35 minute dinner

Vegan Creamy Chickpea and Spinach Curry

vegan creamy chickpea & spinach curry

There are dinners you make on a cold evening when the day has been long and your body is asking for something warm and deeply sustaining. And then there are dinners like this Vegan Creamy Chickpea and Spinach Curry — the kind that fills every corner of your kitchen with the most extraordinary perfume of toasted spices and caramelized onion and rich coconut cream as it simmers, that pours into the bowl a deep, burnished amber-gold with vivid emerald spinach folded through it, and that delivers with every single spoonful a warmth and comfort so profound and so genuine that the world outside becomes entirely irrelevant for as long as the bowl lasts. This is that dinner. The one that makes people close their eyes on the first bite. The one that converts people who thought they did not like curry into people who request it every single week. The one that is simultaneously the most effortless and the most spectacularly delicious thing you will cook all month.

This is a curry built on foundations that have been perfected over centuries of South Asian culinary tradition — a deeply aromatic base of caramelized onion, fresh ginger, and garlic bloomed in fragrant oil, layered with hand-ground spices that fill the kitchen with an aroma so extraordinary it is itself worth making the recipe for, enriched with tomato and coconut cream into a sauce of extraordinary silky depth, and finished with protein-packed chickpeas and tender spinach that make this one of the most complete, nourishing, and deeply satisfying plant-based meals imaginable.

What makes this curry so genuinely outstanding is the layering of flavor at every stage of cooking. Spices are not simply added to a pot — they are bloomed in hot oil to release their essential oils and deepen their complexity. Onion is cooked slowly to true caramelization rather than softened quickly at high heat. Tomato is cooked until it completely breaks down and melds into the base rather than remaining raw and acidic. Coconut cream is added off the heat to preserve its delicate sweetness and prevent splitting. These techniques are simple but they are what elevates this curry from good to extraordinary.

This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free, high in plant-based protein and fiber, ready in just 35 minutes, and spectacular served over basmati rice, alongside warm naan bread, with a cooling cucumber raita, or simply eaten directly from the pot with a large spoon because the aroma made waiting for plates completely impossible.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
10 mins25 mins35 mins4~420 kcal

Ingredients

For the Curry

  • 2 cans (800g) chickpeas, drained and rinsed
  • 4 cups (120g) fresh spinach, roughly chopped (or 200g frozen spinach, thawed and squeezed dry)
  • 1 large white or yellow onion, finely diced
  • 6 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 inch piece fresh ginger, peeled and finely grated
  • 1 can (400g) crushed tomatoes
  • 1 can (400ml) full-fat coconut cream
  • 3 tbsp neutral oil (coconut oil or vegetable oil)
  • 1 tsp salt, plus more to taste
  • Juice of half a lemon

The Spice Blend

  • 2 tsp ground cumin
  • 2 tsp ground coriander
  • 1½ tsp garam masala
  • 1 tsp turmeric
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • ½ tsp chili powder (adjust to heat preference)
  • ½ tsp ground cardamom
  • ¼ tsp cinnamon
  • ¼ tsp black pepper

Optional Add-ins

  • 1 medium sweet potato, peeled and diced into 1-inch cubes (add with chickpeas)
  • 1 cup (150g) frozen peas (add in final 5 minutes)
  • 1 red bell pepper, diced (add with onion)
  • 200g firm tofu, pressed and cubed (add with chickpeas for extra protein)
  • 2 tbsp cashew butter (stir in at end for extra creaminess)
  • 1 tbsp nutritional yeast (adds extraordinary depth)

For Serving

  • Steamed basmati rice or brown rice
  • Warm vegan naan bread or roti
  • Fresh cilantro leaves, roughly chopped
  • Sliced red chili for heat and color
  • Wedges of fresh lemon
  • Vegan coconut yogurt raita
  • Sliced almonds or cashews, toasted
  • Extra drizzle of coconut cream

Instructions

  1. Prepare everything before you begin. Curry cooking moves quickly once started and having everything measured, chopped, and ready before you heat the pan makes the process smooth, effortless, and completely stress-free. Dice the onion, mince the garlic, grate the ginger, measure the spices into a small bowl, open the canned tomatoes and coconut cream. This five minutes of preparation transforms the cooking experience entirely.
  2. Caramelize the onion properly. Heat the oil in a large heavy-bottomed pot or Dutch oven over medium heat until shimmering. Add the finely diced onion and a pinch of salt and cook for 8–10 minutes, stirring regularly, until the onion is deeply golden, soft, and beginning to caramelize around the edges. This step cannot be rushed — properly caramelized onion is the flavor foundation of the entire curry and the depth of sweetness it provides is irreplaceable. Medium heat and patience are everything here.
  3. Add garlic and ginger. Add the minced garlic and grated ginger to the caramelized onion and cook for 2 minutes, stirring constantly, until incredibly fragrant and the raw smell has completely cooked out. The combination of caramelized onion, garlic, and ginger at this stage should smell absolutely extraordinary — this is the aromatic foundation that will carry through the entire dish.
  4. Bloom the spices. Add all the spices — cumin, coriander, garam masala, turmeric, smoked paprika, chili powder, cardamom, cinnamon, and black pepper — to the pot and stir continuously for 60–90 seconds until the spices are deeply fragrant and coating everything in the pot in a rich, aromatic paste. Blooming the spices in the oil activates and intensifies their essential oils in a way that simply adding them to liquid cannot achieve — this step is responsible for a significant portion of the extraordinary depth of flavor in the finished curry.
  5. Add the tomatoes and cook down. Pour in the crushed tomatoes and stir well to combine with the spiced onion base. Cook over medium-high heat for 5–7 minutes, stirring frequently, until the tomatoes have broken down completely, darkened slightly in color, and the oil begins to separate and pool around the edges of the mixture — this is called the bhuna stage and it signals that the tomato base is properly cooked and the curry will have genuine depth rather than a raw, acidic flavor.
  6. Add the chickpeas and simmer. Add the drained chickpeas and stir to coat thoroughly in the spiced tomato base. Pour in the coconut cream and stir well to combine. Add the salt and bring to a gentle simmer. Cook uncovered for 10–12 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the sauce has thickened slightly and the chickpeas have absorbed some of the flavor of the curry base. Taste the sauce at this point and adjust the seasoning — it should be deeply savory, warmly spiced, slightly sweet from the coconut cream, and building with gentle heat.
  7. Add the spinach. Add the fresh spinach to the curry in two or three large handfuls, stirring between each addition to allow the spinach to wilt into the sauce before adding more. Fresh spinach wilts to approximately one eighth of its original volume — what seems like an enormous quantity will incorporate into the curry within 2–3 minutes of stirring over medium heat. If using frozen spinach ensure it is completely thawed and squeezed as dry as possible before adding.
  8. Finish and serve. Remove the pot from the heat and squeeze in the lemon juice — the acid brightens and lifts the entire flavor profile of the curry in a way that is subtle but transformative. Taste one final time and adjust with additional salt, lemon juice, or chili powder as needed. The finished curry should be deeply savory, warmly spiced, beautifully creamy, and utterly harmonious. Serve immediately over steamed basmati rice with warm naan bread alongside, garnished with fresh cilantro, sliced red chili, toasted cashews, and a drizzle of additional coconut cream.

