vegan peanut sauce recipe

Fresh Mango and Avocado Summer Rolls with Peanut Dipping Sauce

There is a category of food that exists at the intersection of beautiful and delicious — food that looks like someone spent a great deal of time on it when they actually did not, and that tastes light and vibrant and like something you want to eat slowly. Vietnamese-style fresh summer rolls sit squarely in that category.

These mango and avocado summer rolls are raw, refreshing, and visually striking. The rice paper wrapper is translucent, allowing the vivid colours of the filling — the warm orange of the mango, the pale green of the avocado, the deep purple of the red cabbage — to show through like stained glass. They are the kind of dish that gets photographed before it gets eaten, and that still tastes excellent once the photography is done.

The peanut dipping sauce is the companion these rolls deserve: rich, slightly spicy, and assertive enough to complement the delicate filling without overwhelming it.

A Note on Rice Paper Wrappers

Rice paper wrappers require a brief soak in warm water to become pliable — typically 15 to 20 seconds in water that is warm but not boiling. Under-soaked wrappers are brittle and crack during rolling. Over-soaked wrappers become sticky and tear. The ideal is a wrapper that is just pliable — still slightly stiff when removed from the water, finishing its softening process as you lay it flat and begin filling it.

The technique is learned rather than read, and the first roll is almost always the least elegant. By the fourth, you will have found your rhythm.

Ingredients (Makes 10–12 rolls)

For the rolls:

  • 10–12 round rice paper wrappers (22cm diameter)
  • 2 ripe mangoes, peeled and julienned or thinly sliced
  • 2 ripe avocados, sliced
  • ½ head red cabbage, very finely shredded
  • 2 medium carrots, julienned or grated
  • 1 cucumber, julienned (seeds removed)
  • 100g rice vermicelli noodles, cooked and cooled
  • A large handful of fresh mint leaves
  • A large handful of fresh coriander
  • A large handful of fresh Thai basil (optional but excellent)
  • 1 red chilli, thinly sliced (optional)
  • 1 lime, for squeezing

For the peanut dipping sauce:

  • 4 tablespoons natural peanut butter
  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce or tamari
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
  • 1 tablespoon maple syrup or coconut sugar
  • 1 tablespoon rice vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 2 garlic cloves, finely grated
  • 1 teaspoon fresh ginger, grated
  • 1 teaspoon chilli sauce or sambal oelek
  • 4–6 tablespoons warm water (to thin)

Method

Step 1: Prepare All Fillings

Before you begin rolling, have every element of the filling prepared, organised, and within reach. Once you start working with a soaked rice paper wrapper, speed matters — you want to fill and roll without stopping to chop or prepare. Set out the mango, avocado, cabbage, carrot, cucumber, noodles, and herbs in small portions on a large chopping board or tray.

Step 2: Make the Peanut Sauce

In a bowl, whisk together the peanut butter, soy sauce, lime juice, maple syrup, rice vinegar, sesame oil, garlic, ginger, and chilli sauce. Add warm water, one tablespoon at a time, until the sauce is smooth and pourable. It should coat the back of a spoon but flow freely when lifted. Taste and adjust — more lime if it needs brightness, more soy if flat, more maple syrup if too sharp. Set aside.

Step 3: Soak and Roll

Fill a large, shallow bowl or roasting tray with warm water. Submerge a rice paper wrapper for 15 to 20 seconds until just pliable. Remove carefully and lay flat on a clean, damp surface (a slightly damp tea towel or silicone mat works well — not a dry chopping board, which causes sticking).

Layer the fillings in the lower third of the wrapper: a small bundle of vermicelli noodles, a few slices of mango and avocado, a pinch of shredded cabbage and carrot, a few sticks of cucumber, mint leaves, coriander, and Thai basil. Do not overfill — the roll should close comfortably.

Fold the bottom of the wrapper up over the filling. Fold in the two sides. Roll forward firmly but gently until you have a neat cylinder. The rice paper will stick to itself. Place seam-side down on a plate. Repeat with remaining wrappers.

Step 4: Serve

Serve immediately with the peanut dipping sauce. If making ahead, lay the rolls on a parchment-lined tray, cover with a damp tea towel, and refrigerate for up to three hours. Beyond that, the wrappers begin to dry and crack.

