The Best Whole Food Plant Based Burger Recipe | Vegan + High Protein (2024)

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4.9 from 21 votes. Leave a review!

This recipe for whole food plant-based burgers is packed with flavor and nutritious ingredients. It’s simple to make, can be customized to your taste preferences and offers plenty of plant-based protein and fiber to keep you feeling full!

You’ll need to bake these patties because of their softer starting texture, but once ready to eat, they hold up quite well. This plant-based hamburger recipe is super versatile; there’s endless ways to serve it!

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Are Plant-based Burgers Vegan?

While many people use the term “plant-based” to refer to vegan food (or veganism), it doesn’t have a specific definition. Sometimes, “plant-based” recipes could contain animal derived ingredients so it’s always best to be on the lookout!

If purchasing burgers or any “plant-based” product, read the label because it’s a popular marketing term and plant-based products may not always be vegan.

Luckily, this burger recipe is completely vegan and made from nutritious, whole food ingredients plus plenty of spices for a delicious patty!

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Whole Food Plant-based Burger Ingredients

This recipe uses simple ingredients to create a satisfying and versatile burger patty. You can use these patties in many unique ways and change the spices for endless customizations! For this recipe, you’ll need:

  • Cooked brown rice: As one of the base ingredients, pre-cooked brown rice offers a subtle flavor and plenty of tasty carbohydrates with fiber. Its starch helps holds the burgers together! This recipe assumes you have cooked rice on hand and it’s a great way to use leftovers.
  • Cooked sweet potato: For a boost of color, nutrition and mildly sweet flavor, some pre-cooked (steamed) sweet potato is a tasty addition to these plant-based burgers.
  • Black beans: To boost the plant-based protein in these burgers and provide a darker color that better replicates “traditional” burgers, black beans are a great choice. I drain and rinse canned beans but you can use home-cooked beans too.
  • Tofu: While not technically a “whole food” ingredient, tofu is packed with nutrition and boosts the plant-based protein, healthy fats and calcium content in these burgers. If you aren’t a fan of tofu, you can replace them with an additional cup of mushrooms (however, that creates a softer burger patty). A firm tofu helps create firmer burger patties.
  • Mushrooms: This vegetable has a great flavor and is often used in meat alternatives for that earthy flavor.
  • Onions: Onion is an essential ingredient that provides a great boost of flavor. Use any variety you like!
  • Chickpea flour: This key ingredient creates a firmer plant-based burger texture. Chickpea flour absorbs liquid from other ingredients and makes for a burger patty that holds together when eating. Just let the burgers cool somewhat before serving since this time allows the chickpea flour to work its magic!
  • Spices: I use nutritional yeast, smoked paprika, chili powder, garlic powder, salt and pepper. This combo of spices creates a tasty burger that still has a neutral flavor, making it extremely versatile. You can use any spice combos you like!
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How to Make Plant-based Hamburgers

This recipe is easy to make with a food processor, but they do take some time. Follow step-by-step instructions below, or if you want a quicker plant-based burger recipe, check out these chickpea burgers!

Step 1: Prep Ingredients

This recipe is easiest to make with leftover cooked rice and sweet potato. The preparation time assumes these two ingredients are already cooked.

Start cooking brown rice and steam sweet potato if not done already. A half cup of dry rice should yield the 1 cup of cooked rice needed for this recipe. You’ll need 1 cup of peeled and cubed sweet potato too.

I also use canned beans for this recipe, so they need to be drained and rinsed. You could also use home-cooked black beans if you have some on hand.

Roughly chop onion and mushroom.

Lastly, you’ll need to crumble tofu. The extra firm tofu I buy doesn’t need to be pressed (no liquid is released if it’s pressed). If your tofu releases liquid when pressed, press it before using in the burgers.

I love the texture the tofu adds, but if you don’t want to use tofu, replace it with an additional 1 cup of roughly chopped mushrooms. If you do this, the burgers will have a softer texture and lower protein content.

Step 2: Prepare Burgers

Next, use a food processor to combine all these ingredients. I typically do this in two parts.

First, I process the rice, sweet potato and tofu. Pulse until everything is well-combined and there are small flecks of rice, sweet potato and tofu. Don’t blend into a full puree since this creates softer burgers; some texture is makes for a better burger consistency.