Pro Tips for the Perfect Vegan Chickpea Curry

  • Caramelize the onion fully and without rushing. The single most important step in this entire recipe is cooking the onion to true caramelization — deep golden, soft, and sweet rather than merely translucent. This takes 8–10 minutes at medium heat and cannot be accelerated without sacrificing flavor. The depth of sweetness and complexity that properly caramelized onion contributes to the finished curry is irreplaceable and is what separates an extraordinary curry from an ordinary one.
  • Bloom the spices in hot oil always. Adding spices directly to liquid produces a flat, one-dimensional spice flavor. Adding spices to hot oil and cooking for 60–90 seconds before adding any liquid activates the essential oils in the spices and deepens their flavor dramatically — producing a rounded, complex, fully integrated spice flavor that is the defining characteristic of truly great curry.
  • Cook the tomatoes until the oil separates. The bhuna stage — when the oil visibly separates and pools around the edge of the cooked-down tomato mixture — is a critical indicator that the tomato base is properly cooked. Raw or undercooked tomato base makes curry taste flat and acidic. Properly cooked tomato base contributes deep, sweet, complex flavor that enriches every element of the finished dish.
  • Use full-fat coconut cream not light. Full-fat coconut cream produces a sauce of extraordinary richness and depth that light coconut milk or cream cannot replicate. The high fat content of full-fat coconut cream is what creates the silky, luscious texture that makes this curry so deeply satisfying and restaurant-quality in its richness.
  • Add lemon juice at the very end. Acid added at the beginning of cooking loses its brightness during the long simmering process. Added at the very end — off the heat — lemon juice lifts and brightens the entire flavor profile of the curry with a freshness that cuts through the richness of the coconut cream and amplifies every other flavor in the pot.
  • Let it rest for 10 minutes before serving. Like all curries this dish improves significantly during a brief resting period as the flavors continue to meld and develop off the heat. Cover the pot for 10 minutes after cooking before serving — the difference in flavor depth between a curry served immediately and one rested for 10 minutes is genuinely remarkable.

The Healing Power of Curry Spices

The spice blend in this curry is not merely a flavor vehicle — it is a concentrated collection of some of the most extensively studied medicinal plants in the world, each with a documented history of supporting human health that spans thousands of years of Ayurvedic and traditional medicine practice and is now increasingly validated by modern clinical research.

Turmeric is perhaps the most celebrated spice in contemporary nutritional science. Its active compound curcumin has been studied in hundreds of clinical trials for its extraordinary anti-inflammatory properties — demonstrating efficacy comparable to some pharmaceutical anti-inflammatory medications in reducing markers of systemic inflammation that underlie virtually every chronic disease. Curcumin is also a powerful antioxidant, neuroprotective agent, and emerging evidence suggests meaningful anti-cancer properties in multiple tissue types.

Ginger contains gingerols and shogaols — bioactive compounds with potent anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties that have been studied for their ability to reduce nausea, support digestive health, reduce muscle soreness, and lower markers of cardiovascular risk including blood sugar levels and LDL cholesterol.

Cumin has been studied for its ability to enhance digestive enzyme activity, improve iron absorption from plant-based foods — making it a particularly valuable spice for anyone following a vegan diet — reduce blood sugar levels, and provide meaningful antioxidant protection through its thymoquinone content.

Cardamom has been studied for its ability to lower blood pressure, reduce inflammatory markers, fight bacterial infections, and support digestive health through its carminative properties that reduce gas and bloating.

Cinnamon is one of the most extensively studied spices for blood sugar regulation — its active compound cinnamaldehyde has been shown to improve insulin sensitivity and reduce post-meal blood sugar spikes, making it a valuable addition to any meal for anyone managing blood sugar levels.


Flavor Variations

  • Extra Spicy Version: Double the chili powder and add one finely minced fresh green chili with the garlic and ginger for a curry with genuine, building heat that is spectacular for anyone who loves intensely spiced food. Finish with a drizzle of chili oil for additional heat and a beautiful visual element.
  • Butternut Squash and Chickpea: Add one medium butternut squash peeled and diced into 1-inch cubes along with the chickpeas. The squash absorbs the curry sauce beautifully and adds a natural sweetness that pairs extraordinarily well with the warm spices and coconut cream.
  • Lemon and Herb Finished: Replace the spinach with a generous handful of fresh cilantro and fresh mint stirred in completely off the heat for a brighter, more herb-forward curry with a fresher, lighter character that is particularly beautiful in summer.
  • Tomato Free Version: Replace the crushed tomatoes with an additional half can of coconut cream and 2 tablespoons of cashew butter for a lighter-colored, creamier, tomato-free curry with an extraordinarily rich and silky sauce.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~420 kcal16g46g13g18g

This curry delivers an outstanding nutritional profile at 420 calories per serving — 16 grams of plant-based protein from the chickpeas, 13 grams of dietary fiber supporting digestive health and lasting satiety, and an extraordinary concentration of vitamins and minerals from every component of the dish. The turmeric provides curcumin with powerful anti-inflammatory properties. The spinach delivers Vitamins K, A, C, and folate alongside iron and calcium. The chickpeas provide the full spectrum of B vitamins essential for energy metabolism. The coconut cream contributes medium-chain triglycerides that provide immediate energy and support metabolic health. This is food that heals and nourishes as deeply as it satisfies.


