© 2024 LEHIGHVALLEYNEWS.COM
Your Local News | Allentown, Bethlehem & Easton
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Health & Wellness News

Vegans, vegetarians and the veg curious visit Allentown's 2nd Annual Veg Fest

SoulVegan.jpg
Christine Sexton
/
LehighValleyNews.com
Kate and Markus Thomas kept things warm and friendly as folks stepped up to their Soul Country Vegan booth Saturday at the second annual Allentown Veg Fest. Helping the couple reveal their mac n' cheese, penne, burritos and eggrolls are their three children, Lailah, Noah and Nate.

ALLENTOWN, Pa. - Vegans, vegetarians and those curious as to what it all means — and tastes like — showed up for the second annual Allentown Veg Fest Saturday, at Cedar Beach Park in west Allentown.

Jemma Drahus and Logan Layne didn’t seem to notice anything unlikable in the Italian butter cookies dipped in chocolate and sprinkles. Drahus, 4, bit right into hers while Layne, 3, waited for his and then his eyes lit up, too.

“They’re definitely one of our most popular,” said The BAKE-A-RE baker, Marie Reiner of Danielsville.

“Gluten-free flour can be a little gritty”
Marie Reiner, baker at vegan home business, The BAKE-A-Re in Danielsville.

VeganBakery.jpg
Christine Sexton
/
LehighValleyNews.com
The Bake-A-Re owners Marie and Dave Reiner, of Danielsville, got on everyone's good side with tasty gluten-free Italian and other artisanal cookies and specialty breads at the second annual Allentown Veg Fest Saturday, April 27, 2024. The event took place at Cedar Beach Park.

It took her a year to get the taste and consistency just right.

“Gluten-free flour can be a little gritty,” she said.

She was joined by her husband, Dave Reiner, who handles the sales behind the booth table at events and is the main taste-tester back home in the test kitchen. It’s a tough job but …

Portia Dove and Marqee Brown found something they liked at the Second Chance Goods Ltd booth, where Lauren and Andrew Hill, of Macungie, were selling their individual no-waste wares.

“I don’t like to waste at all."
Lauren Hill, RN and waste-not candle and wax merchandise producer.

CandleLady.jpg
Christine Sexton
/
LehighValleyNews.com
Portia Dove, Allentown and Marqee Brown, from New Jersey, favored the vegan Sandalwood and cotton lilly wax melts at Lauren Hill's Macungie-based candle, soap and bath products booth Saturday. Hill, a registered home care nurse, is proud of her waste-not business, recycling jars from anyone who will donate them to her.

Lauren Hill, a registered home care nurse, makes her own candles, soaps and wax melts. She makes a coconut, apricot and soy base for the candles, then adds coloring and scents. She pours the melted down concoctions into recycled glass yogurt, salsa and jelly jars that are donated by anyone who wants to give them to her.

"I don't like waste at all," she said.

Boards.jpg
Christine Sexton
/
LehighValleyNews.com
No-waste wood artisan Andrew Hill, of Macungie, uses scraps of exotic woods like blood wood and canary wood, and blends them into herringbone, stripe and other handsome patterns at Second Chance Goods Ltd., a home business he runs with his wife, Lauren, who makes her own candles and wax melts out of recycled wax and glass jars.

Andrew Hill, a nurse practitioner, turns bits of scrap blood wood, African padauk and canary wood, and any other bits and pieces he gets from furniture-makers, into eye-catching charcuterie boards. Perfectly placed pieces form herringbone and striped designs. The hobby woodworker also sells his own sealant, made of just two natural ingredients.

“Mineral oil, which hydrates, and beeswax, which is a natural water and moisture repellent,” he said.

Brown ended up with some sandalwood and cotton lily wax melts. Dove was anxious to keep moving and find out what other food and merchandise was there. She just became a vegan in the last year.

“I wanted to see if and how it affected my health,” she said of the switch in dietary intake. “I definitely have more energy. And it’s not as expensive as people think to eat vegan.”

Dove said she shops for ingredients at Produce Junction, Wegmans and Walmart. She said she’s excited to discover what other restaurants offer vegan choices and is taking it one step at a time.

Mushroom Jerky.jpg
Christine Sexton
/
LehighValleyNews.com
Thomas Hong makes vegan jerky out of shiitake mushroom stems, which most people just throw away after consuming the caps. He sold these and vegan gyozas, or dumplings, filled with carrots, celery, cabbage and mushrooms at Allentown's Second Annual Veg Fest Saturday at Cedar Beach Park.

Thomas Hong said his shiitake mushroom jerky very much resembles the texture of meat.

