Baked Seitan
What even IS seitan?
Some of you might be wondering. Seitan, often referred to as "wheat meat" because of its similarity in texture to the real thing, is made with wheat gluten, and -- though tofu is still king -- it is gaining popularity with veggies and vegans across the country. Back when I lived in Ithaca, Susie's Seitan was the thing . . . but after a while, we just had to know HOW this delicious substitute was made.
This recipe is from my husband's archives. He has a few foods that he just loves to make, and seitan is one of them. Last weekend, I decided to make it with him -- step by step. It's certainly an interesting process! And when you're done, you get this huge log of seitan that would cost a mint at the store.
The seasoning measurements are really up to you, but I've provided guidelines. He never makes two logs of the stuff the same.
BAKED SEITAN
What you'll need . . .
- 1-1/2 cup wheat gluten (found in the bulk foods section)
- 1/4 cup nutritional yeast
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 2 teaspoons paprika
- 2 teaspoons pepper
- 2 cloves garlic
- 2 large basil leaves, chopped
- 3/4 cup cold water
- 4 teaspoons tomato paste
- 2 teaspoons olive oil
- 2 teaspoons vegetable broth
Method . . .
- Preheat oven to 325 degrees F.
- Put all dry ingredients (as well as basil and garlic) in a large bowl and mix together.
- In a separate bowl, combine wet ingredients (make sure to add the tomato paste last and then whisk it into the mixture).
- Add the wet ingredients to the dry and mix with your hand -- until you can knead it like dough.
- Knead until fully incorporated.
- Roll into a log shape and wrap in 2 layers of aluminum foil -- twisting the ends to seal.
- Bake for 90 minutes.
I don't have a great photo of the final result . . . but it looks a little something like the photo below. Use seitan on sandwiches, in salads, or just eat it alone. And if you come up with a tasty combination of flavors -- let me know! I'd love to highlight it on here!
Today's post is part of VeganMoFo. For more delicious vegan recipes -- including sweets, soups, and other scrumptious things -- keep reading METHOD (subscribe to METHOD's RSS feed). As well, check out the VeganMoFo Flickr group.
Comments
Hey! I'm excited to hear you're going to try some of these recipes. Vegan cooking is a whole new world of deliciousness. Anyway, here's some info on nutritional yeast: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutritional_yeast
As far as where you can buy it -- that depends. I buy mine at Wegmans . . . since don't know your geographical location, I don't know if you have a Wegmans, but it's in the natural bulk food section. Otherwise, I'm sure Whole Foods has it. Or Trader Joe's.
Hope this helps!!!
If you can't find wheat gluton you can make it by:
Mixing flower and water in about a