Storage

  • Refrigerator: Store cooled curry in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. This curry is one of those genuinely extraordinary recipes that improves with every passing day as the spices continue to bloom and deepen and the chickpeas absorb more of the sauce flavor. Day 3 curry is often better than day 1 curry — making it one of the finest meal prep recipes available.
  • Freezer: This curry freezes beautifully for up to 3 months. Cool completely before transferring to freezer-safe containers in individual portions. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator and reheat gently in a pot over medium-low heat, stirring frequently and adding a splash of coconut cream or vegetable broth to restore the original consistency and richness.
  • Reheating: Reheat gently over medium-low heat in a pot, stirring regularly and adding liquid as needed. The curry will thicken considerably during refrigeration — this is normal and does not affect quality. Add coconut cream, vegetable broth, or water to restore the consistency before serving. Do not reheat at high heat as this can cause the coconut cream to separate.
  • Rice separately: Always store the curry and the rice separately — rice stored in curry becomes mushy and absorbs the sauce leaving insufficient sauce for the chickpeas. Store in separate containers and combine only when serving.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use dried chickpeas instead of canned?

Yes — soak 400g of dried chickpeas overnight in cold water, drain, and simmer in fresh water for 45–60 minutes until completely tender before using. Home-cooked chickpeas have a slightly firmer, more substantial texture than canned and absorb the curry sauce with extraordinary results. Use the chickpea cooking water in place of some of the vegetable broth for additional depth of flavor.

Can I make this curry less spicy?

Yes — reduce or omit the chili powder entirely and replace the smoked paprika with sweet paprika for a mild, aromatic curry with all the warmth and depth of the spice blend but none of the heat. This version is particularly wonderful for children and anyone with a lower tolerance for spicy food.

Why did my coconut cream split?

Coconut cream splits when cooked at excessively high heat or added to a very hot pot. Add the coconut cream over medium rather than high heat and stir continuously as you add it. If the cream does split it does not affect the flavor — simply reduce the heat and stir vigorously to re-emulsify the sauce.

Can I use coconut milk instead of coconut cream?

Yes — coconut milk produces a thinner, lighter sauce than coconut cream. For a richer result use full-fat coconut milk rather than reduced-fat and simmer the curry for an additional 5 minutes uncovered to allow the sauce to reduce and thicken. Alternatively add 2 tablespoons of cashew butter alongside the coconut milk for additional richness and body.

What is the best rice to serve with this curry?

Basmati rice is the classic and most harmonious pairing for this style of curry — its long, separate grains and delicate fragrance complement the rich, spiced sauce beautifully. Brown basmati provides additional fiber and nutrients with a slightly nuttier flavor. Jasmine rice produces a slightly stickier, more fragrant result. Cauliflower rice is an excellent low-carbohydrate alternative that absorbs the curry sauce beautifully.

Can I make this curry in a slow cooker?

Yes — this curry adapts beautifully to slow cooker preparation. Complete steps 2–5 on the stovetop to properly caramelize the onion and bloom the spices then transfer everything to the slow cooker along with the chickpeas, coconut cream, and salt. Cook on low for 6–8 hours or high for 3–4 hours. Add the spinach in the final 30 minutes of cooking and finish with lemon juice before serving.


Tried this recipe? Leave a comment below and let us know how it turned out! Tag us on Instagram and Facebook — we love seeing your plant-powered creations. Looking for more warming, deeply spiced vegan curry and dinner recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan Taquitos Recipe

vegan taquitos recipe

There are snacks you reach for because hunger strikes and something needs to happen quickly. And then there are snacks like these Vegan Taquitos — the kind that make people abandon all other plans the moment they hear them sizzling in the pan, that come out of the oven or air fryer so impossibly golden and shatteringly crispy that the sound of biting into one is genuinely, audibly satisfying, and that reveal a filling so deeply flavored, so warmly spiced, so richly satisfying that calling them a snack feels almost like an understatement. These are those taquitos. The ones that disappear from the serving plate before you have finished making the last batch. The ones that children request by name and adults eat with the same unguarded enthusiasm. The ones that are simultaneously the easiest and the most crowd-pleasing thing you will make all week.

These are tightly rolled corn tortillas filled with a deeply spiced mixture of black beans, sweet potato, and smoky chipotle — mashed together into a filling so rich and satisfying and complexly flavored that it could stand alone as a meal — then baked or air-fried until every surface is shatteringly crispy and golden and the filling is molten and fragrant and absolutely magnificent inside. They are served with a cool, vibrant avocado cream and a fresh tomato salsa that contrast with the hot, crispy taquitos in a way that is one of the most satisfying flavor and texture combinations in all of plant-based cooking.

What makes these taquitos so genuinely outstanding is the filling. Sweet potato provides natural sweetness and a creamy, yielding texture that binds the filling perfectly. Black beans provide plant-based protein and a satisfying earthiness that grounds the sweetness of the potato. Chipotle peppers in adobo sauce provide a smoky, complex heat that is the defining flavor note of the entire dish — warm and building and deeply complex rather than merely hot. Together these three ingredients create a filling of extraordinary depth that is far more than the sum of its parts.

This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free when made with corn tortillas, ready in just 35 minutes, baked or air-fried rather than deep-fried for a significantly lighter result, and absolutely spectacular served with guacamole, salsa, vegan sour cream, or simply eaten by the handful standing over the baking sheet because the smell coming from the oven made waiting impossible.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
15 mins20 mins35 mins4~380 kcal

Ingredients

For the Taquito Filling

  • 1 can (400g) black beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 large sweet potato (approximately 300g), peeled, diced, and roasted or steamed until tender
  • 2 chipotle peppers in adobo sauce, finely minced (plus 1 tbsp of the adobo sauce)
  • 1 medium white onion, finely diced
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tsp ground cumin
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp chili powder
  • ½ tsp dried oregano
  • ½ tsp onion powder
  • ½ tsp salt, plus more to taste
  • ¼ tsp black pepper
  • Juice of 1 lime
  • 2 tbsp fresh cilantro, finely chopped

For the Taquitos

  • 16 small corn tortillas (15cm diameter)
  • 2 tbsp olive oil or neutral spray oil (for brushing)
  • ½ tsp smoked paprika (mixed with oil for brushing)

