trending vegan bowl 2026

Easy Bang Bang Tofu Bowl The Sticky Sweet-Spicy Vegan Dinner

Crispy bang bang tofu tossed in sweet-spicy sauce over fluffy rice. The most-saved vegan bowl on Pinterest in May 2026 — ready in just 25 minutes!

Every once in a while, a recipe lands with such perfect timing that it almost feels inevitable. The bang bang tofu bowl appeared on food blogs in mid-May 2026, and within days it had become one of the most-saved recipes across Pinterest food boards. The reason is not complicated: it is crispy, it is sticky, it is sweet and spicy in exactly the right proportions, and it looks — with its glossy orange-red sauce and scattering of sesame seeds and spring onions — like something that should cost twice as much to eat out than it does to make at home.

The “bang bang” sauce originates from a classic Chinese dish traditionally made with sesame paste and chilli oil. In its Western restaurant adaptation, it became a sweet-spicy mayo-based sauce — and in this plant-based version, vegan mayonnaise, sriracha, and sweet chilli sauce combine into something that is genuinely, addictively good. Coating crispy tofu in it, then piling everything over steamed jasmine rice with fresh vegetables, creates a bowl that earns its own name.

Twenty-five minutes. One pan. One bowl. This is the vegan dinner that 320,000 people search for every month, and every single one of them makes it again.

Why Bang Bang Sauce Is Having Its Moment

The sweet-spicy flavour profile — what the food industry is calling “swicy” in 2026 — is one of the most dominant taste trends of the year. VegNews confirmed that “swicy” flavours are expanding across menus, products, and home cooking recipes globally. Bang bang sauce sits squarely at the centre of this trend: the sweetness from the sweet chilli sauce, the heat from the sriracha, and the creaminess of the vegan mayo create a sauce that is simultaneously bold and approachable.

It is also visually compelling. The orange-red glaze over golden, crispy tofu photographs beautifully — which is not a trivial consideration when a significant portion of recipe discovery happens on Pinterest and Instagram, where images drive clicks more than titles do.

Ingredients (Serves 4)

For the crispy tofu:

  • 400g extra-firm tofu, pressed 30 minutes minimum
  • 3 tablespoons cornstarch
  • 1 tablespoon soy sauce
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
  • 2 tablespoons neutral oil

The bang bang sauce:

  • 5 tablespoons vegan mayonnaise
  • 3 tablespoons sweet chilli sauce
  • 2 tablespoons sriracha (adjust to heat preference)
  • 1 tablespoon rice vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 1 garlic clove, finely grated
  • 1 teaspoon maple syrup
  • 1 tablespoon water (to loosen)

The bowl:

  • 400g jasmine rice, cooked
  • 2 Lebanese cucumbers, thinly sliced
  • 2 medium carrots, julienned or grated
  • 1 avocado, sliced
  • 150g shelled edamame (cooked from frozen)
  • 4 spring onions, thinly sliced
  • 2 tablespoons toasted sesame seeds
  • Fresh coriander and lime wedges to serve
  • Extra sriracha for serving

Method

Step 1: Press and Season the Tofu

Press the tofu thoroughly — at least 30 minutes between weighted tea towels, or use a tofu press. Cut into even cubes approximately 2cm. Toss with soy sauce and allow to marinate for five minutes. Dust generously with cornstarch, garlic powder, and smoked paprika, turning to coat all sides.

Step 2: Make the Bang Bang Sauce

Whisk together the vegan mayo, sweet chilli sauce, sriracha, rice vinegar, sesame oil, grated garlic, maple syrup, and water in a bowl until smooth. Taste — the sauce should be creamy, sweet, spicy, and slightly tangy. Add more sriracha for heat or more sweet chilli for sweetness. Set aside.

Step 3: Fry the Tofu

Heat the neutral oil in a wide non-stick pan or cast-iron skillet over high heat. Add the tofu in a single layer — work in batches if necessary to avoid overcrowding. Do not stir for three to four minutes. Allow each piece to develop a deep golden crust before turning. Cook for two to three minutes on each remaining side until all surfaces are crispy. Transfer to a plate.

Step 4: Glaze

Turn the heat to medium. Add two-thirds of the bang bang sauce to the pan. It will bubble immediately. Add the crispy tofu back and toss gently to coat every piece in the glossy sauce. Cook for 60 seconds until the sauce caramelises slightly around each piece. Remove from heat.

Step 5: Build the Bowls

Divide the cooked jasmine rice between four bowls. Arrange the glazed bang bang tofu, cucumber slices, grated carrot, avocado, and edamame around the rice. Drizzle the remaining bang bang sauce over everything. Scatter spring onions, sesame seeds, and fresh coriander. Add lime wedges and extra sriracha on the side.