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Transfer these processed ingredients into a large mixing bowl then add black beans, mushroom and onion to the food processor. Pulse until well combined, with only small flecks of ingredients left.

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Scrape this mixture into your mixing bowl.

Add the remaining ingredients (chickpea flour and spices) to your mixing bowl and stir until everything is evenly combined.

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Prepare a baking tray lined with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat, then form 8 burger patties. I use a ½ cup measuring cup to scoop out evenly sized patties.

Flatten the burgers to about ½ inch (1.5 cm) thickness.

Step 3: Bake, Cool and Serve

Place the burgers into a 350 °F preheated oven and cook for 25-30 minutes, flipping halfway through. The burgers will still be soft when flipping, so flip carefully.

Once you’ve finished baking the whole food plant-based burgers, let sit on the baking tray for a few minutes. Then, transfer them to a wire cooling rack and allow to cool for at least 10-15 minutes.

This cool time is essential for the burgers to become firm and hold together well!

Serve with all your favorite vegan hamburger toppings! Tomato, onion, leaf lettuce and pickles are a must for me!

There are also endless ways to serve these plant-based burger patties. A bun or wrap is a delicious choice, but I also love crumbling these burgers over a large garden salad! Along with some honey mustard dressing, you have a tasty meal.

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Plant-based Burger Patty Tips and Variations

The biggest challenge with whole food plant-based burgers is a soft texture that leads to burgers falling apart when eating. Allowing the burgers to cool after baking is essential for them to firm fully.

It’s also helpful to use leftover brown rice and sweet potato that is fully cooled before creating the patties. When these ingredients are hot and freshly cooked, the heat tends to create extra moisture.

If using mushrooms in place of tofu, the burgers will be softer due to its water content. I prefer adding tofu for a firmer burger.

The best part about this recipe is how versatile it is. Get creative with the spices you use to create any type of plant-based burger you like!

You can also switch the black beans for pretty much any other type of bean. Chickpeas are a delicious base ingredient for plant-based burgers; if you want to try this, check out my recipe for vegan chickpea burgers!

If you'd rather try a meatier burger that more closely resembles a hamburger with very little work involved, I recommend trying my TVP burger recipe!

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How to Refrigerate and Freeze these Burgers

Let leftover burgers cool completely before refrigerating in an airtight container. They should keep well for up to a week in the fridge.

You can also freeze cooked burgers in a freezer-safe bag for up to 3 months.

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📖 Recipe

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Whole Food Plant-based Burgers

Looking for the best whole food plant-based burger recipe? These vegan burgers are packed with flavor and nutritious ingredients like black beans, sweet potato and brown rice.

4.86 from 21 votes. Leave a review!

Prep Time 30 minutes mins

Cook Time 25 minutes mins

Total Time 55 minutes mins

Servings 8 Burger Patties

Calories 195 kcal

Cuisine American-inspired, Vegan

Ingredients

  • 1 cup sweet potato , cubed and steamed
  • 1 cup brown rice , cooked
  • 2 cups black beans , cooked (or drained and rinsed from can)
  • ½ cup onion , chopped
  • 1 cup mushrooms , chopped (button or cremini; about 4 large)
  • 1 cup extra firm tofu , crumbled (half a 350 g block; or additional 1 cup of chopped mushroom)
  • ½ cup chickpea flour
  • 1 teaspoon salt (or to taste)
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
  • 1 teaspoon chili powder
  • ¼ - ½ teaspoon black pepper
  • 3 tablespoons nutritional yeast

Instructions

Prep Ingredients

  • If needed, cook and cool brown rice. Cooked rice tends to double in size from dry, so cook ½ cup of dry rice for a standard 8 burger yield. Leftover rice is perfect if you have some around.

    1 cup brown rice

  • If needed, peel, cube and steam the sweet potato. Leftover cooked sweet potato works well too!

    1 cup sweet potato

  • Measure some black beans. If using canned beans, drain and rinse them.

    2 cups black beans

  • Chop onion.

    ½ cup onion

  • Roughly chop mushrooms.

    1 cup mushrooms

  • Crumble extra firm tofu. The tofu I use doesn’t need to be pressed but if your tofu releases liquid when pressed, press if before using. You can use an extra mushrooms in place of tofu if you prefer.

    1 cup extra firm tofu

Prepare Burgers

  • In a food processor, add cooked brown rice, cooked sweet potato and crumbled tofu. Pulse until the rice and sweet potato are ground into a fine texture. There should be small flecks of rice, potato and tofu but it’ll be mostly blended.