For the Avocado Cream

  • 2 ripe avocados
  • ½ cup (120g) vegan sour cream or plain vegan yogurt
  • Juice of 1 lime
  • 1 small clove garlic, grated
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • ¼ tsp cumin
  • 2 tbsp fresh cilantro
  • 2–3 tbsp water (to thin to drizzling consistency)

For the Fresh Tomato Salsa

  • 3 medium ripe tomatoes, finely diced
  • ¼ red onion, very finely diced
  • 1 jalapeño, deseeded and finely minced
  • 2 tbsp fresh cilantro, roughly chopped
  • Juice of 1 lime
  • ½ tsp salt
  • Pinch of sugar

Optional Toppings

  • Shredded vegan cheese (melt inside before rolling for extra indulgence)
  • Pickled red onions
  • Sliced jalapeños
  • Hot sauce of choice
  • Vegan sour cream for dipping
  • Fresh lime wedges
  • Shredded iceberg lettuce

To Serve

  • Over a bed of shredded lettuce with salsa and avocado cream
  • As part of a full Mexican feast alongside rice and beans
  • As a party appetizer with multiple dipping sauces
  • As a weeknight dinner with a simple green salad
  • Stuffed into a larger burrito wrap for a taquito burrito

Instructions

  1. Prepare the sweet potato. If not already cooked, peel and dice the sweet potato into 1-inch cubes and either steam for 12 minutes until tender, microwave with a splash of water for 6–8 minutes, or roast at 400°F (200°C) for 20 minutes until soft and caramelized. Roasted sweet potato adds an additional depth of sweetness and flavor to the filling — if time allows it is the preferred method. Set aside to cool slightly.
  2. Make the filling. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the finely diced onion and cook for 4–5 minutes until softened. Add the minced garlic, cumin, smoked paprika, chili powder, dried oregano, and onion powder and stir for 60 seconds until incredibly fragrant. Add the drained black beans, minced chipotle peppers, adobo sauce, salt, and pepper. Stir to combine and cook for 2–3 minutes until heated through and fragrant.
  3. Add the sweet potato and mash. Add the cooked sweet potato to the skillet and mash roughly with a fork or potato masher — combining it with the black bean and spice mixture until a rough, textured filling forms. You want some texture remaining rather than a completely smooth paste — the combination of mashed sweet potato and whole black beans creates an ideal filling consistency that holds together during rolling without being dry or crumbly. Squeeze in the lime juice and stir in the fresh cilantro. Taste and adjust seasoning generously. Set aside to cool for 5 minutes.
  4. Warm the tortillas. This is an essential step — cold corn tortillas crack and split when rolled rather than bending flexibly. Warm them using one of three methods: wrap a stack of 8 in a damp paper towel and microwave for 45 seconds until pliable, warm individually in a dry skillet over medium heat for 20 seconds per side, or wrap in foil and warm in a 300°F (150°C) oven for 5 minutes. Work with warmed tortillas immediately — they stiffen as they cool.
  5. Fill and roll the taquitos. Preheat the oven to 425°F (220°C) and line two large baking sheets with parchment paper. Working quickly with warm tortillas, place approximately 2 tablespoons of filling in a line across the lower third of each tortilla. Roll tightly from the bottom — keeping the roll as tight and compact as possible — and place seam-side down on the prepared baking sheet. A tight roll that holds its shape during baking produces a taquito that is crispy on all surfaces rather than unrolling and becoming flat.
  6. Brush with seasoned oil. Mix the olive oil with the smoked paprika in a small bowl. Brush each taquito generously on all surfaces with the seasoned oil — top, sides, and ends. The oil is what creates the extraordinary golden, shatteringly crispy exterior that makes these taquitos so irresistible. Do not be shy with the oil — under-oiled taquitos bake to a dry, pale result rather than the deep golden crispness this recipe achieves.
  7. Bake or air fry. For oven baking: bake at 425°F (220°C) for 18–22 minutes, turning once halfway through, until deeply golden and crispy on all surfaces. For air frying: place taquitos in a single layer in the air fryer basket, spray generously with oil, and air fry at 400°F (200°C) for 10–12 minutes, turning once, until deeply golden and shatteringly crispy. Air fryer taquitos are marginally crispier than oven-baked and cook in half the time — use this method whenever possible.
  8. Make the avocado cream. While the taquitos bake blend the avocados, vegan sour cream, lime juice, grated garlic, salt, cumin, and cilantro in a blender or food processor until completely smooth. Add water one tablespoon at a time until a drizzleable, pourable consistency is achieved. Taste and adjust with additional lime juice or salt. Transfer to a serving bowl or squeeze bottle.
  9. Make the fresh tomato salsa. Combine the finely diced tomatoes, red onion, jalapeño, cilantro, lime juice, salt, and sugar in a bowl. Toss well and taste — the salsa should be bright, fresh, slightly sharp, and vibrantly flavored. Allow to rest for 5 minutes while the taquitos finish baking — the resting time allows the salt to draw moisture from the tomatoes and the flavors to meld beautifully.
  10. Serve immediately. Arrange the golden taquitos on a serving platter and drizzle generously with the avocado cream. Spoon the fresh tomato salsa alongside or over the top. Add any additional toppings — pickled red onions, sliced jalapeños, fresh cilantro, hot sauce — and serve immediately while the taquitos are at their crispiest and most extraordinary.

