Vegan Umami | Olives for Dinner https://olivesfordinner.com/category/recipes/vegan-umami/ Vegan Recipes for Those Who Love to Cook and Eat Tue, 18 Nov 2025 22:37:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://olivesfordinner.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/OlivesForDinner_siteicon-150x150.png Vegan Umami | Olives for Dinner https://olivesfordinner.com/category/recipes/vegan-umami/ 32 32 25 Jackfruit Recipes: Sweet and Savory Ideas to Try https://olivesfordinner.com/jackfruit-recipes/ https://olivesfordinner.com/jackfruit-recipes/#respond Wed, 12 Nov 2025 13:45:17 +0000 https://olivesfordinner.com/?p=28120 Jackfruit is one of those ingredients that defies its own category—technically a fruit, but it cooks...

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Jackfruit is one of those ingredients that defies its own category—technically a fruit, but it cooks like something else entirely. These jackfruit recipes show how the right prep and seasoning can turn this humble ingredient into knockout tacos, burgers, curries, and even dessert.

Bowl of vegan crab coconut soup made with jackfruit, noodles, lime, and herbs on a dark stone background.

Looking for the best jackfruit recipes? This tropical fruit has a texture that shreds beautifully and a flavor that fits into everything from savory mains to refreshing smoothies. If you’ve never cooked with jackfruit, you’re not alone—it’s the kind of ingredient that makes you pause in the grocery aisle and think, wait, that spiky thing is food? But once you try it, you get it. Jackfruit soaks up spice and sauce like nothing else, holding its shape through roasting, simmering, and grilling.

The secret is knowing which kind you’ve got. Young green jackfruit (usually canned in brine or water) gives savory dishes that signature pull and chew—it’s what makes vegan pulled pork and jackfruit tacos work. Ripe jackfruit, on the other hand, is soft and floral, perfect for smoothies or coconut desserts. Same fruit, two personalities.

This guide brings together the best jackfruit recipes—savory and sweet, smoky and bright. You’ll find ideas that grill, braise, roast, and blend their way through everything from appetizers to desserts. Each recipe shows off what jackfruit does best: soak up flavor, hold its shape, and surprise you every time you cook with it.

Why Cook with Jackfruit?

Because jackfruit hits the texture jackpot. It shreds easily, crisps at the edges, and soaks up flavor just like tofu or tempeh. Its mild taste means it works in everything—smoky and spicy in rice dishes, rich and saucy in jackfruit curry, or tangy and caramelized in BBQ jackfruit sandwiches.

A piece of deep-fried jackfruit.

Here’s why it deserves a spot in your kitchen:

  • Soaks up flavor on contact. No overnight marinades here—jackfruit drinks up spice and sauce the second it hits the pan, making quick dinners taste slow-cooked.
  • Adapts to every method. Roast it until the edges caramelize, braise it until tender, or pan-fry it until crisp and golden.
  • Plays well with every global cuisine. It’s as at home in a South Indian biryani as it is in a smoky Tex-Mex taco or a sticky southern BBQ sandwich. Wherever it goes, it fits right in.

If you’ve never tried cooking with jackfruit, we’ve got plenty of ideas to get you started—and if there’s a lonely can sitting in the back of your pantry, this is your sign to finally crack it open.

How to Prepare and Cook Jackfruit

Mastering working with jackfruit starts with knowing what kind you’re using. There are two types which are vastly different from each other:

A hand holding up a can of young jackfruit packed in brine.
  • Young jackfruit in brine or water: The base for savory recipes like jackfruit tacos, curries, and BBQ jackfruit. Drain it, rinse off the brine, squeeze out excess liquid, then simmer, roast, bake, or grill until tender.
  • Ripe jackfruit (fresh or canned in syrup): Golden, sweet, and fragrant—best for smoothies, desserts, and sweet snacks. Rinse canned fruit to remove syrup, then slice or blend like mango or pineapple.
Close-up of a ripe jackfruit cut open to reveal its golden yellow pods surrounded by a green, textured rind and glossy leaves.

Once you know how to prep and cook each type, jackfruit can become one of the most adaptable ingredients in your kitchen pantry.

If you’re wondering how to actually cook jackfruit, start here. These vegan jackfruit recipes are grouped by style—tacos and burgers, global mains, soups and salads, and a few sweet takes to finish. Each one shows just how flexible this fruit can be.

The Best Jackfruit Recipes

If you’ve ever wondered how to cook jackfruit or use it as a plant-based meat substitute, these recipes from some of the best vegan blogs walk you through every step. Whether you’re starting with canned young jackfruit or fresh ripe pods, these jackfruit recipes show how versatile this fruit can be.

Jackfruit Tacos, Sandwiches & Burgers

Jackfruit handles heat in a way most fruits can’t—it shreds, crisps, and caramelizes without losing its bite. Its fibrous pull gives tacos and sandwiches that slow-braised chew, while its mild flavor drinks in smoke, spice, and sauce like a sponge. In these jackfruit recipes, the fruit turns savory and caramelized under heat—crispy on the edges, tender in the middle. Whether piled on buns or tucked into tortillas, it delivers the messy, saucy satisfaction of barbecue with none of the heaviness.

Vegan Pulled Pork Sandwiches

Jackfruit slow-bakes in smoky BBQ sauce until it hits that sweet spot between juicy and crisp—the kind of texture that clings to toasted buns and tangy slaw. A quick sear before baking deepens the char and keeps the strands meaty, not mushy. Serve it piled high with crisp cabbage and jalapeño heat for a plant-based sandwich you’ll love.

A vegan bbq pulled pork sandwich made with jackfruit.

Jackfruit Soft Tacos

Slow-braised jackfruit gets fork-tender in vegetable broth, then baked until the edges dry and shred like pulled pork. The double cook gives it bite without chew—perfect for tacos that hold up under creamy cilantro-tahini sauce and crisp radish and carrot. Use canned young jackfruit in brine, not syrup, and you’ll get that savory, beautiful texture every time.

Spicy jackfruit tacos with shredded jackfruit, cilantro, radish, and lime on a white plate.

Jackfruit Barbacoa Tacos

Liv over at Liv Vegan Strong reimagines barbacoa with shredded jackfruit simmered in chipotle, adobo, and smoky spices until thick and saucy. The jackfruit browns first for depth, then soaks up the peppery heat and tangy vinegar kick—finished with a squeeze of lime for brightness. It’s a bold, weeknight-fast jackfruit taco recipe that hits every note: smoky, spicy, and just a little sweet.

Jackfruit barbacoa simmered in chipotle sauce with bay leaves, lime, and cilantro in a skillet.
Photo credit: Liv Vegan Strong

Vegan Carnitas

Chef Adam Sobel over at The Cinnamon Snail nails the street-taco texture with jackfruit seared hot until crisp, then simmered in orange juice, lime, and smoky spices. The squeeze-and-sear method drives out moisture, so the jackfruit soaks up every drop of that citrus-chili sauce. Fold it into tortillas with salsa, onion, and cilantro for jackfruit carnitas that hit sweet, smoky, and tangy all at once.

Close-up of jackfruit carnitas tacos with smoky red sauce and cilantro in charred tortillas.
Photo credit: Cinnamon Snail

Easy Creole Jackfruit Burger

Amanda over at My Goodness Kitchen turns jackfruit into a smoky, spicy pulled-Creole mix—paprika, cayenne, oregano, and Dijon, giving it that slow-cooked Louisiana soul. The jackfruit simmers in stock until the sauce clings and shreds just like barbecue pork. Piled onto toasted buns with vegan mayo and pickled fennel, it’s messy, tangy, and completely irresistible.

Creole-style jackfruit burger with smoky shredded jackfruit, mustard seeds, and greens on a seeded bun.
Photo credit: My Goodness Kitchen

Jackfruit Burger

Rachel over at Health My Lifestyle turns jackfruit and black beans into hearty burger patties that hold together like a champ. Jackfruit brings that tender, shredded texture while the beans add body and richness. Spiced with cumin, smoked paprika, and a hint of heat, these jackfruit burgers can be grilled, baked, or air-fried—crispy on the edges, soft inside, and perfect on a toasted bun with BBQ sauce or vegan mayo.

Vegan jackfruit burger patty stacked with lettuce, tomato, and red onion on a toasted bun.
Photo credit: Health My Lifestyle

Jackfruit No-Tuna Melt

Liv over at Liv Vegan Strong recreates a diner classic with shredded jackfruit as the perfect flaky stand-in for tuna. It’s mixed with dill pickles, lemon, vegan mayo, and a whisper of kelp for that ocean note—then grilled with melty vegan cheese until golden. Hot or cold, this jackfruit tuna melt nails the texture and nostalgia of the traditional version, but made with plants.

Vegan jackfruit tuna melt sandwich stacked with jackfruit, creamy plant-based melted cheese, and dill on toasted bread.
Photo credit: Liv Vegan Strong

Global Jackfruit Mains

Jackfruit adapts to any cuisine that knows how to coax flavor from heat. Its neutral base and pulled-fiber texture let it slip easily into curries, rice dishes, shawarma, bao, and tamales—each one taking on the spices and sauces around it. In these jackfruit curries, biryani, and shawarma, the fruit soaks up fat and acid like it was made for it, caramelizing at the edges while staying tender inside. Whether wrapped, steamed, or simmered, it holds its own in global dishes built on bold seasoning and long, slow flavor.

Vegan Shawarma Roast Jackfruit

Amanda at My Goodness Kitchen roasts marinated jackfruit with chickpeas, olive oil, lemon, and a full suite of shawarma spices—cumin, paprika, cinnamon—until the edges crisp and the centers stay juicy. It’s smoky, zesty, and rich enough to convert any skeptic. Wrap it in pita with hummus, lettuce, and lemon-tahini drizzle for a jackfruit shawarma that is completely vegan and delicious.

Roasted jackfruit shawarma with chickpeas, onions, and spices on a baking sheet.
Photo credit: My Goodness Kitchen

Baked Jackfruit Biryani (Kathal Biryani)

Richa over at Vegan Richa transforms biryani into a one-pan baked masterpiece—layering jackfruit, caramelized onions, fragrant spices, and basmati rice so the flavors bloom together in the oven. The jackfruit absorbs garam masala, ginger-garlic paste, and cinnamon while roasting, giving it a meaty, golden edge. Fluff the rice, scatter with cashews and herbs, and you’ve got a hands-off jackfruit biryani with all the depth of the stovetop version.

Baked jackfruit biryani with basmati rice, caramelized onions, and herbs served with spiced vegan yogurt sauce.
Photo credit: Vegan Richa

Easy Jackfruit Curry

Richa over at Vegan Richa keeps it classic with this Indian-style curry built on toasted cumin, mustard, and nigella seeds. Jackfruit simmers in spiced tomato puree until the edges soften and soak up the sauce, creating that shredded, saucy texture you expect from a homey curry. Serve it with basmati rice or naan for a deeply spiced, weeknight-friendly jackfruit curry that nails the comfort factor.

Vegan jackfruit curry simmered in spiced tomato sauce with cilantro, served with rice in a copper bowl.
Photo credit: Vegan Richa

Vegan Gyros

Ania at Lazy Cat Kitchen reimagines Greek gyros with jackfruit simmered in warm spices—clove, cinnamon, cumin—and finished in the oven until browned and fragrant. The mix of sweet maple and tangy vinegar gives it a caramelized edge that pairs perfectly with cool vegan tzatziki and crisp lettuce. Wrap it all up in a warm pita for a juicy, handheld jackfruit gyro that hits every texture note.

Jackfruit gyros wrapped in pita with lettuce, tomato, cucumber, and a vegan tzatziki sauce.
Photo credit: Lazy Cat Kitchen

Vegan Bao Buns with Pulled Jackfruit

Ania at Lazy Cat Kitchen fills soft, steamed bao with jackfruit simmered in hoisin, tamari, and five-spice until glossy and savory-sweet. The jackfruit strands soak up every bit of the sauce, then get tucked into pillowy buns with crunchy veg, chili, and peanuts. Look at all of that gorgeous color and texture!

Steamed jackfruit bao buns filled with hoisin-glazed jackfruit, peanuts, cilantro, and shredded vegetables.
Photo credit: Lazy Cat Kitchen

Mexican Ancho Chili Jackfruit Tamales

Chef Adam Sobel over at The Cinnamon Snail layers smoky ancho chili sauce with golden-seared jackfruit wrapped in soft, fluffy masa. The jackfruit soaks up the chili-lime mixture until tender, giving each tamale a rich, savory core that balances beautifully with the sweet corn dough. Steamed until pillowy, they’re a little messy in just the right way, and satisfy your tamale cravings. Plus, they freeze perfectly for make-ahead or meal prep jackfruit tamales.

Vegan ancho chili jackfruit tamales served with guacamole, salsa, and lime on a rustic board.
Photo credit: Cinnamon Snail

Jackfruit Gorditas

Jessica over at Jessica in the Kitchen builds these jackfruit gorditas from scratch—puffy masa pockets stuffed with smoky, tangy, and slightly sweet shredded jackfruit. The filling simmers down with tomato paste, soy sauce, lime, and maple until sticky and crisp-edged, then gets tucked into warm gorditas fresh off the pan. Each bite hits soft, chewy, and spicy—perfect handheld comfort food that’s naturally vegan and easy to freeze.

Warm homemade jackfruit gorditas stuffed with smoky shredded jackfruit, onions, and fresh cilantro.
Photo credit: Jessica in the Kitchen

Bowls, Soups & Salads

Jackfruit integrates smoothly into bowls and broths—it’s sturdy enough to simmer, soft enough to shred, and neutral enough to take on anything you throw at it. In these jackfruit bowls, salads, and soups, it moves from smoky and roasted to bright and briny, pulling flavor from chilies, lime, and coconut broth. The result: plant-based comfort that spans from Thai-style curry soup to crisp herb-packed salad, all built on the same adaptable base.

Vegan Crab Coconut Soup

Shredded jackfruit bakes with kelp to capture that ocean-briny edge, then swims in a coconut broth layered with red curry, lemongrass, and ginger. The mix of sweet, salty, and creamy hits every note of Thai-style comfort, with shiitakes adding extra umami depth. Serve it over rice or noodles for a cozy, one-pot jackfruit crab soup that smells like vacation in a bowl.

Spicy Jackfruit Salad

Tender strands of slow-cooked jackfruit soak up vegan fish sauce, chilis, and crisped garlic for a bright, spicy-salty bite. Once tossed with herbs and fried shallots and chilled, it lands somewhere between Thai larb and crunchy slaw—light, punchy, and fresh. Use canned young jackfruit in water, cooked low and dried well so it stays perfectly textured.

Spicy jackfruit salad topped with chili, lime, herbs, and crushed peanuts on a white plate.

Chili Lime Roasted Veggies & Jackfruit Bowl with Jalapeño Cream Sauce

Richa at Vegan Richa brings a major weeknight payoff with this one-pan chili-lime jackfruit and veggie roast. Jackfruit bakes alongside cauliflower, bell pepper, and onion until caramelized and spicy, then gets topped with a creamy cashew–jalapeño dressing. It’s smoky, zesty, and fresh all at once—great as a bowl, burrito filling, or jackfruit taco base.

Lime roasted veggie and jackfruit salad drizzled with creamy dressing and fresh herbs.
Photo credit: Vegan Richa

Pulled Jackfruit Bowls

Ania over at Lazy Cat Kitchen builds layers of flavor into this Chinese five-spice jackfruit—first simmered with garlic, ginger, and lemongrass, then baked until caramelized at the edges. The texture lands somewhere between shredded pork and sticky hoisin glaze. Served over rice with crisp sesame slaw, it’s a fragrant, make-ahead meal that tastes even better the next day.

Pulled jackfruit bowl with rice, sesame, and colorful slaw, topped with scallions and cilantro.
Photo credit: Lazy Cat Kitchen

Party Bites & Game-Day Jackfruit

Jackfruit does party food like a pro—it shreds, crisps, and soaks up heat in all the right ways. In these jackfruit appetizers and buffalo jackfruit dips, it serves as a solid stand-in for chicken or beef, keeping that juicy, sturdy texture pull under creamy, spicy layers. From skillet-browned jackfruit chili to baked, bubbling dip, it’s proof that game-day food can be bold, messy, and completely plant-based without compromise.

