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One Pot Vegan Meals ~ Cannellini Bean, Potato & Mushroom Casserole

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Happy Monday, Lovelies!

I hope you all had a good weekend filled with lots of good vegan food, reading and whatever else you get up to in your free time! Please feel free to tell me what you do when you’re not working or vegan cooking & eating.

Today’s vegan dinner recipe is a two-fer, which I often like to do especially in the cooler weather month. In the Spring and Summer I don’t do it as often because usually I eat some type of salad for lunch but in winter I love vegan soups, stews and of course vegan casseroles with a small salad on the side just to make sure we’re getting something fresh and high in fiber.

While I was making this dish, it struck me how we’re often so stuck into what foods “go together” that we miss out some truly great food combinations. This can be doubly true when you’re vegan because you simply get used to doing things a certain way and the past almost decade of living a vegan life had allowed me to stretch my creativity into the kitchen.

Why? Well because I’m not sure that the Natasha I was a decade ago would have looked at oyster mushrooms, potatoes and cannellini (navy) beans and saw a yummy vegan meal. Even in my early years as a vegan I might have looked at this and added a vegan meat alternative instead of beans. But 2024 me looked at those ingredients and saw a one pot vegan meal and she made it happen.

This is an easy vegan recipe that is super tasty and ingredients like beans and potatoes aren’t just budget friendly, they soak up flavors like nobody’s business so you can make this again and again and (almost) never get sick of it!

Kitchen Tools:

*Cutting board
*Kitchen knife
*9×13 casserole dish
*Large mixing bowl

Ingredients:

*Potatoes (scrubbed & chopped)
*Oyster mushrooms (or any other kind)
*Onion
*Soy sauce
*Salt & black pepper
*Sweet paprika, oregano, cumin & garlic powder
*Cannellini beans (drained & rinsed)
*Cocogurt (any plain vegan yogurt)

Track Your Nutrition & Health Data with cronometer.com

Instructions:

*Preheat oven to 200C/400F

*Chop your potatoes and onions into uniform-ish sizes just to make sure they cook evenly.

*Tear or chop oyster mushrooms add them to the mixing bowl with the potatoes & onions.

*Add the beans, herbs and spices to the mixing bowl and stir everything together until the seasoning coats everything.

*Add a bit of water or broth to the bottom of the casserole dish if you’re going for an oil free vegan recipe, otherwise this step is unnecessary.

*Place everything into your casserole dish and cover with aluminum foil. Bake for 30 minutes.

*At the 30-minute mark, check the casserole and give it a stir, cooking uncovered for another 20 minutes or until the potatoes are fork tender and the mushrooms are a tad crispy along the edges.

*Let cool for 5 minutes–if you can last that long!–and serve.

*I added a cocogurt sauce on the evening portion of this and it was a simple mix of vegan yogurt, the same spices I used for the casserole and a few drops of fresh lemon juice. This is totally optional but it was definitely delicious…just ask my husband!

This was an easy vegan dish that was both tasty and calorie friendly, and it was a totally plant based vegan dinner! Next time I’m going to try sweet potatoes and butter beans.

12 responses to “One Pot Vegan Meals ~ Cannellini Bean, Potato & Mushroom Casserole”

  1. Pooja G Avatar

    This looks soooo good, I used to hate beans but now they’re one of my favourite go-to ingredients for high protein meals.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. writinstuff Avatar

      I’ve always liked beans but growing up they always came with meat so when I first went vegan beans were my go-to meat replacement lol…let me tell you that kidney bean stir fry isn’t as good as you think!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Pooja G Avatar

        That’s so interesting, I don’t think eating beans and meat is common here. Beans were like my least favourite other than chickpeas. Usually my go-to is tofu.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. writinstuff Avatar

        Really? That’s so interesting. Is it just bean stews and beans as side dishes? Growing up it was common to have bean & sausage casserole or stew, which is something I lean on when I’m making a high protein meal post-workout! Now you love all the beans?

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Pooja G Avatar

        Mostly just stews. I think casseroles are mostly American because I’ve never seen them anywhere in Kenya. Yeah, now I’m a fan of all the beans. Chickpeas I still have a problem with though lol.

        Liked by 1 person

      4. writinstuff Avatar

        Yeah that’s true about casseroles. I’ve a few for my Romanian in-laws and there’s not even a word for it. I once tried to explain it in Romanian as a juice-less soup! Have you tried crispy chickpeas?

        Liked by 1 person

      5. Pooja G Avatar

        I do like crispy chickpeas especially in salads but still not as much as beans lol.
        I don’t think we have a word for casserole either. It’s interesting how each country has it’s own dishes that are so common there but completely unheard of elsewhere.

        Liked by 1 person

      6. writinstuff Avatar

        Yes! And everywhere I go I’m determined to mash it up. Last year we went to his uncle’s house for a holiday meal and He (not me) made a Sarmale Casserole! Sarmale is basically a Romanian dolma with cabbage rather than grape leaves so he made it vegan and put it in a casserole dish. The teens loved it but you know, adults can be harder to change their minds. Hahahahaha

        Liked by 1 person

      7. Pooja G Avatar

        I just Googled Sarmale and it looks so delicious. It’s so nice of him to make it vegan and in a casserole dish. It’s so sweet when people make an effort to be inclusive and provide vegan food. Yes it’s definitely harder for adults to change their mind but I’ve noticed that if you don’t tell them it’s vegan they seem to love it lol.

        Liked by 1 person

      8. writinstuff Avatar

        My husband is also vegan so it was always going to be vegan but a few years back he made the traditional version vegan and it was so much work he said “never again” but yes, they liked it…mostly. I find that desserts are my way for many non-vegans b/c like you said they LOVE it until they learn it’s vegan and then it “tastes funny” lol

        Liked by 1 person

      9. Pooja G Avatar

        Aw that’s great. Haha true desserts are a great way in as long as they don’t know it’s vegan.

        Liked by 1 person

      10. writinstuff Avatar

        The sugar is so addictive they don’t care! Hahahahaha

        Liked by 1 person

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