white beans recipe

Vegan Pot Pie Casserole

vegan pot pie casserole

There are dinners that feel like coming home. And then there are dinners like this Vegan Pot Pie Casserole — the kind that fills every corner of your house with the most extraordinary aroma of bubbling vegetable gravy and golden pastry as it bakes, that comes out of the oven with that deeply satisfying sound of a crust that has achieved exactly the right level of golden, flaky perfection, and that delivers with every single spoonful a combination of rich, herb-scented vegetable filling and buttery, shattering pastry that is one of the most deeply comforting food experiences imaginable. This is that casserole. The one that makes cold evenings feel genuinely warm. The one that disappears from the baking dish before the second person has been served. The one that tastes like every excellent pot pie you have ever eaten but made entirely, completely from plants.

This is pot pie in its most generous, most accessible, most spectacular form — the filling of a great pot pie elevated into a casserole that can feed a crowd from a single baking dish, topped with a layer of golden puff pastry or biscuit topping that bakes to a deeply satisfying crust over the bubbling, herb-fragrant vegetable filling beneath it. The filling is extraordinary — sweet carrots, tender peas, hearty potato, earthy mushrooms, and creamy white beans bathed in the richest, most deeply flavored vegetable gravy imaginable, thickened with a roux of vegan butter and flour into something that has the body, the coating quality, and the deep savory richness of the finest chicken gravy ever made — without a trace of anything that was ever anywhere near a chicken.

What makes this casserole so genuinely outstanding is the gravy. A proper gravy — made from a blonde roux of vegan butter and flour, enriched with vegetable broth, oat milk, soy sauce, and nutritional yeast, seasoned with thyme, sage, and an extraordinary amount of black pepper — is one of the most deeply satisfying sauces in all of cooking. It has body, it has richness, it has the specific coating quality that makes every vegetable and bean it surrounds taste better and more satisfying than they would alone. It is the sauce that transforms a collection of very good vegetables into something genuinely extraordinary.

This recipe is 100% vegan, ready in just 50 minutes, naturally adaptable to use whatever vegetables you have on hand, and absolutely magnificent served directly from the baking dish at the table where the combination of golden pastry top and rich, bubbling filling beneath it creates one of the most dramatic and most deeply appealing presentations in all of comfort food cooking.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
20 mins30 mins50 mins6~420 kcal

Ingredients

For the Vegetable Filling

  • 2 medium carrots, peeled and diced into 1cm pieces
  • 2 medium potatoes, peeled and diced into 1cm pieces
  • 1 cup (150g) frozen peas
  • 1 cup (100g) cremini mushrooms, roughly chopped
  • 1 can (400g) white beans or cannellini beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 medium white onion, finely diced
  • 3 stalks celery, thinly sliced
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 tbsp olive oil or vegan butter

For the Vegan Gravy

  • 3 tbsp vegan butter
  • 3 tbsp all-purpose flour
  • 2 cups (480ml) vegetable broth
  • 1 cup (240ml) unsweetened oat milk
  • 2 tbsp soy sauce or tamari
  • 2 tbsp nutritional yeast
  • 1 tsp fresh thyme leaves (or ½ tsp dried)
  • 1 tsp dried sage
  • ½ tsp onion powder
  • ½ tsp garlic powder
  • ½ tsp black pepper
  • ¼ tsp nutmeg
  • Salt to taste

For the Pastry Top

  • 1 sheet (250g) vegan puff pastry, thawed if frozen
  • 2 tbsp plant milk mixed with 1 tsp maple syrup (vegan egg wash)
  • Flaky sea salt and fresh thyme for topping

Alternatively — Biscuit Topping

  • 1½ cups (180g) all-purpose flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ⅓ cup (75g) cold vegan butter, cubed
  • ½ cup (120ml) oat milk
  • 1 tsp apple cider vinegar