Vegan Fish and Chips

Jackfruit gets a double transformation here—first simmered in bouillon and Old Bay to mimic flaky white fish, then dipped in a malty IPA batter that fries up light and crispy. The texture is tender inside and beautifully golden on the outside. Serve with fries, garlicky dill mayo, and a drizzle of malt vinegar for a legit vegan seafood fix.

Deep-fried Jackfruit with fries on a black plate.

Vegan Crab Rangoon

Crispy, golden, and creamy, this vegan crab rangoon recipe turns simple pantry staples into the perfect party bite. Jackfruit takes the place of crab, folding into vegan cream cheese and scallions before getting tucked into wonton wrappers and fried to crunchy perfection. Serve these bite-sized rangoons with Thai chili sauce for the ultimate jackfruit appetizer—flaky, savory, and made for snacking.

A vegan crab rangoon being torn apart to show its interior.

Buffalo Jackfruit Spinach Dip

This oven-baked dip recipe by Jackie over at Vegan Yack Attack turns shredded jackfruit into a spicy, creamy pull that mimics the heft of buffalo chicken—folded through vegan cream cheese, cheddar shreds, and ranch. The jackfruit gives it chew; the spinach cuts through the heat. Bake until bubbling and golden for a party dip that’s rich, fiery, and totally plant-based. Serve with chips or crisp veggies.

Buffalo jackfruit dip baked until hot and bubbly, topped with green onions and served with carrots, celery, cucumbers, and tortilla chips.
Photo credit: Vegan Yack Attack

Spicy Jackfruit Chili

Jackie Sobon over at Vegan Yack Attack—author of Vegan Yack Attack On the Go!—turns humble canned jackfruit into a 30-minute, flavor-packed chili that tastes like it simmered all day. The jackfruit gets browned first to deepen its flavor, then stews with black beans, tomatoes, chipotle, and smoked paprika until thick and bold. It’s hearty, smoky, and just spicy enough—comfort food you can pull off on a weeknight.

Hearty jackfruit chili with black beans, tomatoes, and scallions with the cookbook Vegan Yack Attack On the Go in the background.
Photo credit: Vegan Yack Attack

Fresh & Sweet Jackfruit Recipes

Ripe jackfruit hits a completely different register—sweet, floral, and tropical, with a texture somewhere between mango and lychee. It shines in fresh jackfruit desserts, drinks, and snacks where that distinct flavor can take the lead. In these recipes, jackfruit folds into coconut milk, caramel, or lime to create creamy, bright finishes that balance richness with custard-like sweetness.

Ginataang Bilo Bilo Recipe

Ginataang Bilo Bilo is a traditional Filipino dessert made with glutinous rice balls simmered in coconut milk with sweet potato, saba banana, and ripe jackfruit. This sweet jackfruit recipe by Chef Adam Sobel features a coconut base that turns silky and lightly sweet as the fruit softens, while the rice balls stay chewy and tender. Served warm or chilled, it’s a rich, comforting bowl that balances creamy, starchy, and fruity in every bite.

Ginataang Bilo Bilo, a Filipino dessert made with ripe jackfruit, tapioca pearls, and sweet potato in creamy coconut milk.
Photo credit: Cinnamon Snail

Turon with Lemongrass Spiced Caramel

Turon is a classic Filipino banana lumpia dessert made with ripe saba bananas and sweet jackfruit wrapped in thin lumpia (flour-based) wrappers and fried until golden and crisp. Chef Adam Sobel’s version adds a lemongrass-spiced caramel glaze, creating a fragrant, lightly citrus finish over the soft banana and jackfruit filling.

Filipino turon filled with ripe jackfruit and banana, fried until golden and glazed with caramelized sugar syrup.
Photo credit: Cinnamon Snail

3-Ingredient Jackfruit Smoothie

Thomas over at Gastroplant keeps it clean and bright with this jackfruit smoothie which uses just ripe jackfruit, lime, and plant-based milk. The fruit’s natural sweetness does all the work—no added sugar, no fuss. It’s creamy, tropical, and just tart enough to balance the richness, perfect for breakfast or a cool-down on a hot day. Use fresh pods for peak flavor or canned (rinsed) for convenience.

Fresh jackfruit smoothie served in small glasses with lime, showcasing its creamy texture and tropical flavor.
Photo credit: Gastroplant

Where to Buy Jackfruit

Jackfruit shows up almost everywhere now—fresh in produce markets, canned on supermarket shelves, and frozen in the freezer aisle. For cooking, look for young green jackfruit in brine or water—it’s the firm, neutral kind that works in savory dishes. For sweets and drinks, choose ripe jackfruit, sold fresh, frozen, or canned in syrup.

Jackfruit can be found at almost any specialty or Asian grocery store, but if you can’t find it, it’s easy to find from an online shop. Once you have it on hand, you’ll realize how many recipes it easily fits into—from spicy mains to bright, tropical desserts.

Storage Tips & Leftovers

Jackfruit keeps well if stored correctly. Once opened, canned young jackfruit should be transferred to an airtight container, covered with water, and kept in the fridge for up to 3 days. Drain and pat it dry before cooking again so it crisps instead of steaming.

Cooked jackfruit—BBQ, curry, or taco filling—freezes beautifully. Cool it first, pack it into portions, and freeze for up to 2 months. To reheat, thaw overnight in the fridge or warm it straight from frozen in a covered pan with a splash of water or broth.

Ripe jackfruit (fresh or canned) can also be frozen, though the texture softens slightly. It’s perfect for smoothies, desserts, or any recipe that needs a little sweetness.

FAQs

What kind of jackfruit is best for cooking?

For savory dishes, go with young green jackfruit canned in brine or water. It’s firm, neutral, and shreds beautifully in tacos, curries, or barbecue-style sandwiches. Ripe jackfruit—fresh or canned in syrup—is best for desserts, smoothies, and sweet snacks where its tropical flavor can shine.

How do you use canned vs. fresh jackfruit?

Canned young jackfruit is the easiest place to start: just drain, rinse, and squeeze out extra liquid before cooking. It absorbs sauces and marinades quickly, making it ideal for savory recipes like tacos, curries, and sandwiches. Fresh jackfruit takes more prep—remove the pods and seeds, then wipe away the sticky sap inside the rind—but it rewards you with a naturally sweeter flavor and firmer texture when ripe. Use it in desserts, smoothies, or any dish that calls for tropical fruit.

Does jackfruit really taste like meat?

Not exactly—it doesn’t have the richness or protein of meat—but it does mimic the texture of pulled pork or shredded chicken. Its mild flavor makes it a perfect carrier for smoky BBQ sauce, curry paste, or taco seasoning, so it feels meaty even without the meat.

Can you freeze jackfruit once it’s cooked?

Yes. Cooked jackfruit (like BBQ jackfruit or curry) freezes beautifully for up to 2 months. Let it cool, portion it into containers, and thaw overnight in the fridge or reheat straight from frozen with a splash of broth to bring back the texture. Once thawed, avoid refreezing for the best flavor and bite.

Jackfruit: A Simple Staple With Serious Range

Jackfruit has this way of meeting you where you’re at. Need something quick and savory? Young canned jackfruit in brine will shred, sizzle, and soak up sauce like it was made for the job. Want something bright and sweet? Ripe fresh jackfruit slips easily into coconut milk or is always ready to be drizzled with vegan caramel. It’s super adaptable and a great vegan ingredient to experiment with.

Unripe jackfruit growing on a tree, showing its large green spiky skin surrounded by tropical leaves.

More Vegan Recipes with Big Flavor

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French Onion Ramen (Vegan) https://olivesfordinner.com/french-onion-and-seitan-ramen/ https://olivesfordinner.com/french-onion-and-seitan-ramen/#comments Mon, 03 Nov 2025 12:14:33 +0000 https://olivesfordinner.com/?p=9837 This vegan French onion ramen takes the slow-cooked sweetness of caramelized onions and folds it into...

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This vegan French onion ramen takes the slow-cooked sweetness of caramelized onions and folds it into a spiced, umami-rich broth. The two classics meet halfway—French onion’s depth, ramen’s texture—to create a bowl that’s rich, balanced, and layered with umami and slow-cooked depth.

Vegan French onion ramen with caramelized onions, seared seitan, and ramen noodles in rich umami broth.

Love the flavor of French onion soup but wish it came with noodles and a little spice? That’s this ramen. It starts with onions cooked down until golden and jammy, then folded into an aromatic, spice-kissed broth that smells like a cross between your favorite noodle shop and a cozy kitchen in winter. Each layer builds on the last: a slow burn of caramelization, a quick bloom of warm spices, and a depth that feels way bigger than the sum of its parts.

This French onion ramen is where two comfort foods meet halfway—the sweetness of long-cooked onions and the umami of ramen broth, grounded in a fully vegan build. It’s a cozy project for when you’ve got time to linger at the stove, and the kind of bowl that makes you forget you ever had to choose between the two. This recipe is inspired by Bon Appétit’s beef-heavy version.

Why This French Onion Ramen Recipe Works

French onion soup and ramen share the same logic: build depth slowly, then layer it fast. This recipe borrows from both. The caramelized onions create a base with sweetness and smoke that no amount of miso or soy can replicate. Once that’s in place, everything else: the aromatics, the soy, the noodles—builds on top of it.

  • Warm Spice, Soft Noodles: Star anise, cinnamon, and clove sit quietly under the surface, giving the broth that quiet umami warmth while the ramen noodles soak it all up. It’s texture and aroma working in tandem.
  • The Slow Transformation of the Onions: They start sharp and solid, then collapse into a deep brown, soft sweetness. Watching that shift—the smell, the sound, the color—is the whole reason this recipe works.
  • Seitan Brings the Weight: Sliced thin and seared hard, it anchors the bowl with hearty texture and a good dose of protein. Make your own or buy it ready to go; either way, it holds its own in a broth this rich.
  • Comfort in a Bowl: Cozy, savory, a little spiced—it’s built for cooler days and slower evenings. A cozy vegan noodle soup that smells like it’s been simmering for hours.

What You’ll Need

At first glance, this French onion ramen looks elaborate. But look under the hood, and you’ll see it’s built with aromatic and cozy ingredients working in sync—some build umami, others add contrast or depth. Sweet onions, a spiced decadent broth, seared seitan for heartiness, and ramen noodles for some chew. Every component alone is good on its own, but together they turn a familiar comfort into something layered and new in this plant-based ramen.

Ingredients for vegan French onion ramen including onions, scallions, spices, broth, and ramen noodles.
  • Caramelized Onions: The soul of the dish. Five pounds cook down to a fraction of their size, trading sharpness for sweetness and deep brown color. They give the broth its body and a savory-sweet flavor that only time can coax out.
  • Seitan: Thinly sliced and seared until crisp at the edges, seitan acts like a sponge for the broth. It adds chew and heft that keep the bowl balanced. It’s ramen that eats like a full meal without leaning on heaviness. Don’t want to use seitan? Check out our guides on how to cook maitake, oyster, or shiitake mushrooms—they’ll work great here when seared around the edges.
  • Aromatics (Garlic, Ginger, and Scallions): This trio bridges the gap between French and Japanese flavors. Garlic and ginger bring brightness, scallions add freshness, and together they cut through the richness of the onions.
  • Whole Spices (Star Anise, Cinnamon Stick, Clove, Coriander Seed): These spices sit quietly in the background, lending warmth and complexity. They turn the broth from simple onion soup into something layered and distinct.
  • Soy Sauce and Rice Vinegar: The salt-and-acid duo that makes the broth just work. Soy adds depth and umami; vinegar adds lift so the soup finishes clean, not heavy. It’s the balance point between ramen’s savoriness and French onion’s sweetness.
  • Ramen Noodles: The texture engine. Springy, absorbent, and perfect for catching that onion-rich broth. Instant or fresh both work; just cook them to al dente so they hold their bite in this French onion ramen bowl.
  • Vegan Butter: Used for cooking the onions down, it builds that glossy finish and subtle richness that feels unmistakably French. It helps the onions brown evenly and keeps the broth tasting rounded instead of lean.

How To Make

This vegan French onion ramen recipe comes together in four stages: building, layering, and finishing—all meant to create a deep, restaurant-level bowl. Once you understand the flow, it’s just time and rhythm: make the seitan, caramelize the onions, build the broth, and finish with noodles and seared seitan. For the full measurements and detailed steps, scroll to the recipe card below.

  • Step One: Make the Seitan – Mix vital wheat gluten with shiitake powder, onion powder, and garlic powder. Add broth and toasted sesame oil, knead into a firm dough, and simmer gently in seasoned broth until set. Cooling it in its broth gives it that firm, sliceable texture that sears beautifully later. Short on time? Use store-bought seitan instead—it works perfectly here.
  • Step Two: Caramelize the Onions – Melt vegan butter in a Dutch oven, then add the onions in batches with salt. Let them collapse and brown slowly over medium-low heat until jammy and dark golden. This step takes about an hour, but it’s what makes the broth taste like it’s been simmering all day.
  • Step 3: Build the Broth – In a clean pot, sauté scallions, garlic, and ginger in oil, then toast the whole spices—star anise, cinnamon, clove, and coriander—until fragrant. Deglaze with white wine, add vegetable broth and soy sauce, and simmer. Strain, then stir in the caramelized onions to create a rich, glossy, aromatic broth.
  • Step 4: Finish and Serve – Sear the sliced seitan until crisp at the edges, cook the ramen noodles just to al dente, then build the bowls. Noodles first, seitan on top, then ladle over hot broth. Garnish with scallions and sesame seeds, and serve this French onion ramen immediately while the broth still clings to the noodles.
Person lifting ramen noodles with chopsticks over a bowl of umami-rich broth.

FAQs

Can I make vegan French onion ramen ahead of time?

Yes. The broth and onions actually improve after a day or two as the flavors deepen. Reheat gently on the stove and cook fresh ramen noodles before serving so they stay springy and don’t absorb too much broth.

What can I use instead of seitan in this ramen?

Store-bought seitan works perfectly if you’re short on time. You can also use shiitake or oyster mushrooms—they soak up the broth beautifully and add their own savory umami depth.

Why does this recipe use so many onions?

Five pounds might sound like a lot, but they cook down to a sweet, jammy base that gives the broth body and richness. Caramelizing them slowly is what transforms this from good soup into something layered and deeply flavorful.

Chopsticks lifting ramen noodles from a bowl of savory vegan ramen with seitan.

For More Vegan Ramen Recipes, Try These Next

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Vegan French onion ramen with caramelized onions, seared seitan, and ramen noodles in rich umami broth.

French Onion and Seitan Ramen


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5 from 3 reviews

  • Author: erin wysocarski
  • Total Time: 2 hours 30 minutes
  • Yield: 6-8 servings
  • Diet: Vegan

Description

This French onion ramen folds two comforts into one bowl: slow-cooked caramelized onions meet soy-rich ramen broth layered with star anise, cinnamon, and clove. The result is deeply savory and faintly sweet—like French onion soup crossed with a ramen shop favorite. Topped with seared seitan and scallions, it’s a vegan noodle soup that rewards patience with serious umami payoff.


Ingredients

For the Seitan (can be made the day before)

  • 1 cup vital wheat gluten
  • 1 tablespoon dried shiitake mushroom, ground into a fine powder (about 1 large or 2 small dried shiitakes)
  • 1 teaspoon onion powder
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  • ½ cup cold vegetable broth
  • 1 tablespoon toasted sesame oil
  • 6 cups vegetable broth (for simmering)
  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce

For the Caramelized Onions

  • 610 tablespoons vegan butter, plus more as needed
  • 5 pounds onions (810 large), thinly sliced on a mandoline
  • Pinch of salt

For the Broth

  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil or refined coconut oil
  • 6 scallions, sliced, white and green parts separated
  • ⅓ cup smashed and chopped garlic cloves
  • 1 tablespoon grated fresh ginger
  • 6 star anise pods
  • 3 cinnamon sticks
  • 8 whole cloves
  • 2 teaspoons coriander seeds
  • 1 cup dry white wine
  • 12 cups vegetable broth
  • ¼ cup soy sauce
  • 2 tablespoons rice vinegar

To Finish

  • 1 packet dried ramen noodles per serving
  • Reserved green onion tops
  • Toasted sesame seeds


Instructions

Prepare the Seitan

  1. In a large bowl, combine the vital wheat gluten, shiitake powder, onion powder, and garlic powder.
  2. Whisk the cold broth and toasted sesame oil together in a measuring cup. Pour into the dry mix and stir with a spatula until a dough forms.
  3. Knead the dough on a clean surface for a few minutes, shaping it into a 4-inch log.
  4. In a large Dutch oven, bring 6 cups of vegetable broth and 2 tablespoons soy sauce to a boil, then reduce to a simmer.
  5. Cut the seitan log into four pieces and drop them into the simmering broth. Partially cover and maintain a gentle simmer (avoid boiling to prevent spongy texture).
  6. Simmer for about 1 hour, turning pieces every 15 minutes.
  7. Turn off the heat and let the seitan cool completely in the broth to firm up. Slice thinly once cooled. Reserve the broth for storage if not using immediately.

