Easy Vegan Seitan Sausage Recipe | Lettuce Veg Out (2024)

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5 from 3 votes. Leave a review!

This vegan seitan sausage recipe is easy to make and absolutely packed with flavor! The seitan has a firm and chewy texture and its flavors are customizable to your tastes, depending on how you want to use the sausages.

They’re perfect to eat as-is in a bun with your favorite condiments or use them in any recipe like pasta or vegan bangers and mash!

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Vegan Ingredients in Seitan Sausage

This recipe has a long list of ingredients, most of which are herbs, spices and other seasonings. A few of the ingredients can be substituted but for the most part, you’ll need the following:

  • Olive oil: To create a delicious base layer of flavor, sauté the onions and garlic in some olive oil. This fat is necessary for a moist seitan that isn’t gummy in texture.
  • Onion and garlic: These two vegetables add huge amounts of flavor to this recipe, especially as they slowly cook in oil. Small flecks of onion throughout the sausage also helps break up the texture of the seitan (typically quite dense).
  • Tomato paste: One of the many liquid seasonings used for this recipe, I love the rich flavor and color that tomato paste provides.
  • Soy sauce: For a salty, umami flavor, some soy sauce helps create a flavorful vegan sausage.
  • Red wine vinegar: Vinegar enhances the flavor or pretty much anything it’s added to but is especially helpful in seitan recipes to help remove any “wheat” flavor from the gluten flour. Any type of vinegar can work for this recipe, but I like the taste of red wine vinegar.
  • Miso paste: Along with soy sauce, miso paste adds a depth of flavor that most other vegan ingredients can’t achieve. It’s salty and packed with umami taste that really helps elevate the seitan sausages to taste “meatier”.
  • Chickpeas: The base of many seitan recipes is some type of bean along with gluten flour. Chickpeas are a great, neutral choice when using beans. The fiber content in chickpeas helps break up the gluten, creating a softer seitan that’s still chewy but not spongy or rubbery. Other types of beans (like white beans) should also work.
  • Gluten flour: This is the key ingredient in seitan. Also called vital wheat gluten, gluten flour is pure gluten protein and creates the perfect texture for vegan meats. This cannot be replaced with any other type of flour.
  • Nutritional yeast: This staple ingredient in my vegan kitchen adds a unique depth of flavor to so many recipes! It has a slightly cheesy, nutty taste and cannot be replaced with any other type of yeast (nutritional yeast is completely different from baking yeast).
  • Dry herbs and spices: There’s quite a list of dry herbs and spices for this recipe and they all play a part in creating a delicious vegan sausage. I use dry oregano, paprika (smoked or sweet), salt, black pepper, dry basil, celery seed (fennel seed), dry thyme and dry sage. Adjust the seasoning to your liking and substitute for different herbs or spices if you prefer. If you’re missing one of the herbs or spices, that shouldn’t impact the final flavor too much.
  • Red pepper flakes: A final seasoning I like to add to these seitan sausages is hot red pepper flakes. The slight spicy heat helps enhance the other flavors of the dish. You can add these in whole or blend them with the chickpea mixture. Add as much or as little as you like!
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How to Make Seitan Sausage

As far as seitan goes, this is an easy recipe to prepare and doesn’t require much kneading (just enough to form the dough).

Step 1: Prepare “Wet” Ingredients

Start by finely mincing onion and garlic. Warm some olive oil in a pan over medium heat and add the onion and garlic.

Cook over medium or medium-low heat for 8-10 minutes until the onions are nice and soft. The onions and garlic may brown a little; lower the heat if they become too dark or start to burn.

Then, add tomato paste, soy sauce, red wine vinegar and miso paste to the pan. Stir until the tomato and miso pastes are dissolved and evenly mixed, then remove the pan from heat.

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Drain and rinse your canned chickpeas (or use freshly cooked chickpeas that have been drained and rinsed) and add them to a food processor or small blender.

Add the cooked onion and garlic mixture, scraping out as much of this flavoring as possible.

Blend the chickpeas and onion-garlic mixture until smooth, scraping down the edges of the food processor a couple times.

It’s okay if there’s small flecks of chickpeas that aren’t completely pureed (but try to get the mixture quite smooth).

You can also add the hot red chili flakes to this mixture if you want to blend them in.

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Step 2: Mix “Dry” Ingredients and Form Dough

In a large mixing bowl, stir together gluten flour with all remaining dry herbs and spices. This includes nutritional yeast, oregano, paprika, salt, pepper, basil, celery seed, thyme, sage and hot red chili flakes.