Optional Add-ins

  • 1 cup (90g) broccoli florets, roughly chopped
  • ½ cup (75g) corn kernels, fresh or frozen
  • 1 medium parsnip, diced
  • ½ cup (60g) frozen edamame
  • 1 medium leek, thinly sliced (replace onion)
  • Fresh rosemary, finely chopped

To Serve

  • Directly from the baking dish at the table
  • With a simple green salad alongside
  • With steamed green beans
  • With cranberry sauce for a holiday version
  • With additional gravy poured over at the table

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven. Preheat your oven to 400°F (200°C). Lightly grease a deep 23 x 33cm (9 x 13 inch) baking dish or a large, deep casserole dish with vegan butter or olive oil.
  2. Parboil the root vegetables. Place the diced carrots and potatoes in a medium saucepan, cover with cold water, add a generous pinch of salt, and bring to a boil. Cook for 6–8 minutes until just tender — they should yield to a knife with only slight resistance. They will continue cooking in the oven so do not cook them completely through at this stage. Drain and set aside.
  3. Sauté the aromatics. Heat the olive oil in a large, wide pot or deep skillet over medium heat. Add the diced onion and celery and cook for 5–6 minutes, stirring regularly, until softened and beginning to turn golden. Add the minced garlic and mushrooms and cook for a further 3–4 minutes until the mushrooms are golden and any liquid they release has evaporated completely.
  4. Make the vegan gravy. Push the vegetables to the edges of the pot and add the vegan butter to the center. Allow to melt completely then add the flour all at once and stir vigorously with a wooden spoon for 60–90 seconds until the flour and butter have combined into a smooth, golden paste — this is the roux, and cooking it for this time removes the raw flour taste. Gradually pour in the vegetable broth, whisking continuously after each addition to prevent lumps, until all the broth is incorporated and the mixture is smooth. Add the oat milk, soy sauce, and nutritional yeast and stir to combine. Add the thyme, sage, onion powder, garlic powder, black pepper, and nutmeg. Bring to a simmer, stirring continuously, until the gravy has thickened to a rich, coating consistency — approximately 4–5 minutes.
  5. Combine the filling. Add the parboiled carrots and potatoes, frozen peas, and drained white beans to the gravy and stir gently to combine. Taste the filling and adjust the seasoning generously — it should taste deeply savory, richly herbed, and well-rounded. The filling should be thick and substantial but still flowing — it will thicken further during baking. Transfer the filling to the prepared baking dish and spread in an even layer.
  6. Add the puff pastry top. Unroll the thawed puff pastry sheet and lay it over the filling in the baking dish, tucking the edges down inside the dish slightly or trimming to fit with a sharp knife. Brush the surface generously with the plant milk and maple syrup wash. Score a few diagonal lines across the surface with a sharp knife to allow steam to escape during baking — preventing the pastry from puffing unevenly. Scatter flaky sea salt and fresh thyme over the surface.
  7. Alternatively make the biscuit topping. If using the biscuit topping instead combine the oat milk and apple cider vinegar in a small bowl and rest for 5 minutes. In a large bowl whisk together the flour, baking powder, and salt. Add the cold cubed vegan butter and work into the flour until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Add the buttermilk and fold until just combined. Drop large spoonfuls of biscuit dough over the filling — covering most of the surface but leaving small gaps for steam to escape.
  8. Bake to golden perfection. Place in the preheated oven and bake for 25–30 minutes until the pastry or biscuit topping is deeply golden, puffed, and shatteringly crispy, and the filling is bubbling vigorously around the edges. If the pastry is browning too quickly cover loosely with foil for the remaining baking time.
  9. Rest and serve. Allow to rest for 5 minutes before serving — this allows the filling to thicken slightly and set to the perfect consistency for serving. Bring to the table and serve directly from the baking dish — the golden pastry top and the bubbling, fragrant filling visible around the edges is one of the most deeply appealing presentations in all of comfort food cooking.

