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“…I’d asked Voracious readers for a vegan restaurant that could satisfy some

Published 7:00 am Monday, September 24, 2012

Mary King, M.D., having a aEœSweet JamaicanaE tofu wrap.
1/10
Mary King, M.D., having a aEœSweet JamaicanaE tofu wrap.
Mary King, M.D., having a aEœSweet JamaicanaE tofu wrap.
aEœEl Besito CalienteaE burger: grilled tofustrami on a patella bun with caramelized onions and vegan lime-jalapeA±o mayonnaise.
The famous Macs and Cheese. Not on the menu, but they will make it if you ask.
Sage Cafe owner Makini, having just set out a batch of pastries.
MakiniaE™s vegan brownie.
Customers ordering from Makini's selection of vegan pastries.
Lemon Dill Gyro.
Vegan Reuben sandwich.
Smoked Northwest Portobello & Tempeh CrAape.
A customer with a Chipotle Grill sandwich.

“…I’d asked Voracious readers for a vegan restaurant that could satisfy some weird and half-joking demands I’d made for a suitable vegan alternative to proper summer barbecue. There were rules: It had to be prepared at least vaguely like real barbecue, had to taste at least as good as the worst full-cruelty, pig-based ‘cue I’d ever had in my years of full-blown BBQ addiction. And Sage was the restaurant that kept coming up, a place that many people swore by—their go-to joint for cruelty-free cuisine and a menu completely devoid of anything with a face. And everything was fine and fun while we were all arguing on the blog about the limits of vegetarian cuisine and calling each other names, but at a certain point it had become clear that I was going to have to check Sage out for myself, to see whether the claims of those who loved it were true: that it was not just tolerable, but good, occasionally great, the kind of food that people craved.”Read more from Jason Sheehan’s review of Sage Cafe. Photos by Peter Mumford.Published on August 10, 2010