party dessert vegan

Best Creamy Lemon Squares

best creamy lemon squares

There are desserts that taste pleasant. And then there are desserts like these Best Vegan Creamy Lemon Squares — the kind that deliver such a sharp, bright, intensely lemony filling over such a perfectly crumbly, buttery shortbread base that the contrast between the two stops you completely on the first bite. This is that lemon square. The one that makes everything else taste a little flat afterward. The one that is equally spectacular served at a summer picnic, a holiday dessert table, or sliced into small squares and eaten one after another from the refrigerator at midnight because the craving was specific and these are exactly what was needed.

These lemon squares start with a classic vegan shortbread base — cold vegan butter, flour, powdered sugar, and a pinch of salt pressed into a tin and baked until lightly golden — then topped with a filling of fresh lemon juice, lemon zest, coconut cream, and cornstarch cooked into a smooth, intensely lemony curd that sets over the shortbread into a firm, sliceable layer of extraordinary brightness and richness.

What makes these squares so outstanding is the ratio — more lemon than most recipes use and less sweetness than most recipes default to, producing a filling that tastes genuinely, assertively, gloriously lemony rather than merely sweet with a faint citrus note, set into a creamy, silky layer that holds clean edges when sliced.

This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free when made with gluten-free flour, ready in about 55 minutes plus chilling, and absolutely magnificent dusted with powdered sugar and served cold in generous squares.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeChill TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
20 mins30 mins2 hours2 hrs 50 min16~190 kcal

Ingredients

For the Shortbread Base

  • 1½ cups (180g) all-purpose flour
  • ⅓ cup (40g) powdered sugar
  • ½ tsp fine salt
  • ½ cup (115g) cold vegan butter, cut into small cubes

For the Creamy Lemon Filling

  • ¾ cup (180ml) fresh lemon juice (from 4–5 large lemons)
  • Zest of 3 lemons
  • ¾ cup (150g) cane sugar
  • 1 cup (240ml) full-fat coconut cream
  • 4 tbsp cornstarch
  • ¼ tsp turmeric (for color — adds no discernible flavor)
  • Pinch of salt
  • 2 tbsp vegan butter (stirred in at the end for gloss)

For Finishing

  • Powdered sugar for dusting
  • Extra lemon zest for garnish (optional)

Instructions

  1. Preheat and prepare the tin. Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Line a 20cm (8-inch) square baking tin with parchment paper, leaving overhang on two sides for easy removal.
  2. Make the shortbread base. In a bowl combine the flour, powdered sugar, and salt. Add the cold vegan butter cubes and rub into the flour quickly with your fingertips until the mixture resembles fine, sandy breadcrumbs that hold together when pressed. Press firmly and evenly into the prepared tin to form a uniform base approximately 8mm thick.
  3. Blind bake the base. Bake the shortbread base for 18–20 minutes until set and very lightly golden at the edges. It should feel firm and dry to the touch. Remove from the oven and let cool for 5 minutes while making the filling — the base does not need to cool completely.
  4. Make the lemon filling. In a medium saucepan whisk together the lemon juice, lemon zest, sugar, coconut cream, cornstarch, turmeric, and salt until the cornstarch is completely dissolved. Place over medium heat and cook, whisking continuously without stopping, until the mixture thickens dramatically and large bubbles begin to appear on the surface — approximately 8–10 minutes. Remove from heat and whisk in the vegan butter cubes until melted and incorporated.
  5. Pour over the base. Pour the hot lemon filling immediately over the still-warm shortbread base. Smooth the surface with an offset spatula. The filling should be thick enough to flow slowly rather than running freely.
  6. Chill until set. Allow to cool at room temperature for 20 minutes then refrigerate for a minimum of 2 hours, ideally overnight, until the filling is completely firm and set throughout.
  7. Slice and dust. Lift the set lemon square slab out of the tin using the parchment overhang. Using a sharp knife dipped in hot water and wiped dry between each cut, slice into 16 even squares. Dust generously with powdered sugar immediately before serving.

Pro Tips

  • Whisk the filling continuously without stopping from the moment the pan goes on the heat — any pause allows the cornstarch to settle and form lumps on the bottom of the pan.
  • Pour the filling over a warm rather than cold shortbread base — this helps the filling adhere to and set against the base rather than separating into a distinct layer.
  • Use fresh lemon juice only — bottled lemon juice produces a flat, one-dimensional filling that is noticeably inferior to the bright, complex flavor of fresh.
  • Chill for the full 2 hours minimum before slicing — cutting into partially set lemon squares produces ragged, messy edges. A fully set square slices perfectly cleanly.
  • Dip the knife in hot water and wipe between every cut for the sharpest, most professional edges.

