Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (2024)

This post may include affiliate links; for details, see our disclosure policy.

This vegan lasagna recipe will become your new favorite: guaranteed. It’s full of flavor and a winner with everyone!

Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (1)

Are you a lasagna lover? Us too. Lately we wondered: is cheese essential to that classic Italian baked pasta? After lots of testing…turns out, no! Vegan lasagna is a thing, and it’s extremely tasty. In fact, we agreed: this is our favorite lasagna recipe, period. You can make this huge pan on a budget, so it’s a healthy dinner recipe that’s affordable to all! It pleases everyone, even meat eaters, and is great for entertaining or a casual family dinner. Ready to get started?

Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (2)

What makes it the best vegan lasagna recipe?

No matter how you eat, this vegan lasagna will be a hit. We promise! We had a few friends over for dinner to try it, and here’s what they had to say: “Wow! This is so good. I can’t stop eating it. I need another piece!” Somehow we stumbled upon a truly delicious way to make a dairy free lasagna. Even better, it’s easy to make and made with all whole foods. No cheese or meat substitutes here! Here’s what makes this vegan lasagna recipe special:

  • Really good pasta sauce. We used an organic tomato basil pasta sauce that has a great, robust flavor. You’ll want to use the best sauce you can find.
  • Mushroom, cashews, & spinach. For a meaty filling, chop mushrooms and cashews, and sauté with spinach.
  • Hummus! Our secret ingredient is hummus! It stands in for the typical creamy ricotta cheese filling and infuses huge flavor.
  • “Parmesan” Cashews blended with garlic powder make for a Parmesan-like topping.
Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (3)

Watch how to make vegan lasagna

No boil noodles are required!

This vegan lasagna is made with no boil lasagna noodles. No boil noodles are required here: no substitutions please! No boil noodles are different from standard noodles: they’re made especially so you don’t have to cook them before baking lasagna. This makes prep time shorter. Even better, some people even argue that no boil noodles have the superior texture for a lasagna. So wins all around!

More liquid is required in a lasagna when making it with no boil noodles. This recipe is specially formulated to cook the no boil noodles while baking. Bottom line: Don’t try this vegan recipe with standard noodles or it could end up too watery.

Another noodle note: If you have a large 9 x 13” aluminum pan with square sides, you’ll need 13 ounces noodles. A 9 x 13” glass baking dish with rounded sides only needs 10 ounces of pasta noodles! Because baking dish shapes and noodle shapes can vary, make sure you have enough pasta based on the baking dish you plan to use.

Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (4)
Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (5)
Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (6)
Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (7)

Use a high-quality pasta sauce

The only other “must” for this recipe: find a high-quality pasta sauce! We made this vegan lasagna recipe especially to use pasta sauce because: let’s face it! Lasagna takes a while to make, and a jarred sauce truly speeds up prep time.

There are lots of high-quality pasta sauces these days, even organic. Find your favorite and use it for this lasagna. You could of course substitute your favorite homemade marinara sauce. For this recipe, we used Simply Nature organic tomato & basil pasta sauce from ALDI. It had fantastic flavor and really made this vegan lasagna shine.

Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (8)

Are there any time savers?

Lasagna is notoriously time-intensive. We’ve optimized this vegan lasagna recipe so that it’s as easy to make as possible. If you’re looking for ways to save time when baking it the day of, here are a few options:

  • Use a food processor (optional). A food processor is not required for this recipe! We used ours because it makes chopping the mushrooms and making the “Parmesan” topping very fast. If you don’t have one, you can use a regular large knife for chopping.
  • Make the mushroom filling and Parmesan in advance. The main prep steps here are the mushroom filling and the dairy free “Parmesan” topping. You can make and cook the filling in advance: just store it refrigerated until making the lasagna. Make and store the Parmesan topping at room temperature.
Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (9)

Sides to serve with vegan lasagna

Ready to make this vegan lasagna into a meal? The best side to serve with lasagna is the good old standard: a green salad! Here are a few we’d recommend:

  • Apple Salad Easy to whip up, with tangy apples covered in a zingy balsamic vinaigrette. Make it while the lasagna bakes! (Omit the cheese crumbles for vegan.)
  • BEST Kale Salad Features a tangy lemon vinaigrette that makes kale taste like a dream! (Omit the Parmesan cheese.)
  • Favorite Chopped Salad or Perfect Italian Salad Our favorites, with crisp veggies and tangy Italian dressing. (Omit the Parmesan cheese.)
  • Sauteed Spinach or Sauteed Broccoli add a splash of green.
  • Easy Garlic Toast It’s garlicky, crunchy and vegan.

This vegan lasagna recipe is…

Vegetarian, vegan, plant based, and dairy free. For gluten free, use gluten free no boil lasagna noodles.

Print

Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (14)

Favorite Vegan Lasagna (Easy & Dairy Free!)

  • Author: Sonja Overhiser
  • Prep Time: 35 minutes
  • Cook Time: 50 minutes
  • Total Time: 1 hour 25 minutes
  • Yield: 12 1x
Print Recipe

Description

This vegan lasagna recipe will become your new favorite: guaranteed. It’s full of flavor and a winner with everyone!