Caramelize the Onions

  1. Melt the vegan butter in a large Dutch oven over medium heat. Add a portion of the onions and a pinch of salt. Once softened, add more onions gradually until they all fit comfortably in the pot.
  2. Reduce heat to medium-low and cook slowly, stirring occasionally, until the onions are deeply golden and jammy, about 1 hour. Add extra butter as needed to prevent sticking.

Make the Broth

  1. In a large Dutch oven, heat the oil over medium heat. Add the white parts of the scallions, garlic, and ginger; sauté until fragrant, adjusting heat to avoid burning.
  2. Stir in the star anise, cinnamon sticks, cloves, and coriander seeds. Toast for about 1 minute.
  3. Deglaze the pot with the white wine, scraping up any browned bits, and allow it to fully evaporate.
  4. Add the vegetable broth and soy sauce, then simmer for 20 minutes.
  5. Strain out the spices and return the broth to the pot. Add the caramelized onions and simmer 30–45 minutes. Taste and adjust with soy sauce or rice vinegar if needed.

Finish and Serve

  1. Heat a large cast-iron pan over medium-high heat. Add a little oil or vegan butter and sear the sliced seitan until golden and crisp on both sides.
  2. Prepare the ramen noodles according to package directions.
  3. Divide the noodles among bowls. Top with seared seitan and ladle in the hot onion broth.
  4. Garnish with green onions and sesame seeds. Serve immediately.

Notes

Make Ahead and Storage

The broth develops even more depth after a day or two in the fridge.

  • Broth: Refrigerate up to 3–4 days or freeze up to 3 months.
  • Seitan: Store separately from the broth. Refrigerate in a covered container in some vegetable broth or stock up to 4 days, or freeze up to 3 months.

Always cook the noodles fresh just before serving; once they hit the broth, the clock starts ticking.

  • Noodles: Use instant or fresh ramen noodles; cook just until al dente (about a minute shy of package time) so they finish perfectly in the bowl.
  • Don’t want to use seitan? Swap in mushrooms. Oyster, shiitake, maitake, or quartered brown beech all work beautifully. Sear them well so the edges caramelize and stand up to the broth.
  • Prefer to skip the wine?  Simply deglaze with vegetable broth, then add 1–2 teaspoons rice vinegar at the end to brighten the flavor.
  • Prep Time: 30 minutes
  • Cook Time: 2 hours
  • Category: Lunch, Dinner
  • Method: Boiled, Simmered, Sautéed
  • Cuisine: Japanese, French

The recipe was originally published in 2021 and updated in 2025 with clearer instructions and expanded step details.

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Stock vs. Broth: (And How To Make Both Vegan) https://olivesfordinner.com/vegetable-stock/ https://olivesfordinner.com/vegetable-stock/#respond Mon, 27 Oct 2025 19:22:46 +0000 https://olivesfordinner.com/?p=440 Stock and broth start the same way but serve different purposes. One builds flavor while the...

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Stock and broth start the same way but serve different purposes. One builds flavor while the other finishes it. Let’s look at where they split and why it matters.

Frozen vegetable scraps, mushrooms, and herbs in a Dutch oven, ready to simmer into homemade vegan stock.

You’ve probably used stock and broth like they’re the same thing—and to be fair, in most weeknight cooking, they sort of are. Both start with vegetables and water. Both leave your kitchen smelling comforting and cozy. But when you step back and look at the process, the difference is clear: one’s a blank canvas, the other’s already painted.

In traditional kitchens, stock is the foundation—unsalted, layered, and built to develop flavor. Broth is the finished piece: seasoned, rounded, and ready to sip. While classic versions rely on animal ingredients, the same logic applies in vegan cooking. The same pot of vegetables can go two ways—leave it plain for a base that builds flavor, or season it for a balanced, ready-to-serve broth.

Stock vs. Broth: What’s The Difference?

If you’ve used “stock” and “broth” interchangeably—same. They share the same ingredients, but the intention behind them is what separates the two. Here’s what really sets them apart:

  • Stock is a clean, unsalted base liquid made by simmering vegetables, herbs, and aromatics to extract flavor, color, and natural body. It’s ideal for sauces, chowder, risotto, or any dish you’ll season later.
  • Broth is a seasoned, ready-to-serve liquid meant for sipping or quick soups—it’s lighter, balanced, and fully seasoned right from the pot.

Stock is all about extraction. You’re pulling flavor, color, and body from vegetables—especially alliums (onions, leeks, and garlic), mushrooms, and herbs—without introducing salt or acid that could cap how far the flavor goes. Think of it as your liquid foundation. It should taste deep but unfinished, ready to absorb whatever direction you give it next.

Broth, on the other hand, is meant to stand on its own. It’s seasoned, balanced, and rounded off with salt, soy sauce, or miso. You could ladle it into a mug and drink it as-is. Broth is where flavor peaks—stock is where it starts. Here’s a quick rundown of how they differ in purpose, flavor, and use:

FeatureStockBroth
Base IngredientsHearty vegetables like onions, leeks, mushrooms, carrots, and herbsSimilar base, but seasoned with salt, soy sauce, or miso for umami
TextureFuller-bodied and lightly viscousLighter, clearer, and more direct
PurposeFoundation for sauces, soups, and risottoSeasoned and ready to sip or serve
FlavorUnsalted, layered, and neutral—built for flexibilitySalted, seasoned, and complete—ready to serve
Simmer Time45–60 minutes20–30 minutes

How to Make Vegan Stock

You’re building a base here—clean, unsalted, and deeply savory. The best vegan stock also happens to be zero waste. Instead of tossing onion ends and skins, mushroom stems, or fresh herbs you can’t use up, save them. Keep a bag or container in your freezer for scraps, and when it’s full, you’ve got everything you need to make a pot of stock.

When you’re ready to cook, combine those frozen scraps with a small handful of fresh vegetables or aromatics for balance—whatever you have on hand adds lift and brightness. (See the list of recommended vegetables below.) Cover with cold water, bring it to a gentle simmer, and allow the color and flavor to be extracted from the vegetables until they look pale and the liquid turns gold.

For a deeper, toastier flavor, you can roast or sauté the vegetables first—but for a clean, neutral vegan stock, start cold and go slow. Strain, cool fast, and you’ve got a versatile base you can use anywhere you’d reach for store-bought broth.

Top view of vegetable scraps, mushrooms, celery, and herbs for vegan stock preparation.

Vegetables That Work Best For Stock

The best vegan stock starts with balance—frozen scraps for depth and zero waste, fresh aromatics for brightness. Bonus: frozen scraps extract flavor fast because freezing ruptures their cell walls, helping flavor compounds move directly into the water. Fresh aromatics add brightness back in.

Avoid strong brassicas (broccoli, cabbage, kale, cauliflower, turnip, radish) or overly long simmers—they can push sulfur notes and muddy the flavor. Skip beets unless you want pink stock. Hold the salt until the end; as seasoning turns stock into broth.

Keep a freezer bag of onion or leek ends, carrot peels, celery leaves, mushroom stems, and herb stems. When you’re ready to cook, toss them in the pot along with a small fresh handful (about ½–1 cup) of onion or leek and a few sprigs of thyme or parsley. The frozen vegetables build body; the fresh ones keep the flavor lively. Here’s what’s best when making vegetable stock:

  • Onion, leek, or shallot ends: build savory sweetness
  • Carrots or parsnips: add body and mild sugars
  • Celery ribs and leaves: fresh, clean backbone
  • Mushroom stems or caps: deepen umami
  • Parsley, thyme, or whole bay leaves: herbal lift that withstands simmering
  • Garlic cloves (smashed, unpeeled): mellow sharpness and aromatic depth
  • Tomato paste or scraps: subtle acidity and color; adds roundness if you want a darker stock

How To Turn Stock Into Broth

Stock is your foundation—broth is how you bring it to life. Once your vegan stock is strained, you’ve got two choices: freeze it as-is, or turn it into broth right now.

To do that, pour your stock (about one quart) back into the pot and warm it gently. (Unless you used tomato paste or beets, it should be clear and golden.) Add a pinch of salt or a splash of tamari for balance. If you want extra roundness, whisk in a little miso once it’s off the heat, which keeps its flavor and natural probiotics intact. Taste, adjust, repeat. You’ll feel it shift from ordinary to complex.

That’s it—you’ve made broth. Sip it straight, ladle it into vegan ramen, or use it anywhere you’d reach for boxed vegetable broth. This is the version that meets you halfway through dinner prep and makes everything taste homemade.

Hand pouring golden vegan stock from a glass measuring cup against a black background.

When to Use Stock vs. Broth

Use stock when you’re building flavor from the ground up—risotto, gravy, ramen broth bases, or anything that reduces. Its job is to deepen what’s already there without competing. Stock gives sauces a backbone, not a spotlight. Now that you know how they differ, here’s when to reach for each:

Use broth when the liquid is the meal—vegan soups, stews, or quick noodle bowls. It’s seasoned and assertive enough to stand alone. Broth brings balance and warmth, while stock brings structure.

When in doubt, remember: stock builds, broth finishes.

  • If you’re simmering something slow, reach for stock.
  • If you’re seasoning to serve, reach for broth.

Best Vegan Stock, Broth, and Bouillon Brands

Homemade stock gives you full control over what goes in it, but store-bought versions still have their place. The best vegan stock and broth brands build depth with roasted vegetables, tomato, mushrooms, or yeast extract for natural umami. When the balance is right, you get a clean, rounded flavor without the salt bomb. Bouillon is simply concentrated stock—sold as a paste, powder, or cube that you dilute in hot water.

Here are some vegan options:

  • Better Than Bouillon No-Chicken Base: A concentrated vegan paste made with roasted vegetables and yeast extract for deep flavor. A spoonful dissolved in hot water adds instant body to soups, sauces, and gravies.
  • Kitchen Basics Unsalted Vegetable Stock: A low-salt, slow-simmered vegetable stock that’s clean and balanced—great for risotto, braised vegetables, or anywhere you’ll season later.
  • Edward & Sons Not-Chick’n Bouillon Cubes: Vegan, shelf-stable cubes that dissolve quickly into hot water. They deliver bright, rounded flavor without the muddiness of some vegetable broths.
  • Pacific Foods Organic Vegetable Broth: Mild and mellow, with roasted onion and carrot notes. Ideal for sipping, light soups, or quick noodle bowls. Slightly higher in sodium than homemade.
  • Imagine No-Chicken Broth: A classic plant-based staple—golden, balanced, and versatile. Its layered vegetable flavor makes it a strong base for ramen, stews, and gravies.

When you’re testing store-bought options, treat them like ingredients—taste, dilute, adjust. Every brand leans a little differently in salt, sweetness, and umami. Once you know their quirks, you can season your way back to balance.

Hand holding a carton of Imagine Organic No-Chicken Broth in a grocery store aisle.

Storage and Freezing Tips

Cool your stock quickly to keep the flavor clean. If it stays hot too long, the vegetables keep steeping, and the flavor can turn bitter or cloudy.

  • Pour the stock into smaller containers so it cools evenly. Let it cool until just warm to the touch, then refrigerate uncovered until fully cold. Once chilled, seal it tight—oxygen and residual heat are what dull flavor over time.
  • Refrigerate or freeze. Store in the fridge for up to 7 days, or freeze for up to 3 months. Ice cube trays, 1-cup deli containers, or freezer-safe jars make portioning easy.
  • Choose the right jars. For freezing, use straight-sided glass jars (no shoulders) and leave at least ½ inch of headspace so the liquid can expand without cracking the glass.
  • Label clearly. Mark the lid “stock or “broth,” along with the date to avoid any confusion later.

FAQs

Which is better, stock or broth?

Neither is better—they serve different purposes. Stock gives depth and structure; broth is seasoned and ready to serve. Use stock when you want flexibility and richness (like sauces, risotto, or reductions), and broth when you’re ready to sip or serve.

What happens if you use stock instead of broth?

Your dish will taste less salty and more neutral. That’s not a bad thing—stock takes on seasoning from whatever you add next. If you swap broth for stock, just remember to taste and adjust near the end of cooking.

Why would someone use stock over broth in cooking?

Stock has more body. Long, gentle simmering pulls flavor, starches, and soluble solids from vegetables, mushrooms, and herbs, giving it a fuller texture and deeper flavor than broth. It makes sauces silkier and soups more layered.

Is vegetable stock the same as broth?

They share the same ingredients, but not the same purpose. Vegetable stock is unsalted and built as a flavor base; broth is seasoned and meant to stand alone. Think of stock as your foundation, and broth as the finished product.

Fresh and frozen vegetables with thyme in a Dutch oven before making vegan stock.

At its core, stock vs. broth comes down to purpose. Stock builds flavor; broth finishes it. Once you know the difference, you can cook more intuitively—layering stock into sauces, soups, and risotto for depth, or reaching for broth when you want something seasoned, balanced, and ready to serve.

Recipes That Use Stock or Broth

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Hand pouring golden vegan stock from a glass measuring cup against a black background.

Vegan Vegetable Stock


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  • Author: erin wysocarski
  • Total Time: 1 hour 10 minutes
  • Yield: 5-6 cups
  • Diet: Vegan

Description

This vegan vegetable stock is simple, versatile, and built from frozen scraps or fresh vegetables you need to use up. A slow simmer pulls out deep, clean flavor and leaves you with a golden base for soups, sauces, and stews—or the perfect starting point for turning into broth.


Ingredients

About 6 cups mixed vegetables (fresh or frozen scraps), ideally: 

  • 12 cups chopped onion (include ends and skins) or leek ends 
  • 1 cup chopped celery ribs and leaves
  • 1 cup chopped carrots 
  • 1 cup mushroom stems or caps
  • 1 small handful parsley or thyme stems or sprigs
  • 2 unpeeled garlic cloves, smashed lightly to release flavor (if using kombu, skip garlic—it can add sharpness)
  • 810 whole black peppercorns
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 8 cups cold water, or enough to cover the vegetables by 1-2 inches

Optional, salt-free umami boosters (choose 1–2):

  • 12 dried shiitake mushrooms
  • 1 teaspoon tomato paste
  • 1 small strip kombu (remove after 20 minutes)


Instructions

  1. Load the pot. Rinse vegetable scraps to remove any grit. Add the vegetables, peppercorns, bay leaves, and any optional umami boosters to a large 4–6 quart pot. Pour in the water so it covers the vegetables by 1–2 inches.
  2. Simmer gently. Bring to a boil over medium heat, then lower to the barest simmer. Skim off any foam. Partially cover and cook for 45–60 minutes, until the vegetables look pale and spent and the stock tastes rich, not bitter.
  3. Strain. Pour through a fine-mesh sieve. Press gently on the solids to extract more liquid without forcing sediment through.
  4. Cool fast, store smart. Pour the stock into smaller containers to cool evenly. Once it drops below room temperature, refrigerate uncovered until fully cold, then seal it tight. Store up to 7 days in the fridge or 3 months in the freezer.