Why These Lemon Squares Are the Best Version

Most lemon square recipes err on the side of too much sweetness and too little lemon, producing a dessert that is pleasant but not particularly memorable. This recipe specifically inverts that ratio — using significantly more fresh lemon juice and zest than standard and less sugar — producing squares where the lemon is the dominant, forward flavor and the sweetness exists to balance and round it rather than to overwhelm it. This produces the specific, sharp, bright, almost electric lemon flavor that makes a truly great lemon square genuinely difficult to stop eating.


Flavor Variations

  • Lime Squares: Replace the lemon juice and zest with fresh lime juice and lime zest for a more tropical, slightly more tart version with a beautiful pale green filling.
  • Lemon Lavender Squares: Add 1 teaspoon of culinary dried lavender to the filling while cooking and strain out before pouring for a fragrant, floral version.
  • Raspberry Lemon Squares: Press a layer of fresh raspberries onto the shortbread base before adding the filling for a raspberry-lemon combination that is spectacular in summer.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Square)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~190 kcal1g26g0g9g

Storage

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container in a single layer for up to 5 days. These squares are best served cold — the filling is firmer and more sliceable and the contrast with the shortbread base is more pronounced when chilled.
  • Freezer: Freeze in a single layer until solid then transfer to a freezer-safe container with parchment between layers for up to 2 months. Thaw in the refrigerator overnight before serving.
  • Dusting: Dust with powdered sugar immediately before serving rather than in advance — the powdered sugar absorbs moisture from the filling during storage and becomes invisible and damp if added too early.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is my filling not setting firmly?

Filling that does not set is caused by insufficient cornstarch, insufficient cooking time, or not chilling for long enough. Ensure the filling has thickened dramatically on the stovetop with visible large bubbles before pouring, and chill for the full 2 hours minimum.

Can I make these gluten-free?

Yes — use a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend for the shortbread base. The filling is naturally gluten-free. The shortbread may be slightly more crumbly than the regular version but still delicious.

Why did the filling separate from the base?

This usually happens when cold filling is poured over a cold or fully cooled base. Pouring hot filling over a still-warm base helps them bond as they cool together. A thin layer of jam brushed over the cooled shortbread before adding the filling can also help adhesion.


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 bright, indulgent vegan dessert bar recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

BANANA PUDDING

banana pudding

There are desserts that take you back to a specific moment — a grandmother’s kitchen, a summer barbecue, a Sunday afternoon that smelled of vanilla and ripe bananas. And then there are desserts like this Vegan Banana Pudding — the kind that captures every single one of those feelings and delivers them in a bowl so beautiful, so deeply nostalgic, and so profoundly satisfying that people go quiet for a moment on the first spoonful and then immediately ask for the recipe. This is that dessert. The one that tastes like a memory. The one that is simultaneously the most comforting and the most elegant thing on the dessert table. The one that makes people stop and say — with genuine, unreserved disbelief — that this is entirely plant-based.

This is a banana pudding of extraordinary classical beauty — layers of silky, vanilla-scented custard pudding made from scratch with oat milk and coconut cream, alternating with crisp vanilla wafer cookies that soften slowly into the pudding into something that is neither quite cookie nor quite cake but something entirely and magnificently its own, and generous slices of ripe, fragrant banana that perfume every layer with their sweet, tropical presence, all crowned with a cloud of whipped coconut cream so light and so voluminous that it trembles when the dish is set on the table. It is stunning to look at. It is extraordinary to eat. And it takes thirty minutes to make.

What makes this pudding so genuinely outstanding is the from-scratch vanilla custard. Unlike instant pudding mixes — which rely on artificial flavors, colorings, and stabilizers to achieve their characteristic texture — this custard is made the classical way: oat milk warmed with vanilla bean, enriched with coconut cream, thickened with cornstarch and a touch of agar agar into a pudding of such extraordinary silkiness and depth of flavor that it is in a completely different category from anything that comes from a packet. The flavor is clean, pure, and deeply vanilla — with a richness from the coconut cream that makes every spoonful feel genuinely indulgent.