Pro Tips for the Crispiest Vegan Taquitos

  • Warm the tortillas until genuinely pliable before rolling. A tortilla that is not warm enough will crack along the roll line the moment you begin rolling it — creating splits that allow the filling to escape during baking and producing taquitos that unravel in the oven. Warm until genuinely soft and flexible — they should bend without any resistance or cracking whatsoever.
  • Roll as tightly as absolutely possible. The tightness of the roll determines the crispiness of the finished taquito. A loosely rolled taquito bakes to a soft, doughy result. A tightly rolled taquito bakes to a shatteringly crispy, uniformly golden result with a distinct snap when bitten. Roll from the bottom with firm, consistent pressure and place immediately seam-side down on the baking sheet.
  • Do not overfill. Two tablespoons of filling per taquito is the correct amount — enough to provide a generous, satisfying filling without making the taquito impossible to roll tightly or causing the filling to burst through the tortilla during baking. Overfilled taquitos are the most common cause of taquitos that unroll or split during cooking.
  • Use the air fryer whenever possible. Air fryer taquitos are marginally but meaningfully crispier than oven-baked ones — the circulating hot air reaches all surfaces simultaneously rather than requiring turning and produces a more evenly golden, more thoroughly crispy result in significantly less time.
  • Make the filling slightly drier than seems necessary. A filling that seems slightly dry when assembling the taquitos will be perfectly moist inside the finished taquito — the moisture from the filling steams inside the closed tortilla during baking. A filling that seems perfectly moist at assembly will be wet inside the finished taquito, making the tortilla soggy from the inside.
  • Serve immediately from the oven. Taquitos are at their absolute peak crispiness the moment they come out of the oven or air fryer. They soften as they sit — serve immediately for the finest result, or recrisp in a hot oven or air fryer for 3–4 minutes if they have been sitting.

The Extraordinary Nutritional Power of This Mexican-Inspired Bowl

Every component of these taquitos has been chosen for both its extraordinary flavor contribution and its genuine nutritional substance — creating a dish that is as nourishing as it is deeply satisfying.

Black beans are one of the most nutritionally outstanding legumes available and a cornerstone of traditional Mexican cuisine for excellent reason. A single serving of these taquitos provides approximately 10 grams of plant-based protein and 10 grams of dietary fiber from the black beans alone — supporting digestive health, promoting lasting satiety, and providing a spectrum of B vitamins, iron, magnesium, and potassium that make them one of the most nutritionally complete plant foods available.

Sweet potato provides one of the richest sources of beta-carotene available in the entire plant kingdom — the orange pigment compound that converts to Vitamin A in the body and supports immune function, vision health, and skin integrity. A single medium sweet potato provides over 400% of the daily recommended Vitamin A intake alongside meaningful amounts of Vitamin C, potassium, manganese, and dietary fiber.

Chipotle peppers in adobo sauce contribute capsaicin — the compound responsible for their characteristic heat — which has been studied extensively for its ability to boost metabolic rate, reduce appetite, provide anti-inflammatory protection, and support cardiovascular health through multiple mechanisms.

Corn tortillas — the traditional wrapper for taquitos — provide a significantly more nutritious base than flour tortillas when made from masa harina. The nixtamalization process used to create masa harina increases the bioavailability of niacin and other B vitamins in the corn dramatically and provides meaningful amounts of calcium from the lime used in the process.

Avocado contributes one of the most impressive fat profiles of any fruit or vegetable — extraordinarily rich in heart-healthy monounsaturated oleic acid, potassium, folate, and fat-soluble vitamins that are all made more bioavailable by the fat in the avocado itself. The avocado cream in this recipe is not merely a delicious accompaniment — it is a genuinely functional nutritional addition that enhances the absorption of fat-soluble nutrients throughout the entire dish.


Flavor Variations

  • Spicy Jackfruit Taquitos: Replace the black bean and sweet potato filling with pulled jackfruit cooked in chipotle adobo, cumin, and smoked paprika for a spectacularly meaty, deeply smoky taquito filling that is particularly outstanding for anyone who misses the texture of pulled pork in their plant-based cooking.
  • Potato and Chorizo Vegan Taquitos: Replace the sweet potato with diced regular potato and add crumbled vegan chorizo to the filling for a richer, smokier, more intensely savory taquito that is extraordinary with a tomatillo green salsa alongside.
  • Refried Bean and Vegan Cheese: Use smooth refried black beans as the base filling and add a generous layer of shredded vegan cheese before rolling for an extraordinarily indulgent taquito with a molten, gooey center that is spectacular as a party food or weekend treat.
  • Lentil and Roasted Corn: Replace the black beans with cooked green lentils and add half a cup of charred roasted corn to the filling for a version with additional textural interest and a beautiful sweetness from the corn that pairs magnificently with the chipotle and lime.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving — 4 taquitos with avocado cream)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~380 kcal12g52g14g14g

At 380 calories per serving these taquitos deliver an outstanding nutritional profile — 12 grams of plant-based protein, 14 grams of dietary fiber representing over half the daily recommended intake, and an exceptional concentration of beta-carotene, B vitamins, iron, and potassium from the sweet potato and black beans. The avocado cream contributes heart-healthy monounsaturated fats that support cardiovascular health and dramatically improve the absorption of the fat-soluble vitamins present throughout the dish. The corn tortillas provide complex carbohydrates alongside the nixtamalization-enhanced B vitamins and calcium that make traditional masa-based preparations so nutritionally distinctive.


Storage

  • Baked taquitos: Store cooled baked taquitos in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. Reheat in a hot oven at 400°F (200°C) for 8–10 minutes or in an air fryer at 375°F (190°C) for 4–5 minutes to restore full crispiness. Do not reheat in the microwave which makes them irreversibly soft and steamed rather than crispy.
  • Uncooked assembled taquitos: Assembled but unbaked taquitos can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 24 hours before baking — making them an ideal make-ahead party food. Brush with oil and bake directly from the refrigerator adding 2–3 minutes to the baking time.
  • Freezer: These taquitos freeze beautifully both before and after baking. Freeze assembled unbaked taquitos on a baking sheet until solid then transfer to a freezer bag for up to 2 months — bake from frozen at 400°F (200°C) for 22–25 minutes. Freeze baked taquitos in the same way and reheat from frozen in a hot oven for 12–15 minutes until heated through and re-crisped.
  • Filling separately: The filling stores in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days and freezes well for up to 2 months — making it possible to have taquito filling always available for assembling fresh taquitos in minutes whenever the craving strikes.
  • Avocado cream: Store with plastic wrap pressed directly onto the surface of the cream to prevent oxidation. Keeps for up to 2 days in the refrigerator — stir well before serving as some liquid separation may occur.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do my corn tortillas crack when I try to roll them?

Cracking corn tortillas are the result of insufficient warming before rolling. Corn tortillas must be genuinely warm and pliable — almost steamy — to roll without cracking. Warm them wrapped in a damp paper towel in the microwave for 45 seconds, or in a dry skillet for 20 seconds per side, and roll immediately while still warm. Working in small batches of 4–6 tortillas at a time keeps each tortilla at the correct temperature for rolling.

