ham

Vegan Maple Breakfast Ham

I was recently asked on Facebook by someone named Mike if I had a recipe for a loaf of seitan bacon.

I seems Mike had a product he liked that was simply, best I could tell from the picture he shared and the description, a loaf of bacon like seitan. Nothing fancy like we see all the time these days. It did not remotely look like bacon, but had the flavor profile and was sliceable.

Mike had been looking for a recipe for a seitan bacon, and again best I can tell from our brief internet chat, kept finding recipes for fancy, realistic, vegan bacons. Mike just wanted the loaf he missed that he can no longer find.

So, I looked the ingredient list, it was pretty similar to most of my seitans, and figured I would give it a whirl and see if It was like the vegan bacon Mike was missing.

But really I kept thinking this was more like a Canadian bacon vs traditional bacon. Since it was going to be sliced from a loaf and round. I used to love Canadian bacon on an English muffin with egg and cheese as a kid. Essentially breakfast ham! So that is the direction I decided to go.

I already make a seitan glazed ham but it is intended to be sliced for sandwiches or served as a holiday vegan ham. Not really the cylindrical log of bacon Mike was referring too, but the base and many of the spices are similar.

And with that, I give you a simple seitan breakfast ham recipe. A vegan breakfast ham/bacon that can be sliced, fried up in a pan, and eaten with all of your favorite breakfast foods. No bells and whistles, no fancy 2 toned coloring to make it look like real bacon (Just so we are clear, I am fascinated by all of the amazing realistic looking vegan bacon recipes out there and think they are amazing, this is just not what we are aiming for in this recipe) Just an easy, anyone can makes this, maple laced, salty, vegan breakfast meat that maybe Mike will like?!?! And if not, I tried Mike, I really did!


So if you have made seitan a million times, or never made it once in you life, this recipe is for you. It is easy, but tasty. Sometimes no matter your skill level, there is no need to over complicate a thing. And I tell you what, your breakfast sandwiches will be a whole lot tastier with this vegan breakfast ham! I am sure I will also find a lot of other uses for it, but for now I am focusing on ham, egg and cheese sandwiches for days to come.

Thanks for the challenge Mike, and y’all feel free to shoot me a message if there is a recipe you miss or think I should try to make. I like a challenge.

INGREDIENTS:

  • 1 block super firm tofu, 14-16 oz

  • 2 cups Vital Wheat Gluten

  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste

  • 1/4 cup maple syrup

  • 2 tablespoons tapioca starch or corn starch

  • 1 tablespoon white sugar

  • 2 teaspoons onion powder

  • 1-2 teaspoons garlic powder

  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika

  • 1/2 teaspoon black pepper

  • 1 teaspoon coriander

  • 1/8 teaspoon nutmeg

  • 1/8 teaspoon allspice

  • 1 teaspoon salt if you think it needs more (the bouillon and soy add a bit of salt as is)

  • 2 tablespoons Garlic or Vegetable Better Than Bouillon (I used garlic)

  • 2-3 teaspoons liquid smoke

  • 1 tablespoon coconut aminos or soy sauce

  • 2 tablespoons water if need (add last)

COATING:

  • A few tablespoons maple syrup

  • Salt

    TROUBLE SHOOTING THIS REICPE:

    *I used high protein tofu in a vacuum sealed package and this what I strongly advise using. It is much firmer than regular firm tofu and has less moisture and a more chewy texture. If you opt to use regular firm tofu you will need to press it first and remove as much liquid as possible. You may need to adjust the amount of water in the recipet as well. Add the water last, adding just enough to accomplish a firm dough.

    • *If you find your vegan breakfast ham has A LOT OF LITTLE HOLES, and a more BREAD LIKE TEXTURE this can be caused from under kneading the dough, BUT more likely cooking the seitan at too high of a temperature, or for too long. Check your ovens temperature with an oven thermometer. Your oven may just be cooking hotter than it registers. Also gas and electric ovens tend to cook differently. If you do not have an oven thermometer you can reduce the heat in your oven by 25 degrees, and keep the seitan covered for 50 minutes and open for 10.






INSTRUCTIONS:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees

  1. Break up the tofu and place it into a food processor with the regular metal blade. Run the processor for around a minute until the tofu is broken down.

  2. Add all of the remaining ingredients and let the food processor run for a couple of minutes. You want the mixture to form a dough. Letting the processor run will help knead the dough. We want this seitan to be firm so we need it to knead for a bit. If you dough seems a bit too dry, you can add another few tablespoons of water, just don’t add too much more! This dough came out stickier than the turkey because of the addition of more wet ingredients, and I did not have to add ANY water to mine. If your dough seems too sticky, then add 2 more tablespoons of starch.