This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free when made with gluten-free vanilla wafers, made without refined sugar in the custard, ready in just 30 minutes of active preparation plus chilling time, and absolutely, completely, magnificently worth every moment it requires.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeChill TimeServingsCalories
15 mins15 mins4 hours6~420 kcal

Ingredients

For the Vanilla Custard Pudding

  • 3 cups (720ml) unsweetened oat milk
  • 1 cup (240ml) full-fat coconut cream
  • ½ cup (100g) cane sugar or coconut sugar
  • 4 tbsp cornstarch
  • 1 tsp agar agar powder (for additional firmness — optional but recommended)
  • 2 tsp pure vanilla extract or seeds from 1 vanilla bean
  • ¼ tsp turmeric (purely for the classic yellow color — adds no flavor)
  • Pinch of salt
  • 2 tbsp vegan butter (stirred in at the very end for extraordinary richness)

For the Whipped Coconut Cream

  • 2 cans (800ml total) full-fat coconut cream, refrigerated overnight
  • 3 tbsp powdered sugar
  • 1½ tsp pure vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt

For Assembly

  • 4–5 ripe but firm bananas, sliced into coins approximately 1cm thick
  • 200g vegan vanilla wafer cookies (Nilla wafers style — check for vegan varieties)
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice (toss with banana slices to prevent browning)

For Topping

  • Additional banana slices for decoration
  • Crushed vanilla wafer cookies
  • Extra whipped coconut cream
  • Fresh mint leaves
  • A light dusting of cinnamon or nutmeg
  • Vegan caramel drizzle (optional but extraordinary)

Instructions

  1. Refrigerate the coconut cream overnight. Place both cans of full-fat coconut cream in the coldest part of the refrigerator for a minimum of 8 hours — ideally 24 hours. The cold separates the solid coconut fat from the liquid, making it possible to whip it into the light, stable cream that crowns this pudding. This is the one step that cannot be rushed — plan ahead.
  2. Make the vanilla custard. In a medium heavy-bottomed saucepan whisk together the oat milk, coconut cream, sugar, cornstarch, agar agar if using, turmeric, and salt until the cornstarch is completely dissolved with no lumps remaining — this pre-whisking before heat is applied prevents lumps from forming during cooking. Place over medium heat and cook, whisking continuously and reaching every corner of the pan, until the mixture thickens to a pudding consistency — approximately 8–10 minutes. The pudding is ready when it coats the back of a spoon thickly and a line drawn through it with a finger holds its shape cleanly.
  3. Finish the custard. Remove from heat immediately and stir in the vanilla extract and vegan butter until completely incorporated. The butter adds a richness and gloss to the finished pudding that makes it feel genuinely luxurious. Pour through a fine mesh sieve into a clean bowl to remove any lumps and produce a perfectly smooth custard. Press a sheet of plastic wrap directly onto the surface of the custard — preventing a skin from forming — and allow to cool for 15 minutes before using while still slightly warm.
  4. Prepare the banana slices. Slice the bananas into coins approximately 1cm thick and toss immediately with the lemon juice in a bowl — the acid prevents the banana from oxidizing and turning brown, keeping the slices fresh and visually beautiful throughout the chilling time. The lemon flavor is completely undetectable in the finished pudding.
  5. Whip the coconut cream. Open the refrigerated coconut cream cans without shaking. Scoop only the solid white coconut fat from the top of each can into a large cold mixing bowl — discard or save the liquid at the bottom for smoothies. Whip on high speed with a hand mixer or stand mixer for 2–3 minutes until light, fluffy, and holding soft peaks. Add the powdered sugar, vanilla extract, and salt and whip for a further 60 seconds until the cream is thick, stable, and gloriously voluminous. Refrigerate until assembly.
  6. Assemble the pudding. Use a large trifle bowl, deep rectangular dish, or individual serving glasses — clear vessels show the beautiful layers most dramatically. Begin with a layer of vanilla wafer cookies covering the entire base. Add a layer of banana slices arranged in a single, even layer over the cookies. Pour or ladle a generous layer of the warm custard over the bananas — enough to fill between the banana slices and come just above them. Repeat the layers — cookies, bananas, custard — until all ingredients are used finishing with a final layer of custard on top.
  7. Add the whipped coconut cream. Spoon or pipe the whipped coconut cream over the top of the assembled pudding in generous, billowing clouds. Use the back of a spoon to create beautiful swoops and peaks in the cream for the most visually spectacular presentation. Alternatively pipe the cream using a large star tip for a more elegant, decorated finish.
  8. Decorate and chill. Arrange additional banana slices decoratively over the whipped cream. Scatter crushed vanilla wafer crumbs over the entire surface. Add fresh mint leaves for color and a light dusting of cinnamon or nutmeg. Drizzle with vegan caramel if using. Cover loosely and refrigerate for a minimum of 4 hours — ideally overnight. During this chilling time the custard sets completely, the cookies soften into the custard into something magnificently between cookie and cake, and the flavors meld into the extraordinary unified whole that makes banana pudding so deeply satisfying.
  9. Serve beautifully. Serve directly from the refrigerator — banana pudding is at its finest when cold, when the custard is perfectly set, the cream is at its firmest, and the cookies have softened to their ideal texture. Scoop generous portions ensuring every serving contains all layers — cookie, banana, custard, and cream — in every spoonful.