Notes

  • Keep it unsalted. Salt limits flavor extraction and flexibility. Always season later in the dish or when turning your stock into broth.
  • Avoid strong brassicas. Skip broccoli, cabbage, kale, radish, turnip, and cauliflower—long simmering brings out sulfur notes. Beets also tint the stock red, so use them only if color isn’t a concern.
  • Best mix. Use mostly frozen vegetable scraps for depth and a handful of fresh aromatics (onion, leek, herbs) for brightness. Freezing ruptures cell walls, helping flavor compounds extract faster and cleaner.
  • For richer flavor, brown first. To build a darker, toastier stock, sauté the vegetables in a little oil for 5–7 minutes until golden, or roast them at 425°F (220°C) for about 20 minutes. Then add water and simmer for 30–40 minutes for a darker, toastier stock.
  • Slow cooker variation. Add all ingredients plus 8 cups water to a slow cooker. Cook on Low for 4–6 hours, then strain.
  • Yield reality. Eight cups of water typically reduces to about 5–6 cups of finished stock after evaporation and absorption.
  • Cold water in, gentle heat out. Start with cold water and bring it to a low simmer gradually. This slow rise in temperature pulls out clean, balanced flavor and prevents bitterness or cloudy stock.
  • Turn stock into broth. Season one quart (4 cups) of stock with ¾–1 teaspoon kosher salt or 1–2 teaspoons soy sauce, plus a splash of lemon juice or rice vinegar. Simmer for 5 minutes, taste, and adjust before serving.
  • Mushrooms are magic. Even a single dried shiitake can double the flavor and umami without adding salt.
  • Label and store. Use straight-sided, freezer-safe jars with at least ½ inch of headspace to prevent cracking. Label lids clearly as “stock” or “broth” with the date—future you will thank you.
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes
  • Cook Time: 1 hour
  • Category: Soup
  • Method: Simmered
  • Cuisine: Global

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Tempeh Bacon https://olivesfordinner.com/tempeh-bacon/ https://olivesfordinner.com/tempeh-bacon/#respond Thu, 23 Oct 2025 11:51:37 +0000 https://olivesfordinner.com/?p=21520 This smoky tempeh bacon recipe is built on balance—salt, fat, acid, and heat working in harmony...

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This smoky tempeh bacon recipe is built on balance—salt, fat, acid, and heat working in harmony to create umami-forward slices you’ll want to put on everything. These glossy, caramelized pieces smell just as good as they taste.

Baked tempeh bacon on parchment, golden brown and glazed with smoky marinade.

Tempeh is already a flavor powerhouse—fermented, nutty, and full of umami depth. It’s the kind of ingredient that doesn’t need rescuing, just a good direction. So in this smoky tempeh bacon recipe, it gets soaked in soy sauce, maple syrup, and liquid smoke until every slice drinks up that sweet-salty magic. Then, once it hits the oven, something happens—edges crisp, sugars caramelize, and the whole kitchen smells amazing.

What comes out is tempeh bacon: golden, sticky, and just the right mix of salty and sweet. Baked low and slow, it builds a glossy glaze that’s crisp-edged and chewy in the center. It’s simple, deeply flavorful, and one of those recipes that quietly makes everything around it taste better—sandwiches, scrambles, or anything that needs a smoky kick.

Why You’ll Love It

Tempeh bacon is so good because it hits that perfect balance of salt, fat, acid, and smoke—all the levers that make umami feel deep and round. Once it bakes, those sugars caramelize into a glossy crust that’s crisp at the edges and chewy in the center.

  • Umami in action. Tamari or soy sauce brings salt and glutamates, maple syrup adds caramelized sugars, and a little acid keeps everything bright.
  • Texture you can tune. Lower heat gives you a chewy center with crisp edges; an optional quick pan-fry afterward enhances those crispy edges that make it so good.
  • Flavor that deepens with time. A long soak in the smoky maple marinade allows the tempeh pull flavor all the way through. Deeper color, deeper umami.
  • Super versatile. This smoky tempeh bacon works anywhere you’d use bacon bits or strips: over soup, tucked into a sandwich, or eaten straight from the tray.

Why Tempeh Works So Well Here

Tempeh is the base of this vegan bacon recipe, made from fermented whole soybeans, which gives it a firm, nutty texture and natural umami depth. That dense structure means it won’t fall apart or go soggy, and the fermentation leaves tiny pockets that pull the smoky maple marinade deep inside—so every slice bakes up crisp-edged, chewy, and full of flavor.

Key Ingredients

A few simple ingredients come together to make this smoky tempeh bacon work. Salt, fat, sugar, and smoke build flavor in layers, transforming a block of tempeh into something with real structure, depth, and aroma.

Thinly sliced tempeh stacked on parchment paper for making crispy tempeh bacon.
  • Tempeh: Firm, nutty, and full of umami on its own, tempeh gives this vegan bacon structure and chew. It absorbs the marinade without turning soggy, so each slice finishes crisp-edged and meaty.
  • Tamari or soy sauce: The salt base. It seasons the tempeh all the way through and brings a savory, glutamate-rich depth.
  • Maple syrup: Adds sweetness and shine. As it bakes, the sugars caramelize into a sticky glaze that balances the salt and smoke.
  • Toasted sesame oil: A small but crucial layer of fat. It helps the marinade cling, adds subtle nuttiness, and encourages even browning in the oven.
  • Liquid smoke (or smoked paprika): The aroma driver. Just a small amount gives this smoky tempeh bacon recipe that unmistakable bacon scent—sharp, warm, and nostalgic.
  • Apple cider vinegar: The acid that lifts everything else. It cuts through the richness so the final bite tastes balanced instead of heavy.

How To Make Tempeh Bacon

This smoky tempeh bacon recipe works because each step builds on the last. Marination gives you flavor, low heat gives you texture, and time gives you both. For full recipe details, scroll to the end of this post.

Step 1: Slice it smart. Cut the tempeh into thin, even strips—thinner slices mean more surface for that smoky glaze to cling to. You’re creating texture before you even start cooking.

Step 2: Whisk up the flavor base. Combine the tamari, maple syrup, sesame oil, liquid smoke, and vinegar in a glass baking dish to form a perfectly balanced marinade: salty, sweet, nutty, and smoky. Whisk until it looks glossy and uniform—that sheen means it’ll cling beautifully to the tempeh.

Thin tempeh slices soaking in a smoky maple soy marinade for vegan tempeh bacon.

Step 3: Marinate and wait. Lay the slices in a single layer and turn them once so they’re fully coated. A couple of hours is good; overnight is better. During this time, the soy sauce coats, the maple clings, and the smoky notes settle deep into the tempeh’s grain.

Step 4: Bake low and slow. At 300°F, sugars caramelize gradually instead of burning. Flip halfway through and brush with more marinade to build a sticky surface that will crisp once it cools.

Step 5: Rest and admire. The tempeh bacon is done when the slices are bronzed and glossy. They’ll firm up a little as they cool into the ideal balance of chewy and crisp.

Crispy baked tempeh bacon on a parchment-lined baking sheet, caramelized and smoky from a maple-tamari marinade.

How To Serve

Tempeh bacon can carry a meal or just play well with other components. This smoky tempeh bacon is crisp-edged and versatile enough to move from breakfast to dinner without breaking stride. Here are some of our favorite ways to serve tempeh bacon:

  • Layer it into sandwiches. Try it stacked in a vegan BLT or tucked into our tempeh Reuben for a salty-sweet contrast. Make your own sandwich bread with this simple recipe.
  • Top a breakfast plate. Pair this plant-based bacon with our tofu scramble, roasted potatoes, or slide it next to vegan French toast for a sweet-savory mix.
  • Upgrade your avocado toast. A few slices on warm toast with smashed avocado, chili flakes, and a drizzle of olive oil … perfection.
  • Crumble it over soup or salad. Adds smoky crunch to a creamy soup or roasted Brussels sprouts. It’s especially good on our vegan clam chowder, vegan split pea soup, or a miso-dressed slaw.
  • Use it as a flavor base. Chop and fold this plant-based bacon into carbonara-style pasta or vegan Alfredo pasta.
  • Make a fun appetizer. Use this vegan bacon recipe to make vegan bacon-wrapped scallops or chop finely and serve over these loaded smashed potatoes.
  • Eat it straight from the oven. Eating this crispy, glossy smoky tempeh bacon warm from the tray is a protein-packed umami snack.

FAQs

What is tempeh bacon made of?

Tempeh bacon is a vegan bacon alternative made from fermented soybeans that are sliced thin and marinated in a smoky-sweet blend of tamari, maple syrup, sesame oil, vinegar, and liquid smoke. Once baked, the tempeh turns caramelized and chewy—like bacon, but plant-based and full of umami depth.

Does tempeh bacon taste like bacon?

Not exactly—but it hits the same notes. The marinade brings salt, smoke, and sweetness, while the tempeh adds its own nutty, fermented flavor. The result is crisp-edged and savory, with strong umami flavor.

Is tempeh bacon healthy?

Yes. Tempeh bacon is high in protein, rich in probiotics, and much lower in saturated fat than traditional bacon. It’s made from whole soybeans, not isolates or additives, and offers a satisfying way to add smoky, savory flavor to meals.

Crispy baked tempeh bacon on a parchment-lined baking sheet, caramelized and smoky from a maple-tamari marinade.

For More Vegan Bacon Recipes, Try These Next

If you try this tempeh bacon recipe, please drop a comment and rating below. Your feedback helps others discover the recipe, and we love hearing how it turned out for you.

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Close-up of crispy baked tempeh bacon with glossy, caramelized edges and smoky glaze.

Tempeh Bacon


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  • Author: erin wysocarski
  • Total Time: 45 minutes
  • Yield: 4 servings
  • Diet: Vegan

Description

This smoky tempeh bacon recipe turns plain tempeh into something crisp, salty, and full of umami. A simple marinade of tamari, maple syrup, sesame oil, and liquid smoke gives it a beautiful sweet-savory depth. Bake it low and slow until the edges caramelize into chewy, smoky perfection.


Ingredients

  • 8-ounce block of plain tempeh
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 3 tablespoons tamari or soy sauce
  • 2 tablespoons maple syrup
  • 2 teaspoons toasted sesame oil
  • 1 teaspoon liquid smoke (or 1/2 teaspoon smoked paprika)
  • 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
  • Freshly ground black pepper
  • olive oil, for the baking sheet


Instructions

To prepare and marinate

  1. Slice the tempeh widthwise into 4 even squares. Turn each square on its side and cut it horizontally into thin strips—about 9 per piece—to make roughly 36 slices.
  2. In a shallow glass or ceramic dish, whisk together the olive oil, tamari, maple syrup, sesame oil, liquid smoke, vinegar, and a few grinds of black pepper until smooth and glossy.
  3. Arrange the tempeh slices in a single layer in the marinade, turning them once so each piece is coated.
  4. Cover and refrigerate for several hours or overnight, flipping once midway so every side absorbs the smoky glaze. (A 2-hour quick marinade works in a pinch.)

To bake

  1. Preheat oven to 300°F (150°C).
  2. Line a large baking sheet with parchment and brush or drizzle it lightly with olive oil.
  3. Lift the tempeh from the marinade and arrange the slices in one layer. Reserve any leftover marinade.
  4. Bake for 15 minutes, then flip each piece and brush with a bit of the reserved marinade.
  5. Continue baking another 15 minutes, or until the slices look darkened, slightly crisp at the edges, and caramelized.
  6. Let cool a few minutes—they’ll firm up as they rest.

Notes

  • Storage: Keep cooled slices in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days.
  • Reheating: Warm in a skillet with a drizzle of oil over medium heat until edges sizzle again.
  • Make ahead: Slice and marinate the tempeh up to a day in advance (or even two if you like a bolder flavor). Keep it covered and chilled until you’re ready to bake.
  • Extra-crispy option: For bolder texture, pan-sear baked slices for 1–2 minutes per side right before serving.
  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Cook Time: 30 minutes
  • Category: Side, Breakfast
  • Method: Baked
  • Cuisine: American

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Crispy Air Fried Mushrooms https://olivesfordinner.com/crispy-air-fried-mushrooms/ https://olivesfordinner.com/crispy-air-fried-mushrooms/#comments Wed, 22 Oct 2025 15:49:22 +0000 https://olivesfordinner.com/?p=7820 If you’ve ever wished fried food came with less fuss, these air fried mushrooms get it....

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If you’ve ever wished fried food came with less fuss, these air fried mushrooms get it. They’re golden and crisp at the edges, tender inside, with a balanced kick of spice that keeps every bite interesting.

Stack of golden, crispy air fried breaded mushrooms with a crunchy sriracha-panko coating.

These air fried mushrooms deliver deep-fried flavor without the deep-fried drama. They come out golden and crisp at the edges, tender inside, with just enough heat from the crushed sriracha peas to keep things interesting. The flavorful breading—panko mixed with those spicy crumbs—clings beautifully and fries up perfectly in the air fryer.

Dunk them in a cool celery-garlic mayo and you get that sweet spot of balancespicy, crispy, creamy, and clean. Serve them to friends, make them on game day, or eat them straight from the basket if you can’t wait. Either way, they’ll disappear fast.

Why You’ll Love This Crispy Air Fried Mushrooms Recipe

Because mushrooms are built for this. Their high moisture content can sometimes fight against crisping, but here it works in your favor: the air fryer draws it out slowly while the double breading locks in the crunch. What you get: a contrast in flavor and texture: golden shell on the outside, with a succulent, tender interior. Here are more reasons to love it:

  • Easy mushroom recipe: If you can dip, bread, and coat—this recipe’s ya girl. No vat of oil is needed to get the same deep-fried flavor; just an even spritz of neutral cooking oil and about 20 minutes in the air fryer for that deep-fried flavor.
  • Creative use of a fun ingredient: Crushed sriracha peas add the right mix of heat, sweetness, and salt. Blended with panko, they form a sturdy, flavorful coating that holds up beautifully in the air fryer. The last bite stays as crisp as the first.
  • The secret sauce: The celery-garlic mayo brings a fresh, cool, and creamy contrast to the crispy edges.
  • Deep umami flavor: This one is packed with umami flavor! If you are curious about savory recipes made with plants, be sure to check out my guide on how to build umami with vegan ingredients.

Air Fryer Tip: The Best Mushrooms for Air Frying

This recipe works best with classic white or brown mushrooms—they hold their shape, stay juicy, and crisp up beautifully under high heat. Their moisture level is just right for the air fryer: enough to stay tender inside but not so much that it softens the crust.

If you’re curious how other varieties behave, explore my guides on how to cook shiitake mushrooms and how to cook oyster mushrooms. Each one brings its own texture and flavor personality—and knowing how they cook is the secret to mastering every mushroom.

Key Ingredients

This easy air fryer mushroom recipe keeps things simple but strategic. A few key ingredients come together to turn ordinary mushrooms into extraordinary air fried breaded mushrooms that stay crisp, golden, and full of flavor. The double coating builds a light, even crust that clings and browns perfectly, while crushed sriracha peas add a layer of spice and crunch that’s unexpected in the best possible way. Here’s what you’ll need:

Key ingredients for air fried breaded mushrooms including panko, sriracha peas, and fresh mushrooms.
  • Mushrooms: The star of the show. Their natural moisture steams the inside while the coating crisps on the outside, creating that perfect fried contrast. Any variety works, but larger white or brown mushrooms give you the best texture-to-crust ratio for air fried breaded mushrooms that stay juicy.
  • JUST Egg: Acts as the binding layer in the coating process. Unlike traditional egg, this vegan version coats evenly and helps the panko and crushed sriracha peas stick, so your crispy air fried mushrooms come out with an even, golden crust.
  • All-Purpose Flour: The first layer of structure. It dries the surface slightly, creating grip for the JUST Egg and panko to cling to. Skipping this step often leads to patchy coating or flaking in the air fryer.
  • Crushed Sriracha Peas: The secret weapon. These bring heat, salt, and texture in one move. Once crushed, they blend into the panko and give each bite a slow-building spice that’s more flavorful than fiery. Think crisp, toasty, a little sweet, and completely unexpected. Find them at most Asian grocers or online.
  • Panko Breadcrumbs: The backbone of the crust. Light, airy, and perfectly structured for air frying—they brown beautifully without absorbing oil, giving these mushrooms that deep-fried payoff with a fraction of the fat.
  • Celery-Garlic Mayo: More than a dip, this balances everything else. The sharpness of raw garlic and the crisp, clean note of celery cuts through the decadent richness, creating a clean, refreshing finish that keeps you reaching for one more.