  3. Once you have a smooth but firm dough, remove it from the food processor and place on a clean counter. Knead the dough with your hands for about a minute. Divide the dough into 2 equal piece. Form each piece into a smooth 8ish inch log. To get the dough nice and smooth roll the dough back and forth on a smooth cutting mat using the heals of your hands. You may have to pinch any seams you see and roll them out smooth.

  4. Take four pieces of aluminum foil about 3x bigger than the loaf of dough, and lay it out flat. Coat a piece of the foil in spray oil or wipe it down with any oil you have. Brush the loaf with a tablespoon or so of maple syrup. Sprinkle salt ( this depends on your salt preference, but I maybe did a little under a teaspoon per loaf) onto the foil and roll the sticky loaf in the salt. Lay the foil out and place the loaf at one end and roll the loaf up tightly in the foil. If the foil is super wrinkled those wrinkles will transfer to your dough as it bakes, just a heads up. Pinch and twist the ends of the foil to tightly seal the loaf. Now use a second piece of foil and wrap the dough again so this foil has nice long ends where you twist ( refer to picture.) You are trying to create sort of arms with the second piece of foil to hammock the loaf over a pot. Repeat process with second loaf.

  5. Using a dutch oven, roasting pan, or any deep pot or pan that is oven safe, suspend the loaves over the pan using the foil arms to keep them from touching the bottom. (again refer to picture above if this is confusing.) You want the loaves to bake suspended vs sitting on a pan to maintain their shape. If you baked them directly on a pan they tend to get a flat bottom and often the bottom can brown or harden depending on what kind of pan you are using. This method just keeps them nice and round. If you don’t care that they are perfectly round then you can certainly bake them directly on a pan.

  6. Bake the loaves for one hour, sealed in the foil.

  7. Remove finished “ham” and let cool at room temp in the foil. I leave mine just the way they are and put the pot with the suspend vegan breakfast hams still wrapped right in the fridge to allow them to rest. The breakfast ham MUST REST AT LEAST 8 HOURS. This ensures the texture we are trying to achieve. A firm, sliceable, breakfast meat. If you do not let it rest, it will seem under done, gummy, and just not that great. You have gotta let seitan have a nice long fridge nap if you want that meaty texture!

  8. Once the “ham” has been in the fridge 8 hours per over night, you can remove it and slice it to serve. It should at this point be firm enough to slice using a mandolin or a sharp knife. Store in an air tight container in the fridge for up to 10 days. I suggest pan frying slices of this vegan breakfast ham with a little spray of oil. I makes one delicious ham, vegan egg, and cheese breakfast sandwich!

vegan flank steak

Vegan Chicken Cordon Bleu

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Truth be told, I never really ate Chicken Cordon Blue before I was vegan.

I don’t know why? I mean it was certainly something my parents never made, so maybe that’s why.

My husband on the other hand adored it, and ordered it often if we ever went somewhere and it was an option. I don’t know why I didn’t jump on the band wagon back then, but I didn’t.

So recently I decided I would give it a go since I had just baked up a vegan deli glazed ham and we still have a little left over. This ham is so super easy and if you haven’t tried making it yet, I highly recommend it. It is one of my favorite seitan recipes on our site! You can also use something like Lifelight smart bacon. But if you make the ham then USE IT!! It is so good!

vegan ham

I also make a really easy and very convincing vegan chicken breast. I normally make a batch or 2 each week for meal prep, because it is so quick and easy, and it keeps for a week in the fridge or months in freezer. For this recipe you do need to make a fresh batch of the chicken because you actually have to stuff the chicken seitan when it is still in its dough form.

For the cheese I used our all purpose cheese sauce, and I literally use it for almost any recipes that requires a gooey cheese. I make a ton of sliceable, shreddable vegan cheeses BUT this sauce is still my go to because it is so good, so easy, and most people have the ingredients in their pantry already! For this recipe you have to let the sauce cook until its good and thick and gooey! This just makes it easier to get it into the vegan chicken breast without it all oozing out! I say to make a half batch for the recipe, but if you make a full batch you can use it to make all kinds of things later in the week. Pizza, quesadillas, grilled cheese, nachos, lasagna, all kinds of things!