Pro Tips for the Most Extraordinary Vegan Banana Pudding

  • Whisk the custard continuously and without stopping. The moment you stop whisking a custard cooking over direct heat is the moment lumps begin to form. Whisk continuously — reaching every corner and edge of the pan — from the moment the pan goes on the heat until the moment it comes off. A silicone whisk that conforms to the curved bottom of the saucepan is the ideal tool for this application.
  • Use ripe but firm bananas. The ideal banana for pudding is fully yellow with just the beginning of brown spots — ripe enough to be sweet and fragrant but firm enough to hold its shape during assembly and chilling rather than turning mushy. Underripe bananas lack sweetness. Overripe bananas collapse during chilling and produce an unappetizing texture.
  • Press plastic wrap directly onto the custard surface. This simple step — placing the plastic wrap in direct contact with the custard surface rather than over the top of the bowl — prevents the custard skin that forms when custard cools exposed to air. A skin-free custard produces a perfectly smooth, silky pudding layer that is visually and texturally superior in every respect.
  • Chill for the full 4 hours minimum — overnight is better. The transformation that happens during the chilling period is one of the most remarkable in all of dessert making — the cookies absorb moisture from the custard and soften from crispy wafers into something that is simultaneously yielding and substantial — and this transformation requires sufficient time to complete fully. A pudding chilled for only 1–2 hours will have crunchy cookies and a looser custard. A pudding chilled overnight will have perfectly softened cookies and a firmly set, magnificently silky custard.
  • Assemble in a clear vessel always. The layered beauty of banana pudding — the alternating ivory custard, golden banana, and pale cookie layers — is one of its most appealing qualities and can only be appreciated through a clear glass or bowl. A trifle bowl is the most spectacular presentation. Individual mason jars or clear glasses are beautiful for individual servings and particularly elegant for dinner party desserts.
  • Add the decorated banana slices to the top immediately before serving. Banana slices used for decoration on the very top of the pudding will begin to brown during the chilling period despite the lemon juice treatment — add the decorative top banana slices in the final 30 minutes before serving for the most visually beautiful presentation.

The Timeless Appeal of Banana Pudding

Banana pudding is one of the most beloved desserts in American culinary history — a preparation so deeply embedded in Southern food culture in particular that it has transcended its regional origins to become one of the most universally recognized and requested desserts across the entire country. Its origins trace to the late nineteenth century when vanilla custard pudding — a staple of American home cooking — began to be layered with the increasingly available and affordable banana, creating a combination that proved so immediately and universally appealing that it became a classic almost instantaneously.

The genius of banana pudding lies in its textural evolution during the chilling period. When first assembled the dessert has three distinct textures — crispy cookies, silky custard, and firm banana. After four hours of chilling these three textures have begun to meld and transform — the cookies have absorbed custard moisture and softened into something halfway between a cookie and a cake, the custard has set to a firm, sliceable consistency, and the bananas have released some of their natural sugars into the surrounding custard, perfuming every layer with their characteristic sweetness. After overnight chilling the transformation is complete — the pudding has become a unified whole that is entirely different from and entirely more extraordinary than the sum of its assembled parts.