Then scrape your chickpea mixture from the food processor into this mixing bowl. Again, make sure to scrape as much as possible out of the food processor.

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Stir the mixture until a ball of dough starts to form, then switch to mixing with your hand. Knead the dough by hand until everything is combined and there are no dry bits of gluten flour anywhere.

This is a very firm dough and it takes some work to come together.

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Step 3: Shape Sausages and Steam

Cut the seitan into 8 pieces; this recipe makes 8 small sausages. You can cut the dough into 6 pieces for larger sausages, but I find they won’t fit in my steaming basket this way.

Shape each piece of seitan into a sausage by rolling it in your hands (or on a hard surface).

Wrap each sausage in a piece of parchment paper as tightly as possible, then wrap each sausage in a piece of tin foil (again, as tightly as possible).

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It’s important for the wrapping to be tight because seitan expands while it cooks. If it has too much room to expand, it creates a spongy texture.

Prep a pot with a steaming basket and add water until the water reaches just below the basket. Fill the pot with wrapped seitan sausages and place a lid on the pot. Bring this to a boil and steam the sausage for 40 minutes.

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Lower the heat while cooking (down to medium or medium-low) if steam continues to vent from the lid of the pot.

Towards the end of cooking, you may need to add extra water to the pot, so keep an eye on the water level and add in small amounts of water if needed (add hot or boiling water).

Once the 40 minutes have passed, let the sausages cool for at least 10 minutes.

You can serve them right away, but they’ll have the best texture if refrigerated overnight. I like to unwrap each sausage before storing in the fridge to prevent condensation from softening the outer edges.

The next day, reheat your sausages in a frying pan or on a grill/ barbecue. You can also use them in any recipe you like!

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Create a Balanced Vegan Meal with Sausages

I consider a balanced meal one that contains a good source of plant-based protein, carbohydrates, fats and lots of vegetables or fruits.

This recipe is absolutely packed with protein from the gluten flour and chickpeas. It also offers some healthy carbohydrates and fiber along with a small amount of healthy fats.

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Seitan sausages are perfect to pair with any vegetable side dish or salad to round out your meal. If you like, add extra carbohydrate options, like potatoes, rice, pasta, bread or a sausage bun for a boost of energy.

These sausages are quite low in fat, especially compared to many store-bought options. While this works for some people, adding extra healthy fats can make the meal more satisfying and satiating.

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Easy Seitan Variations

Seitan is a delicious, versatile high-protein option for vegans and is great for meal prep. There are endless ways to make seitan, but I typically stick to the easy method used for this sausage recipe.

If you want more variety in your seitan repertoire, check out these other delicious options:

  • Vegan ham roast
  • Seitan gyros
  • Basic seitan roast
  • Vegan turkey roast
  • Jackfruit seitan “ribs”
  • Vegan donair “meat” (like kebab meat)

What to do with Leftover Sausage

Refrigerate any leftover sausages in an airtight container for up to a week. Reheat by pan-frying or grilling/ barbecuing the sausages.

Seitan sausages also freeze well. For freezing, I keep the seitan wrapped. Let them cool to room temperature (or place into fridge to chill), then freeze in a freezer bag or container. They should be okay in the freezer for a few months.

To thaw, place your sausages into the fridge overnight and reheat before eating.

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📖 Recipe

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Vegan Seitan Sausage

This seitan sausage recipe creates the most flavor-packed, homemade vegan sausages. They’re easy to make and the seasoning can be adjusted to your liking. Perfect to serve on a bun or in any recipe that calls for sausage!

5 from 3 votes. Leave a review!

Prep Time 30 minutes mins

Cook Time 40 minutes mins

Total Time 1 hour hr 10 minutes mins

Servings 8 Small sausages

Calories 170 kcal

Cuisine Vegan

Equipment

Ingredients

Vegan Sausage “Wet” Ingredients

  • 3 tablespoons olive oil (45 milliliters)
  • ½ cup onion , minced (75 grams)
  • 3 cloves garlic , minced
  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste (30 milliliters)
  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce (30 milliliters)
  • 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar (30 milliliters)
  • 1 tablespoon white miso paste (15 grams)
  • 1 cup chickpeas , drained and rinsed (170 grams)

Vegan Sausage “Dry” Ingredients

  • 1 ⅛ cup gluten flour (1 cup + 2 tablespoons; 165 grams)*
  • 1 tablespoon nutritional yeast
  • 1 teaspoon dry oregano
  • 1 teaspoon paprika (smoked or sweet)
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • ½ teaspoon black pepper
  • ½ teaspoon dry basil
  • ½ teaspoon celery seed (fennel seed)
  • ¼ teaspoon dry thyme
  • ¼ teaspoon dry sage
  • ¼ teaspoon red pepper flakes , optional

Instructions

Step 1: Prepare “Wet” Ingredients

  • Heat olive oil in a small pan over medium heat. Add onion and garlic and cook for 8-10 minutes, until fragrant and soft. If the onions or garlic start to brown, turn the heat to low. Stir regularly while the onions and garlic cook.