Can I use flour tortillas instead of corn?

Yes — flour tortillas roll more easily than corn tortillas and are less prone to cracking. They produce a slightly softer, less crispy exterior than corn tortillas and a different flavor profile — more neutral and bread-like rather than the characteristic earthy corn flavor of traditional taquitos. Use small flour tortillas of the same diameter as the corn tortillas for the most practical rolling size.

Can I deep fry these taquitos instead of baking?

Yes — traditional taquitos are deep fried and the result is arguably crispier than the baked version. Heat neutral oil to 375°F (190°C) in a deep pot and fry the taquitos in batches of 4–6 for 2–3 minutes until deeply golden on all surfaces. Drain on paper towels and serve immediately. The baked and air-fried versions in this recipe are significantly lighter and still produce an excellent crispy result without the mess, oil usage, or calorie content of deep frying.

How do I keep the taquitos from unrolling during baking?

Place the taquitos seam-side down on the baking sheet immediately after rolling — the weight of the taquito holds the seam closed during the initial minutes of baking when the tortilla is softening before it crisps. Alternatively secure each taquito with a toothpick during baking and remove before serving. Ensuring the tortillas are warm enough before rolling and rolling as tightly as possible are the most effective preventive measures.

Can I make these taquitos gluten-free?

Traditional corn tortillas made from masa harina are naturally gluten-free — check the packaging to ensure no wheat has been added to your specific brand. All other ingredients in this recipe are naturally gluten-free. Use tamari in place of soy sauce if adding any soy-based ingredients to the filling for a fully certified gluten-free version.

What is the best dipping sauce for vegan taquitos?

The avocado cream in this recipe is the finest accompaniment — its cool, rich creaminess is the perfect counterpoint to the hot, crispy, spiced taquitos. Additional outstanding dipping options include: tomatillo green salsa, chipotle vegan mayo, vegan sour cream with lime and cilantro, classic guacamole, or a smoky cashew queso made from blended cashews with nutritional yeast, chipotle, and lime juice.


Tried this recipe? Leave a comment below and let us know how it turned out! Tag us on Instagram and Facebook — we love seeing your plant-powered creations. Looking for more crispy, vibrant vegan Mexican-inspired recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

ONE POT VEGAN MUSHROOM STROGANOFF

one pot vegan mushroom stroganoff

There are dinners that feel like a warm embrace at the end of a long day. And then there are dinners like this One Pot Vegan Mushroom Stroganoff — the kind that fills every corner of your kitchen with the most extraordinary aroma of caramelized mushrooms, garlic, and paprika as it simmers, that pours into the bowl a deep, burnished, mahogany-rich sauce so silky and so deeply flavored that people close their eyes on the first spoonful, and that delivers a warmth and comfort so profound and so genuine that the cold world outside becomes entirely irrelevant for as long as the bowl lasts. This is that dinner. The one that becomes a weekly non-negotiable. The one that converts people who thought plant-based cooking could never be truly satisfying into people who stop thinking about meat altogether. The one that is simultaneously the easiest and the most spectacularly delicious thing you will cook all month.

This is a stroganoff built on the most deeply satisfying flavor foundation imaginable — golden-seared mushrooms cooked low and slow until they are caramelized, concentrated, and almost meaty in their intensity, bathed in a rich sauce of vegetable broth, smoked paprika, Dijon mustard, and Worcestershire sauce thickened with a silky swirl of vegan sour cream that transforms everything in the pot into something that tastes like it spent hours on a professional stove rather than thirty minutes on yours. The pasta cooks directly in the sauce — absorbing every drop of flavor as it hydrates and thickens the liquid simultaneously into a glossy, coating, impossibly delicious one-pot masterpiece.

What makes this stroganoff so genuinely outstanding is the one-pot technique. The pasta cooks directly in the broth and sauce rather than separately — releasing its starch as it cooks and naturally thickening the sauce to a silky, glossy consistency that coats every strand of pasta and every piece of mushroom in a layer of deeply flavored richness that no separately cooked pasta can replicate. This technique also means one pot, one pan, minimal washing up, and maximum flavor — the trifecta of weeknight dinner perfection.

This recipe is 100% vegan, ready in just 35 minutes, made in a single pot, naturally adaptable to gluten-free, high in plant-based protein and umami-rich flavor, and absolutely magnificent served directly from the pot into deep, warm bowls with a scattering of fresh parsley and a generous crack of black pepper.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
10 mins25 mins35 mins4~480 kcal

Ingredients

For the Stroganoff

  • 500g mixed mushrooms (cremini, shiitake, and portobello work beautifully together)
  • 1 large white or yellow onion, finely diced
  • 6 cloves garlic, minced
  • 300g pasta (pappardelle, egg-free tagliatelle, or wide egg-free noodles)
  • 3 cups (720ml) vegetable broth
  • 1 cup (240ml) unsweetened plant milk (oat or soy)
  • ¾ cup (180g) vegan sour cream (store-bought or cashew-based)
  • 3 tbsp olive oil or vegan butter
  • 2 tbsp tomato paste
  • 2 tbsp soy sauce or tamari
  • 1 tbsp vegan Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tbsp Dijon mustard
  • 2 tsp smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp sweet paprika
  • 1 tsp dried thyme
  • ½ tsp onion powder
  • Salt and black pepper to taste
  • Juice of half a lemon (added at the very end)

Optional Add-ins

  • 1 cup (150g) frozen peas (add in final 5 minutes)
  • 2 cups (60g) fresh spinach (stir in at end)
  • 1 medium zucchini, diced (add with mushrooms)
  • 200g firm tofu, pressed and crumbled (adds extra protein)
  • ½ cup (60g) walnuts, roughly chopped (adds meaty texture)
  • 1 tbsp nutritional yeast (deepens the savory flavor)
  • 1 tsp truffle oil (added at end for extraordinary luxury)

To Serve

  • Fresh parsley, generously chopped
  • Freshly cracked black pepper — very generous
  • Extra vegan sour cream dolloped on top
  • Chili flakes for warmth and color
  • Fresh dill (traditional and extraordinary)
  • A squeeze of fresh lemon
  • Crusty sourdough or garlic bread alongside