This vegan version honors every element of the classical preparation while replacing the dairy custard with an oat milk and coconut cream custard that is — in the context of a layered, chilled pudding — indistinguishable from its dairy counterpart in richness, silkiness, and depth of vanilla flavor. The whipped coconut cream replaces whipped dairy cream with a result so similar in texture and flavor that blind tasters consistently identify it as dairy. The vegan vanilla wafers provide the same textural journey from crispy to softened that makes banana pudding so uniquely satisfying.

This is not a lesser version of a great dessert. It is a great dessert. The bananas are real. The vanilla is real. The joy is completely, entirely real.


Flavor Variations

  • Chocolate Banana Pudding: Replace one cup of the oat milk with chocolate oat milk and add 3 tablespoons of raw cacao powder to the custard for a deeply chocolate version that is particularly spectacular with a layer of vegan chocolate ganache between the custard and whipped cream layers.
  • Caramel Banana Pudding: Replace the vanilla custard with a caramel custard made by cooking the sugar until it caramelizes to a deep amber before adding the oat milk — creating a butterscotch-flavored custard that pairs magnificently with the banana and whipped cream for an extraordinarily indulgent caramel banana experience.
  • Tropical Banana Pudding: Add a layer of diced mango and toasted coconut between the banana and custard layers and replace the vanilla wafers with coconut shortbread cookies for a tropical-inspired version that is particularly spectacular in summer and pairs beautifully with a passion fruit drizzle over the whipped cream.
  • Peanut Butter Banana Pudding: Swirl 3 tablespoons of natural peanut butter into the warm custard before assembling and add a layer of chopped roasted peanuts between the banana and custard layers for a version inspired by the classic Elvis combination of peanut butter and banana that is one of the most addictive dessert flavors imaginable.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~420 kcal5g62g3g18g

At 420 calories per serving this pudding delivers the genuine indulgence of a classic dessert alongside meaningful nutrition from its whole food ingredients. The bananas provide potassium — one of the most important minerals for cardiovascular and muscle function — alongside Vitamins B6 and C, manganese, and prebiotic fiber that feeds beneficial gut bacteria. The oat milk base contributes beta-glucan fiber with well-documented cholesterol-lowering properties and meaningful amounts of iron and B vitamins. The coconut cream provides medium-chain triglycerides that support metabolic health and rapid energy availability. The vanilla — used generously in this recipe — contributes vanillin, a powerful antioxidant compound with anti-inflammatory properties that has been studied for neuroprotective effects.


Storage

  • Assembled pudding: Cover tightly with plastic wrap and store in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. The pudding actually improves for the first 24 hours as the cookies continue to soften and the flavors deepen and meld. Beyond 3 days the banana slices begin to brown noticeably and the cookie layers become too soft — the pudding is best consumed within 3 days of assembly.
  • Custard separately: The vanilla custard stores in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days — press plastic wrap directly onto the surface to prevent a skin from forming. Reheat gently in a saucepan over low heat with a splash of oat milk, whisking continuously, if you wish to use it warm for another application.
  • Whipped coconut cream: Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. It will firm considerably during storage — allow to sit at room temperature for 5 minutes and whisk briefly to restore its original lightness before using.
  • Individual servings: Assembled individual puddings in sealed mason jars or glasses keep beautifully in the refrigerator for up to 3 days — making them an outstanding make-ahead dessert for dinner parties, meal prep, or packed lunches. Add the decorative banana slices and cookie crumb topping in the final 30 minutes before serving.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did my custard turn out lumpy?

Lumpy custard is almost always caused by one of two things — the cornstarch was not fully dissolved in the cold milk before heating, or the custard was not stirred continuously during cooking. Whisk the cornstarch and cold milk together very thoroughly before applying heat and whisk continuously and without stopping throughout the entire cooking process. If lumps do form despite continuous stirring strain the finished custard through a fine mesh sieve while still warm — this removes virtually all lumps and produces a perfectly smooth result.

How ripe should the bananas be for banana pudding?

Fully yellow bananas with just the beginning of brown spots are ideal — they are sweet enough to contribute genuine banana flavor to the pudding, firm enough to hold their shape during the chilling period, and fragrant enough to perfume the surrounding custard with their characteristic aroma. Avoid very green bananas which are starchy and flavorless, and very overripe bananas which will turn mushy and brown quickly during the chilling period.

Can I make this pudding without coconut cream?