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It might seem like this vegan Chicken Cordon Bleu recipe has a lot of steps, or too many ingredients, and you are not wrong, but also you are. If you have recently bake a vegan ham, or use pre-made vegan ham or bacon it is really easy! I really think once you make the cheese sauce it will become a staple in you fridge once you discover all the different ways you can use it! Because I already had the ham, this recipe did not take me any longer to make than regular vegan fried chicken! For us the cheese and ham are already staples in our house, making this recipe relatively quick and unfussy. So I guess it just depends on what you keep on hand.

But I will also say that if you do not already have a vegan ham laying around or a batch of cheese sauce made up, it is worth the effort to make both just to make this reicpe!! You will have lots of leftover ham that you eat on sandwiches, or freeze for later, and again the cheese sauce is so versatile and can be used in a ton of recipes!

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I know not all Chicken Cordon Bleu comes with a sauce on it, but I am a fan of sauce. So I decided to use some reserved cheese to make a creamy sauce with a zesty kick from the dijon mustard. Again, you can skip this step but y’all, its soooo good. I might be my favorite part of the whole reicpe! So again I say just try it!!

So there you go, my versions of Vegan Chicken Cordon Bleu from a former non fan. Easier than you might think and now I have to wonder why I never ate it more when we were not vegan, because it is delicious! I hate to tell my husband he was right, but…….

INGREDIENTS:

  • I cup thinly sliced vegan deli ham. or 8 sliced Lightlife Smart Bacon

  • 1/2 batch all purpose vegan cheese sauce (1/4 cup for chicken, 1/2 cup for sauce)

  • 1 teaspoon dijon mustard

  • 1/3 cup vegan sour cream or plain unsweetened yogurt

  • 1/3 cup unsweetened plant milk

  • 3/4 cups all purpose flour

  • 3/4 cups vegan panko bread crumbs

  • 1/4 cup corn or tapioca starch

  • 1 teaspoon salt

  • 1 teaspoon onion powder

  • 1 teaspoon of any all purpose sesoinng you like

  • Oil for frying

CHICKEN BREAST:

  • 1 block super firm tofu (16 oz) the kind that is vacuum sealed in not much water

  • 1 cup vital wheat gluten

  • 2 -3 teaspoons No Chicken Better Than Bouillon, or any vegan chicken flavored bouillon powder or seasoning

  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder

  • 1-2 teaspoons onion powder

  • 1/2 teaspoon sage

  • 1/2 teaspoon rosemary

  • 2 teaspoons liquid smoke

  • 2 tablespoons tapioca or corn starch

  • 1/4 cup nutritional yeast

  • 2 tablespoon neural flavored oil

  • 1/2 to 3/4 cups water

  • 1 teaspoons salt

CREAMY DIJON MUSTARD SAUCE:

  • 1/2 cup of prepared all purpose cheese sauce

  • 1 cup unsweetened plant milk

  • 1-2 teaspoon dijon mustard

  • 1/4 teaspoon black pepper

  • 1/4 teaspoon paprika

INSTRUCTIONS:

  1. Prepare cheese sauce according to instructions. You want the sauce pretty thick so allow it too cook until it is thick and kind of stretchy. Allow it to cool while you prepare the chicken.

  2. You can use our 86eats deli ham recipe or you can use a premade vegan ham or bacon. If you want to use our ham recipe it will have to be made ahead of time and allowed to rest.

  3. For The Chicken: Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Break up the tofu and place it into a food processor with the regular metal blade. Run the processor for around a minute until the tofu is broken down.

  4. Add all of the remaining ingredients and let the food processor run for a couple of minutes. You want the mixture to form a dough. Letting the processor run will help knead the dough. We want this seitan to be firm so we need it to knead for a bit. If you dough seems a bit too dry, you can add another few tablespoons of water, just don’t add too much more! I start at 1/2 cup and work from there.

  5. Once you have a smooth but firm dough, remove it from the food processor and place on a clean counter. Knead the dough with your hands for about a minute, forming a kind of oval, flattened out shaped with the dough. Cut the dough into 8 triangles. Using your hands, form the triangles into a chicken breast shape.

  6. Flatten out the chicken breast shapes to about a half inch thick. You are going to stuff and fold the pieces in half so make sure you have formed them big enough and flat enough to accomplish this.

  7. Take about a tablespoon of the cooled cheese sauce and spread it in the middle of the chicken breast but leave and edge of seitan dough untouched by the cheese ( the dough won’t stick together if it gets wet with the cheese.) Lay a few thin pieces of vegan ham on the cheese and fold the breast in half. Pinch the edges to make sure the vegan chicken breast is perfectly sealed. You don’t want any cheese oozing out while baking.