How To Make

If you want fried-level crunch without actually deep-frying, this is how you do it. The double breading gives the coating great structure. It sticks, crisps, and stays put. The air fryer’s dry heat pulls moisture out of the mushrooms just slowly enough to leave the centers juicy and the crust golden and crisp. Here’s the game plan: dip, coat, air fry, and dunk. For full recipe details, scroll to the end of this post.

  • Step 1: Make the Celery-Garlic Mayo: Combine the vegan mayo, finely diced celery, and grated garlic. The crispness of the celery and the sharpness of the garlic provide a fresh counterpoint to the heat and crunch of the mushrooms. Set aside or refrigerate while you prep the rest.
  • Step 2: Prep the Mushrooms: Start with white or brown whole mushrooms. These work best because they hold their shape and moisture. Wipe them clean and remove the stems.
  • Step 3: Set Up Your Coating Stations: Set up three medium bowls: one with the JUST Egg, one with the flour, and one with the panko + crushed sriracha peas. This order matters—the vegan egg helps the flour stick, the flour helps the second egg coat cling, and the final panko mix forms your crunchy, flavorful shell.
Breaded mushrooms coated in panko and sriracha peas resting on a rack before air frying.
  • Step 4: Bread the Mushrooms: Working one mushroom at a time, dip it into the JUST Egg, then into the flour, back into the JUST Egg, and finally into the panko + crushed sriracha peas mixture. That second coat is important—it’s how you build that crisp, thick crust that stays crunchy in the air fryer and makes these air fried breaded mushrooms so magical.
  • Step 5: Air Fry to Golden Perfection: Evenly mist your prepared mushrooms with neutral cooking oil and arrange in a single layer in the air fryer basket. Space matters here so the hot air can flow around each piece. Cook at 400°F for about 10 minutes. Flip, mist again, then cook for another 5–10 minutes depending on size. The air fryer dehydrates the surface while the crust browns—this gives you that “deep-fried flavor” without the oil plunge.
  • Step 6: Serve Immediately: Transfer the hot, crusted mushrooms to a platter and serve right away with the celery-garlic mayo on the side. Perfect as a vegan appetizer, game-day snack, or crispy late-night fix.
Close-up of a crispy air fried mushroom cut in half showing the golden crust and tender center.

FAQs

Can you make air fried breaded mushrooms without a deep fryer?

Yes, and this recipe proves it. By using a spritz of oil and the double-breading method, you build a crust that browns and stays crisp in the air fryer. The dry, circulating heat pulls moisture out slowly so the coating sets and the mushroom inside stays tender, giving you that deep-fried texture, without the deep frying.

How long should I cook air fried breaded mushrooms to get the crust right and the middle juicy?

Timing depends on mushroom size, but as a general rule: air fry at 400 °F for about 10 minutes, flip, mist again, then cook another 5–10 minutes. Larger mushrooms may need full 20 minutes; smaller ones less. The key is an even single layer (don’t overcrowd) so the hot air flows freely and the crust crisps fully.

What’s the best way to ensure the coating sticks to the mushrooms and stays crunchy in the air fryer?

The trick is in the sequence. Set up three bowls: one with vegan egg (JUST Egg), one with flour, and one with a mix of panko and crushed sriracha peas. Dip each mushroom into the egg, then flour, back into the egg, and finally into the panko mixture. That second dip gives the coating structure so it clings, crisps, and holds up beautifully in the air fryer without peeling or turning soggy.

Hand lifting a crispy air fried mushroom from a tall stack with creamy dip in the background.

Love Mushroom Recipes? Try These Next

We hope you enjoy this air fried mushrooms recipe! If you try and enjoy, please leave a comment below. It helps others find our recipes and makes our day!

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Stack of golden air fried mushrooms with a crisp sriracha-panko crust beside a cold beer.

Crispy Air Fried Mushrooms


5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

5 from 2 reviews

  • Author: erin wysocarski
  • Total Time: 40 minutes
  • Yield: 2 servings
  • Diet: Vegan

Description

Crispy, golden, and wildly satisfying—these air fried mushrooms might be the best thing to come out of your air fryer yet. Each one has a perfectly textured crust made from crushed sriracha peas and panko, wrapped around a tender, juicy mushroom. Dunk in our celery-garlic mayo and you get everything at once: crunch, heat, and a cool creamy finish that just works.


Ingredients

For the celery-garlic mayo

  • 1/2 cup vegan mayo
  • 2 stalks celery, finely diced
  • 1 large clove garlic, grated on a microplane

For the mushrooms

  • 12 oz. mushrooms, stems removed (white or brown works best)
  • 3/4 cup JUST Egg (liquid vegan egg substitute)
  • 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1 cup sriracha peas, finely ground in a food processor
  • 1 1/2 cups panko breadcrumbs
  • cooking spray (neutral oil)


Instructions

To make the celery-garlic mayo

  1. In a small bowl, combine vegan mayo, celery, and garlic.
  2. Stir until evenly mixed. Refrigerate until ready to serve.

To prepare the mushroom coating

  1. In one bowl, pour the JUST Egg.
  2. Place the flour in a second bowl.
  3. In a third bowl, combine the ground sriracha peas and panko breadcrumbs.

To bread the mushrooms

  1. Working with one mushroom at a time, dip it into the JUST Egg, then into the flour, shaking off excess.
  2. Dip it again into the JUST Egg, then coat generously in the panko + crushed sriracha pea mixture. This process gives the coating structure so it fries up thick, crisp, and golden.

To air fry

  1. Arrange the coated mushrooms in a single layer in your air fryer basket, leaving space between each piece for airflow.
  2. Air fry at 400°F (200°C) for 10 minutes.
  3. Flip, mist again with a touch of oil, and cook for another 5–10 minutes, or until golden and crispy on all sides.
  4. The mushrooms are done when the coating is firm and crackly and the centers are tender.

To serve

  1. Serve the crispy air-fried mushrooms immediately with the celery-garlic mayo for dipping.

Notes

  1. Storage & Reheating: These reheat beautifully: return to the air fryer at 375°F for 3–5 minutes until crisp again. Leftover celery-garlic mayo keeps for up to 3 days in the fridge; stir before serving.
  2. Don’t overcrowd: For best results, air fry in a single layer—overcrowding leads to steam instead of crisping.
  3. Cook timing: If using smaller mushrooms, reduce cooking time slightly (check around the 8-minute mark).
  4. Sriracha pea smarts: These add heat, salt, and crunch. Find them in most Asian grocery stores (like H Mart) or online. 
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 20 minutes
  • Category: Appetizer, Snack
  • Method: Battered, Air-Fried
  • Cuisine: American

This recipe was first published in 2019 and updated in 2025 to include clarified instructions and serving suggestions.

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Tamari vs Soy Sauce: What’s the Difference? https://olivesfordinner.com/tamari-vs-soy-sauce/ https://olivesfordinner.com/tamari-vs-soy-sauce/#respond Thu, 16 Oct 2025 21:18:03 +0000 https://olivesfordinner.com/?p=27766 Tamari and soy sauce share a shelf but not the same personality. Are they interchangeable? Here’s...

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Tamari and soy sauce share a shelf but not the same personality. Are they interchangeable? Here’s what sets them apart—and how to know which one belongs in your dish.

Hand holding bottles of San-J Tamari and Kikkoman Soy Sauce side by side on a grocery store aisle.

At first glance, tamari and soy sauce look identical: dark, salty, and full of umami flavor. But tamari—a Japanese soy sauce made with little or no wheat—has a smoother, less salty flavor than traditional soy sauce. Knowing the difference between the two can change how a dish behaves once heat gets involved, or how balanced it tastes straight from the bottle.

This guide breaks down the real difference between tamari and soy sauce: how they’re made, how they taste, and when to reach for one over the other. Once you understand what sets them apart, you’ll cook with more intention (and better balance).

What Is Soy Sauce?

Soy sauce is a centuries-old condiment that originated in China and spread throughout Asia in countless regional styles. It’s made by fermenting soybeans, wheat, salt, and water with a mold called koji, then aging the mixture until it develops its signature dark color and layered umami flavor. Traditional soy sauce tastes sharp and salty, with a light-bodied texture that seasons food rather than coating it.

In Japanese cooking, you’ll often see shoyu, a style of soy sauce that balances salt with a slightly sweeter finish. Chinese soy sauces tend to run either lighter and saltier or darker and more molasses-like, depending on their formulation and brewing process. Across all versions, soy sauce adds depth, savoriness, and balance—the kind of flavor that makes rice, teriyaki sauce, noodles, and stir-fries taste alive.

Types of Soy Sauce

Soy sauce isn’t one flavor or shade—it shifts depending on where it’s brewed and what ingredients and techniques are used. Some are light and sharp, meant to season quickly; others are darker and richer, built to coat or deepen color. Each reflects the grains, salt levels, and traditions of its origin.

  • Japan: Koikuchi (dark soy) is the everyday staple—balanced, full-bodied, and versatile. Usukuchi (light soy) trades color for sharper saltiness, often used when you want flavor without darkening ingredients. Japanese variants like Shiro (very light) and Saishikomi (double-brewed) offer even lighter and more concentrated notes.
  • China: Broadly, light soy is thin and salty for seasoning; dark soy is thicker, sweeter, and used to deepen color and flavor.
  • Korea: Ganjang can range from traditional, briny styles (often linked to fermented soybean-and-brine methods) to modernized versions brewed with alternate grains and smoother profiles.
  • Indonesia: Kecap manis is sweet, syrupy, and flavored with palm sugar—rich, glossy, and deeply caramelized in character.

What Is Tamari?

Tamari is a Japanese soy sauce that originated as a byproduct of miso fermentation. When soybeans are brewed into miso, the liquid that rises to the top is collected, aged, and refined into what became known as tamari. The name itself comes from the Japanese word tamari, meaning “to accumulate,” a nod to how it first formed during the miso-making process.

Unlike traditional soy sauce, tamari is made with little or no wheat, which gives it a smoother, rounder flavor and a darker, glossier body. Because of that difference, tamari is often labeled gluten-free soy sauce—a key reason it’s popular among those avoiding gluten or preferring a rounder, less sharp flavor. Its fermentation is typically longer and gentler, creating deep umami without the sharp salt edge found in most soy sauces. It clings beautifully to tofu, rice, and noodles, adding savory depth with a softer finish.

Tamari vs. Soy Sauce: Key Differences

They share the same building blocks—soybeans, salt, and time—but the balance of ingredients and process makes them behave differently in the pan. Tamari delivers a deep, mellow umami that feels smooth and rounded, while soy sauce hits faster and sharper with salt and brightness. Here’s how they compare side by side:

Tamari

  • Origin: Japan, developed as a byproduct of miso fermentation
  • Contains Wheat: Little to none (often gluten-free)
  • Flavor: Smooth, balanced, less salty
  • Color & Texture: Darker, thicker, glossier
  • Fermentation: Often aged more gently or longer in traditional methods
  • Best For: Dipping sauces, glazes, finishing flavor

Soy Sauce

  • Origin: China, brewed for centuries as a seasoning base
  • Contains Wheat: Often contains a substantial portion
  • Flavor: Sharper, saltier, more assertive
  • Color & Texture: Lighter and thinner
  • Fermentation: Usually brewed faster with a higher salt concentration
  • Best For: Marinades, stir-fries, everyday seasoning


Both sauces bring umami, but in different moods: tamari deepens; soy sauce brightens. Once you know which quality you want in the dish—rounded depth or sharp savoriness—you’ll know which bottle to reach for.

How To Use Each In Cooking

Tamari and soy sauce might seem interchangeable, but they behave differently once they hit heat or starch. Tamari is thicker, silkier, and milder—it builds umami that feels soft and rounded. Soy sauce is thinner and sharper, and seasons fast, bright, and direct. Here’s how to tell which one your dish needs:

Use Tamari When:

  • You want gloss and cling. Tamari (a naturally gluten-free soy sauce) has a thicker body that helps it grip tofu, noodles, and roasted vegetables, reducing into a satiny glaze rather than disappearing.
  • You’re using it as a finishing touch or dipping sauce. It’s perfect when mellow depth is more helpful than a salt-forward punch.
  • You’re cooking something subtle or lightly seasoned. It is ideal for sushi rolls, grain bowls, or steamed vegetables—places where umami should support, not overpower. Try it in these dishes:
Tamari glaze dripping from a spoon onto rice with roasted golden beets and sesame seeds.

Use Soy Sauce When:

  • You want fast seasoning and brightness. A splash sharpens stir-fries, fried rice, or brothy soups in seconds.
  • You need even distribution. Its thinner body dissolves easily into marinades, dressings, and pan sauces, salting evenly instead of coating.
  • You’re chasing edge and snap. Sautéed greens, tofu scrambles, tempeh bacon, noodle soups—anything that benefits from a clean, salty lift. Try it in these dishes:
Vegan dumplings topped with soy sauce and sesame seeds on a white plate.

Substitution tip:

  • Replacing soy sauce with tamari? Use a 1:1 ratio. Tamari is slightly less salty, so your dish will taste a bit rounder and less sharp—no need to cut back.
  • Replacing tamari with soy sauce? Start with ¾ the amount, then taste and adjust. Soy sauce is saltier and more assertive, so a little less keeps flavors balanced.

In short: Soy sauce cuts. Tamari coats. Both deepen flavor—just in different ways.

Which Should You Choose?

If you’re cooking gluten-free or want a softer, rounder flavor, reach for tamari. If you’re after classic salt and edge, stick with soy sauce. Both bring umami, but they land differently—tamari coats, soy sauce cuts—making each essential in modern vegan cooking.

FAQs

Is tamari soy sauce?

Yes, tamari is a Japanese style of soy sauce made with little or no wheat. It’s traditionally a byproduct of miso fermentation, which gives it a thicker texture and smoother, less salty flavor than regular soy sauce.

Is tamari gluten-free?

Most tamari is gluten-free because it’s brewed without wheat, but always check the label—some brands use small amounts in the fermentation process. If you’re avoiding gluten entirely, look for bottles labeled certified gluten-free tamari.

Can I substitute soy sauce for tamari?

Yes. If you’re using soy sauce in place of tamari, start with about ¾ the amount—it’s saltier and sharper. When swapping tamari for soy sauce, use a 1:1 ratio for a smoother, rounder flavor that’s slightly less salty.

Which is healthier: soy sauce or tamari?

They’re nutritionally similar. Tamari is often lower in sodium and naturally gluten-free, while soy sauce is higher in salt but just as rich in umami. The “healthier” choice depends on your dietary needs—if you’re watching sodium or avoiding gluten, tamari wins.

Is Kikkoman Tamari the same as soy sauce?

Kikkoman makes both tamari and regular soy sauce. Their tamari is brewed without wheat for a gluten-free option, while their standard soy sauce contains about 40–50% wheat. Both deliver umami flavor, but tamari is milder and darker.

Tamari vs Soy Sauce: The Bottom Line

Both tamari and soy sauce start from the same place—soybeans, salt, and fermentation—but they diverge in flavor and intent. Soy sauce hits with sharp umami and salinity; tamari leans smoother, darker, and more rounded. Knowing when to use each turns a dish from balanced to unforgettable. Keep both in your kitchen, and you’ll always have the right kind of umami in reach.

Soy sauce being swirled into a marinade in a glass baking dish.

More Ways To Use Soy Sauce And Tamari

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Crispy Fried Tofu with Lemongrass-Peanut Sauce https://olivesfordinner.com/lemongrass-and-garlic-stuffed-tofu/ https://olivesfordinner.com/lemongrass-and-garlic-stuffed-tofu/#comments Wed, 15 Oct 2025 13:58:35 +0000 https://olivesfordinner.com/?p=393 This crispy fried tofu is what happens when texture meets flavor magic—crunchy on the outside, creamy...

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This crispy fried tofu is what happens when texture meets flavor magic—crunchy on the outside, creamy and savory in the middle. Easy to make, perfect for guests (or just you), and a little bit extra in the best possible way.

Top-down view of crispy fried tofu triangles filled with lemongrass–peanut sauce, garnished with cilantro, scallions, and lime on a dark plate.

Tofu is a blank slate—neutral enough to take on any flavor, and versatile enough to be crisp, creamy, or chewy depending on how you cook it. In this recipe, we’re giving it the golden treatment: slicing a block into triangles, scooping out the centers, dredging in cornstarch, and deep-frying until crisp and deeply golden. Think of each triangle as a pocket for flavor, with structure that makes this crispy fried tofu sturdy enough to eat with your hands.

