Vegan Chorizo
Updated March 17, 2022

- Total Time
- 45 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 7large guajillo chiles, destemmed, deseeded and rinsed
- 2chiles de árbol, destemmed, deseeded and rinsed
- 3cups boiling water
- 2large garlic cloves
- 2tablespoons ground cumin
- 1tablespoon paprika
- ¾teaspoon ground coriander
- ½teaspoon ground clove
- ½teaspoon ground cinnamon, preferably Ceylon
- 1teaspoon dried oregano
- 1tablespoon apple cider vinegar
- 2tablespoons liquid aminos, soy sauce or tamari
- 2teaspoons kosher salt (Diamond Crystal)
- 15½ounces firm tofu, patted dry and crumbled
- 10ounces shiitake or cremini mushrooms, trimmed and finely minced (about 3 cups)
- ½cup neutral oil, such as grapeseed
Preparation
- Step 1
Add the guajillo chiles and chiles de árbol to a heatproof bowl and pour in the 3 cups of boiling water. Allow the chiles to rehydrate for at least 10 minutes, gently pressing a bowl on top to submerge them in the water if needed.
- Step 2
Once tender, add the chiles to a blender with ½ cup of the soaking liquid. Add the garlic, cumin, paprika, salt, oregano, coriander, clove, cinnamon, liquid aminos and vinegar, and blend for 1 to 2 minutes until completely smooth, stopping to scrape the sides of the blender as needed.
- Step 3
Combine the crumbled tofu and minced mushrooms in a large bowl. Pour the blended mixture over the tofu and mushrooms, and mix until fully incorporated.
- Step 4
Add the oil to a large (12-inch) pan over medium heat. Once the oil is hot and shimmering, add the soyrizo mixture.
- Step 5
Cook for 20 minutes until the mixture begins to sear and lightly brown, stirring occasionally and scraping the bottom of the pan. The liquid from the tofu and mushrooms should be mostly absorbed.
- Step 6
Serve as taco filling with diced onion, minced cilantro, guacamole and lime, or add to your favorite dishes that call for chorizo. Keep refrigerated for up to a week in an airtight container.
Private Notes
Comments
This looks great, but Trader Joe's makes an excellent soy chorizo, at a very moderate costs. I'll let someone more ambitious make this.
Made this but swapped for spices common to hot Italian sausage: 2tsp crushed fennel, 2 tsp cracked black pepper, 1/2 tsp red pepper flakes, 1tbs assorted Italian spices (basil, thyme, oregano, etc.) in whatever combo you like, 1tsp paprika, 1 tsp kosher salt. I kept the soy (it helps color the tofu) and cut the oil to the few tablespoons necessary for browning. It worked worked well for a vegetarian lasagna and can see it being a good in a pasta sauce or as a ravioli filling.
Made this a couple times now and this is the new go-to. Better than the TJ’s, which we like a lot. I make it using TVP instead of tofu (1 C dry w/ 1 c water or broth) as I prefer the chewier texture. TVP also soaks you the oil nicely. Only had an 8 oz container of mushrooms the first time so subbed 2 oz. ground walnuts. Used chiles from Rancho Gordo.
I might try crumbled chickpeas or seitan for the tofu next time for more chew, but the flavor was excellent and the recipe easy. Great tacos!
This is good, would be relatively satisfied if I were served this in a restaurant. However the liquid aminos taste is pretty much the dominant flavor. Could stand to use less salt as well.
This is the best vegan chorizo I've ever had. none of the store bought packaged vegan chorizo can hold a candle to it.
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