Ingredients

Scale

  • 8 ounces baby bella mushrooms
  • 1 cup roasted cashews, divided
  • ½ teaspoon dried rosemary
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 5 ounces baby spinach
  • ¼ teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice + 1 teaspoon lemon zest (1/2 lemon)
  • ⅛ teaspoon garlic powder
  • 2 25-ounce jars tomato basil pasta sauce or marinara sauce
  • 2 8-ounce cans tomato sauce
  • 10 to 13 ounces no boil lasagna noodles* (see note!)
  • 8-ounce container hummus (or garlic hummus)
  • Dried oregano, for sprinkling
  • Fresh ground black pepper

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 375°F.
  2. Make the spinach mushroom filling: Pull out the stems of mushrooms with your fingers. In a food processor or with a large knife, roughly chop the mushrooms, ½ cup of the cashews and the rosemary. Add 2 tablespoons olive oil to a skillet and bring to medium heat. Sauté mushrooms and cashews for 3 minutes until soft but still hold their shape. Add the spinach (saving out a few leaves for the garnish) and sauté until wilted, 1 to 2 minutes. Remove from the heat and stir in ¼ teaspoon of the kosher salt, a few grinds of pepper, and the lemon juice. Let stand until assembling.
  3. Make the dairy free Parmesan topping: in a food processor or blender, blend ½ cup cashews with the garlic powder and lemon zest until it’s ground into about the texture of a shaker can of grated Parmesan. (Alternatively, chop as finely as possible with a knife.)
  4. Mix the sauce: In a large bowl, mix together the pasta sauce and tomato sauce.
  5. Layer the lasagna: In a 9 x 13” baking dish, spread tomato sauce on the bottom of the pan. Then top with 1 layer of noodles (our pan held 3 noodles longwise and ¾ noodle widthwise), breaking noodles as necessary**. Spread with half of the hummus, half of the mushrooms and a tomato sauce layer. Repeat again: 1 layer of noodles, half of the hummus, half of the greens and tomato sauce. Finally, top with noodles, then tomato sauce again. Sprinkle the entire top with the “Parmesan” and dried oregano.
  6. Bake: Cover the pan with aluminum foil and bake for 40 minutes, then 10 minutes uncovered. Let stand for 15 minutes before serving (this allows the lasagna to set). If you’d like, finely chop spinach leaves to use as a garnish (for looks only!). Cut into pieces and enjoy.

Notes

*Important: You must use no-boil lasagna noodles for this recipe! Do not substitute standard noodles. The amount of sauce is formulated for no boil noodles, which need more liquid than standard lasagna noodles.

**If you have a large 9 x 13” aluminum pan with square sides, you’ll need 13 ounces noodles. A 9 x 13” glass baking dish with rounded sides only needs 10 ounces of pasta noodles! Baking dish shapes and noodle shapes can vary, so make sure you have enough pasta based on your baking dish.

  • Category: Main Dish
  • Method: Baked
  • Cuisine: Italian

Keywords: Vegan Lasagna, non dairy, dairy free, cheeseless, lasagna, italian

vegan vegetarian

Published on / Last updated on

Categorized In:

  • Dinner Recipes
  • Recipes
  • Special Occasion Dinner Recipes

Tagged with:

  • Cashews
  • Dairy-Free
  • Italian
  • Lasagna
  • Mushrooms
  • Noodles
  • Pasta
  • Plant-Based
  • Spinach
  • Tomatoes
  • Vegan Recipes
  • Vegetarian Recipes

About the authors

Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (15)

Sonja & Alex

Hi, we’re Alex and Sonja Overhiser, married cookbook authors, food bloggers, and recipe developers. We founded A Couple Cooks to share fresh, seasonal recipes for memorable kitchen moments! Our recipes are made by two real people and work every time.

About Us

Favorite Vegan Lasagna Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How do you keep veggie lasagna from getting soggy? ›

For this recipe, we help reduce excess moisture by using no-boil noodles, cooking the mushrooms, onion and bell peppers before adding them to the lasagna, and squeezing the liquid out of the cooked spinach with a kitchen towel. You want your veggies as dry as possible so you are not adding more moisture than necessary.

What is vegan lasagna made of? ›

2 containers of Vegan Tofu or Cashew Cheese;
  • 1 box of Lasagna pasta;
  • 2 cans of crushed tomatoes;
  • 1 can tomato paste;
  • 2 tbsp Italian seasoning;
  • 2 cloves of garlic; diced.
  • 2 onions;
  • 6 mushrooms; sliced;
  • 2 tablespoons molasses;
Sep 29, 2020

What keeps lasagna from falling apart? ›

A helpful technique can prevent this pitfall from sabotaging your lasagna: Reduce your sauce to thicken it before pouring it into the casserole. A thin sauce runs right off of cooked lasagna noodles, causing all the layers to slide off of each other, as well.

How do you make lasagna so it doesn't fall apart? ›

If your lasagna is falling apart it could be because, it is to hot. Let it sit about 5 mins after you pull it out of the oven. Also your sauce could be to thin, if your sauce is watery it will cause your lasagna to not cut properly. Thicken it up by letting it reduce, adding less water or adding a bit of tomato paste.

