Roots will make you eat your vegetables, and like them. LEO's Eats with Robin Garr Pad Thai at Heart & Soy. Vegetarian and vegan lifestyles are on the rise, and this really shouldn’t surprise anyone. After all, the Baby Boom is growing older and more health-conscious, while a lot of Millennials are looking at a self-destructing world and worrying about a sustainable future for themselves and their children. Put these trends together, and it’s no wonder that more and more people are giving up meat.
This also may help explain why Louisville’s Roots and Heart & Soy restaurants have won a large and faithful audience since their opening in 2011.
You can hardly open a door without finding a vegetarian or vegan on the other side. Bill Clinton is a cheating vegan who wanders now and then when tempted by fish or eggs, but Al Gore turned vegan in 2013 and made it stick. All manner of celebrities have forsaken meat: The singer Miley Cyrus shuns animal flesh and gets downright evangelistic about it. Whole Foods CEO John Mackey and radio host Don Imus more quietly spread the vegan agenda.
The British newspaper, The Telegraph, reported in May 2016 that the number of vegans in the U.K. had increased 360 percent in the past decade. Gallup’s polling in the U.S. reveals that about 5 percent of Americans declared themselves “vegetarian” in 2012, and another 2 percent identified as vegan. That’s about 1 out of 15; and the proportion concentrated in cities is likely to be higher because demographics.
So we have to ask: Why don’t more of Louisville’s outstanding array of excellent chefs take buy a clue from Roots and Heart & Soy? A surprising number of chefs seem to assume that peckish vegetarians will be satisfied with a few veggie side dishes placed prettily on a plate; or, if they want something fancy, a grilled portobello painted with crisscross stripes of balsamic. Meh.
The key to interesting vegetarian dishes isn’t complicated: Don’t just delete the meat from a recipe and present it as “vegetarian.” Rather, build interesting, creative recipes with a meat-free item as the center of attention. (It doesn’t hurt if you have a hulking Taiwanese tofu-making machine cranking out fresh, organic tofu right on the premises, as Roots does. It should also be noted that many of Roots’ dishes don’t make use of tofu, although it’s worth trying some while you’re there.)
It should also be noted that Roots, having no need to pay premium prices for quality animal-based protein, may be the most affordable fancy sit-down eatery on the Bardstown strip, with not a one of its 30 main dishes priced over $10.95.
How do Roots and its street-food partner Heart & Soy, make that happen?
From small plates to large, the concept is simple: Build a compete dish made with interesting flavors that tickle the taste buds and satisfy the tummy, with a plant-based ingredient in the spotlight where meat would otherwise stand. The zen ethos that owner Huang “Coco” Tran brings to the bill of fare is the same as she brings to simple, elegant less-is-more decor with feng shui oriented toward peace. ...
Read the full review on LouisvilleHotBytes,
http://www.louisvillehotbytes.com/roots ... ables-likeYou'll also find this review in LEO Weekly’s Food & Drink section today.
http://www.leoweekly.com/category/food-drink/Roots/Heart & Soy 1216 Bardstown Road
452-6688
http://heartandsoy.netRobin Garr’s rating: 88 points