    1 cup sweet potato, 1 cup brown rice, 1 cup extra firm tofu

  • Remove the rice, potato and tofu into a mixing bowl. Then, add black beans, mushroom and onion to the food processor. Pulse until the mixture reaches a similar consistency to the rice and potato (well mixed with some small flecks of ingredients).

    2 cups black beans, 1 cup mushrooms, ½ cup onion

  • Add the bean mixture to the mixing bowl with the rice and sweet potato.

  • Stir the remaining ingredients into the mixing bowl: chickpea flour, salt, garlic powder, smoked paprika, chili powder, black pepper and nutritional yeast. Stir until everything is well combined.

    ½ cup chickpea flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon garlic powder, 1 teaspoon smoked paprika, 1 teaspoon chili powder, ¼ - ½ teaspoon black pepper, 3 tablespoons nutritional yeast

  • Prep a baking tray with a silicone baking mat or parchment paper.

  • This recipe makes 8 burgers, about ½ C in size. Use a ½ C measuring cup to form them, then transfer to your hands and shape them into flat, round patties.

  • Place formed burgers on baking tray.

Bake, Cool and Serve

  • Bake the burgers in a preheated oven set to 350 °F for 25-30 minutes, flipping once halfway through cooking. The burgers will be soft at the halfway point so flip carefully.

  • Once out of the oven, allow to cool for a few minutes on the tray. Transfer to a wire cooling rack and let the burgers sit for another 10-15 minutes before serving. This rest time is essential to allow the burgers to firm and hold together nicely!

  • Serve on your favorite vegan hamburger bun, in a wrap or crumbled into a salad!

Notes

Nutrition analysis only factors in the recipe (burger patty) and does not account for your bun or additional toppings.

Prep time assumes potatoes, rice and beans are already cooked.

Accuracy of nutrition information cannot be guaranteed (certain ingredients may not have all nutrients listed in the database); amounts may vary (and will vary depending on brands of ingredients used); all nutrition fact values rounded to the nearest whole number.

Nutrition

Serving: 1 Burger (⅛ of recipe)Calories: 195 kcalCarbohydrates: 31 gProtein: 12 gFat: 3 gSaturated Fat: 1 gPolyunsaturated Fat: 2 gMonounsaturated Fat: 1 gSodium: 483 mgPotassium: 501 mgFiber: 8 gSugar: 4 gVitamin A: 5453 IUVitamin C: 6 mgCalcium: 168 mgIron: 3 mg

Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

More Vegan Main Meal Recipes

Like this recipe? You should also try:

  • TVP Spaghetti Sauce Recipe (Bolognese)
  • Vegan TVP Chili Recipe (High Protein)
  • Teriyaki Tempeh Recipe (with Homemade Sauce)
  • Vegan Sushi Bake Recipe (with Chickpea “Tuna”)
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About Nicole Stevens

Nicole is a long-time vegan with a Masters of Science in Food and Nutrition.

She helps people thrive on a vegan diet with balanced recipes.

The Best Whole Food Plant Based Burger Recipe | Vegan + High Protein (2024)

FAQs

Are plant-based burgers high in protein? ›

It's an excellent source of protein with 20g per serving. Compared to 80/20 beef it also has 35% less total and saturated fat, lower calories, no cholesterol, more iron and comparable B vitamins and minerals.

What veggie burger has the most protein? ›

Protein. Interestingly, five veggie burgers contain more protein than the beef patty, with Dr. Praeger's All American Veggie Burger and Sweet Earth Awesome Burger tied for the most plant-based protein at 28 grams. Seven veggie burgers analyzed have at least 20 grams of protein, and 12 pack 15 or more grams of protein.

What is the base protein of the new plant-based burgers? ›

The foundational elements in plant-based meat are a protein of some sort (like tofu, tempeh, or soy), plant oils (like sunflower or canola oil), and a vegan binding agent (like gluten, aquafaba, or beans.)

What are the cons of plant-based burgers? ›

Downsides of plant-based meat alternatives

Some highly processed products, such as those from Beyond Meat and Impossible Burger, are just as high in total and saturated fat as their meat counterparts. The burgers even contain more sodium than a single beef patty, which may not support heart health ( 12 , 18 , 19 ).

