Vegan
3078 recipes found

Pasta with Dried Mushrooms and Tomato Sauce
This meaty, savory pasta sauce is just one reason to keep dried porcini mushrooms on hand. Along with intense flavor, porcinis are an excellent source of riboflavin and niacin, and a good source of selenium and potassium. They also contain a powerful antioxidant called L-ergothioneine.

Roasted Apple and Pear Compote With Candied Ginger
This comforting compote should be served warm. If you do want a little indulgence, add a dollop of crème fraîche to each serving.

Whole Wheat Focaccia with Peppers and Eggplant
I first made this because I had a festival of leftovers in my refrigerator – sautéed peppers with tomato and onion, and roasted eggplant. The combination made a delicious, typically Mediterranean topping. The peppers would suffice, but it’s even better with the eggplant. You can use one type of bell pepper or a mix, and if you want some heat, add a hot one.

Roasted Tomato-Coconut Sauce
This easy sauce, which uses slow-roasted tomatoes, goes great with fish or tofu served on top of a grain (rice, coucous, anything). Just pan-sear your protein very quickly, and you’re ready to eat. If you don’t like tomato skins, blend the tomatoes before you add them, or use an immersion blender on the finished sauce.

Pan-Cooked Summer Squash With Tomatoes and Basil
This Provençal summer dish is delightful as a starter or as a side dish with fish, chicken or cooked grains.

Focaccia With Cauliflower and Sage
I love to roast cauliflower on its own, so I decided to roast it, along with fresh sage leaves, on top of focaccia.

Beet Gnocchi

Pasta With Mushrooms and Gremolata
This savory pasta is just one idea for gremolata, a pungent mixture of garlic, lemon zest and parsley. It’s terrific with the sautéed mushrooms and makes a great condiment for a variety of roasted vegetables.

Summer Tomato Gratin
When you bake tomatoes for a very long time, as you do here, they become quite sweet.

Sweet and Sour Cabbage with Tofu and Grains
You can use regular green cabbage for this slightly spicy, sweet and sour stir-fry, or you can use Napa Cabbage. I like to serve the dish with bulgur, but you could also serve it with rice, noodles, or any other grain.

Andean Bean Stew with Winter Squash and Quinoa
This savory, filling pot of beans is inspired by a Chilean bean stew. I’ve substituted quinoa for the corn that the authentic version calls for. Make it a day ahead for the best flavor.

Moroccan Cooked Carrot Salad
There are many versions of this cooked carrot salad throughout the Middle East and North Africa. This one, seasoned with lemon juice, cumin, garlic and olive oil, is always a crowd pleaser.

Bulgur and Squash Kefteh
This mixture can be formed into patties, but it is just as wonderful and a lot easier to spread in a baking dish, served by the spoonful.

Beet, Fennel and Fig Salad With Cranberry-Sage Dressing

Sweet Peppers Conserved in Oil
Roasted peppers always look beautiful in a jar of olive oil. Feel free to add other herbs, like oregano or basil, to the mix.

Swiss Chard Stalk and Tahini Dip
If you are making a Swiss chard dish and don’t know what to do with the stems, save them for this luscious and ingenious Middle Eastern appetizer. Serve it with warm Arabic bread.

Stewed Peppers with Tomatoes, Onions and Garlic
There are variations of this dish throughout the Mediterranean. The Basque piperade, made with slender, slightly piquant peppers called piments d’espelette and stirred into scrambled eggs along with bayonne ham, has some heat; whereas Italian peperonata is sweet through and through. A North African version, chakchouka, is spiced with fiery harissa and a spice blend made with caraway and coriander, cayenne and garlic, and is usually served with eggs poached right on top of the stew. See the variations below.

Quince Compote
Quince is a fruit that grows abundantly throughout the Mediterranean. Though it’s too hard and tart to bite into, it has a wonderful perfume. I like to combine it with apples in this simple compote.

Sautéed Summer Squash with Red Pepper and Onion
This is the time of year when, no matter what part of the country you live in, tables at farmers’ markets are piled high with summer squash, mounds of it: yellow, light green and dark, round and long. This is a vegetable that expresses itself well in a wide range of dishes; just about every cuisine in the world knows how to show it off. It's an excellent low-calorie food, with only 19 calories per cup of raw squash. This dish is great on its own as a side dish, but it can also be incorporated into many other recipes.

Moroccan Carrot Dip
This vegan dip from America's Test Kitchen has a bright, spiced flavor that goes beautifully with pita chips. To retain the appealing, brilliant orange color, be careful not to brown the carrots when cooking them.

Andalusian Cabbage Stew
This simple Spanish stew is spiked with a splash of sherry vinegar as you finish cooking it. Serve the stew as a side dish or as a main dish with rice.

Shaved Fennel and Apples With Mandarin Vinaigrette

Tunisian Winter Squash Salad
This recipe was brought to The Times by Joan Nathan and was featured in her cookbook "Quiches, Kugels, and Couscous: My Search for Jewish Cooking in France."