Filling Variations

Summer rolls are one of the most adaptable preparations in any kitchen. Once you are comfortable with the technique, the filling becomes an exercise in creativity:

Tropical: Papaya, pineapple, and coconut strips with fresh mint and lime zest.

Protein-rich: Add strips of marinated and pan-fried tofu or tempeh alongside the vegetables.

Korean-inspired: Replace the peanut sauce with a gochujang-soy dipping sauce. Add kimchi, thinly sliced cucumber, and sesame seeds to the filling.

Mediterranean: Fill with hummus, roasted red peppers, cucumber, olives, and fresh parsley. Serve with a tahini dipping sauce.

Nutrition

Fresh summer rolls are among the most nutritionally efficient handheld foods available. Each roll provides a meaningful portion of vitamins A and C from the vegetables, healthy monounsaturated fats from the avocado, and plant-based protein and healthy fats from the peanut sauce. Mango contributes beta-carotene, vitamin C, and natural sugars for immediate energy.

Rice paper wrappers are naturally gluten-free, low in calories, and easy to digest. This makes these rolls a genuinely accessible option for those managing a range of dietary requirements.

A Final Note

What I love most about this recipe is the moment of assembly — the meditative repetition of soaking, filling, rolling. It is the kind of cooking that slows you down in the best way, requiring enough attention to pull you fully into the present moment.

Make these for a summer lunch, a light dinner, or a visually impressive starter for guests. Serve with additional lime wedges and a small dish of soy sauce alongside the peanut sauce.

They are one of those rare dishes that are as enjoyable to make as they are to eat.


Explore more fresh and vibrant plant-based recipes in our Website.

Thai Peanut Noodles: The 20-Minute Vegan Dinner That Tastes Like Takeaway

Some recipes exist to remind you that eating well does not have to be complicated. These Thai peanut noodles are perhaps the best example I know of that truth. They come together in under twenty minutes, require minimal equipment, and produce a bowl of food so rich, so balanced, and so quietly addictive that I have made them more times than I can reasonably count.

The peanut sauce is the centrepiece. It is bold without being heavy, sweet without being cloying, and carries just enough heat to keep you reaching for the next mouthful. Tossed through rice noodles and piled with crisp, fresh vegetables, it is the kind of dish that proves vegan food at its best is not a substitute for anything — it is simply excellent cooking in its own right.

This recipe is also almost infinitely adaptable. Whatever vegetables you have in your refrigerator — bell peppers, broccoli, edamame, cucumber, shredded carrot — they all belong here. The sauce is the constant; everything else is a variable.

The Anatomy of a Great Peanut Sauce

A great peanut sauce has five elements in balance: fat, salt, acid, sweetness, and heat. Peanut butter provides the fat and, together with soy sauce, the salt. Fresh lime juice delivers the acid. Maple syrup or coconut sugar brings the sweetness. Fresh chilli or chilli flakes provide the heat. Garlic and ginger thread through the whole thing, giving it depth and fragrance.

The ratio matters, but so does your palate — and that is why tasting as you go is not optional here, it is the recipe. Start with the proportions below, then adjust. A touch more lime if it needs brightness. A little more soy if it feels flat. An extra teaspoon of chilli if you want more fire. The sauce should taste almost too intense on its own, because once tossed through noodles and vegetables, it mellows significantly.

One more thing: use warm water to thin the sauce rather than cold. Warm water blends more easily into the peanut butter and prevents the sauce from seizing up.

Ingredients (Serves 4)

For the peanut sauce:

  • 5 tablespoons natural peanut butter (smooth or crunchy)
  • 3 tablespoons soy sauce or tamari
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
  • 1½ tablespoons maple syrup or coconut sugar
  • 1 tablespoon rice vinegar
  • 2 teaspoons sesame oil
  • 3 garlic cloves, finely minced or grated
  • 1 tablespoon fresh ginger, grated
  • 1 to 2 teaspoons chilli flakes or sambal oelek (to taste)
  • 4 to 6 tablespoons warm water (to loosen)

For the noodles and vegetables:

  • 300g rice noodles (flat or vermicelli)
  • 1 red bell pepper, thinly sliced
  • 2 medium carrots, julienned or grated
  • 1 cucumber, halved and thinly sliced
  • 150g edamame beans (shelled, thawed if frozen)
  • 4 spring onions, thinly sliced
  • A large handful of fresh coriander
  • A large handful of fresh mint
  • 2 tablespoons sesame seeds, toasted

Optional toppings:

  • Crushed roasted peanuts
  • Extra lime wedges
  • Crispy tofu or tempeh
  • Thinly sliced red chilli

Method

Step 1: Make the Peanut Sauce

Combine the peanut butter, soy sauce, lime juice, maple syrup, rice vinegar, sesame oil, garlic, ginger, and chilli flakes in a medium bowl. Whisk together until smooth — it will look thick and slightly seized at first, but keep whisking. Add warm water, one tablespoon at a time, until you reach a pourable, coating consistency. Taste and adjust any element you feel is out of balance. Set aside.

Step 2: Cook the Noodles

Cook the rice noodles according to the packet instructions — most flat rice noodles require soaking in boiling water for 5 to 8 minutes rather than active boiling. Once tender, drain and rinse under cold water to stop the cooking and prevent sticking. If the noodles are very long, you can snip them roughly with kitchen scissors for easier tossing.

Step 3: Prepare the Vegetables

While the noodles soak, prepare all your vegetables. This is a raw-vegetable dish, so everything is sliced or grated for maximum freshness. The crunch of the carrot and bell pepper against the tender noodles and creamy sauce is part of what makes this dish so appealing.

Step 4: Combine

Place the drained noodles in a large bowl. Pour over most of the peanut sauce and toss well to coat every strand. Add the carrots, bell pepper, edamame, spring onions, coriander, and mint. Toss again gently, adding more sauce if needed. The noodles absorb the sauce quickly, so be generous.

Step 5: Serve

Divide between bowls and garnish with toasted sesame seeds, crushed peanuts, fresh lime wedges, and any additional toppings. Serve immediately, or refrigerate and serve cold as a noodle salad — it works beautifully both ways.

Making it a Full Meal: Adding Protein

The noodles as described are a satisfying meal for most people, but if you want to add more protein, crispy tofu is the natural companion.

To make crispy tofu: press a block of firm tofu between clean tea towels for at least 20 minutes to remove excess moisture. Cut into cubes, toss in a little soy sauce and cornstarch, and pan-fry in a tablespoon of neutral oil over high heat until golden and crisp on all sides. Add directly to the bowl.

Tempeh, marinated and pan-fried, is another excellent option. Its firmer, slightly nutty character pairs especially well with the intensity of the peanut sauce.

Health Benefits Worth Noting

Despite tasting like an indulgence, this dish is nutritionally well-rounded. Natural peanut butter provides protein, healthy monounsaturated fats, vitamin E, and magnesium. The raw vegetables contribute a range of vitamins, antioxidants, and dietary fibre. Fresh herbs — particularly coriander — provide meaningful amounts of vitamin K and trace minerals.

Rice noodles are naturally gluten-free and easy to digest, making this a dish that is accessible to those with gluten sensitivities. Use tamari instead of standard soy sauce to ensure the dish is fully gluten-free.

The sesame oil, beyond flavour, provides lignans and healthy polyunsaturated fats. It is one of those ingredients that earns its place nutritionally as well as flavourwise.

Storage

The peanut sauce can be made several days in advance and stored in a sealed jar in the refrigerator, where it will keep for up to a week. The assembled noodles are best eaten on the day they are made, as the noodles continue to absorb the sauce and can become clumped if stored overnight. If making ahead, store the sauce, noodles, and vegetables separately and combine just before serving.

A Recipe for All Occasions

What I appreciate most about this recipe is that it requires no special occasion. It belongs equally at a dinner party — served in a large bowl in the centre of the table for people to help themselves — and on a Tuesday evening when you open the refrigerator, see a wilting bell pepper and some leftover noodles, and decide something good can still come from what is there.

That versatility, more than anything else, is what makes this a staple recipe. It adapts to you, to your kitchen, and to whatever happens to be in your vegetable drawer. And it always tastes like someone tried.


Discover more quick and delicious plant-based meals in our Website