coast Vegan restaurant.

 

Many are picking up take-out food. Some enjoy lunch in the small,

light-filled eatery whose front wall is floor-to-ceiling glass.

 

But East Coast Vegan is unlike other restaurants.

 

You won't find burgers, roasted chicken or french fries on the menu.

No fish, either. In fact, you can't even get a hot meal here.

 

Owner Michael Pollack says the three-year-old restaurant on West

Water Street is the only raw-foods-and-vegan restaurant in New Jersey

as far as he knows.

 

" I have no competition, " Pollack says. " I wish there were some

because people would be eating healthier. There are restaurants that

give you vegetarian or vegan choices. A lot are ethnic, such as

Indian or Malaysian. But this is purely vegan. "

 

A vegan diet is vegetarian — no animals, including fish — but it also

excludes dairy products and eggs. At East Coast, there's also no

gluten, soy, beans or refined sugar, says the 43-year-old Island

Heights resident.

 

" When I first opened, it was a cooked-vegan restaurant. When it

switched to raw, not only did people love the taste, but going raw

has increased business three or four times, " Pollack says.

 

Dishes made from fruits, vegetables, nuts and seeds are fresh,

organic and almost all raw. If anything is cooked, the temperature

never goes above 105 degrees.

 

" Nature has given foods in their natural states the enzymes that your

body needs. Once you cook over 105 degrees, it kills the enzymes.

Some people say it causes us to age, causes obesity, " he says.

 

Choices include a sweet curry mango chutney, salads, soups, smoothies

and granolas. A peaches and cream pie is made with germinated nuts,

raw fruit and agave syrup.

 

" We make everything fresh. My raw living bread is made with

germinated flax and buckwheat, vegetable pulp and seasoning. It's low-

dehydrated at 105 degrees, " Pollack says, holding up a piece of the

crackerlike flat bread, which is crispy and has a tasty seasoning.

 

" I try to mimic foods so people are comfortable with what they're

eating, " he adds, saying a " burger " there is a big seller. " It's made

with a " living' sweet tomato ketchup, pumpkin and sunflower seeds,

walnuts and veggies. It's low-dehydrated and topped with our pinenut

cashew cheese sauce. "

 

Cindy Aldrich of Berkeley eats at East Coast Vegan at least three

times a week.

 

" I'm not a vegetarian. I just eat organic, " says Aldrich, 31. " All

the nutrients and vitamins come out of food when you cook it. This is

the way God intended.

 

" The food here is really good, " she says. " The salads are excellent.

Even the salad dressing is from fresh fruit, fresh herbs. "

 

Pollack opened the restaurant because he needed someplace to eat, he

says with a smile.

 

" I used to weigh 350-plus pounds. That was about six years ago, " says

Pollack, who was then a caterer in Atlanta. " I did every diet. You

lose the weight, then you go back to your old ways. "

 

A friend told him about a 10-day detox fast. He fasted, then became a

vegetarian, but he was still eating white flour, dairy and sugars.

 

" The magic started when I became a vegan. Over three years, I lost 75

pounds, " he says.

 

After another fast and reading about raw foods, he became a raw-foods

vegan. In six months, he lost another 85 pounds. That was about two

years ago.

 

" I used to have gray hair. My hair is almost back to brown. I wore

glasses my entire life. I don't wear glasses anymore, " Pollack says.

 

Food fromThe Farm

San Benito chef shares healthy eating on Guam

By Sun Kang

Pacific Sunday News

sakang2

 

Have you ever held phosphoric acid in your hand? As one of the many

Americans who drink soda, I have, and poured it directly into my

system according to the ingredients listing on my soda can.

 

Such dietary habits have people turning to places such as The Farm at

San Benito in the Philippines. Located in Batangas, The Farm is a two-

hour drive from Manila, and is helping to spread the word of holistic

healing and raw food.

 

" We're getting more sick because of our lifestyle habits, our eating

habits, " says The Farm's executive chef, Felix Schoener. " So a really

powerful and efficient way to change it is with your diet. "

 

The Farm also employs meditation, yoga, and other holistic methods.

Many come for detoxification to cleanse their bodies and for the raw

food menu to feed them afterwards, which is where chef Schoener takes

over.

 

" The emphasis on The Farm is raw food, eating good foods and

(detoxing), " says Schoener. " As much as I can do raw, I do raw. If I

can't do that, I steam it, or use healthy cooking techniques. "

 

Schoener designed The Farm's unique fare and will help create a menu

for the Hilton Guam Spa & Resort. You can also be witness to his work

in a raw food cooking class from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mar. 3.

 

All the foods in the pictures accompanying this article are raw

foods. It's hard to believe some measure of cooking wasn't involved,

but Schoener assures it's true.

 

" Cooking food for a long time over a certain temperature loses enzyme

values, vitamins and minerals, " says Schoener of traditional methods

like frying of baking.

 

Hailing from Bremen, Germany, the 30-year-old started on the culinary

track working at hotels and restaurants, receiving training for

nearly 10 years. About two years ago, his focus shifted after

exposure to the raw food movement.

 

At The Farm, he uses ingredients such as nuts, legumes, seeds,

grains, spices, fruits and vegetables. Instead of cooking, he

prepares raw foods in various ways, using blending in a high speed

blender, marination and dehydrating items at a low temperature to

mimic the effects of cooking. He's also working on new methods year

round.

 

Schoener boils his menu down to this:

 

" It's basically preparing everything in the whole state, the whole

food using less process as possible and using new techniques to

prepare food. "

 

 

Blissed be, Annie

 

 

 

 

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