  8. Place the stuffed chicken breast on a parchment lined baking sheet. Spray the tops with some cooking oil and tightly cover the entire pan with foil. If you don’t want the foil touching your food, lay another piece of parchment paper on top of the breast before covering in foil.

  9. Let the chicken breast bake covered for 30 minutes.

  10. Remove from the oven and allow to cool at room temperature for about 15 minutes. Pop the chicken in the fridge and let it rest for at least 4 hours. This rest time is important for the texture to develop.

  1. To Coat The Chicken: In a medim bowl mix 1/3 cup plant milk, 1/3 cup sour cream or yogurt, and 1 teaspoon dijon mustard. In another bowl mix the flour, starch, bread crumbs, salt, onion powder, and all purpose seasoning.

  2. Dip the chicken breast first in the wet mixture then the dry. Make sure the pieces are coated well and entirely.

  3. Place a wire cooling rack on top of paper towel lined cookie sheet and place it next to the stove.

  4. Heat a deep skillet with several inches of any neutral oil you prefer for frying. I like peanut or grapeseed oil. Get the oil good and hot (350 degrees if you have a kitchen thermometer, if you don’t you can put a chop stick in the pan touching the bottom. If little bubbles form around the tip of the chop stick then the oil is ready.) Fry a few pieces at a time, just for a few minutes per side or until the chicken breast begin to brown and are crispy. Place on cooling rack for a few minutes after they are done to allow excess oil to drip off. You can alternatively use an air fryer. Just fry at 375, giving them a mist with oil. You will need to flip the mid fry and probably fry them for about 10 minutes depending on how many you have in there. Just check on them and when they are brown and crispy they are done.

  5. Prepare the sauce by whisking 1/2 cup of cheese in a sauce pan with the 1 cup of plant milk, dijon and spices. Heat on medium heat whisking continuously until the cheese sauce thins back out and the sauce is smooth. It will be lumpy and kind of weird at first, but just keep whisking and it will come together. You can add less or more dijon mustard depending on preference.

  6. Serve the vegan Chicken Cordon Bleu with the creamy dijon sauce on the side or drizzled on top.

If you like this recipe, then try these:

Vegan Glazed Deli Ham

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I make a lot of seitan based vegan meats. So bare with me while I talk turkey for a minute. The ham talk will follow.

I have recipes for a holiday roast, holiday turkey style breast with crispy skin, chicken breast, pastrami, brisket, and even pepperoni. But until our turkey recipe, I had never added tofu to the mix.

If there was ever a sandwich I missed since going vegan it is a regular old turkey sandwich. I used to love a good deli carved turkey sandwich more than almost anything. So I decided I would try to add tofu to my regular turkey style breast recipe to see if I could get it to a more deli sliced texture.

Y’all, the answer is YES! I have seen other people adding tofu to seitan recipes, and obviously Tofurkey lunch slices are a mix of tofu and vital wheat gluten so I decided to give it a go. It only took one experiment and it came out pretty perfect the first time. I was elated.

So once I realized how easy the turkey was, I went on to make a vegan roast beef using the same method!

Ham was my next stop on the vegan lunch meat deli tour, and I knew if I made it the same way as the turkey but changed a few wet ingredients and spices, I would get the same successful results I got with the turkey and roast beef.

Oh and a glaze. Whats a ham without a glaze?!?!

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Growing up I LOVED when my parents bought a Honey Baked Ham for the holidays. I was never a fan of packaged deli ham but I lived for leftover Honey Baked Ham sandwiches on a Hawaiian roll with mayo. So that was the kind of ham I was looking to recreate.

You can slice this ham extra thin if that is your preferred texture, or leave it a little on the thick side to mimic more of a holiday ham. And because I loved a glazed ham the most, I gave this one a nice sweet brown sugar glaze with a hint of soy for the salt and to add a little color to the top.

My kids love our easy vegan deli turkey recipe so when I offered them this ham (2 of my kids have only ever had ham once at a friends how when they were really young, the other two, never) they announced “I don’t think I liked ham that one time I ate it.” But since we were out of turkey and they wanted and sandwich, they gave in and made a vegan ham sandwich for lunch.

We were out and about and my 14 year old daughter was super reluctant to eat said sandwich, but y’all, if I could have videoed her face when she took that first bite…priceless. Lets just say she is now a big fan of vegan ham non white bread with mayo and vegan American cheese.