    3 tablespoons olive oil, ½ cup onion, 3 cloves garlic

  • Then add tomato paste, soy sauce, red wine vinegar and miso paste. Stir to evenly mix in the ingredients and dissolve the miso. Cook for about 1 minute.

    2 tablespoons tomato paste, 2 tablespoons soy sauce, 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar, 1 tablespoon white miso paste

  • Add drained and rinsed chickpeas to a food processor (or small blender) along with your cooked onion mixture.

    1 cup chickpeas

  • Blend until smooth (small chickpea flecks are okay but it should be as smooth as possible).

Step 2: Mix “Dry” Ingredients and Form Dough

  • In a large mixing bowl, whisk gluten flour with the remaining spices.

    1 ⅛ cup gluten flour, 1 tablespoon nutritional yeast, 1 teaspoon dry oregano, 1 teaspoon paprika, ½ teaspoon salt, ½ teaspoon black pepper, ½ teaspoon dry basil, ½ teaspoon celery seed, ¼ teaspoon dry thyme, ¼ teaspoon dry sage, ¼ teaspoon red pepper flakes

  • Scrape the blended chickpea mixture from your food processor into the mixing bowl.

  • Stir until a dough starts to form, then switch to using your hand to finish combining. This is a very firm seitan dough, so it takes some work to come together (there are no dry clumps of gluten flour).

Step 3: Shape Sausage and Steam

  • Cut the dough into 8 equal pieces and shape each one into a sausage.

  • Tightly wrap each sausage in a piece of parchment paper. Then, wrap in a piece of tin foil, again, as tightly as possible.

  • Prep a large pot with a steaming basket and fill with water to just below the bottom of the steaming basket.

  • Add your sausages to the steaming basket and place a lid on the pot. Boil the water and steam the sausage for 40 minutes. You can lower the heat to medium once the water is boiling (if steam comes out the whole time).

  • Keep an eye on the pot to make sure it doesn’t run out of water (add more if needed).

  • Once cooked, cool the sausages for at least 10 minutes before serving.

  • These are best served the next day, after chilling in your fridge (unwrapped) overnight.

  • The sausages can be pan-fried, grilled, eaten as-is or used in any recipe you like.

Notes

*Also called vital wheat gluten.

Accuracy of nutrition information cannot be guaranteed (certain ingredients may not have all nutrients listed in the database); amounts may vary (and will vary depending on brands of ingredients used); all nutrition fact values rounded to the nearest whole number.

Nutrition

Serving: 1 Sausage (⅛ of recipe)Calories: 170 kcalCarbohydrates: 11 gProtein: 18 gFat: 6 gSaturated Fat: 1 gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1 gMonounsaturated Fat: 4 gSodium: 487 mgPotassium: 162 mgFiber: 2 gSugar: 2 gVitamin A: 11 IUVitamin C: 2 mgCalcium: 54 mgIron: 2 mg

Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

More Vegan Main Meal Recipes

Like this recipe? You should also try:

  • TVP Spaghetti Sauce Recipe (Bolognese)
  • Vegan TVP Chili Recipe (High Protein)
  • Teriyaki Tempeh Recipe (with Homemade Sauce)
  • Vegan Sushi Bake Recipe (with Chickpea “Tuna”)
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About Nicole Stevens

Nicole is a long-time vegan with a Masters of Science in Food and Nutrition.

She helps people thrive on a vegan diet with balanced recipes.

Easy Vegan Seitan Sausage Recipe | Lettuce Veg Out (2024)

FAQs

How do you make seitan not rubbery? ›

Add a little less water and knead it thoroughly. Let it stay for 30 minutes and knead it again, I even use a wooden roll for that. I some times add a tablespoon of potato starch or cornstarch, this adds consistency without making it too rubbery or hard (don't knead as much).

