After a few days of unbearable heat around these parts, the temperature has come back down and there is a nice gentle breeze in the air again. I’m glad, as even though I love warm weather, that was a bit much, especially when you are stuck in a city and no longer live by the sea. Had the weather not calmed down a bit, all I could manage today would be another salad recipe but luckily putting the oven on is no longer torture and so I have a way more exciting recipe for you today, for vegan fajitas.
While this recipe can be done on the stove top, the mushrooms in particular benefit from being baked. Initially, I started off baking the mushrooms and sizzling the onions and peppers in a pan separately, but then I had a brainwave and decided to combine the two and bake them instead. This way is so much more straight forward and convenient. These vegan fajitas make for a perfect midweek dinner material or low effort entertaining that doesn’t leave you so exhausted preparing the meal that you end up not really enjoying the evening. Or maybe that’s just me. I sometimes feel so much pressure for everything to be spot on and for everyone to enjoy the food that all that mental fretting leaves me drained. Although I am working on cutting myself some slack more and more often and I am happy to report that it really does work wonders on one’s mood.
So these vegan fajitas are really super easy to make. All you need to do is to chop up some onion and peppers roughly. Then place them and some oyster mushrooms on a large baking tray and coat in a marinade fragrant with spices. Leave the ingredients to marinate for a few hours if you can or shove into the oven straight way if you are too hungry to wait. Then wait half an hour for the oven to do its magic and that’s it, YOU ARE DONE!
Use shop-bought tortillas (I obviously made my own cos my perfectionism is only curable up to a point 😉 ), vegan sour cream, a ripe avocado, some fresh coriander and a squeeze of lime and enjoy. Don’t forget about some chilled summer ale (if you are that way inclined) and both YOU and your guests will be a bunch of happy bunnies. An al fresco consumption method is highly recommended but not a non-negotiable…Hope you’ll enjoy these as much as we have!
- 60 ml / ¼ cup olive oil*
- 35 ml / 2½ tbsp soy sauce or tamari (for GF version) or ¾ tsp salt
- 30-45 ml / 2-3 tbsp lime juice, adjust to taste (I like 3 tbsp)
- 2 tsp maple syrup
- 2 cloves garlic, finely grated
- 1¼ tsp ground cumin
- 1¼ tsp smoked paprika
- ¼ tsp black pepper
- 1/8 tsp cayenne pepper, to taste
- 1 red bell pepper, thickly sliced
- 1 yellow bell pepper, thickly sliced
- 1 red onion, thickly sliced
- 300 g / 10½ oz oyster mushrooms
- 8 soft tortillas* (corn for GF version), kept warm
REMAINING INGREDIENTS
- avocado or guacamole
- vegan sour cream, homemade or shop-bought
- small bunch of coriander
- lime wedges
- Make the marinade by combining the first 9 ingredients together. Mix really well.
- Put all of the pepper and onion slices on a large, deep, baking tray (like this). Add the mushrooms, tearing bigger ones into smaller pieces with your hands.
- Coat everything in the marinade and set aside for as long as you can, but you can bake straight away too, if you wish.
- Preheat the oven to 200° C / 390° F.
- Bake the mushrooms and peppers for about 15 minutes, giving everything a good stir and then increase the temperature 225° C / 435° F to bake for another 20-25 minutes, until all juices bake out and the ingredients get a nice char.
ASSEMBLY
- Assemble your vegan fajitas by putting a generous amount of filling at the bottom of each tortilla. Finish off with chopped avocado, vegan sour cream, fresh coriander and a squeeze of lime and a dash of Tabasco (if liked).
**I made my own corn tortillas. In the interest of keeping this recipe short and sweet and knowing there there are shop-bought tortillas available (like these, for example), I have not included the tortilla making process in the recipe but if feel like making them yourself, here is the recipe I followed.
Thank you
Thanks
You could pan-fry them on a well-heated cast iron (ideally) skillet but you will need to do so in batches or else there will be too much moisture and the dish will stew in their own juices. I would also perhaps not mix in the marinade until after you cook everything (it has sugar so it will burn) and once tossed in the marinade, return to the pan to char just briefly. Hope this helps! Ania
Swapped the mushrooms for marinated textured soya protein and a courgette in place of the yellow pepper (as that's what I had to hand) and it worked super well!
Made the sour cream mix from the latkes recipe.
We devoured it.
Cheers and will give you an update after I serve it.
Apologies for a late reply, I was on holidays until today. I hope I am not too late, but the answer is you can marinate it for 8 hrs absolutely, no problem. I would keep it in a baking tin/dish rather than a plastic bag to let it breathe a little. I hope your daughter will enjoy them and how nice of you to go to such trouble! She must be stoked to have such a thoughtful parent! x Ania
Have shared this with family and friends and we all love it.
Great idea, I hope your friend likes it! The salsa is simply finely diced plum tomatoes, red onion, fresh coriander, a pinch of sugar, some lime juice and olive oil (+ S&P). Really simple and I just make it to taste. x Ania
Likely the best fajita marinade/sauce I've ever had - although it was a touch acidic to me, so I added a touch more maple syrup. I ended up with too many veggies and not enough meatiness from the mushrooms. Next time I'll double the mushrooms and include shiitakes as well.
5 * out of 5!!!
I’d be very grateful to hear how you make your corn tortillas XThank you love JANE 💜