Instructions

  1. Sear the mushrooms in batches. Heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil in a large, wide pot or Dutch oven over high heat until almost smoking. Add the mushrooms in a single layer — working in two batches if necessary to avoid crowding. Leave completely undisturbed for 2–3 minutes until deeply golden and caramelized on the bottom, then flip and cook for a further 2 minutes. Season generously with salt and pepper. Transfer the first batch to a plate and repeat with the remaining mushrooms. Properly seared mushrooms — deeply golden, slightly crispy at the edges, concentrated and nutty in flavor — are the single most important element of an extraordinary stroganoff. Never crowd the pan and never stir too soon.
  2. Sauté the aromatics. Reduce the heat to medium and add the remaining tablespoon of olive oil to the pot. Add the finely diced onion and cook for 5–6 minutes, stirring regularly, until softened and beginning to turn golden at the edges. Add the minced garlic and cook for a further 60–90 seconds until incredibly fragrant. The combination of caramelized onion and garlic at this stage creates an aromatic foundation that carries through the entire dish.
  3. Build the flavor base. Add the tomato paste to the softened onion and garlic and stir continuously for 1–2 minutes until the paste darkens slightly and begins to caramelize — this brief cooking concentrates the tomato flavor and removes any raw taste that would otherwise remain in the finished sauce. Add the smoked paprika, sweet paprika, dried thyme, and onion powder and stir for a further 30 seconds until the spices are fragrant and coating everything in the pot.
  4. Add the liquids and pasta. Pour in the vegetable broth and plant milk and stir well to combine with the spiced base — scraping up any caramelized bits from the bottom of the pot as you stir. Add the soy sauce, vegan Worcestershire sauce, and Dijon mustard and stir to incorporate. Bring to a vigorous boil over high heat. Add the dry pasta directly to the boiling liquid and stir well to submerge. Return the seared mushrooms to the pot and stir to combine.
  5. Cook the pasta in the sauce. Reduce the heat to a lively simmer and cook uncovered for 10–12 minutes, stirring frequently — every 2 minutes — to prevent the pasta from sticking to the bottom of the pot and to ensure even cooking throughout. The pasta will absorb the liquid as it cooks and the natural starch it releases will thicken the sauce simultaneously into a glossy, coating consistency. Add a splash of additional vegetable broth if the sauce becomes too thick before the pasta is fully cooked.
  6. Add the vegan sour cream. Once the pasta is al dente and the sauce has thickened to a silky, glossy consistency reduce the heat to the lowest setting. Add the vegan sour cream and stir gently until completely incorporated throughout the sauce. Do not allow the sauce to boil after adding the sour cream — high heat causes vegan sour cream to split and curdle. A gentle heat and continuous stirring produces a perfectly smooth, uniformly creamy result.
  7. Taste and finish. Squeeze in the lemon juice — this final addition of acid brightens and lifts the entire flavor profile of the stroganoff dramatically. Taste and adjust the seasoning with additional salt, black pepper, soy sauce, or smoked paprika as needed. The finished stroganoff should be deeply savory, warmly spiced, slightly tangy from the sour cream and lemon, and utterly harmonious in every element.
  8. Serve immediately and generously. Divide the stroganoff between deep, warmed bowls and finish each serving with a very generous scattering of fresh parsley, an additional dollop of vegan sour cream, a generous crack of fresh black pepper, and a pinch of chili flakes for color and warmth. Serve immediately — stroganoff is at its absolute peak directly from the pot and loses some of its silky sauce consistency as it sits and the pasta continues to absorb liquid.

Pro Tips for the Most Extraordinary One Pot Stroganoff

  • Sear the mushrooms in a screaming hot dry pot before adding anything else. This single step — cooking the mushrooms at the highest possible heat in a single layer without stirring — is what creates the deep, caramelized, concentrated mushroom flavor that gives this stroganoff its extraordinary meaty depth. A mushroom that is steamed in a crowded pot contributes a fraction of the flavor of one that is properly seared. Use two batches if necessary — it takes an extra four minutes and makes an enormous difference.
  • Cook the tomato paste until it darkens. Raw tomato paste added directly to liquid produces a flat, slightly tinny flavor. Cooked briefly in the hot pot until it deepens to a brick-red color and begins to caramelize it contributes a rich, complex, slightly sweet depth that is one of the defining flavor notes of great stroganoff.
  • Stir the pasta frequently during cooking. Unlike pasta cooked in a large pot of boiling water pasta cooked in a smaller amount of liquid requires more attention — stir every 2 minutes to prevent sticking and ensure even cooking. The starch released by the pasta during this stirring process is exactly what creates the gloriously thick, glossy, coating sauce consistency that makes one-pot pasta so extraordinary.
  • Add sour cream off the heat or on the lowest possible heat. Vegan sour cream splits at high temperatures producing a grainy, separated sauce rather than a silky, uniformly creamy one. Always reduce to the very lowest heat setting before adding and stir continuously and gently as you incorporate it throughout the sauce.
  • Use a combination of mushroom varieties always. Cremini mushrooms provide earthy reliability. Shiitake mushrooms contribute extraordinary umami depth from their naturally occurring glutamates. Portobello mushrooms add meaty, substantial texture. Together they create a mushroom component of far greater complexity and depth than any single variety can produce alone.
  • Finish with lemon juice always. The lemon juice added at the very end of cooking is non-negotiable — it lifts and brightens the rich, heavy sauce in a way that is subtle but completely transformative. Without it the stroganoff can taste slightly flat and one-dimensional. With it every other flavor in the pot is amplified and brightened into perfect balance.

The Extraordinary Flavor Science of Stroganoff

Stroganoff is a dish of extraordinary flavor complexity — and understanding the science behind why it tastes so deeply satisfying helps explain why this vegan version is so remarkably successful at replicating and even surpassing the original.

The foundation of stroganoff flavor is umami — the fifth taste, produced by glutamic acid and ribonucleotides that trigger specific receptors on the tongue producing a savory, mouth-coating, deeply satisfying sensation that is distinct from sweet, sour, salty, and bitter. In traditional beef stroganoff this umami comes primarily from the beef itself and from the sour cream. In this vegan version it comes from multiple, carefully chosen plant-based sources that together create an umami intensity that rivals and in many tasters’ assessments surpasses the original.