Yes — replace the coconut cream in the custard with additional oat milk and add 2 tablespoons of cashew butter for richness. For the whipped topping use a commercial vegan whipped cream from a can, aquafaba whipped with cream of tartar and powdered sugar, or a whipped cashew cream made from blended soaked cashews with vanilla and powdered sugar. The coconut cream version is the most consistently successful and most similar to dairy whipped cream but these alternatives are all viable.

Can I use instant vegan pudding mix instead of making the custard from scratch?

Yes — a good quality vegan instant pudding mix prepared with oat milk produces a perfectly acceptable custard layer that saves significant time and effort. The from-scratch custard in this recipe is superior in flavor depth and texture but the instant version is an excellent shortcut for occasions when time is limited. Add a teaspoon of vanilla extract and a tablespoon of coconut cream to the instant pudding mixture for a richer, more flavorful result.

What vegan vanilla wafers should I use?

Several brands produce vegan vanilla wafer cookies that perform beautifully in banana pudding. Check the ingredients list for any dairy, eggs, or honey — many standard vanilla wafer cookies are accidentally vegan. If dedicated vegan vanilla wafers are unavailable in your area substitute with vegan shortbread cookies, vegan digestive biscuits, or vegan graham crackers — all produce excellent results with a slightly different but equally delicious character in the finished pudding.

Can I serve this pudding warm?

Traditional banana pudding is served chilled — the chilling period is essential for the cookie softening and custard setting that define the dessert. However the warm custard alone served immediately after cooking over sliced bananas and vanilla wafers with whipped coconut cream on top produces a delicious warm banana pudding trifle that is a completely different but equally wonderful dessert experience — particularly spectacular served warm in winter with the cold whipped coconut cream providing an extraordinary temperature contrast.


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 dreamy, indulgent vegan dessert recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan Chocolate Peanut Butter Brownie Bars

vegan chocolate peanut butter brownie bars

There are brownies you bake because something chocolatey is needed. And then there are brownies like these Vegan Chocolate Peanut Butter Brownie Bars — the kind that come out of the oven dense and fudgy and glossy on top, sliced to reveal a thick layer of creamy peanut butter rippling through the center of each bar, finished with a thin chocolate ganache that sets to a barely-there sheen over the entire surface. This is that brownie. The one that combines two of the most universally beloved flavors on the planet in a single bar so deeply satisfying that one piece is never quite enough. The one that disappears from the tin before it has properly cooled.

These bars layer a rich, fudgy vegan chocolate brownie batter with a thick peanut butter filling that sets into a distinct, creamy layer during baking, all finished with a glossy chocolate ganache topping. The result is a bar that delivers three genuinely distinct layers — fudgy brownie, creamy peanut butter, and glossy ganache — in every single bite.

What makes these bars so outstanding is the peanut butter layer — thickened with powdered sugar and a touch of coconut oil into a consistency that holds its shape as a distinct layer during baking rather than sinking into the brownie batter, ensuring that every single square has a generous, visible stripe of peanut butter throughout.

This recipe is 100% vegan, ready in just 45 minutes, naturally dairy-free and egg-free, and absolutely magnificent eaten at room temperature when the layers are at their most distinct and the ganache has set to a perfectly glossy finish.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeChill TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
20 mins25 mins30 mins75 mins16~290 kcal

Ingredients

For the Brownie Batter

  • 1 cup (120g) all-purpose flour
  • ½ cup (45g) cocoa powder
  • 1 cup (200g) cane sugar
  • ½ tsp baking powder
  • ¼ tsp fine salt
  • ½ cup (120ml) neutral vegetable oil
  • ½ cup (120ml) plant milk
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 1 tsp apple cider vinegar
  • ½ cup (85g) vegan chocolate chips

For the Peanut Butter Layer

  • 1 cup (260g) natural smooth peanut butter
  • ½ cup (60g) powdered sugar
  • 2 tbsp coconut oil, melted
  • ½ tsp vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt

For the Chocolate Ganache Topping

  • 150g vegan dark chocolate, finely chopped
  • ½ cup (120ml) full-fat coconut cream
  • 1 tbsp maple syrup