The finishing touch is a thick lemongrass–peanut sauce that settles into the center. It’s savory, rich, and just a little bit of an umami bomb, turning simple fried tofu into something unexpected. Serve it as an appetizer or a small plate—whatever you choose, this deep-fried tofu recipe proves that when texture and flavor play well together, you get a dish that feels instantly special.

Why This Recipe Works

This recipe’s secret sauce is smart tofu engineering—hollow center, sturdy sides. By hollowing out the centers before frying, you create little wells that crisp around the edges but stay tender inside. That structure gives the sauce somewhere to land instead of sliding off, so every bite carries both crunch and sauce. Here are other reasons it shines:

  • Easy method. No pressing or marinade needed—just cut the tofu into triangles, hollow out the centers, coat in aquafaba and cornstarch, then deep-fry until golden.
  • Balanced sauce. Peanut butter gives body, lemongrass brings brightness, soy sauce adds umami, and curry powder brings subtle depth and complexity.
  • Texture meets depth. Crisp tofu gives shape while peanut butter adds creamy contrast. The two work together to make this dish feel complete—savory, rich, and deeply satisfying.
  • Fun to make. Nervous about deep-frying tofu? Think of this as your gateway recipe. A quick batter and a few minutes in hot oil yield a perfectly crisp shell every time. Not sure if your oil’s ready? We’ll explain how with the chopstick test.
  • Pretty presentation. These golden triangles filled with sauce and garnished with pops of green look restaurant-ready, yet they’re simple enough for any home cook to pull off.

Key Ingredients

Every element here has a purpose—texture, flavor, or both. The tofu gives structure, the starch gives crunch, and the sauce ties it all together with fat, salt, and brightness. Each ingredient has a task, working together to make this crispy fried tofu as balanced as it is bold.

A block of tofu.
  • Firm tofu: Holds its shape through the fry, turning crisp at the edges while staying soft inside. Avoid using soft tofu, which will fall apart in hot oil, or extra-firm tofu, which can throw off the texture balance.
  • Aquafaba: The liquid from canned chickpeas acts as an egg replacer here, adding a bit of protein and helping the cornstarch cling evenly to the tofu and prevent it from becoming too greasy.
  • Cornstarch: This starch is ideal for deep-frying because it crisps up fast and holds its shape. It forms a thin, crackly crust that gives the tofu that perfectly crunchy texture.
  • Peanut butter: The backbone of the sauce. It gives creamy richness and body that balances the sharper, fragrant notes from lemongrass and lime.
  • Lemongrass: Adds bright, citrusy aroma that cuts through the richness of the peanut butter and fried tofu. A small amount wakes up the entire dish. Not sure how to select or prep lemongrass? Check out our quick tips below.
  • Soy sauce: Brings umami and depth—the bridge between the creamy and the crisp. A light dunk before each bite is optional, but it ties everything together.
  • Curry powder: Adds subtle warmth and dimension without stealing the spotlight from the peanut butter or lemongrass.
  • Cilantro, lime, and scallions: This fresh green trio adds color, acidity, and freshness to make this dish feel a little extra.

How to Prep Lemongrass Like a Pro

Fresh lemongrass adds citrusy aroma and depth to sauces, curries, and stir-fries—but only if you use the right part and prep it correctly. The goal is to unlock the oils from the fibrous stalk while keeping the flavor bright, not bitter. Here’s how to do it right:

  • Look for fresh, firm stalks: Choose lemongrass that’s pale green to light yellow, with tight outer leaves and a heavy feel for its size. Avoid dry or shriveled ends.
  • Find the heart: Peel off the tough outer leaves until you reach the tender, pale inner stalk—this is the “heart.” It’s the aromatic core you’ll mince or bruise for cooking.
  • Trim smart: Cut off the root end and the top fibrous green portion, leaving about 5–6 inches of usable stalk.
  • Bruise to release aroma: Before chopping, give the stalk a few firm whacks against the counter (or with the side of your knife). This bruises the fibers and releases the essential oils that carry its signature lemony fragrance.
  • Chop or slice finely: For sauces like your lemongrass–peanut sauce, mince the tender heart finely so it melts into the aromatics without leaving stringy bits.
  • Smart storage: Wrap trimmed lemongrass tightly and refrigerate for up to one week, or freeze in sealed bags for longer storage. Frozen lemongrass softens slightly when thawed, making it easier to chop and quick to release flavor.

Fresh lemongrass stalks showing pale yellow hearts and green tops, ready to chop for lemongrass-peanut sauce or stir-fries.

How To Make This Crispy Fried Tofu Appetizer

Crispy, golden, and full of contrast—this dish layers crunch and sauce in all the right ways. The tofu fries up with a delicate crust, while the lemongrass–peanut sauce builds richness, brightness, and just enough depth to make every bite pop. For full recipe details, scroll to the end of this post.

Step 1: Build the sauce: Sauté shallots and garlic in toasted sesame oil until soft and fragrant. Deglaze with a splash of vegan broth, then add lemongrass and curry powder. Stir in the peanut butter and a bit more broth until loosened but still thick. Remove from the heat and stir in cilantro and soy sauce. It’s creamy, rich, and bright enough to wake up everything it touches.

Step 2: Prep the tofu: Slice the block into four triangles and carve a shallow well into each one. This creates space for the sauce while helping the tofu hold its shape once fried.

Step 3: Coat for crispiness: Set up two large prep bowls: one with aquafaba, the other with cornstarch. Dip the tofu in aquafaba first, then dredge in cornstarch, tapping off any excess.

Step 4: Deep-fry to golden perfection: Heat a few inches of oil in a heavy saucepan over medium heat for about 7 minutes, aiming for roughly 375°F. Any hotter, and the tofu will burn; too cool, and it’ll become soggy.

  • If you don’t have a thermometer, use the chopstick test: insert a dry chopstick until it touches the bottom—if bubbles form instantly, the oil’s ready. Fry one or two pieces at a time for a few minutes, until evenly golden. The goal: crisp edges, soft middle, zero sogginess.
  • Pro tip: Avoid overcrowding. Too many pieces drop the oil temperature and lead to soggy tofu instead of crisp perfection.

Step 5: Assemble and serve: Spoon the warm lemongrass–peanut sauce into each tofu well. Top with crushed peanuts, cilantro, scallions, and a squeeze of lime. Serve immediately while the tofu is still crisp and the sauce is thick and fragrant.

Hand holding a piece of crispy fried tofu filled with lemongrass–peanut sauce, topped with cilantro and scallions against a dark background.

How To Serve

This crispy fried tofu appetizer walks the line between simple and showstopping. Golden on the outside, tender inside, and rich with lemongrass–peanut sauce, it’s the kind of dish that holds its own—or plays beautifully with others. Whether you’re building a small-plate dinner, a noodle bowl, or a full Southeast-Asian–inspired spread, here’s how to make it sing.

FAQs

How do you get tofu crispy when frying?

The key is surface dryness and even coating. Pat your tofu dry, then coat it in aquafaba and cornstarch to create a thin, clinging layer that crisps in hot oil. The oil should be around 375°F—hot enough to bubble instantly but not smoke. This gives you a golden, glassy crust that stays crisp even after saucing.

Should you coat tofu in cornstarch before frying?

Yes—cornstarch is the secret to restaurant-style tofu. It creates a delicate shell that locks in moisture while crisping the exterior. Skip flour or heavy batters; cornstarch fries up lighter and cleaner, giving you that shattering bite without greasiness.

What’s the secret to really crispy tofu at home?

A few simple tweaks make all the difference: start with firm tofu, use enough oil for full contact, and don’t overcrowd the pan. Fry in small batches so the oil stays hot and the tofu can brown evenly. For the final touch, let it rest on a wire rack instead of paper towels—it keeps the underside from steaming and losing its crunch.

Golden fried tofu triangles filled with lemongrass-peanut sauce, topped with cilantro and scallions on a dark ceramic plate.

More Tofu Recipes To Try Next

Did you try this crispy tofu recipe? Leave your rating and feedback in the comments below. It helps others find this recipe and makes our day!

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Hands holding a piece of crispy fried tofu filled with savory lemongrass-peanut sauce and garnished with cilantro.

Crispy Fried Tofu with Lemongrass-Peanut Sauce


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  • Author: erin wysocarski
  • Total Time: 40 minutes
  • Yield: 2-4 servings
  • Diet: Vegan

Description

Golden, crunchy, and built for flavor—this crispy fried tofu recipe turns a simple block into something spectacular. Each triangle gets hollowed, dredged, and deep-fried to create a pocket that holds a thick, savory lemongrass–peanut sauce. Every bite hits that perfect mix of crunch and creaminess—the kind of dish that feels restaurant-level but totally doable at home.


Ingredients

for the lemongrass-peanut butter sauce

  • 1 teaspoon toasted sesame oil
  • 3 tablespoons minced shallots
  • 3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 tablespoons vegan broth
  • 2 teaspoons chopped lemongrass hearts (the pale, tender inner stalks)
  • 1/2 teaspoon curry powder
  • 3 tablespoons chunky peanut butter
  • 1/4 cup vegan broth
  • 2 tablespoons chopped cilantro
  • 1 teaspoon soy sauce

for the tofu

  • the brine from a 15-ounce can of chickpeas (aquafaba)
  • 1 cup cornstarch
  • 1 (14-ounce) block of firm tofu, cut in half, then each half cut diagonally to create 4 triangles
  • Neutral oil like canola, vegetable, or grapeseed oil, for frying (enough for 2-3 inches of frying depth)

to serve

  • cilantro sprigs
  • crushed peanuts
  • chopped green part of 1 scallion
  • lime wedges
  • soy sauce


Instructions

to make the lemongrass-peanut butter sauce

  1. Build the flavor base. In a small saucepan, heat the toasted sesame oil over medium heat. Add the shallots and allow them to sizzle for about a minute, then reduce the heat to medium-low, and saute for about 3 minutes.
  2. Add in the garlic cloves and saute for about 2 minutes, taking care to stir them to ensure they do not brown, or they will become bitter.
  3. Deglaze the saucepan with the 2 tablespoons of broth, then allow most of the moisture to evaporate, about 2 minutes.
  4. Add in the chopped lemongrass hearts and curry powder and saute for about 2 minutes more.
  5. Add in the peanut butter and 1/4 cup vegan broth, and stir to combine and soften for about 2 minutes.
  6. Turn the heat off and stir in the cilantro and soy sauce. The texture should be thick.
  7. Remove from the heat and set aside.

to fry the tofu

  1. Get that golden crunch. Preheat several inches of oil in a heavy saucepan over medium-high heat for about 7 minutes.
  2. Once the oil is heated (you can test by inserting a chopstick into the saucepan so it touches the bottom–if bubbles form around the tip immediately, you are ready to fry).
  3. Place the aquafaba in one large prep bowl and the cornstarch in another large prep bowl.
  4. Cut a small rectangle out of the center of the tofu, taking care to leave plenty of space around the edges so the tofu maintains its shape.
  5. Working one piece at a time, coat the tofu in the aquafaba, then coat evenly in the cornstarch, tapping off any extra.
  6. Place into the hot oil and fry until golden all over, about 2-3 minutes, flipping it if the oil doesn’t coat it completely.
  7. Transfer to a plate lined with paper towels or a baking sheet with a cooling rack placed over the top, hollow side down. Allow to cool for a couple of minutes.

to assemble the tofu

  1. Divide the lemongrass and peanut butter sauce into 4 portions, spooning it into the center of the tofu. Garnish as desired with crushed peanuts, cilantro, chopped scallions, and lime wedges.
  2. Serve immediately with soy sauce.

Notes

  • Best served fresh: This crispy fried tofu is at its peak right out of the oil; serve immediately after frying for the best crunch.
  • Make-ahead tip: The lemongrass–peanut sauce can be made a day ahead and stored in the fridge. Warm gently before spooning into the tofu.
  • Use a neutral, high-heat oil: Choose from canola, vegetable, or grapeseed. These oils stay stable at frying temperatures (around 375°F), so they won’t smoke, darken, or add any unwanted flavor to the tofu.
  • Don’t overcrowd the pan: Add only one or two pieces at a time so the oil temperature stays consistent. When you overcrowd, the temperature drops, steam gets trapped, and the tofu stews instead of fries—resulting in a pale, soggy crust instead of that golden, shattering crunch.
  • Serving suggestion: These tofu pockets shine as an appetizer or small plate but also pair beautifully with jasmine rice, soba noodles, mushroom wontons, and tofu satay.
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 20 minutes
  • Category: Appetizer, Snack, Side
  • Method: Deep-Fried
  • Cuisine: Asian-Inspired

This recipe was originally posted in 2011 and has been updated in 2025 with updated instructions and helpful tips.

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Cashew Cheese Recipe From Miyoko Schinner’s The Vegan Creamery https://olivesfordinner.com/cashew-cheese-recipe/ https://olivesfordinner.com/cashew-cheese-recipe/#comments Mon, 13 Oct 2025 18:12:25 +0000 https://olivesfordinner.com/?p=27793 This phenomenal cashew cheese recipe from The Vegan Creamery by Miyoko Schinner is a smooth and...

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This phenomenal cashew cheese recipe from The Vegan Creamery by Miyoko Schinner is a smooth and creamy umami bomb. If you’re new to vegan cheesemaking or just curious about the process, you’ll love this spread!

Close-up of creamy vegan cashew cheese on a cracker, showing its smooth texture and rich flavor.

I’ve been making Miyoko Schinner’s cheeses for years. Her air-dried Camembert from Artisan Vegan Cheese is one of my all-time favorites. I’ve been making it since 2012, a year after I started this blog. Making Miyoko’s vegan cheese is like waiting for dough to rise: you leave it alone, and time does the magic. Each batch is a little science experiment, and I love to see the aroma and texture develop day by day, until it turns into something creamy, tangy, and full of umami to spread over crackers, grate onto pasta, or melt across a pizza.

Her new book, The Vegan Creamery, feels like the next, more refined chapter in her story—and her foundational cashew cheese recipe fires on every cylinder. Sure, it takes time, but it’s mostly hands-off (like many of her best fermented recipes). That time’s going to pass anyway, so you may as well end up with a homemade cheese at the end of it. You start with raw cashews and end up with something smooth, layered, and quietly complex.

Beyond the ease and curiosity, what hooked me most were the ingredients I hadn’t used—or even heard of—before: shio-kōji and mesophilic/thermophilic cultures, the quiet engines behind Miyoko’s approach to umami and fermentation in this recipe. They lit up my inner food nerd and made me want to dig deeper into how vegan cheese actually works. If you’ve ever wondered how culturing vegan cheese happens, or how a handful of ingredients can turn into something rich and alive with time, this is the recipe to start with.

Why You’ll Love This Cashew Cheese

If you’ve got a blender and a warm spot on your counter, you can make vegan cheese that tastes like it was made by a pro (you). This one from The Vegan Creamery starts simple: raw cashews, salt, nutritional yeast, and a little rejuvelac—or a mesophilic/thermophilic culture, which works a bit like a sourdough starter for cheese, quietly building that gentle tang as it rests.

The wildcard ingredient here is the shio-kōji. This new-to-me ingredient gives this cheese its umami punch and a complex depth that keeps you coming back for that second scoop or schmear. For full recipe instructions to Miyoko’s recipe, scroll to the end of this post!

Cover of The Vegan Creamery by Miyoko Schinner, featuring plant-based cheeses and fermented recipes.

Key Ingredients

Making this cashew cheese from The Vegan Creamery doesn’t take much—just a few ingredients that work together to create something rich, tangy, and alive with flavor. Each one brings its own role to the table, from texture to tang to umami. Here’s what makes them essential.