Can you leave vegetarian lasagna out overnight? ›

The guidelines for food handling recommend that food only be left out for 2 hours at the most.

How long does homemade veggie lasagna last? ›

Leftover vegetarian lasagna keeps well in an airtight container or covered dish in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. Reheat it in the microwave or a 350°F oven. To freeze vegetable lasagna: Assemble the lasagna in the baking dish. Cover tightly with foil and store in the freezer for up to 3 months.

What is a good substitute for meat in lasagna? ›

A: For the meaty ragu, vegan lasagnas can be made with a vegan meat alternative or simply with finely minced mushrooms and lentils. Crumbled tempeh works great too! For the creamy white sauce, the milk and butter can be replaced for non-dairy alternatives. Try soy milk and vegan butter instead.

Can you buy vegan lasagna sheets? ›

San Remo No. 228 Gluten Free and Vegan Lasagne Sheets provide a premium quality substitute for gluten free and vegan diets without sacrificing taste. The sheets are also suitable for dairy free and egg free diets. Create lasagne with roast vegetables, pesto and other diet appropriate ingredients.

Is Stouffer's lasagna vegetarian? ›

Which variety is best for vegetarians? Stouffer's Vegetable Lasagna is meatless and perfect for your vegetarian guests. Because our lasagna products contain cheese, they are not recommended for those with vegan diets. Are any of your lasagna varieties gluten free?

Why put toothpick in lasagna? ›

Pro Tip: There's nothing worse than having the top portion of cheese stuck to the foil. To prevent this, I poke 8-10 toothpicks evenly around the top of the lasagna, pushing them in halfway to keep the foil from touching the cheese. Just be sure to count and remove every toothpick prior to serving.

Is lasagna better made the day before? ›

If you make your lasagna the day before, it will probably taste better! Letting the dish set for a day let's the flavors meld. Just make sure that when you do make it, you don't overcook it is — that will make the pasta soggy; remember, you will need to reheat it when you are ready to serve.

How many layers should a lasagna be? ›

Let me break it to you: If you want to make a lasagna, three layers just won't cut it! For the perfect lasagna, you need at least 4-5 layers to really enjoy all those mouth-watering flavors. And, here's a pro-tip: make sure to season each layer generously, but not too much. The average lasagna has 8 layers!

What can I use instead of tomato sauce in lasagna? ›

What can I substitute for tomato sauce?
  • Tomato paste. “I think of tomato paste as the garlic powder equivalent to fresh garlic,” Xie said, noting that it's highly concentrated and very dehydrated. ...
  • Canned tomatoes. ...
  • Tomato soup. ...
  • Ketchup. ...
  • Fresh tomato. ...
  • Sun-dried tomatoes.
Mar 24, 2022

What happens if you don't let lasagna rest? ›

The usual cause is not allowing the lasagna to rest long enough after cooking, so to help prevent a loose and runny casserole, you'll need to let it sit for quite a while.

Can I put lasagna together and bake it the next day? ›

Lasagna is the kind of food that can keep a family fed for many nights in a row, happily. But it has other perks, too: namely, that you can prepare the whole thing in advance, and store it in the fridge overnight—ready to pop in the oven an hour or so before dinner (just before the kids start to whine).

How do you add moisture to lasagna? ›

There are four tried and true methods to prevent dry lasagne.
  1. Par cook the noodles. Don't cook them all of the way, just until they are pliable. ...
  2. Use enough sauce. ...
  3. Cover your lasagne with a layer of plastic wrap and then a layer of aluminum foil before you bake it. ...
  4. Bechamel sauce.
Apr 4, 2017

How do you store vegetable lasagna? ›

Make Ahead and Storing Tips

To make it ahead, assemble it and store the unbaked lasagna in the fridge for up to 2 days. (I like to add a sheet of parchment paper on top before covering the baking dish with foil). I prefer freezing baked lasagna.

Should I cook veggie lasagna before freezing? ›

You can take one of two approaches when it comes to freezing lasagna: assemble and freeze it unbaked, or bake the lasagna and then freeze it. Either way, plan on baking frozen lasagna within three months (any longer, and the quality starts to deteriorate).

Why is my eggplant lasagna watery? ›

The eggplants need time to sweat out their juices before cooking or else the dish is too watery. Sprinkle a little salt over the slices and place in a colander over the sink for at least a half hour to several hours- the eggplant will sweat out the additional liquid. Skip this step and you will have a soggy lasagna.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Corie Satterfield

Last Updated:

Views: 6170

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (62 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Corie Satterfield

Birthday: 1992-08-19

Address: 850 Benjamin Bridge, Dickinsonchester, CO 68572-0542

Phone: +26813599986666

Job: Sales Manager

Hobby: Table tennis, Soapmaking, Flower arranging, amateur radio, Rock climbing, scrapbook, Horseback riding

Introduction: My name is Corie Satterfield, I am a fancy, perfect, spotless, quaint, fantastic, funny, lucky person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.