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven and prepare the pan. Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Line a 20cm (8-inch) square baking pan with parchment paper, leaving overhang on the sides for easy removal.
  2. Make the brownie batter. In a large bowl whisk together the flour, cocoa powder, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Add the oil, plant milk, vanilla extract, and apple cider vinegar. Stir until just combined and smooth. Fold in the chocolate chips.
  3. Make the peanut butter layer. In a bowl combine the peanut butter, powdered sugar, melted coconut oil, vanilla extract, and salt. Mix until smooth and thick — the mixture should be firm enough to spread without sinking into the brownie batter.
  4. Assemble the bars. Pour the brownie batter into the prepared pan and spread evenly. Drop the peanut butter mixture in large spoonfuls across the surface of the brownie batter, then spread gently into an even layer using an offset spatula or the back of a spoon, being careful not to mix the layers together.
  5. Bake. Bake for 22–26 minutes until the edges are set and a toothpick inserted in the brownie layer (avoiding the peanut butter) comes out with just a few moist crumbs. Do not overbake — the bars firm up considerably as they cool.
  6. Make the ganache. While the bars cool, heat the coconut cream in a small saucepan until just simmering. Remove from heat, add the chopped chocolate, and let sit for 2 minutes undisturbed. Stir gently from the center outward until completely smooth and glossy. Stir in the maple syrup.
  7. Top and chill. Pour the ganache over the cooled bars and spread to the edges. Refrigerate for 30 minutes until the ganache has set.
  8. Slice and serve. Lift the bars out using the parchment overhang and slice into 16 squares with a sharp knife dipped in hot water between cuts.

Pro Tips

  • Do not overbake the brownie layer — remove when the edges are set but the center still looks slightly underdone, as the bars continue to firm during cooling and chilling.
  • Make the peanut butter layer thick enough to hold its shape — if it seems too soft, add additional powdered sugar one tablespoon at a time.
  • Spread the peanut butter layer gently to avoid mixing it into the brownie batter — keep the layers distinct for the most dramatic visual and textural result.
  • Dip the knife in hot water and wipe between slices for the cleanest, most professional cuts through the ganache layer.

Why Peanut Butter and Chocolate Work So Well Together

As with all peanut butter and chocolate combinations, the appeal lies in the complementary balance of flavors — the bitterness of dark chocolate balanced by the sweetness of the brownie, against the rich, slightly salty, intensely nutty peanut butter that provides depth, texture, and the specific sweet-salty contrast that makes this pairing so universally addictive.


Flavor Variations

  • Almond Butter Brownie Bars: Replace the peanut butter with almond butter for a subtler, more delicate nut flavor.
  • Salted Caramel Brownie Bars: Replace the peanut butter layer with a thick salted date caramel for a different but equally indulgent variation.
  • Raspberry Brownie Bars: Replace the peanut butter layer with a thick raspberry jam spread for a chocolate-raspberry combination.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Bar)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~290 kcal6g30g3g17g

Storage

  • Room temperature: Store in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The ganache remains set at cool room temperature.
  • Refrigerator: Keeps for up to 1 week; bring to room temperature for 10 minutes before serving for the best texture.
  • Freezer: Freeze individually wrapped bars for up to 2 months. Thaw in the refrigerator overnight before serving.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make these bars gluten-free?

Yes — use a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend in the brownie batter. The other layers are naturally gluten-free.

Why is my peanut butter layer sinking into the brownie?

This is caused by a peanut butter mixture that is too soft or a brownie batter that is too thin. Ensure the peanut butter layer is thick and firm before spreading, and add extra powdered sugar if needed to stiffen it.

Can I skip the ganache topping?

Yes — the bars are delicious without the ganache, though it adds a professional finish and an extra layer of chocolate indulgence.


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 indulgent vegan brownie and dessert bar recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan Chocolate Fudge

vegan chocolate fudge

There are treats you make because something sweet is needed. And then there are treats like this Vegan Chocolate Fudge — the kind that sets into perfectly dense, glossy squares that melt slowly on the tongue with a rich, intensely chocolatey flavor that rivals anything from a candy shop. This is that fudge. The one that requires no candy thermometer, no stovetop drama, and no risk of grainy, broken sugar crystals. The one that disappears from the tin within a day of being made.

This fudge uses a simple, foolproof method built on melted vegan chocolate, full-fat coconut cream, and a touch of vegan butter, set in the refrigerator until firm and sliceable. It avoids the traditional candy-making process entirely, relying instead on the natural setting properties of chocolate and coconut fat to produce a result that is every bit as rich and dense as classical fudge.

What makes this fudge so outstanding is its simplicity — four main ingredients, no thermometer, no boiling sugar syrup, just melted chocolate and coconut cream combined and chilled, producing a result that is consistently smooth and perfectly set every single time.