  • Raw Cashews: The base of this vegan cheese, cashews blend into a smooth, buttery purée that ferments beautifully. Their mild flavor gives the culture space to shine, while their natural fats create that creamy, spreadable texture.
Homemade rejuvelac in a glass jar — a fermented grain liquid used for culturing vegan cashew cheese.
  • Rejuvelac (or Mesophilic or Thermophilic Culture): This is what starts the fermentation process. I used homemade rejuvelac, which is a lightly fermented liquid made from sprouted grains (I used quinoa). In this recipe, you can alternatively use mesophilic or thermophilic cultures, which are cheesemaking starters that can be purchased online. As the mixture rests, those cultures introduce beneficial bacteria that slowly acidify the cashew base, developing tang and depth over time.
Package of Japanese shio-kōji, a fermented seasoning made from rice kōji, salt, and water, used in Miyoko Schinner’s cashew cheese recipe.
  • Shio-kōji: Made from rice kōji, salt, and water, this fermented seasoning adds umami and complexity without overpowering. It’s used to deepen flavor and support fermentation, and here it gives the cashew cheese its subtle, savory edge.
  • Nutritional Yeast: A vegan classic for a reason. Nutritional yeast adds that savory, cheesy note and rounds out the flavor. It’s not the main driver of tang here—that’s the culture’s job—but it gives the finished cheese its mellow, nutty edge.
  • Sea Salt: Simple but crucial. Salt enhances everything else: it balances acidity, sharpens umami, and keeps the flavor from drifting too mild. Use a fine sea salt so it dissolves easily into the mixture before fermentation starts.

What Are Mesophilic and Thermophilic Cultures?

Both mesophilic and thermophilic cultures are blends of beneficial bacteria used to ferment and flavor cheese. They’re often called “starter cultures” because they set the process in motion, transforming a smooth nut base into something tangy and alive. You can also use homemade rejuvelac in this recipe—it’s simple to make, and Miyoko explains how in her book.

The word mesophilic breaks down into meso (middle) and philic (loving)—these cultures “love” moderate, cozy conditions. They’re commonly used in recipes that ferment slowly on the counter or in a warm spot, like this cashew cheese.

Thermophilic comes from thermo (heat) and philic. These cultures prefer warmer conditions and are often used in cheeses that need a bit more heat during fermentation.

You can find vegan versions of both at The Cheesemaker and other cheesemaking suppliers—just look for “non-dairy” or “vegan-friendly” on the label.

How To Serve

This cashew cheese from Miyoko Schinner’s The Vegan Creamery is the kind of thing you’ll keep finding new uses for. It’s creamy, tangy, and just funky enough to make anything it touches feel a little more special. Here are some ways to use it:

  • Spread on crackers or crostini: A classic. Use seeded crackers, toasty crostini, bagels, or slices of warm focaccia.
  • Add to a vegan cheese board: Pair it with grapes, olives, toasted nuts, or jam. The balanced flavor contrast—sweet, salty, creamy, umami—is spot on.
  • Stir into grains or grain bowls: Mix a spoonful into warm quinoa, farro, or rice. It melts slightly, lending creaminess without overpowering.
  • Serve as a vegetable dip: This vegan cheese spread pairs beautifully with raw carrots, bell peppers, cucumber slices, or cauliflower florets.
  • Make a savory sandwich: Try it toasted with roasted mushrooms and caramelized onions. Umami bomb!
Bowl of homemade vegan cashew cheese from Miyoko Schinner’s The Vegan Creamery.

More About Miyoko Schinner

Miyoko Schinner is a Japanese-American chef, author, and activist whose work has helped shift how the world thinks about vegan cheese. By applying traditional cheesemaking techniques to plant-based ingredients, she has been a pioneer in shaping vegan cheese and making it accessible to home cooks. She’s published several groundbreaking cookbooks, including Artisan Vegan Cheese, The Homemade Vegan Pantry and, most recently, The Vegan Creamery.

A photo of Miyoko Schinner, vegan cheesemaker and author of The Vegan Creamery.

FAQs

Can I use this recipe as a base for other vegan cheeses?

Yes. This cashew cheese recipe is meant to be a starting point—once you’ve got the method down, you can add herbs, spices, miso, or smoked paprika to create your own variations.

Does this cheese melt like dairy cheese?

This style of cashew cheese softens beautifully but doesn’t fully melt like traditional dairy cheese. It’s best for spreading, layering, or stirring into warm dishes for creaminess.

What is shio-kōji, and what does it do in this recipe?

Shio-kōji is a fermented seasoning made from rice kōji, salt, and water. It’s used throughout The Vegan Creamery to add umami and help the fermentation process along. In this cashew cheese, it gives the finished spread a subtle savory depth—rich, balanced, and just a little funky in the best way.

More Vegan Fermentation & Umami Recipes To Explore

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Cashew cheese from Miyoko Schinner’s The Vegan Creamery served with crackers.

The Foundational Cashew Cheese


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  • Author: miyoko schinner
  • Total Time: 24 hours 20 minutes
  • Yield: 1 pound (450g)
  • Diet: Vegan

Description

Reprinted with permission from The Vegan Creamery Copyright © 2025 by Miyoko Schinner. Photography copyright © 2025 by Eva Kolenko. Published by Ten Speed Press, an imprint of Crown Publishing Group. 

Cashew cheeses are now ubiquitous, and everyone makes them a little differently. Unlike the previous recipes in this chapter where a milk is coagulated, then separated from the whey, cashew cheese is basically a thick puree or paste that “sets up” into cheese. Sometimes coconut or another oil is added to make the mouthfeel even creamier, although I don’t find it necessary.

Cashew cheese is the easiest of all to make and can be flavored in a multitude of ways. It can even be aged, and its texture will change over time from creamy to sliceable. I have aged wax-covered cashew cheese for even two years or longer, at which point the texture can become like Parmesan. Although in my first book I recommend air-drying, if you do this for too long without a protective coating, the flavor can dissipate and just become chalky. This is why a long-aged cashew cheese should be waxed or have another protective coating, such as herbs, a saturated oil like shea butter, or activated charcoal.

This recipe is a springboard from which I hope you will create your own versions.


Ingredients

  • 2 cups (280g) cashews
  • ½ cup (120ml) water or rejuvelac
  • 1 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 2 tablespoons shio-kōji (optional; for umami flavor)
  • 1 tablespoon nutritional yeast flakes
  • ¼ teaspoon vegan culture, either mesophilic or thermophilic (omit if using rejuvelac)


Instructions

  1. In a saucepan, combine the cashews with water to cover. Bring to a boil for 2 to 3 minutes, then drain well.
  2. In a blender, combine the cashews, the ½ cup (120ml) water or rejuvelac, salt, shio-kōji (if using), and nutritional yeast and process until smooth and creamy, 1 to 2 minutes. Check the temperature—if the mixture is very hot, allow it to cool to below 100°F before adding the culture. Add the culture and reblend momentarily.
  3. Transfer the mixture to a sterilized container with a lid, ensuring that there is at least an inch or two of headspace, and place in a warm place (80° to 90°F for mesophilic cultures, 90° to 105°F for thermophilic) for up to 24 hours. You should see little gas bubbles build up—this is a unique function of cashew fermentation (this does not happen with most other milks). You should check the pH or taste it after 12 hours. Aim for a pH of 4.6 for a cheesy but not too tangy cheese (the longer you ferment it, the tangier it will get).
  4. When it has reached the desired pH, put the container in the refrigerator or transfer to a cheesecloth-lined mold of choice. Refrigerate it for 24 hours or so until it has firmed up and can be unmolded. Serve as is, or roll in fresh or dried herbs, smoked paprika, grated lemon zest, or crushed peppercorns. To keep and serve as a soft cheese, wrap in plastic wrap and store in the refrigerator for 2 to 4 weeks.

Notes

Variations

  • Aged Cashew Cheese: Cashew cheese is easier to age if it is coated in something that adds not only flavor but protection. Coat the molded cheese in dried herbs of choice, activated charcoal, or paprika and wrap loosely in parchment paper. Store in the refrigerator, where it will firm up and develop additional flavor over the course of 4 to 8 weeks. The cheese is ready when you say it is!
  • Savory Aged Cashew Cheese (Cheddar-like): When making the cheese, use only ⅓ cup (80ml) water or rejuvelac, increase the nutritional yeast to 4 tablespoons, and add 2 tablespoons light or white miso. Ferment until fairly tangy, aiming for a pH of 4.3 or lower. Put in a mold and refrigerate to firm up. Take out and wrap in parchment paper. Let it age in your refrigerator for 6 to 8 weeks, until firm and sliceable.
  • Double Cream Cheese: After fermentation, put the cheese in a food processor with ¼ cup (60ml) melted refined coconut oil or refined shea butter and process until smooth. At this point, you can also add finely minced chives, garlic, or fresh or dried herbs. Pour into a cheesecloth-lined mold of choice and refrigerate until firm, then remove from the cheesecloth. Wrap in plastic wrap or parchment paper and store in the refrigerator for up to 8 weeks
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Fermentation Time: 24 hours
  • Category: Snack, Condiment
  • Method: Fermented
  • Cuisine: French, Japanese

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13 Vegan Soup Recipes For Every Season https://olivesfordinner.com/vegan-soup-recipes/ https://olivesfordinner.com/vegan-soup-recipes/#respond Thu, 02 Oct 2025 00:32:26 +0000 https://olivesfordinner.com/?p=27770 Vegan soup recipes are the ultimate comfort food, working year-round—creamy bowls in winter, fresh broths in...

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Vegan soup recipes are the ultimate comfort food, working year-round—creamy bowls in winter, fresh broths in summer, and hearty pots that carry you through fall and spring. This roundup brings together soups that are simple enough for weeknights, layered enough for weekends, and always built for comfort.

Spoon lifting hot vegan soup from a steaming bowl.

A pot of soup is its own kind of therapy. You chop, you stir, you let it bubble away, and the world feels lighter for a while. Cold weather makes it extra cozy, sure, but I’ll happily eat soup all year—herby broths in spring, something fresh and bright in summer, and the big hearty bowls that carry you through fall and winter.

These vegan soup recipes are the ones I make when I’m looking for comfort. Some are weeknight-simple, others take a little more love, but that’s where the magic comes in: sometimes that comfort comes from creating something while staying fully in it. These bowls are silky, brothy, noodle-loaded, or coconut-rich, and each one is layered with flavor and easy enough to pull off on a weeknight. However you prefer your soup—creamy, cozy, or quick—there’s a bowl here to match your mood.

Easy Vegan Soup Recipes to Try

There’s no single way to define an easy vegan soup recipe. Sometimes “easy” means you can throw it together on a weeknight with pantry staples, and sometimes it means the pot does the heavy lifting while you wait. Either way, the reward is the same: a bowl that feels comforting, nourishing, and a little bit special without demanding too much.

This roundup brings together a mix of cozy vegan soups, quick brothy bowls, and creamy classics you’ll want on repeat. From plant-based spins on takeout favorites to simple, hearty recipes for cold nights, these are soups designed to keep things approachable while still delivering big flavor. Looking for vegan meal prep ideas? Yeah, you’re in the right place.

Creamy Vegan Soups

Sometimes the only thing that’ll do is a soup you can practically sink into. Creamy vegan soups bring that kind of comfort—smooth, rich, and filling without the dairy. Potatoes blended until velvety, roots roasted until sweet, coconut milk whisked into something lush … these are the bowls that feel like a blanket, only warmer and better seasoned.

Vegan Potato Soup

This one leans classic: soft potatoes blended into something smooth and hearty, with garlic and onion building the base. It’s creamy without cream, filling without fuss, and the kind of soup that makes a crusty loaf disappear fast. Simple, cozy, and the definition of weeknight comfort.

Creamy vegan potato soup in a bowl, served with bread on the side.

Creamy Roasted Parsnip Soup

Parsnips don’t always get the spotlight, but here they shine. Roasting brings out their sweetness, which blends into a silky base with just enough earthiness to keep things interesting. It’s creamy, elegant, and a little unexpected—exactly the kind of soup that makes you wonder why you don’t cook with parsnips more often.

Two bowls of roasted parsnip vegan soup on a wooden board with spoons.

Cauliflower & Cashew Cream Soup

Cauliflower and cashews team up here for double the creaminess. The cauliflower brings a soft, mellow base, while the cashews add that rich body you’d swear came from dairy. It’s smooth, nutty, and comforting in a way that makes you want to curl up with the whole pot.

Bowl of creamy vegan cauliflower and cashew soup garnished with mushrooms and herbs.

Roasted Ginger & Coconut Soup

Ginger takes on a softer side when it’s roasted, losing its bite and gaining a caramelized warmth. Blended into coconut milk, it creates a soup that’s equal parts silky and bright, with a little kick that lingers at the end. It’s fragrant, soothing, and the kind of bowl that feels both refreshing and grounding.

Vegan roasted ginger and coconut soup in a bowl with vegan scallops and fresh garnish.

Vegan Crab Coconut Soup

The broth is the star here—coconut milk simmered with red curry paste, lemongrass, and ginger until it’s creamy and fragrant. Jackfruit adds a tender, meaty texture that soaks up all that flavor without weighing it down. It’s bold, aromatic, and the kind of soup that makes a weeknight feel cozy and special.

Bowl of vegan crab coconut soup with chopsticks on the side.

Thai-Inspired Coconut Soup

This soup proves how far a few good ingredients can go. Shallots and shiitakes lay down something savory, coconut milk softens it into creaminess, and a squeeze of lime keeps it bright. Cherry tomatoes burst into the broth for little hits of sweetness, while tofu turns it into a meal if you want. It’s light but layered, and this vegan coconut soup hits the spot in summer or winter.

Two bowls of Thai-inspired vegan coconut soup with tofu and tomatoes.

Light & Brothy Vegan Soups

Not every soup has to be rich and heavy—sometimes what you want is something clear, bright, and full of liquid comfort. These brothy vegan soups lean on aromatics, herbs, and spice to build flavor without the weight. They’re the bowls you make when you’re craving warmth but still want to feel light on your feet.

Vegan Miso Soup

This one’s all about umami: kombu and dried shiitakes steep into a savory base, then miso folds in at the end for that deep, cozy flavor. It can stay simple—just broth, tofu, and scallions—or turn into a fuller bowl with noodles and vegetables. Light but satisfying, it’s the kind of mineral-rich miso soup that feels grounding every time you make it.

Side view of a bowl of vegan miso soup with tofu and scallions.

Vegan Tom Kha Soup

This Thai-inspired soup is all about balance—coconut milk for creaminess, lemongrass and lime for brightness, and a little heat to tie it all together. It’s brothy but rich, fragrant enough to perfume the kitchen, and the kind of soup that feels really special without asking for a lot. Add soy curls and oyster mushrooms for a hearty feel.

Vegan tom kha soup with coconut milk, lemongrass, and herbs.

Mushroom Wonton Soup

Folding wontons feels like part art project, part cooking adventure. These are stuffed with umami-rich mushrooms, then dropped into a garlic and ginger broth that’s light enough to sip but layered with depth.

Bowl of vegan mushroom wonton soup in a light garlic ginger broth.

Vegan Pork Wonton Soup with Bok Choy

A farro-based faux-pork filling makes these wontons hearty and savory, holding their own in a sesame and soy broth. Bok choy slips in at the end, adding a fresh, green bite against the rich, gingery base. It’s warming, satisfying, and the kind of soup that feels like a full meal in one bowl.

Bowl of vegan wonton soup with plant-based pork filling and bok choy.

Hearty & Filling Vegan Soups

These are the soups that eat like a meal. Built with beans, grains, and vegetables, they’re sturdy enough to stand on their own but still deliver comfort in every spoonful. Aromatic herbs and slow-simmered broths give them depth, while hearty textures make them the kind of bowls that keep you full, warm, and satisfied long after dinner’s done.

Vegan Chicken and Rice Soup

Soy curls stand in for chicken here, giving the soup a hearty, meaty bite without the meat. Carrots, celery, and mushrooms round it out, while sage, thyme, and rosemary make the broth smell like pure comfort. It’s soothing, filling, and the kind of soup you’ll want on repeat all winter.

Bowl of vegan chicken and rice soup made with soy curls and vegetables.

Vegan Split Pea Soup

Split peas break down into something creamy and smoky here, helped along by garlic, thyme, and a swirl of cashew cream. It’s hearty without being heavy, the kind of soup that feels like winter’s answer to comfort food. Simple, filling, and even better the next day.

Side shot of creamy vegan split pea soup with cashew cream swirl.

