Among your other resolutions — do more good? make more money? — you’ve  probably made the annual pledge to eat better, although this concept may  be more often reduced simply to “lose some weight.” The weight-loss  obsession is both a national need and a neurotic urge (those last five  pounds really don’t matter, either cosmetically or medically). But most  of us do need to eat “better.”         
If defining this betterness has become increasingly more difficult (half  the diet books that spilled over my desk in December focused on going  gluten-free), the core of the answer is known to everyone: eat more  plants. And if the diet that most starkly represents this — veganism —  is no longer considered bizarre or unreasonably spartan, neither is it  exactly mainstream. (For the record, vegans don’t simply avoid meat;  they eschew all animal products, including dairy, eggs and even honey.) 
 Many vegan dishes, however, are already beloved: we eat fruit salad,  peanut butter and jelly, beans and rice, eggplant in garlic sauce. The  problem faced by many of us — brought up as we were with plates whose  center was filled with a piece of an animal — is in imagining  less-traditional vegan dishes that are creative, filling, interesting  and not especially challenging to either put together or enjoy. 
 My point here is to make semi-veganism work for you. Once a week, let  bean burgers stand in for hamburgers, leave the meat out of your pasta  sauce, make a risotto the likes of which you’ve probably never had — and  you may just find yourself eating “better.” 
 These recipes serve about four, and in all, the addition of salt and  pepper is taken for granted. This is not a gimmick or even a diet. It’s a  path, and the smart resolution might be to get on it. 
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