So if you have made any of other vegan deli meat recipe and looking to switch it up, try the ham. Its just as good as the turkey, roast beef, or brisket, just more, well, ham like!

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INGREDIENTS:

  • 1 block super firm tofu, 14-16 oz

  • 1 cup vital wheat gluten

  • 1/4 cup ketchup or tomato sauce

  • 1/4 cup nutritional yeast

  • 2 tablespoons neutral flavored oil ( you can replace with water if you are oil free)

  • 2 tablespoons tapioca starch or corn starch

  • 1 tablespoon white sugar

  • 2 teaspoons onion powder

  • 1 teaspoons garlic powder

  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika

  • 1/2 teaspoon black pepper

  • 1 teaspoon coriander

  • 1/8 teaspoon nutmeg

  • 1/8 teaspoon allspice

  • 1 teaspoon salt is you think it needs more (the bouillon and soy add a bit of salt as is)

  • 1 tablespoon Garlic or Vegetable Better Than Bouillon (I used garlic)

  • 2 teaspoons liquid smoke

  • 1 tablespoon coconut aminos or soy sauce

  • 2 tablespoons water if need (add last)

Glaze Coating:

  • 2 tablespoon brown sugar

  • 2 teaspoons dry mustard

  • 1/2 teaspoons salt

  • 2 teaspoons soy sauce or coconut aminos

TROUBLE SHOOTING THIS REICPE:

*I used high protein tofu in a vacuum sealed package and this what I strongly advise using. It is much firmer than regular firm tofu and has less moisture and a more chewy texture. If you opt to use regular firm tofu you will need to press it first and remove as much liquid as possible. You may need to adjust the amount of water in the recipet as well. Add the water last, adding just enough to accomplish a firm dough.

  • *If you find your turkey has A LOT OF LITTLE HOLES, and a more BREAD LIKE TEXTURE this can be caused from under kneading the dough, BUT more likely cooking the seitan at too high of a temperature, or for too long. Check your ovens temperature with an oven thermometer. Your oven may just be cooking hotter than it registers. Also gas and electric ovens tend to cook differently. If you do not have an oven thermometer you can reduce the heat in your oven by 25 degrees, and keep the seitan covered for 50 minutes and open for 10.

INSTRUCTIONS:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees

  1. Break up the tofu and place it into a food processor with the regular metal blade. Run the processor for around a minute until the tofu is broken down.

  2. Add all of the remaining ingredients and let the food processor run for a couple of minutes. You want the mixture to form a dough. Letting the processor run will help knead the dough. We want this seitan to be firm so we need it to knead for a bit. If you dough seems a bit too dry, you can add another few tablespoons of water, just don’t add too much more! This dough came out stickier than the turkey because of the consistency of the ketchup and I did not have to add ANY water to mine. If your dough seems too sticky, then add 2 more tablespoons of starch.

  3. Once you have a smooth but firm dough, remove it from the food processor and place on a clean counter. Knead the dough with your hands for about a minute, forming a kind of oval shaped loaf with the dough. Using a very sharp knife, score crisscross marks across the top of the loaf about an eighth of an inch deep.

  4. Take a piece of aluminum for about 3x bigger than the loaf of dough, and lay it out flat. Coat the foil in spray oil or wipe it down with any oil you have. Sprinkle the brown sugar, mustard, and salt in the middle of the foil and give a little mix. Place the loaf on the seasoning and roll it around. The goal is to fully coat the loaf in the seasoning!

  5. Place the loaf back in the center of the foil and fold up the sides, pinching at the top to seal it up, then twist the ends to fully seal the foil.

  6. Place on a baking sheet and put in the oven on the middle rack. Bake sealed for 30 minutes. After 30 minutes carefully open up the foil and brush the top with a teaspoon or two of soy sauce, and continue baking for another 30 minutes.

  7. Remove finished “ham” and let cool at room temp. Seal the foil back up and place the “ham” in the fridge over night to rest. This step is important to get the texture we are trying achieve. If you try and serve it before it rests it will not be nearly as firm.

  8. Once the “ham” has been in the fridge over night, you can remove it and slice it to serve. It should at this point be firm enough to slice using a mandolin or a sharp knife. Store in an air tight container in the fridge for up to 10 days.

If you like this recipe, then try these:

Vegan Dry Rubbed Brisket

Vegan Dry Rubbed Brisket

Vegan Deli Sliced Turkey

Vegan Deli Sliced Turkey

Vegan Deli Sliced Roast Beef

Vegan Deli Sliced Roast Beef

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