Mushrooms — particularly shiitake and portobello varieties — are among the richest plant-based sources of both glutamic acid and the ribonucleotide guanosine monophosphate available. The combination of these two umami compounds creates a synergistic effect — when present together their umami impact is not merely additive but multiplicative, with each compound amplifying the impact of the other to produce a depth of savory flavor that is dramatically greater than either could produce alone.

Soy sauce and Worcestershire sauce contribute additional glutamic acid alongside complex fermentation-derived flavor compounds that add layers of aged, fermented depth to the sauce. Tomato paste provides further glutamic acid alongside lycopene and caramelized sugars from the brief cooking. Dijon mustard adds emulsifying compounds that help maintain the silky consistency of the sauce alongside its characteristic pungent depth.

The result is a sauce with an umami profile that is not merely satisfying — it is deeply, genuinely craveable in the specific neurological sense that umami-rich foods trigger reward pathways in the brain that make us want more of them. This is food that satisfies not just hunger but something deeper and more fundamental — and it achieves this entirely through plants.


Flavor Variations

  • Hungarian Inspired: Double the smoked paprika and add half a teaspoon of caraway seeds to the onion as it cooks. Replace the plant milk with additional vegetable broth and add a tablespoon of red wine vinegar at the end for a deeper, more intensely paprika-forward stroganoff inspired by Hungarian gulyas.
  • Truffle Mushroom Stroganoff: Use exclusively oyster and cremini mushrooms and add a tablespoon of truffle oil in the final minute of cooking. Replace the vegan sour cream with cashew cream for an extraordinarily luxurious version that is genuinely spectacular for special occasions.
  • Green Herb Stroganoff: Stir in two generous handfuls of fresh baby spinach and a quarter cup of fresh dill in the final minute of cooking for a brighter, more herb-forward version with a beautiful visual contrast between the dark, rich sauce and the vivid green herbs.
  • Spicy Stroganoff: Add half a teaspoon of cayenne pepper and a tablespoon of sriracha to the sauce for a version with genuine building heat that is particularly spectacular for anyone who loves intensely spiced comfort food.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~480 kcal16g68g6g14g

At 480 calories per serving this stroganoff delivers a genuinely satisfying and nutritionally substantial meal — 16 grams of plant-based protein from the pasta, mushrooms, and vegan sour cream, 6 grams of dietary fiber, and an extraordinary concentration of B vitamins from the mushrooms including B2, B3, and B5 that support energy metabolism at the cellular level. The mushrooms contribute selenium — one of the most important antioxidant minerals — alongside ergothioneine, a unique antioxidant found almost exclusively in mushrooms that has been studied for extraordinary cellular protective properties. The smoked paprika contributes capsaicin compounds with anti-inflammatory properties and meaningful amounts of Vitamins A and E.


Storage

  • Refrigerator: Store cooled stroganoff in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. The pasta will continue absorbing the sauce during storage — add a generous splash of vegetable broth when reheating and stir well to restore the original silky, saucy consistency. The flavor actually deepens and improves overnight making this an outstanding next-day lunch.
  • Reheating: Reheat gently in a pot over medium-low heat with a splash of vegetable broth or plant milk, stirring continuously. Do not reheat at high heat as the vegan sour cream in the sauce can become grainy when reheated aggressively. Gentle heat and patient stirring produce a perfectly restored silky sauce every time.
  • Freezer: The sauce freezes beautifully for up to 2 months but the cooked pasta does not freeze well — it becomes mushy when thawed. For the finest freezer meal prep make and freeze only the mushroom sauce without the pasta and cook fresh pasta when serving. Thaw the sauce overnight in the refrigerator and reheat gently before tossing with freshly cooked pasta.
  • Make ahead: The seared mushrooms and flavor base can be made up to 2 days in advance and stored in the refrigerator. Add the broth, pasta, and remaining ingredients and complete the recipe on the day of serving for a make-ahead dinner that comes together in under 15 minutes on the night.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make this recipe gluten-free?

Yes — use your favorite gluten-free wide pasta shape and replace the soy sauce with tamari and the vegan Worcestershire sauce with a gluten-free version. Gluten-free pasta absorbs liquid slightly differently than regular pasta — monitor the sauce consistency more carefully during cooking and add additional broth if needed as gluten-free pasta can absorb liquid faster.

What is the best vegan sour cream for stroganoff?

Store-bought vegan sour cream brands vary considerably in their flavor and ability to withstand heat without splitting. Cashew-based vegan sour creams are the most heat-stable and produce the silkiest, most luxurious result. Alternatively make your own by blending one cup of soaked raw cashews with two tablespoons of lemon juice, one tablespoon of apple cider vinegar, half a teaspoon of salt, and enough water to reach a thick, pourable consistency.

Can I add protein to make this more filling?

Yes — this stroganoff is outstanding with additional plant-based protein. Sliced vegan sausage browned in the pot before the mushrooms, crumbled tempeh cooked alongside the mushrooms, or white beans stirred into the sauce in the final minutes all work beautifully. Lentil-based pasta used in place of regular pasta significantly increases the protein content without any change to the recipe or technique.

Why did my sauce become too thick?

One-pot pasta dishes thicken considerably as the pasta releases starch during cooking and continues absorbing liquid after cooking. Add additional vegetable broth — one quarter cup at a time — and stir well over gentle heat to restore the desired consistency. The sauce should coat the pasta generously but still flow and pool slightly at the bottom of the bowl when served.

Can I use regular pasta instead of wide noodles?

Yes — any pasta shape works in this recipe. Penne, rigatoni, fusilli, and farfalle all cook beautifully in the sauce. Wide, flat shapes like pappardelle and tagliatelle carry the rich sauce most effectively but shorter shapes are perfectly delicious and slightly more practical for stirring during the one-pot cooking process.

Can I make this in a slow cooker?

Yes with a modification — sear the mushrooms and sauté the aromatics and build the flavor base on the stovetop first then transfer everything to the slow cooker with the broth, sauces, and spices. Cook on low for 4–5 hours. Cook the pasta separately and stir into the slow cooker with the vegan sour cream in the final 30 minutes. This produces a deeper, more concentrated sauce flavor than the stovetop version.


Tried this recipe? Leave a comment below and let us know how it turned out! Tag us on Instagram and Facebook — we love seeing your plant-powered creations. Looking for more warming, deeply satisfying vegan one-pot dinner recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!