Vegan French Onion Ramen Noodle Soup

Caramelized onions don’t usually end up in ramen, but here they take center stage. Slowly cooked down until sweet and jammy, they give the broth a depth that’s both savory and a little surprising. Warm spices and a tangle of noodles round it out, with seared seitan adding heft. It’s rich, aromatic, and unexpected—in the best way.

Hands holding a bowl of vegan French onion ramen with seitan and scallions.

FAQs

What soups can vegans eat?

Vegans can enjoy almost any soup that skips animal-based broths, meat, and dairy. Think creamy vegan soups made with cashews or coconut milk, brothy bowls built on kombu or miso, and hearty classics like split pea or vegan chicken and rice. With the right swaps, nearly every soup style—from ramen to chowder—can be made fully plant-based.

How do you make vegan soup taste more flavorful?

Layering is key. Start with aromatics like onion, garlic, and ginger, then build depth with umami-rich ingredients like miso, soy sauce, mushrooms, or nutritional yeast. Fresh herbs, a splash of acid (lemon, lime, or vinegar), and finishing touches like chili oil or toasted sesame can take a vegan soup from simple to sensational.

What is the healthiest vegan soup to make?

The “healthiest” soup depends on your needs, but protein-packed lentil soup, fiber-rich split pea soup, and mineral-rich miso soup are all nutrient-dense favorites. Most vegan soups are naturally lighter than cream- or meat-based ones, and you can pack them with vegetables, whole grains, and legumes for a balanced, nourishing meal.

The Comfort of Vegan Soup

Soup has a way of steadying the day. You stir, you wait, you taste—and the world feels a little more manageable. A bowl in your hands, steam rising, the first spoonful slowing everything down—it’s simple, but it stays with you.

These vegan soup recipes cover it all: creamy vegan soups that feel like blankets, light brothy soups that refresh, hearty vegan soups that fill without fuss, and coconut-rich bowls that bring brightness to the table. However you like your soup—smooth, brothy, or loaded with noodles—comfort can be found right in your own kitchen.

Steaming vegan soup ladled into a patterned bowl.

More Vegan Comfort Food Roundups To Explore Next

If you try one of these vegan soup recipes, let me know in the comments—happy cooking!

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General Tso’s Tofu https://olivesfordinner.com/general-tsos-tofu/ https://olivesfordinner.com/general-tsos-tofu/#respond Tue, 30 Sep 2025 13:51:17 +0000 https://olivesfordinner.com/?p=433 General Tso’s tofu = golden, crunchy tofu plus a sticky-sweet, tangy sauce that clings to every...

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General Tso’s tofu = golden, crunchy tofu plus a sticky-sweet, tangy sauce that clings to every bite. It’s bold, balanced, and built to taste like your favorite takeout order.

Close-up of General Tso's tofu coated in sticky glaze and sesame seeds.

General Tso’s tofu is Chinese-American comfort food at its best: golden, crispy tofu coated in a sticky, tangy sauce with garlic, ginger, scallions, soy sauce, and mirin. Each bite nails that sweet-savory balance, brightened with vinegar and rounded out with umami.

The result is more than crunch plus sauce—it’s contrast in every bite. Sweet against savory, tang against depth. This iconic takeout-style favorite delivers big flavor with a quick reward, streamlined into simple steps you can pull off any night of the week.

Why You’ll Love This General Tso’s Tofu

Think of this General Tso’s tofu recipe as takeout flavors tuned in for home cooking. It’s bold enough to scratch that takeout itch, and is easier to pull off than you might think. Here’s what makes it stand out:

  • Crispy tofu with structure: This version coats tofu cubes in aquafaba and cornstarch, then fries them until golden. The result is a shatter-crisp crust that stays crunchy even after being tossed in the sauce.
  • A sticky-sweet, balanced sauce: Softened ginger, garlic, and scallions mingle with soy sauce for umami, sugar for sweetness, mirin for tang, and vegetable broth for depth. Together, they create a glossy sauce that sings.
  • Better-than-takeout energy: You still get the comfort food vibes of the restaurant version, but tuned for home cooking. This is built on easy steps and pantry-friendly ingredients.
  • Customizable and crowd-friendly: Whether you serve it over rice with broccoli, sprinkle it with sesame seeds, or add crushed peanuts for crunch, this recipe flexes easily. Want to make it gluten-free? Swap in tamari. Don’t want to deep fry? Try our lighter, sautéed General Tso’s tofu instead.
  • Weeknight-accessible: Ready in under an hour, this dish is just as perfect for a weeknight dinner as it is for a special evening together with friends.

Key Ingredients

Ever wonder what makes General Tso’s tofu so irresistible at home? It’s all in the ingredients. Each one builds texture, gloss, or balance so the final dish delivers that sticky-sweet, savory punch you’ll keep coming back to. Here’s what you’ll need:

Ingredients for General Tso’s tofu laid out on a wooden table, including tofu, scallions, garlic, soy sauce, and cornstarch.
  • Firm tofu: The foundation of the recipe. It holds its shape through dredging and frying, turning into golden cubes with a shatter-crisp crust that stays crunchy even in sauce.
  • Aquafaba (chickpea brine): The vegan binder that makes this recipe stand out. It coats the tofu, helping the cornstarch form a crisp, airy shell.
  • Cornstarch: The crunch and gloss maker. It gives tofu its light coating and thickens the General Tso’s sauce until it clings just right.
  • Ginger, garlic, and scallions: The aromatic base. Sautéed until fragrant, this trifecta gives the sauce its takeout-style backbone and aroma.
  • Soy sauce (or tamari): The umami anchor. It deepens flavor and balances sweetness, while tamari keeps the recipe gluten-free.
  • Sugar and rice vinegar: The sweet-tangy duo. Sugar brings sticky shine, vinegar cuts through richness, keeping every bite bright.
  • Mirin: The quiet depth booster. This sweet rice wine adds subtle acidity and roundness, so the sauce tastes layered instead of one-note.
  • Vegetable broth: The sauce stretcher. It builds body and restaurant-style gloss while keeping it vegan.

How to Make General Tso’s Tofu

Think making this crispy, gloss-kissed dish is complicated? Not at all. Here’s how it comes together. For the full recipe with exact amounts and times, scroll to the recipe at the end of this post!

Sauce base with scallions, ginger, and garlic simmering in a saucepan.

Step One: Make the Sauce – Heat a little oil in a saucepan, then sauté the ginger, garlic, and scallion whites until fragrant. Add mirin to deglaze, followed by vegetable broth, soy sauce, sugar, and rice vinegar. Let it simmer gently while you prep the tofu—this is the base of that sticky-sweet General Tso’s sauce.

Tofu cubes fully dredged in cornstarch, prepared for frying.

Step Two: Prep and Dredge the Tofu – Pat the tofu dry and cut it into cubes. Coat the pieces in aquafaba so the cornstarch sticks evenly. Toss with cornstarch until every side is covered—this is what creates the shatter-crisp crust.

Crispy golden tofu cubes resting on a wire rack after frying.

Step Three: Fry Until Crispy – Preheat oil in a wide skillet or pan. Once ready, fry the tofu, taking care not to overcrowd the pan. Cook until golden on all sides, then transfer to a rack or paper towel to drain. This is where the crunch gets locked in.

Sweet and savory sauce thickening in a saucepan, stirred with a spoon.

Step Four: Thicken the Sauce – Return to your sauce. Bring the sauce back to a boil and whisk in the cornstarch slurry a little at a time. Stop once it looks glossy and thick enough to coat the back of a spoon—this is the lacquer that gives General Tso’s tofu its magic.

General Tso’s tofu served with steamed rice, scallions, and sesame in a black bowl.

Step Five: Toss and Serve – Add the crispy tofu to the thickened sauce and toss gently until every piece is coated. Finish with scallion greens, sesame seeds, or crushed peanuts. Serve hot over steamed rice with broccoli on the side, and boom you’ve got takeout energy at home.

Pro Tips

What makes or breaks this General Tso’s tofu? Keep these things in mind for a perfect result every time!

  • Aquafaba as a binder: Aquafaba—the protein- and starch-rich liquid from a can of chickpeas — helps cornstarch adhere evenly to tofu, creating a shell that fries up light and crisp. It’s also a zero-waste ingredient that most people usually pour down the sink.
  • Aim for 375°F for your oil temp: Temperature makes or breaks frying. Go lower than this, and the tofu absorbs oil and turns heavy—sad! Go higher, and the crust can scorch before the center warms and softens—also sad. Around 375°F is the sweet spot for crisp, golden tofu.
  • Chopstick test: Don’t have a thermometer? Heat the oil over medium-high heat for about 7 minutes, then dip a wooden chopstick so it touches the bottom of the pan. If bubbles form around it immediately, you are ready to fry.
  • Don’t overcrowd the oil: Frying relies on high heat driving moisture out of the tofu’s surface. Too many cubes at once lowers the oil temp and traps steam, leading to soggy, uneven crusts. Work in batches so your tofu has room to breathe.
  • Keep an eye on the garlic: Garlic should be sautéed just until fragrant. If it browns, it turns bitter and sours the sauce. Keep it moving around the pan with a spatula or chopsticks.
  • Add the Slurry Slowly: Cornstarch thickens sauces quickly. Stir in the slurry one tablespoon at a time and stop when the sauce looks glossy and coats the back of a spoon. Too much slurry can make it gummy.

What’s A Cornstarch Slurry?

A cornstarch slurry is just cornstarch mixed with cold water until smooth. In hot liquid, starch granules swell and thicken the sauce instantly. The key is to whisk it right before using—if it sits, the starch sinks. For this recipe, combine 3 tablespoons cornstarch with 6 tablespoons water, then add it slowly to the sauce until it turns glossy.

  • Store your oil smartly: Once cooled, strain the oil and refrigerate. Neutral frying oil (like canola or grapeseed) can usually be reused 2–3 times before it breaks down.

Serving Suggestions

Once you’ve made this recipe, you can serve it as-is or make it a feast. Pair it with the right cast and it shines. Here are some ideas:

  • Over steamed rice: The classic. Jasmine, basmati, or brown rice soaks up every drop of the glossy General Tso’s sauce, making each bite feel complete.
  • With bright greens: Steamed or sautéed broccoli, Szechuan Bok Choy, or snow peas add freshness and textural contrast. They lighten the bowl, balancing richness.
  • Turn it into a spread: Make it a full vegan takeout experience—pair with spring rolls, vegan crab rangoon, vegan egg drop soup, vegetable fried rice, or spicy noodles for a shared family-style dinner.
  • Finish with flair: Top with sesame seeds, extra scallions, or crushed peanuts for crunch and brightness. These small touches make it feel restaurant-level.
  • Spice it your way: Prefer heat? Toss in red pepper flakes, a squirt of sriracha, or a drizzle of chili crisp. Want it saucier? Add a splash of reserved sauce to the bowl.

FAQs

What is General Tso’s tofu?

General Tso’s tofu is a Chinese-American takeout classic made vegan. Crispy tofu cubes are tossed in a sticky, glossy sauce that’s sweet, savory, tangy, and lightly spicy. It delivers all the comfort of the original chicken version but with a plant-based twist.

What does General Tso’s tofu taste like?

General Tso’s tofu tastes bold and balanced—crispy tofu coated in a sauce that’s sticky-sweet, sharp with vinegar, and laced with ginger, garlic, and scallions. Every bite hits sweet, savory, and tangy notes at once, giving it that unmistakable takeout flavor.

What is the best tofu to use for General Tso?

Firm or extra-firm tofu works best for General Tso’s tofu. It holds its shape through dredging and frying, creating golden cubes with a crisp shell that stay crunchy even after being tossed in sauce. Avoid silken tofu, which is too soft and will break apart.

Chopsticks lifting a piece of General Tso’s tofu coated in sticky sauce with sesame seeds.

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Overhead shot of General Tso’s tofu—crispy tofu coated in glossy sauce, paired with rice.

General Tso’s Tofu


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  • Author: erin wysocarski
  • Total Time: 55 minutes
  • Yield: 2 servings
  • Diet: Vegan

Description

Crispy, sticky, and tangy-sweet—this General Tso’s tofu brings takeout flavor to your kitchen. Golden tofu cubes fry up with a shatter-crisp crust, then get tossed in a glossy sauce of garlic, ginger, scallions, soy, and vinegar. It’s bold and balanced, fast enough for a weeknight, and every bit as satisfying as your favorite restaurant order.


Ingredients

for the sauce

  • 2 teaspoons neutral oil (canola, grapeseed, or vegetable)
  • 2 tablespoons fresh ginger, minced
  • 2 tablespoons garlic, minced
  • 5 scallions, chopped (white parts and green parts separated)
  • 2 tablespoons mirin
  • 2 cups vegetable broth
  • 3 tablespoons soy sauce (or tamari, for gluten-free)
  • 3 tablespoons sugar
  • 1 tablespoon rice vinegar
  • 3 tablespoons cornstarch, whisked with 6 tablespoons water (to make a cornstarch slurry)

for the tofu

  • 1 (14-ounce) block firm tofu, cut into 1-inch cubes
  • 1/3 cup aquafaba (liquid from canned chickpeas)
  • 1 cup cornstarch
  • Vegetable oil, for frying (canola or grapeseed recommended)

for serving

  • Reserved scallion greens
  • 1 tablespoon sesame seeds
  • Steamed rice
  • Steamed broccoli
  • Crushed peanuts (optional, for garnish)


Instructions

to make the sauce

  1. Heat oil in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Add ginger, garlic, and scallion whites. Sauté for 3–4 minutes, stirring often to prevent browning.
  2. Increase heat to high. Deglaze with mirin for 1 minute.
  3. Add vegetable broth, soy sauce, sugar, and rice vinegar. Stir to combine, then reduce heat to low and keep the sauce warm while you prepare the tofu.

to prep the tofu

  1. Place the tofu into a large prep bowl. Pour the aquafaba over the top and use your hands to coat the tofu evenly. Drain any leftover liquid in the bottom of the bowl.
  2. Sprinkle half of the cornstarch over the top of the tofu and use your hands to toss and coat. Add the rest of the cornstarch to ensure all pieces are evenly coated.

to fry the tofu

  1. In a large, wide pan, add a couple of inches of oil. Heat over medium-high heat for about 7 minutes. You can test the oil’s readiness by inserting a chopstick into the oil until it touches the bottom of the pan. If bubbles immediately form around it, you are ready to fry.
  2. Add the tofu pieces to the pan one at a time in a single layer. They should sizzle immediately when they are added to the pan. If all of the pieces do not fit, work in batches. The tofu needs space to move around, or the pieces will clump together.
  3. Fry on each side for 4-5 minutes. They are done when golden and crisp all over, with a light crunchy coating. Do not let them brown.
  4. Using a spider or skimmer, transfer the crispy fried tofu to paper towels or a cooling rack set over a baking sheet to drain excess oil.

to assemble

  1. Return to your sauce. Increase the heat to high. Once it comes to a boil, add the cornstarch slurry a tablespoon at a time until the sauce is glossy and thickened to your liking (you may not need all of it).
  2. Add the fried tofu to the thickened General Tso’s sauce. Stir gently to coat every piece.
  3. Garnish with scallion greens, sesame seeds, and peanuts, if desired.
  4. Serve immediately over steamed rice with broccoli on the side.

Notes

  • Best tofu for frying: Use firm or extra-firm tofu. Softer varieties (silken or medium) will fall apart and won’t hold a crisp crust. Lightly pressing the tofu helps remove excess water for a better texture.
  • Sauce adjustments: Taste as you go—different vinegars and soy sauces vary in strength. Add vinegar gradually if you prefer a milder tang, or bump up sugar for extra stickiness.
  • Storage & reheating: General Tso’s tofu is best served right away, but leftovers can be refrigerated in an airtight container for up to 3 days if kept separate. Re-crisp tofu in an air fryer or hot skillet before serving. The sauce will thicken once chilled; just loosen it in a saucepan with a splash of water or broth over a gentle heat.
  • Serving suggestions: Steamed rice and broccoli are the classic pairings, but bok choy, snap peas, or green beans also work well. Finish with scallions, sesame seeds, or crushed peanuts for crunch and color.
  • Prep Time: 25 minutes
  • Cook Time: 30 minutes

This recipe was originally published in 2011 and updated in 2025 with clearer instructions and new photos.

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