What is seitan sausage made of? ›

Seitan sausage FAQs

Seitan is a vegan the term given to a food made predominantly from wheat gluten. Wheat gluten is the main protein of wheat and is made by washing regular flour to remove any starch. When cooked seitan has a surprisingly “meaty” texture and is very easy to mould into different shapes and sizes.

How are vegan sausages made? ›

Vegan sausage can be made a variety of ways, but usually in a food processor with a combination of tofu, tempeh, or beans. It can be chopped and mixed by hand, but a food processor speeds the whole process up!

How is seitan most commonly cooked? ›

Think of seitan as a pre-cooked meat in need of a little browning, or a sauce. Seitan is easy to cut in chunks and add to stir-fries, stews, and casseroles. Tossed in a marinade with some oil in it, seitan can be grilled on a skewer or roasted in a hot oven to crisp the edges.

What is the problem with seitan? ›

Specifically, they may be quite high in sodium, which represents a problem for people who are trying to lower the salt in their diets. Because seitan depends on added seasonings to deliver flavor, it's important to make sure you aren't sensitive to any of those ingredients if you do have food sensitivities.

Who should avoid seitan? ›

While seitan is a versatile plant-based protein, people with celiac disease, non-celiac gluten sensitivity, or gluten allergy should avoid it. Premade seitan can also be high in sodium, so it's important to read the nutrition label if you monitor your sodium intake.

Is it OK to eat seitan everyday? ›

“Eat it sparingly,” he says. “It's not necessarily a once a day thing, and if you think you need a plant-based option I'd actually suggest tofu over seitan.” That said, Mora says there's no denying that folks can benefit from adding seitan to their menu—especially since it comes in a variety of flavor profiles.

Is seitan better for you than meat? ›

While seitan provides similar protein and iron content as meat, animal meat is a complete protein, and seitan is not. In addition, iron found in animal-based products is generally more easily absorbed than iron from plant-based foods. Meat typically also has more fat than seitan.

What protein is seitan missing? ›

Sources of protein containing all nine essential amino acids are called complete protein. Seitan is therefore slightly incomplete but fear not – it's an excellent source of protein and usually seasoned with soya sauce, which conveniently adds the missing amino acid (lysine)!

Is seitan good or bad for you? ›

Is Seitan Healthy? In many ways, yes, seitan is quite a healthy option. The seitan nutrition facts are hard to argue with: notable amounts of protein, iron, calcium, selenium, phosphorus, and B vitamins. This combination of macro- and micronutrients can result in some pretty impressive health benefits.

What is the skin on vegan sausages made of? ›

How are vegan sausages made? Well, sausages are pretty much ANYTHING you can put in a casing and then cook. In this particular case, vegetarian sausage casings are made of “Vegetable Glycerin, Water and Natural Polysaccharides (sugar/carbohydrate).”

Is it cheaper to make or buy seitan? ›

It's cheaper to make seitan than to buy it pre-fabricated. It's also cheaper to make it than to buy good-quality, local meat, so it's a good budget protein item. It's stupid easy to make, especially if you've made homemade bread. It's super customizable, both in flavor and texture.

What is the best flour for seitan? ›

All-purpose flour: 10–12% protein – This can be used, but some brands work better than others depending on where the protein is coming from. Read more info below. Bread flour: 12–16% protein – Fine-grain, unbleached, white varieties are optimal for making seitan.

Why is my seitan so rubbery? ›

Boiling seitan makes it have a brainy spongey texture, frying seitan (without first steaming it) makes it rubbery and spongey, baking it makes it dry and rubbery. Steaming seitan, on the other hand, will yield the perfect meaty, juicy, chewy, yet tender seitan every single time.

Why is my seitan too chewy? ›

A too wet, too soft dough is going to make a gummy, soft seitan. This could be because you used a tofu that was not super firm, or not pressed well enough so it was holding extra liquid. Or if there was water suggested in the recipe, you did not wait to add it until the end.

What happens if you overcook seitan? ›

It's possible to overcook the seitan (it can get tough). Rest: After the seitan chicken has steamed, remove the pot from heat, take off the lid, and let them cool for 5 minutes in the foil.

Why did my seitan turn out spongy? ›

As you knead, more gluten develops. Think of it like muscle fibers building up. Knead too much, and your seitan can end up rubbery. Knead too little and it can be too spongy.

How to make seitan fibrous? ›

Using a food processor to “knead” the dough creates fibrous, textures nearly resembling meat. The more you process the dough, the more fibrous/meaty your homemade Seitan becomes.

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