The Science Behind Crispy Tofu

Getting tofu genuinely crispy in a home kitchen requires three non-negotiable conditions:

Dryness:

All surface moisture must be removed before the tofu hits the pan. Moisture creates steam, which prevents browning. Press thoroughly and pat dry just before seasoning.

Cornstarch coating:

The thin layer of starch creates a barrier between the tofu’s moisture and the hot oil, allowing the exterior to dry and form a crust while the interior remains soft. Without it, tofu browns unevenly.

High heat and patience:

The pan must be genuinely hot before the tofu goes in, and each piece must be left undisturbed long enough to develop a proper crust. Moving it too soon causes it to stick and tear. Three to four minutes of uninterrupted contact with the hot pan is what produces the golden crust.

Sauce Variations

The bang bang sauce template is infinitely adaptable:

Mango bang bang: Add two tablespoons of mango purée to the sauce for a tropical sweetness that reduces the need for sweet chilli sauce.

Gochujang bang bang: Replace sriracha with gochujang for a deeper, fermented heat with complex umami notes.

Peanut bang bang: Add one tablespoon of natural peanut butter to the sauce — it thickens it and adds a nutty dimension that pairs beautifully with the tofu.

Lime and coconut: Replace the mayo with thick coconut cream and add extra lime juice for a lighter, dairy-free variation.

Meal Prep Notes

This bowl is excellent for meal prep with one important consideration: the tofu loses its crispiness within a few hours of being glazed. For meal prep, store the unglazed crispy tofu separately from the sauce, rice, and vegetables..

All other components keep refrigerated for up to four days.

Nutritional Value

Each serving of this bowl provides approximately 25 grams of protein from the tofu and edamame, complex carbohydrates from the jasmine rice, healthy fats from the avocado, and a broad spectrum of vitamins and minerals from the fresh vegetables. Sesame seeds add calcium, zinc, and healthy polyunsaturated fats. The garlic in the sauce provides allicin — a compound with antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory properties.

FAQ

Can I air-fry the tofu? Yes — air-frying produces excellent results with less oil. Toss the cornstarch-coated tofu with one tablespoon of oil and air-fry at 200°C for 15 to 18 minutes, shaking halfway.

Is this recipe gluten-free? Use tamari instead of soy sauce and verify that your sweet chilli sauce and sriracha are gluten-free. All other ingredients are naturally gluten-free.

Can I use another protein? Yes — tempeh, chickpeas, or cauliflower all work well with the bang bang sauce and cornstarch-fry method.

Final Thoughts

The bang bang tofu bowl is one of those rare recipes that genuinely delivers on its visual promise. What looks impressive in a photograph tastes even better on the fork.


Discover more trending plant-based bowl recipes in our Website.

Vegan Lasagna Soup – Ready in 30 Minutes

This vegan version has quietly become one of the most searched plant-based recipes in 2026. And honestly? Once you make it, the reason is obvious. All the things that make lasagna great — the rich tomato sauce, the pillowy pasta, the creamy, cheesy filling — are present in this bowl. The difference is that it takes thirty-five minutes, uses one pot , and requires no layering, no bechamel, and no patience.

The tofu ricotta is the masterstroke. Blended silken tofu with lemon, nutritional yeast, and fresh basil produces a spoonfuls-in-the-soup creaminess that sits beautifully in the tomato broth and carries every bite from good to genuinely extraordinary.

Why This Recipe Is Dominating Google Right Now

Vegan lasagna cracked Google. The reason is simple: lasagna is one of the most universally beloved comfort foods, and the soup format removes every barrier that makes the original feel like a weekend-only project.

The Tofu Ricotta: Why It Works

Traditional lasagna ricotta does three things: it adds creaminess, provides protein, and introduces a mild, slightly tangy dairy flavour that balances the richness of the tomato sauce. Silken tofu replicates all three correctly.

The key is blending it smooth. Smooth silken tofu, combined with nutritional yeast for depth, lemon juice for tang, and fresh basil for fragrance, produces a ricotta-style filling that drops into the soup in spoonfuls and melts slowly into the broth.

