It’s taken me a while to feel inspired to cook spring recipes due to the move/renos and the on-again, off-again spring weather (ahem, fresh blanket of snow last week), but now I can say it finally feels like spring. Today also happens to be Earth Day which is even more reason to eat some plants. I love this time of the year and it’s been fun experiencing spring with a backyard again! Oh how I missed having a backyard. The tulips and daffodils are coming up, the frisky red squirrel is trying its best to take down our bird feeder, and Sketchie is sniffing the spring air through the screen door while the birds, bunnies, and squirrels drive him insane. It’s a good time of year.
Now that we’re starting to get settled into the new house, I’m finding my way back to the kitchen and away from the Indian food take-out menu (at least some of the time). The kitchen is slowly starting to feel like home, complete with fresh tea and vanilla extract stains on the laminate countertops (those were not designed for an avid cook, I tell you! ahhh) and the padded chef’s mat underneath my feet. Every time I cook in there, I get a bit more familiar with my new space and I find myself cursing less and less as I search for misplaced kitchen tools. Rome wasn’t built in a day, you know.
This recipe is an ultra-fresh take on pasta primavera – a spring vegetable pasta dish. Rather than relying on heavy pasta for a spring recipe, I decided to lighten things up with a fresh carrot “pasta”, which is simply julienned carrots. Obviously, the carrot pasta tastes nothing like actual pasta, but I promise you won’t miss it one bit! You’ll be feeling light and energized after eating this rather than sleepy and sluggish. I plan on making a seasonal summer version and a fall version to follow so keep your eyes peeled for those recipes later this year.
So what’s in this delightful spring dish? As per my usual style, it’s loaded with fresh vegetables. Leek, garlic, asparagus, and peas are sautéed with some pink salt, pepper, and olive oil. Ignore the snap peas in the photo above, I opted not to include them in this dish (but feel free to improvise if you’d like). Then I whipped up an incredible batch of pesto – my nut-free Sun-dried Tomato Basil Hemp Pesto adapted from the pesto in my cookbook. Kale can be used instead of basil if you prefer. It’s packed with protein thanks to the hemp seeds and it’s completely nut- and dairy-free without giving up that creamy, luxurious texture that makes pesto so great.
Once the vegetables are tender, I stir in the pesto. This is when things go from good to mind-blowing; a simple spring veggie sauté is transformed into something decadent. It’s one of those I-can’t-stop-eating-this-straight-from-the-skillet dishes. Hold me back! If you can share, it’s the perfect amount for two veggie-loving people – decadent but light, simple to make, and packed with veggies. I swear I felt the baby bust out a flutter kick dance recital after I ate it.
Featuring all new, protein-packed salads, hearty toppers, flavour boosters, and dressings you'll want to drink, my new cookbook will transform the way you think about salads. Oh, and be sure to flip to the back for a surprise dessert chapter!
Glowing Green "Pasta" Primavera
Yield
2 servings
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
This is my take on a lightened-up version of pasta primavera - a spring vegetable pasta dish. Rather than using pasta, I opted for fresh carrot pasta which is simply carrots that are julienned into very thin strand-like noodles. This is the julienne peeler that I use. The vegetables are coated with a decadent, but nut- and diary-free sun-dried tomato hemp pesto and it transforms this dish into something decadent and special.
Ingredients
FOR THE PRIMAVERA:
- 2-3 large carrots, peeled and julienned
- 1/2 tablespoon coconut oil or extra virgin olive oil
- 1 leek, thinly sliced into rounds and rinsed off
- 3 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 bunch asparagus, ends broken off and chopped into 1-inch pieces
- 1 cup fresh or frozen peas.
SUN-DRIED TOMATO BASIL-HEMP PESTO:
- 1 small clove garlic
- 3/4 cup fresh basil leaves
- 1⁄4 cup oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes
- 1⁄4 cup hulled hemp seeds
- 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
- 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- 1 tablespoon water
- Scant 1/4 teaspoon fine-grain sea salt or pink Himalayan sea salt, or to taste
Directions
- With a julienne peeler, peel the carrots into thin, spaghetti-like strands. Cover with a damp tea towel or damp paper towel to avoid it drying out.
- Add oil to a large skillet or wok, and preheat over medium. Add sliced leek and garlic and saute for 3-4 minutes, until soft and translucent. Add a couple pinches of salt and several grounds of pepper.
- Add the asparagus to the skillet and saute for around 8 minutes more, until tender. Increase heat if necessary. Finally, stir in the peas and cook until heated throughout.
- Meanwhile, make the pesto. Add the garlic into a food processor and process until minced. Now add in the basil and sun-dried tomatoes and process again until smooth. Finally, add the rest of the ingredients and process again until combined and smooth.
- Stir all the pesto into the vegetable skillet mixture and cook until heated throughout. Season to taste.
- Serve the vegetable pesto mixture on top of the carrot pasta.
Tip:
Note: If you'd like to add more protein to this dish, I recommend French green lentils. Edamame would work nicely too.