Pro Tips for the Most Extraordinary Vegan Pot Pie Casserole

  • Parboil the root vegetables before adding to the filling. Raw carrots and potatoes added directly to the filling will not cook through completely during the 30 minutes of oven time available — producing a casserole with firm, undercooked vegetables beneath a perfectly golden pastry top. Parboiling for 6–8 minutes first ensures every vegetable is perfectly tender in the finished dish.
  • Cook the roux for the full 60–90 seconds. A roux that is not cooked long enough retains a raw flour taste that persists through the finished gravy and makes the entire casserole taste starchy and flat. Cooking the roux until it turns a pale golden color and smells nutty eliminates the raw flour taste and produces a gravy of genuine depth and complexity.
  • Season the gravy aggressively. The gravy needs to season the entire casserole — every vegetable, every bean, every bite. Timid seasoning produces a flat, uninspiring filling. Confident seasoning produces the rich, deeply flavored gravy that makes pot pie so deeply satisfying. Taste at every stage and add salt, pepper, and soy sauce until the gravy tastes complete.
  • Use cold vegan butter for the biscuit topping. If making the biscuit version the same principle applies as for any biscuit dough — cold butter produces steam pockets during baking that create the flaky, layered texture of a great biscuit topping. Room temperature butter produces a dense, uniform dough with none of this textural quality.
  • Score the pastry top before baking. Scoring allows steam to escape during baking — preventing the pastry from puffing unevenly into large, hollow bubbles above the filling. Three or four diagonal cuts across the surface are sufficient for even puffing and a beautiful finished appearance.
  • Serve directly from the baking dish always. Part of what makes pot pie casserole so deeply appealing is the presentation — the golden pastry top, the bubbling filling visible at the edges, the fragrant steam that rises when the first serving is scooped and the pastry breaks. Serving from the baking dish at the table preserves all of this drama and makes the meal feel genuinely special.

The Comfort Food History of Pot Pie

Pot pie is one of the oldest and most universally beloved comfort food preparations in the English-speaking world — a dish with roots in medieval English cooking that has remained continuously popular across five centuries through nothing more than the sheer power of how extraordinarily good it is when made well.

The earliest pot pies were made in ancient Rome and Greece — pastry-encased fillings of meat and vegetables baked in clay pots that served both as cooking vessels and as serving dishes. The preparation emigrated to England where it became one of the defining dishes of medieval and early modern cooking — a practical, hearty, deeply satisfying preparation that used pastry both as a container for the filling and as an edible serving dish.

The pot pie arrived in America with British colonists and became one of the most enduring comfort foods in American culinary culture — evolving from the individual pastry-encased preparations of its English origin into the large, casserole-style preparations that define it today. The defining American pot pie — a deep dish filled with creamy vegetable and chicken filling beneath a golden pastry or biscuit crust — became one of the most requested home-cooked dinners of the twentieth century and remains one of the most deeply comforting and universally appealing dishes in the entire American culinary canon.

This vegan version honours every element of the American pot pie tradition — the rich, herb-scented filling, the deeply flavored gravy, the golden crust — while replacing the meat and dairy with plant-based ingredients that deliver every element of the flavor and comfort of the original and add a nutritional profile that the traditional version simply cannot match.


Flavor Variations

  • Mushroom and Lentil Pot Pie: Replace the white beans with cooked green lentils and double the mushrooms for a meatier, earthier version with extraordinary umami depth from the combination of mushrooms, lentils, soy sauce, and nutritional yeast.
  • Butternut Squash and Sage: Add diced roasted butternut squash to the filling and double the sage for a beautiful autumn version with a natural sweetness from the squash that contrasts magnificently with the savory gravy and golden pastry.
  • Roasted Garlic and Spinach: Add a full head of roasted garlic mashed into the gravy and two large handfuls of fresh spinach stirred in at the end for a version with extraordinary garlic depth and a beautiful green color throughout the filling.
  • Individual Pot Pies: Divide the filling between 6 individual oven-safe ramekins and top each with a circle of puff pastry for an elegant individual-serve version that is particularly beautiful for dinner parties and special occasions.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~420 kcal14g56g9g16g