“In Asia for centuries, Buddhist monks didn't eat meat and so they repurposed mushroom stems. Most people toss the stems and eat the caps,” he said. With minimal processing and spices for flavor, his company Vegky’s mushroom jerky very much resembles meat and is bursting with flavor.

Hong was also cooking vegan gyozas (dumplings) filled with cabbage, carrots, celery and mushrooms, popular among event attendees.

Friends.jpg
Christine Sexton
/
LehighValleyNews.com
Best friends forever, Tai Cardwell of Easton and Carmen Jones, who indulged in loaded fries covered with vegetarian (has dairy) cheese, portobello mushrooms, peppers and onions, came to Allentown's VegFest Saturday to check out the competition and get ideas for their soon-to-open vegan business.

Carmen Jones had no trouble talking in-between bites of the loaded fries with vegetarian (yes to dairy) cheese, portobello mushrooms, green peppers and onions. It looked delicious. Jones and her lifelong best friend, Tai Cardwell, from Easton, each were at the festival to check out what the competition was dishing out and how it was being received.

The two are soon opening up their own healthy sports drink business, an idea which was born out of the plethora of sports their children all play.

Cardwell said her five kids “are in lots of sports.”

“We want to provide something natural, made from fresh pressed fruits,” said Jones, adding that the pair plans on selling their products at local sports festivals and tournaments.

The Thomas family traveled with their 100% plant-based Soul Country Vegan meals and three kids in tow from Lancaster County, where they make, freeze and ship what looks like — but is not — rich, calorie-heavy gut-busting mac ‘n cheese, burritos, egg rolls and penne with sauce.

“We started this business in 2020 during the pandemic,” said Markus Thomas, who runs the business with his wife, Kate and children Lailah, 15, Noah, 12, and Nate, 10.

“It was and still is all about giving people healthy food.

“I bring the soul,” he said with a smile, referring to the traditional southern fare they make, like sweet potatoes and (vegan) crab cakes — and other standard fare. “You’ll never know you weren’t eating real crab meat.”

IceCreamGirl.jpg
Christine Sexton
/
LehighValleyNews.com
It wasn't too chilly for Isabelle, from Allentown, to give the vegan ice cream from the Udder Bar truck a try Saturday afternoon, at the second annual Allentown Veg Fest at Cedar Beach Park.

Savory tooth satiated, sweetness made an appearance as well along the festival walk. Young kids flocked to Udder Bar’s beautiful blue vegan ice cream truck.

Little Isabelle tried not to mind when her friend Finley invaded her personal space, and her vegan vanilla ice cream sparkling with gummy bears and sprinkles. The children, both from Allentown, were there with their mothers.

The gluten-free ice cream is also sold at a store located at 19th and Allen streets, said Mike DeLong, who owns Udder Bar. The store has been in business for seven years. The food truck is in its second year. Ube (purple yam), cookies and cream, and vanilla are the top three flavors.

DeLong has himself been gluten-free for almost 11 years.

“It’s just better for me,” he said.

Chocodiem.jpg
Christine Sexton
/
Chocolate artist Milan Stevens stayed busy talking Chocodiem vegan truffles at Allentown's second annual VegFest Saturday.

Grown women in particular were noticed flocking to Chocodiem, sold at the Easton Public Market and owned by Master Chocolatier Jean-Paul “JP” Hepp, originally from Belgium, who in three years of opening was honored at the Institute of Culinary Education and named among the Top 10 Chocolatiers in North America by Dessert Professional magazine, and one of eight "Best Chocolates for Gift Giving” by Forbes.

How is chocolate vegan?

“You know, it’s a fruit. If you don’t add stuff to it, it’s always vegan,” the Belgian said.

vegan books.jpg
Christine Sexton
/
LehighValleyNews.com
Deborah Emin brought her moveable feast of vegan-themed children's and self-authored adult novels to Allentown Veg Fest Saturday. Her business, The LOCALS' Bookshop, in East Stroudsburg, is the only vegan bookstore in Pennsylvania, she said.

The only vegan bookstore in Pennsylvania was represented by owner, author and writing teacher Deborah Emin.

“Vegan is a way of seeing the world,” said the former New Yorker who worked in publishing.

Now living in East Stroudsburg with her wife, Emin stood behind a table of brightly colored books with animals on the covers and titles such as, “Hope the Hopeful Piglet,” a picture book teaching children kindness and compassion.

“We started this to help people understand the benefits of a plant-based diet,” said Emin.

“People think it’s a lot of work. I say, ‘sweetheart, you’re going to save your life.”