Laura's Creamy Vegan Noodle Kugel Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (2024)

This month’s Community Recipe is Laura Williams’ creamy vegan noodle kugel recipe is a real crowd pleaser. Community Recipes is a recurring feature where I ask a community member to share a vegan recipe with us.

Kugel is a a classic ashkenazi Jewish baked casserole

Noodle kugel is a classic ashkenazi Jewish baked casserole that is normally made with noodles or potatoes and lots of dairy products. Healthier vegan noodle recipes replace the dairy with vegan and plant-based ingredients. The Jewish Food Hero Kitchen’s healthy vegan noodle kugel recipe is a low-fat recipe that features silken tofu and mushroom for a creamy savoury dish.

Laura's Creamy Vegan Noodle Kugel Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (1)

Tell us about yourself, Laura

I was born and raised in the Metro-Detroit Jewish community. Today, I’m the Director of Cultural Resources at Temple Beth El in Bloomfield Hills, MI where I oversee the synagogue archives and library. I went vegan in 2015. I had been inspired by the documentary “Cowspirarcy” and started doing research about the ethical and environmental impacts of animal-based products. Before going vegan, I was an avid baker and now I’m determined to transform my favorite recipes into delicious vegan-friendly alternatives that don’t lose the nostalgic taste.

Vegan Egg Substitute

The biggest challenge thus far in my vegan baking has been to create a creamy vegan noodle kugel recipe. The vegan kugel never seemed to come out right until recently, when JUST Egg came on the scene. The last piece to the seemingly impossible puzzle was complete. JUST also makes a kosher egg-free mayo that is delicious.

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Laura's Creamy Vegan Noodle Kugel Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (2)

Other vegan dairy substitutes used in this recipe

This recipe calls for ½ cup vegan butter. My favorite brands to use as a vegan butter substitute are Earth Balance and Smart Balance. The recipe uses 1 ¼ cups of vegan sour cream. Good Karma is a delicious vegan sour cream substitute.

Vegan Cottage Cheese Really Exists

Alongside the Just Egg, I came across a great recipe for vegan cottage cheese that works perfectly in this Creamy Vegan Noodle Kugel Recipe. The best pasta to use here is either eggless fusilli or eggless cellentani.

Laura's Creamy Vegan Noodle Kugel Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (3)

Pleasing a tough crowd – my family

After testing many times, this Creamy Vegan Noodle Kugel Recipe has passed the taste test of even the toughest family members to please.

By adapting the recipe used by my family, my Creamy Vegan Noodle Kugel Recipe holds true as a crowd favorite. This recipe is classic and simple, but there is no offense taken if you add pineapple, corn flakes, or even…raisins. Enjoy!

Jewish Food Hero Kitchen Vegan Challah Recipe Cards

Download a beautiful printable Vegan challah recipe card – the recipe is oil free and has two surprising and top secret ingredients.

More resources for vegan Jewish recipes

This plant-based squash dip would be a delicious spread to serve with egg- free challah.

Challah. These mini baked parsnip and sweet potato latkes are delicious

This plant-based kosher for passover apple pistachio cake also makes a good Shabbat dessert especially during the holiday of Passover. This recipe is oil-free and lighter than traditional Passover desserts.

These plant-based stuffed cabbage rolls These stuffed cabbage rolls from the Jewish Food Hero Kitchen are as delicious and satiating as traditional cabbage rolls, while being less heavy and more nutritious. You can bake these rolls of prepare them in a slow cooker. rolls can be baked or made in a slow cooker.

Community cookbook

If you like Laura’s recipe, you will love Feeding Women of the Bible, Feeding Ourselves Cookbook, a Jewish female community cookbook.

Laura's Creamy Vegan Noodle Kugel Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (4)

Feeding Women of the Bible, Feeding Ourselvescookbook features a short compelling narrative of 20 female biblical heroines from the Hebrew bible, paired with two healthy plant-based kosher pareve recipes inspired by the character’s experience.

This is a community cookbook by Jewish Food Hero and is the co-creation of 40 Jewish women. The twenty biblical narratives are contributed by Rabbis, Rabbinical students, Jewish teachers and emerging thought leaders. The forty-one plant-based recipes were developed by professional chefs, homecooks who are elementary school students, and great-grandmothers.

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Laura's Creamy Vegan Noodle Kugel Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (5)

Laura’s Creamy Vegan Noodle Kugel Recipe

  • Author: Laura Williams.
Print Recipe

Description

A creamy vegan noodle kugel recipe.

Ingredients

Scale

  • 10 oz. Curly/Swirly eggless pasta
  • ½ cup vegan butter
  • 1 ¼ cups vegan sour cream
  • 1 ¼ cup sugar
  • ¼ teaspoon cinnamon (and extra to sprinkle on top at the end)
  • 1 cup Just Egg

For the Vegan Cottage Cheese (1 ¾ cups):

  • 1 ¾ cups vegan cottage cheese
  • 1 cup soft or silken tofu
  • ¾ tablespoons nutritional yeast
  • ¾ tablespoons apple cider vinegar
  • ¾ tablespoons lemon juice
  • ⅓ teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup (150g) firm tofu, crumbled

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F and grease a 9”x13” dish.

  2. Cook noodles according to the package instructions.

  3. Drain noodles and transfer to a large bowl. Add butter and let the warm noodles melt it. Mix to ensure butter is evenly distributed.