At 420 calories per serving this casserole delivers a genuinely complete and nutritionally substantial meal — 14 grams of plant-based protein from the white beans, nutritional yeast, and oat milk, 9 grams of dietary fiber, and an exceptional concentration of vitamins and minerals from every vegetable in the filling. White beans provide complete plant-based protein alongside folate, iron, magnesium, and potassium. Carrots provide extraordinary beta-carotene concentration. Peas contribute Vitamins C, K, and B vitamins alongside additional plant-based protein. Mushrooms contribute selenium, B vitamins, and ergothioneine antioxidants. The nutritional yeast contributes B vitamins including B12 in fortified varieties. Fresh thyme provides thymol with antimicrobial and antioxidant properties.


Storage

  • Refrigerator: Store cooled casserole covered tightly in the baking dish or in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. The pastry softens during refrigeration — reheat uncovered in a 375°F (190°C) oven for 15–20 minutes to restore some crispiness to the top. The filling actually improves during refrigeration as the flavors deepen and meld.
  • Freezer: This casserole freezes well for up to 3 months. Cool completely before wrapping tightly in plastic wrap and foil. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator and reheat uncovered in a 375°F (190°C) oven for 25–30 minutes. The pastry will not achieve its original crispiness after freezing but the filling will be as extraordinary as when freshly made.
  • Make ahead — filling only: The vegetable filling can be made up to 2 days in advance and stored in the refrigerator. Transfer to the baking dish, add the pastry top, and bake on the day of serving for a completely fresh-baked result with minimal day-of effort. This makes it an outstanding make-ahead dinner party dish.
  • Make ahead — assembled unbaked: The fully assembled unbaked casserole can be refrigerated for up to 24 hours before baking. Add 5–10 minutes to the baking time when cooking from cold. The pastry may not puff quite as dramatically as a room-temperature assembled casserole but will still be beautifully golden and deeply delicious.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use a different pastry for the top?

Yes — the filling works beautifully with puff pastry, shortcrust pastry, filo pastry, or the dropped biscuit topping described in the recipe. Each produces a different but equally wonderful result — puff pastry for maximum drama and flakiness, shortcrust for a more traditional pot pie character, filo for an extraordinarily crispy, layered top, biscuit for the most American-style comfort food experience.

Can I make this casserole gluten-free?

Yes — replace the all-purpose flour in the roux with a gluten-free flour blend or cornstarch and use gluten-free puff pastry for the topping. Replace the soy sauce with tamari. The filling will be slightly different in texture using cornstarch but equally rich and delicious. Most gluten-free puff pastry brands perform well in this application.

What vegetables can I substitute?

This recipe is extraordinarily flexible — almost any vegetable works beautifully in the filling. Outstanding substitutions include butternut squash, sweet potato, parsnip, turnip, broccoli, cauliflower, green beans, corn, edamame, and Brussels sprouts. Use whatever combination of vegetables is available, seasonal, or preferred — the gravy elevates everything it surrounds.

Why is my gravy lumpy?

Lumpy gravy is caused by adding the liquid too quickly to the roux without continuous whisking. Add the vegetable broth gradually — one quarter cup at a time — whisking vigorously after each addition until completely smooth before adding more. If lumps develop strain the finished gravy through a fine mesh sieve before adding the vegetables.

Can I make this in a slow cooker?

Yes with modification — make the filling and gravy completely on the stovetop as directed then transfer to the slow cooker and cook on low for 3–4 hours. The pastry topping cannot go in the slow cooker — make it separately in the oven on a lined baking sheet and serve it alongside or on top of the filling at the table.

How do I make individual pot pies from this recipe?

Divide the filling equally between 6 individual oven-safe ramekins of approximately 300ml capacity. Cut circles of puff pastry slightly larger than the diameter of each ramekin, lay over the filling, and press down around the rim to seal. Brush with the plant milk wash and bake at 400°F (200°C) for 20–22 minutes until golden. Individual pies bake faster than the casserole — check at 18 minutes.


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