Which is healthier beyond or impossible? ›

Are Impossible and Beyond Meat Healthy? From a nutrition standpoint, Impossible and Beyond Meat stack up quite similarly to beef (see below for a side-by-side comparison). That said, there are a few notable differences: Beyond has significantly less saturated fat than both ground beef and Impossible Burger.

Is it okay to eat veggie burgers everyday? ›

NO? Store-bought veggie burgers may have a reasonable amount of calories per serving, but the sodium can be pretty high in some brands. In a recent veggie burger taste test, I found varieties containing as many as 390 milligrams of sodium per patty; that's 17% of the recommended daily amount.

Is Dr Praeger's healthy? ›

Praeger's All American burgers are a healthier alternative to some of the more processed vegan burgers on the market today. Featuring wholesome ingredients you can identify and understand, these high-protein patties are both gluten and soy-free.

What vegetables are extremely high in protein? ›

And what are the best sources for protein?
  • Green peas. Green peas are at the top of the list of the most protein-filled vegetables. ...
  • Spinach. A big crisp spinach salad is certainly refreshing, especially on a hot day in the South. ...
  • Collard greens. ...
  • Sweet corn. ...
  • Mustard greens. ...
  • Lima beans. ...
  • Asparagus. ...
  • Broccoli.

What is the difference between a plant burger and a veggie burger? ›

While both options may contain veggies, the key difference between vegan burgers and veggie burgers is that vegan burgers are made from a protein and are made to mimic the flavor and texture of actual meat while veggie burgers are not meant to evoke meat properties at all.

Are veggie burgers better than plant-based burgers? ›

Keep in mind that both options usually contain processed elements, but plant-based burgers are much more processed. Because of this, veggie burgers are typically the healthier option if that's what you're going for. It's hard to find organic options for plant-based burgers.

What's the number one healthiest burger? ›

15 Healthiest Fast-Food Burgers, According to Dietitians
  • Burger King Hamburger.
  • Wendy's Jr. Cheeseburger.
  • McDonald's Hamburger.
  • Burger King Whopper Jr.
  • Whataburger Jr.
  • BurgerFi Single Burger.
  • BurgerFi VegiFi Burger.
  • Jack in the Box Jr. Jumbo Jack.
Mar 29, 2024

What are 3 of the most famous plant-based meat brands? ›

Top 10 Plant-based Meat Companies : growing sustainable, plant-based food industry
  • Impossible Foods. Impossible Foods Inc. ...
  • Gardein™ ...
  • Beyond Meat. ...
  • Quorn Foods. ...
  • Maple Leaf Foods Inc. ...
  • Amy's Kitchen. ...
  • Morningstar Farms. ...
  • Sunfed Meats.

What's in Mcdonald's plant-based burger? ›

McPlant is a vegan burger made with a juicy plant-based patty that has been co-developed with Beyond Meat® and features vegan sandwich sauce, ketchup, mustard, onion, pickles, lettuce, tomato, and a vegan alternative to cheese in a sesame seed bun.

What are the best sources of plant protein? ›

Examples of whole-food sources of plant proteins include:
  • Edamame.
  • Green peas.
  • Legumes, such as garbanzo, kidney, black, pinto or cannellini beans.
  • Lentils.
  • Nutritional yeast.
  • Nuts and nut butter.
  • Quinoa.
  • Seeds.
Jul 5, 2023

How healthy are plant-based burgers? ›

Interestingly, the plant based burgers may not be the best choice for people following a heart-healthy diet, as they are higher in saturated fat than turkey burgers and contain substantially more sodium than lean beef burgers.

Is a plant based burger healthier than a beef burger? ›

Using less animal products helps to reduce greenhouse emissions, pesticide use and land use. Now, for the bad news. Although plant-based burgers do not contain red meat, they have a similar number of calories and saturated fat content. They may also contain more sodium than traditional red meat beef burgers.

Do vegan burgers have more protein? ›

A Closer Look at Plant-Based Beef

The dietary fiber in plant-based meats makes up for 15% of the daily value, whereas beef has 0% of the daily value of fiber. Plant-based burgers contained less protein, zinc, and vitamin B12 than ground beef.

Are veggie burgers complete protein? ›

Most Vegetarian Foods Are Not Complete Proteins

Of course, there are exceptions to this, including vegan complete proteins like quinoa, soy, hemp, and chia seeds.

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