Ingredients

For the soup base:

  • 300g lasagna sheets, broken into rough 4–5cm pieces
  • 2 cans (800g) crushed or chopped tomatoes
  • 1 can (400g) tomato passata
  • 700ml vegetable stock
  • 1 medium onion, finely diced
  • 6 garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 medium carrots, finely diced
  • 2 stalks celery, finely diced
  • 150g brown or green lentils (or 1 can, drained)
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • 1 teaspoon dried basil
  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
  • ½ teaspoon chilli flakes (optional)
  • 1 teaspoon coconut sugar or caster sugar
  • Salt and black pepper to taste
  • A large handful of fresh basil or spinach to finish

For the tofu ricotta:

  • 400g silken tofu, drained
  • 3 tablespoons nutritional yeast
  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 garlic clove, minced
  • A handful of fresh basil
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • Black pepper to taste

Step 1: Make the Tofu Ricotta First

Place all ricotta ingredients into a blender or food processor. Blend until completely smooth and creamy — this takes about 60 seconds. Taste and adjust salt, lemon, and nutritional yeast. The mixture should be rich, slightly tangy, and fragrant with basil. Transfer to a bowl, cover, and refrigerate while you build the soup. Cold tofu ricotta dropped into hot soup creates the best textural contrast.

Step 2: Build the Soffritto

Heat the olive oil in a large, deep pot over medium heat. Add the diced onion, carrots, and celery with a generous pinch of salt. Cook for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables are softened and the onion is turning golden. Add the garlic and cook for two more minutes.

Step 3: Add Tomatoes and Spices

Add the tomato paste and stir for two minutes, allowing it to caramelise slightly. Add the dried oregano, basil, smoked paprika, and chilli flakes. Stir for one minute to bloom the spices. Pour in the crushed tomatoes and passata. Stir well and simmer for five minutes.

Step 4: Add Stock, Lentils, and Pasta

Add the vegetable stock and lentils. Bring to a boil, then reduce to a steady simmer. If using dried lentils, add them now and simmer for 15 minutes before adding the pasta. If using canned lentils, add them at the same time as the pasta.

Break the lasagna sheets into rough 4–5cm pieces over the pot. Stir well to prevent sticking. Simmer for 10 to 12 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the pasta is just al dente. The soup will thicken considerably as the pasta releases its starch — add a splash of additional stock if it becomes thicker than you prefer.

Step 5: Finish and Serve

Add the coconut sugar and season generously with salt and black pepper. Stir in the fresh basil or spinach — it will wilt immediately in the hot soup. Remove from heat.

Ladle into deep, warmed bowls. Drop generous spoonfuls of the cold tofu ricotta onto the surface of each bowl — two to three large spoonfuls per serving. The contrast between the hot soup and the cold, creamy ricotta is part of what makes this dish extraordinary. Finish with a drizzle of olive oil, extra fresh basil, and chilli flakes.

The Pasta Timing Problem (And How to Solve It)

Pasta in soup is genuinely problematic for meal prep and storage: it continues absorbing liquid and becomes soft and bloated if left in the soup overnight. There are two solutions:

Option A (Recommended for meal prep): Cook the pasta separately and store it apart from the soup base. Combine per portion at the time of reheating. This maintains perfect pasta texture across four to five days of storage.

Option B: Slightly undercook the pasta in the soup pull it off heat when it is still firmly al dente. The residual heat and overnight resting will bring it to the right texture by the following day.

Nutritional Highlights

This soup is a complete meal in a bowl. Lentils provide approximately 18 grams of protein per serving alongside significant amounts of iron and folate. Tofu ricotta contributes additional plant protein and calcium. The tomato base is rich in lycopene — a carotenoid antioxidant most bioavailable in cooked tomatoes — and the olive oil aids its absorption. Fresh basil contributes vitamin K and anti-inflammatory volatile compounds.

Per serving: approximately 420 calories, 22g protein, 14g fibre.

FAQ

Can I make this gluten-free? Yes — use gluten-free lasagna sheets or replace with rice pasta. The texture will be slightly different and delicious.

Can I freeze it? Freeze the soup base (without pasta and without tofu ricotta) for up to three months. Make fresh pasta and ricotta.

What can I substitute for silken tofu? Blended cannellini beans with nutritional yeast and lemon produce a similar creamy result. The flavour is slightly earthier and works well.

Storage

Refrigerate the soup base (without pasta) for up to four days. Cook fresh pasta per serving or store separately. The tofu ricotta keeps refrigerated in a sealed jar for three days.

Final Thoughts

The vegan lasagna soup is, in the truest sense, a recipe for our current moment: nostalgic in flavour, modern in format, simple in technique, and extraordinary in result. It delivers everything lasagna promises without any of the effort it usually demands. Make it once, and you will understand exactly why 480,000 people search for it every month.


Find more one-pot vegan dinners and trending plant-based recipes in our Website.