Nutrition Information
(click to expand)
Lastly, I’d like to pass on some new cookbook reviews and interviews from these lovely bloggers:
Kim @ Our Fresh Kitchen (interview)
Valerie @ Vbouv (multiple recipe reviews)
Melissa @ It’s Got Vegan In It (review)
Ari @ Abe’s Market (interview)
Bianca @ Vegan Crunk (review, recipe)
Lauren @ Lauren Lives Healthy (review)
Alex @ Vegetarian Snob (review, recipe, giveaway)
Jess @ The Wellness Warrior (interview)
Richa @ Vegan Richa (review, recipe)
If I missed any of your reviews please let me know and I’ll be sure to add them to my book page.








Oh this sounds so tasty and creative! Saving to try soon!
Thank you for this!!!! I have been craving a pasta dish and this definitely will satisfy!!!! I’m off to the store for some sun dried tomatoes today!!!
I JUST got the julienne peeler when I ordered your cookbook off of Amazon last month and I love both (clearly the second the most haha), so this sounds perfect to put that peeler to use more!
Hi Angela! My birthday was on Easter so my mom and I decided to make a vegan feast for my family. We loved your life affirming nacho dip and sundried tomato pesto! The cookbook has been Amazing so far we can’t wait to try more!
Hi Nicole, So happy to hear this! Thanks for all your support :)
Do you think grape tomatoes would work in this recipe? I happen to dislike the taste of sundried tomatoes.
you might be able to skip the sun-dried tomatoes all together – i’d worry that regular tomatoes would make the pesto too watery?
this looks so good – certainly glowing with healthy and yumminess!
Mary x
Hi Angela! This recipe looks perfect for Spring, I love all the green!
I also wanted to let you know that I wrote a review and am having a giveaway of your cookbook on my blog; herbivoretriathlete.com/oh-she-glows-cookbook/
Thank you so much Anna! What a lovely review. I will be sure to add this to the list :)
I made this for dinner last night. Didn’t have hemp seed so I substituted pistachio nuts. It was fabulous. Thanks for such a tasty meal.
So glad you enjoyed it Robbie! Thanks for your feedback.
Thank you soooooooooo much for all your delicious recipes. I most recently been trying to become 100% vegan ( can’t say I have not cheated once in a while) but your amazing ideas of food combinations makes it easier to get back on track without sacrifycing my demanding taste buds (all about great tasting recipes). Easy, delicious and nutricious!! Thanks again!
Do you accept followers recipes for your website?
Reading about all the veggies in this dish… leek, garlic, asparagus… my mind just suddenly pasted in ‘deliciousness’, right there. this looks sooooooooooooo good! cant wait to try it out!
What a beautiful recipe and perfect for spring, I can’t wait to try it! I’ve made the kale-hemp-sundried tomato pesto and it’s amazing. :)
so pretty and looks yumm!
Hi, Angela! This looks so good I’m going to have switch up the week’s menu and make it tomorrow night!
On a unrelated note: I am making the double chocolate cake from your cookbook and have a question about the sugar. What type of cane sugar did you use? Not the brand, but the grade. Did you use a fine sugar or the larger stuff? The one I have is very coarse, like kosher salt, and I’m afraid it will not fully dissolve and the cake will have crunchies in it. Am I paranoid?
Hey Stephanie, You might be referring to turbinado sugar? That’s very coarse sugar. I used the fine stuff. To be honest I haven’t tried a coarse sugar in a cake so I dont know if it would dissolve or not. Let me know how it goes!
Yes, turbinado sugar. : ) It turned out very well, thank you! I opted to heat the almond milk, sugar and coconut just until the sugar melted and it did the trick very nicely. Unmelted, it would have been very crunchy.
I made this tonight for dinner with the addition of lentils and it was FANTASTIC! Thanks for another great recipe Angela! :)
So, I just posted a brief review, recipe, and giveaway on VeganYumminess.com. :) Giveaway for the Oh She Glows Cookbook ends next Sunday night at midnight (CST). Happy Veg Week!
Thank you so much Lindsay! I will be sure to add your review to the book page.
I love the fact you call it “Glowing Green” because the positive flowing name is the salad topper on top!
Gorgeous green photos :) I am loving asparagus right now too. It’s perfect!
I just returned from my Spring Break in France and Italy where I spent 10 days eating pasta, pizza and bread for breakfast, lunch, and dinner (not only are they delicious options, but always the cheapest too, and I am on a student budget) so right now I need a carb break haha. However, this recipe has me itching for more pasta! It looks incredible and like an amazing combination of greens and pasta! I can’t wait to try it when I return home and have access to my own ingredients!
Any thoughts on whether onions would be tasty instead of/in addition to the leek?
Yes I think onion would be a fine substitute!
Just an update, tried it last night. The onions worked great! Also didn’t have hemp seeds but used pine nuts and nutritional yeast in the pesto as well as swapping the julienned carrots for spiralized zuchinni and it was excellent!
Great swaps – thanks for your feedback Brett!