This vegan joint has meatless Filipino food to rival the real thing

“My daughter one time packed lunch and it’s afritada. One of her classmates peeked at her baon and said ‘where’s the chicken?’ ‘Chicken? Hindi ako kumakain ng bangkay.

Two of Donah Ozoa’s four children have never eaten meat in their whole lives. Now they are 10 and 12 years old, respectively, and this situation is just one of the things they encounter growing up vegan.

You can say that Ozoa’s vegan philosophy is really geared towards the youth. Outside of their family, she runs a vegan restaurant called Greens Spot at a food court in Katipunan which caters to students and professionals in the vicinity who are looking for healthier meals that are also low cost.

For P175, you can already have a heaping serving of your choice of dish like this afritada plus turmeric rice.

Their approach to food is simple: no MSG, only organic ingredients, and most of all, no meat. As with every vegan enterprise, most people who are omnivores look at it with raised eyebrows. How could you possibly live without eating meat?

The answer is just as simple: meat substitutes. But beyond their plant-based meat alternatives, Greens Spot is also known for their dishes which deviate from the usual salads, falafels, and what have you. Unlike other vegan restaurants, they do a pretty mean take on Filipino classics that comes very close to the taste of the original dish sans meat, of course.

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Kare-kare

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Hamonado longganisa cured with calamansi juice and muscovado sugar

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Take their kare-kare, for example. While the star of the dish in an ordinary Filipino table may be the tripe or the oxtail, their version does away with both and is mostly vegetables they grew at a private farm in Sta. Ines, Tanay, Rizal. The sauce, however, is still peanut-based so that’s a relief. But other than that what really shines through is their housemade shrimpless bagoong. How? Fermented black beans and an assortment of vegetables. It’s very very (one more for good measure) very close to the real thing.

Picadillo, a menudo-like Cuban dish cooked with mock ground beef

“A lot of our customers are transitionary vegetarians or vegans pa lang. Hindi pa talaga nila kaya ’yung diretsong gulay,” Ozoa says. “So what we’re doing is we’re coming up with this transitionary food na parang junk food lang but will not cause damage to their health.”

This is evident in their menu which composes mainly of texture veggie meat but could fool even the pickiest of eaters—yes, that includes kids. One of their best-sellers is their vegan chicken nuggets made with chickpeas with a crust made of cornflakes and breadcrumbs which mimics the texture and the taste of the beloved children’s snack.

 

Mushroom salpicao made with shiitake mushrooms, broccoli, mock beef cutlets in vegan butter sauce
Vegan chicken nuggets

Save for the vegan Filipino classics, Greens Spot is also a hit with students mostly because of their expansive menu which includes ramen, pad thai, pasta, and their famous Heart burger whose patty is made from five different veggies, grilled and flavored with soyannaise, their housemade mayo made with soya and olive oil sans eggs.

And if you think because they’re a vegan restaurant desserts are off-limits, Greens Spot has also made quite an enticing sweets menu with their sugar-free and low carb desserts like brownie and chocolate chip cookies, which uses oatmeal instead of eggs and only 100% cacao chocolate.

Chocolate chip cookies

Greens Spot understands that most people switching to this kind of lifestyle are those who are younger thus their location, although, their previous store was originally located in Maginhawa. It is this demographic that they are trying to court as Ozoa says they are ultimately the carrier of the message of healthy eating and living.

 

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