  4. Make cottage cheese: in a blender, add the silken tofu, nutritional yeast, apple cider vinegar, lemon juice, and salt. Mix until blended.

  5. Pour the blended mixture into a medium bowl. Crumble the firm tofu on top and fold to combine. Your cottage cheese is complete.

  6. Add sour cream, sugar, cinnamon, and Just Egg to the cottage cheese bowl..

  7. Add wet ingredients into the large bowl of noodles, fold.

  8. Pour mixture evenly into greased 9×13 dish. Sprinkle cinnamon on top.

  9. Bake for 1 hour or until the top noodles crisp to bown.

Laura's Creamy Vegan Noodle Kugel Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (2024)

FAQs

What is a Jewish kugel? ›

The name of the dish comes from the Middle High German kugel meaning 'sphere, globe, ball'; thus the Yiddish name likely originated as a reference to the round, puffed-up shape of the original dishes (compare to German Gugelhupf—a type of ring-shaped cake).

What nationality is noodle Kugel? ›

Noodle kugel
TypeKugel or casserole
CourseSide dish
Place of originJewish from Russia, Eastern Europe and Central Europe. Today mostly in Israel, the United States, France, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, Argentina, South Africa, and other communities in the Jewish diaspora.
Created byAshkenazi Jews
4 more rows

What's the difference between a kugel and a casserole? ›

The common denominators of all true kugels are a starch base, eggs (or egg substitute), and fat, without the addition of water or other liquids. If the dish lacks any of the basic ingredients, it is technically a casserole or cake, not a kugel.

Do people eat kugel for Rosh Hashanah? ›

A combination of noodles, eggs, cream cheese and more, kugel is a hallmark holiday food and has been passed down from my grandmother, to my father and then to my mother. Thanksgiving and Rosh Hashanah simply are not the holidays without homemade kugel.

Is kugel eaten hot or cold? ›

Kugel is traditionally served as a side dish alongside something meaty like brisket or roast chicken. In this case it would normally be served warm, but it can also be refrigerated and eaten cold the next day. Sweeter versions can also be eaten hot or cold, and taste great with fresh cream or vanilla ice cream.

What does kugel symbolize? ›

And then I read in The Jewish Kitchen: Recipes and Stories from Around the World of a Hasidic rabbi, Pinchas of Koretz (in Galicia), who claimed that lokshen kugel itself symbolizes Jewish unity, since the noodles are all tangled together and are really inseparable, just like the unified Jewish people.

Why does my noodle kugel fall apart? ›

Make Sure to Cool Your Kugel

Once it's baked, a kugel needs to cool, otherwise it will fall apart when slicing. Give it at least an hour to cool and set up, then slice and serve it warm or at room temperature.

What is kugel in English? ›

noun. ball [noun] anything roughly round in shape. a ball of wool. bowl [noun] a wooden ball rolled along the ground in playing bowls.

What is the Yiddish word for egg noodles? ›

Lokshen (Yiddish: לאָקשן, lokshn), also known as Itriyot (Hebrew: איטריות), locshen, lockshen, or Jewish egg noodles, is the common name of a range of Ashkenazi Jewish egg noodles that are commonly used in a variety of Jewish dishes including chicken soup, kugel, kasha varnishkes, lokshen mit kaese, and as a side dish ...

Is kugel kosher? ›

Potato kugel, on the other hand, can very easily be made with only kosher-for-Passover ingredients (potato, onion, egg, Passover oil, salt, and pepper). Provided that you made the kugel in a kosher-for-Passover kitchen, you have a delicious Passover feast.

Is kugel sweet or savory? ›

Noodle kugel is a traditional Jewish dish of egg noodles baked in a sweet or savory custard. Much like a French toast or strata, kugel can be made in advance, refrigerated and baked before serving, making it perfect for big family get-togethers.

What is a substitute for farmers cheese in kugel? ›

ILOC tip: if you can't find farmer cheese, just do a full pound of cottage cheese instead.

Why do Jews eat kugel? ›

As Rabbi Pinchas of Koretz once said, “Jews eat lots of lokshen on Shabbat because noodles are symbolic of the unity of the people of Israel: They are so tangled that they can never be separated.” Noodle kugel may not actually be eaten by all Jews, but it has clearly reached far beyond mere Ashkenazi cuisine.

Is kugel eaten at Hanukkah? ›

“Lokshen” (noodle) kugel is perhaps the most traditional. It blends light and airy egg noodles with moist and creamy dairy ingredients. Hanukkah celebrants can try this recipe for “Noodle Kugel,” courtesy of Taste of Home.

Why is kugel eaten at Hanukkah? ›

It commonly makes an appearance on the dinner table during Shavuot (along with bourekas), when it's traditional to consume dairy foods, and Shabbat because it's said that kugel resembles the manna that fell from heaven. It's the perfect side dish for a Hanukkah latke party, adding some richness to the meal.

What makes something a kugel? ›

Hailing from Germany, kugel is, at its core, a baked casserole with starch (usually noodles or potatoes), eggs and fat. While that's the base, kugel can be found in many variations from savory to sweet. The word kugel is German for “sphere,” which refers to the dumplings that made up the earliest version of the dish.

What is the difference between kugel and lokshen? ›

The word lokshen is Yiddish for noodle. A lokshen kugel is a kugel made with noodles. There are endless variations on the noodle kugel theme; they can be made savory or sweet, topped or untopped, with dried fruit or nuts or seasonings.

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