This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free, ready in just 15 minutes of active preparation plus chilling time, and absolutely wonderful cut into small squares for gifting, parties, or simply keeping in the refrigerator for whenever a chocolate craving strikes.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeChill TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
15 mins3 hours3 hrs 15 mins16~150 kcal

Ingredients

For the Fudge

  • 400g vegan dark chocolate (60-70% cocoa), finely chopped
  • 1 cup (240ml) full-fat coconut cream
  • 3 tbsp vegan butter
  • 2 tbsp maple syrup
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt

Optional Add-ins

  • ½ cup (75g) chopped toasted walnuts or pecans, folded in before setting
  • ¼ cup (45g) vegan chocolate chips folded in for extra texture
  • ½ tsp espresso powder for a deeper chocolate flavor
  • Flaky sea salt scattered over the top before chilling

For Topping

  • Flaky sea salt
  • Crushed nuts
  • A light dusting of cocoa powder

Instructions

  1. Prepare the pan. Line an 20cm (8-inch) square baking dish with parchment paper, leaving some overhang on the sides for easy removal later.
  2. Heat the coconut cream. In a small saucepan, heat the coconut cream and vegan butter over medium heat until just beginning to simmer at the edges, with small bubbles forming. Do not let it boil vigorously.
  3. Melt the chocolate. Remove the pan from heat and add the finely chopped chocolate. Let sit undisturbed for 2 minutes to allow the heat to begin melting the chocolate evenly.
  4. Stir until smooth. Stir gently from the center outward until the mixture is completely smooth, glossy, and fully combined. Stir in the maple syrup, vanilla extract, and salt.
  5. Add optional ingredients. Fold in any nuts or chocolate chips if using, reserving a small amount for topping if desired.
  6. Pour and chill. Pour the mixture into the prepared dish and smooth the top with a spatula. Scatter with flaky sea salt or reserved toppings if using. Refrigerate for a minimum of 3 hours, ideally overnight, until completely firm.
  7. Slice and serve. Once fully set, lift the fudge out using the parchment overhang and slice into small squares with a sharp knife.

Pro Tips

  • Use good quality dark chocolate, since it makes up the majority of the flavor in this simple recipe.
  • Heat the coconut cream just to a gentle simmer, not a vigorous boil, to avoid the fat separating.
  • Let the hot cream sit on the chopped chocolate for a couple of minutes before stirring, to ensure even, gentle melting.
  • Chill the fudge fully before slicing — cutting too early will result in a softer, less clean slice.
  • Use a sharp knife and wipe it clean between cuts for the neatest squares.

Why This Method Works

Traditional fudge relies on carefully cooking sugar to a precise temperature to control crystallization, which can easily go wrong without a thermometer. This recipe sidesteps that process entirely by relying on the natural fat content of dark chocolate and coconut cream, which set firmly when chilled, producing a dense, smooth texture without any risk of grainy or seized sugar.


Flavor Variations

  • Peppermint Chocolate Fudge: Add ½ teaspoon of peppermint extract in place of vanilla for a festive, minty version.
  • Peanut Butter Fudge Swirl: Swirl warmed peanut butter through the top of the fudge before chilling for a marbled effect.
  • Orange Chocolate Fudge: Add the zest of an orange to the mixture for a bright, citrus-chocolate combination.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving — 1 square)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~150 kcal2g12g2g11g

Storage

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 2 weeks. Keep chilled, as the fudge softens at room temperature.
  • Freezer: Freeze in a sealed container for up to 3 months. Thaw in the refrigerator before serving.
  • Gifting: Fudge squares travel well when kept cool, making them an excellent homemade gift for holidays or special occasions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use coconut milk instead of coconut cream?

Full-fat coconut cream is recommended for the best set, as coconut milk contains more water and may result in a softer fudge. If using coconut milk, reduce slightly over low heat before proceeding.

Why didn’t my fudge set firm?

This is usually caused by using a lower percentage chocolate with less cocoa solids, or coconut milk instead of full-fat cream. Stick to dark chocolate with at least 60% cocoa and full-fat coconut cream for the most reliable result.

Can I make this fudge nut-free?

Yes — simply omit any nuts and use a nut-free topping like crushed pretzels or extra chocolate chips instead.


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 indulgent vegan dessert and treat recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!