I made this recipe several months ago and completely forgot about sharing it with you. Not because it was unmemorable – quite the opposite – but recipes and photos occasionally get lost in the bunch if I’m not careful. The photos on my computer are a bit out of control (or so says my husband). I’m trying to work up the courage to tell Eric that I’ve filled up yet another hard drive, but that is another story.
This stuffed shell pasta is inspired by Terry Walters, author of Clean Food and Clean Start cookbooks. There’s a recipe for basic stuffed shells in her Clean Food cookbook, so I played around with it by adding more veggies and fresh herbs. The outcome is a tasty tofu “ricotta-like” cheese that can be added to stuffed shells, spread on lasagna, or even turned into eggplant rollatini if you are so inclined. Of course, it doesn’t taste exactly like ricotta cheese (not that I even remember what it tastes like!), but it sure is a tasty dairy-free alternative.
Speaking of eggplant rollatini, here’s a photo when I made it last summer – served on a bed of julienned carrot and zucchini “pasta” with a sprinkle of almond parmesan cheese. A lovely summer meal. Edit: I’ve added the directions for prepping the eggplant in the comments section.
I haven’t been able to find any gluten-free dairy-free jumbo shells yet, but I’m sure they exist. If you know of any brands, please give them a shout-out in the comments! For those of you looking for a soy alternative, maybe give nut-cheese a try instead. I have a cheese recipe in my lasagna recipe that could probably be used for stuffed shells also.
As for the tofu, you can crumble it by hand or you can use a food processor. I’ve made it both ways and I can’t decide which I prefer. Crumbling by hand is a bit messy, but it saves cleaning the processor while using the processor is a bit quicker and results in a creamier texture. It’s really up to you how you make it.
Jumbo Stuffed Shells
Yield
6 servings
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
Adapted from: Clean Food by Terry Walters
Ingredients
For the pasta
- 3.5 cups pasta sauce
- 340 grams jumbo pasta shells (I used 30 shells or 2/3 of the box – but make extra as some break)
For the Tofu Ricotta
- 3 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 medium sweet onion, diced
- 2 tsp extra virgin olive oil
- 2 celery stalks, diced
- 1/2 cup packed fresh basil leaves, minced
- 1/2 cup packed fresh parsley, minced
- 1 (14oz) package extra-firm or firm tofu, pressed
- 3 tbsp nutritional yeast
- 3/4-1 tsp fine grain sea salt, or to taste
- Freshly ground black pepper, to taste
- 1 tbsp fresh lemon juice
- 1/2 tsp cayenne pepper or red pepper flakes (optional)
Directions
- Rinse block of tofu and wrap with paper towels followed by 2-3 tea towels. Place it on a cutting board or plate and add several heavy cookbooks on top. Press tofu for about 20-25 minutes to drain out the water. Alternatively, you can use a tofu press.
- Grease a very large casserole dish. I used about 30 shells, but you’ll need to cook more than that as some shells will break during the cooking process. Cook shells in a pot of boiling water until al dente, about 8-11 minutes. Be careful not to overcook. Drain shells and set aside to cool.
- Preheat oven to 400°F. For the tofu ricotta: In a large skillet, sauté the garlic and onion in the oil for about 5 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. Add in the chopped celery, basil, and parsley and sauté for another 5 minutes or so. Feel free to throw in some spinach for extra greens.
- For the tofu, you can either crumble it into the skillet with your hands or you can give it a whirl in the food processor and then stir it into the skillet. If you use the processor, the texture will be very creamy like ricotta cheese and if you crumble it with your hands it will be more chunky/crumbly. It’s up to you how you want to make it. I usually opt to crumble it by hand so I don’t dirty the processor. Stir in the nutritional yeast, salt, pepper, lemon, and cayenne all to taste. Over medium heat, cook for about 8-10 minutes or until most of the water cooks off.
- Spoon about 1 cup of marinara sauce into the casserole dish and spread around. Add about 2 tbsp of tofu ricotta into each stuffed shell and place shells on top of marinara sauce. Cover shells with the remaining 2-2.5 cups marinara sauce and any leftover tofu ricotta. You can add vegan cheese on top, but I don’t bother. Cover dish with tin foil and poke several air holes. Bake at 400°F for about 20 minutes or until heated throughout. Serve with a basic green salad and garlic bread, if desired.
Nutrition Information
(click to expand)Vida Vegan Con Giveaway Winner!
I’m excited to announce that the winner of the VVC giveaway is Traci! Congrats! Traci wrote,”I am from Portland and will be home visiting during that time! OH WHAT A TREAT that would be!”
Traci I will shoot you an email today to get things rolling. Thanks again to Grace for her generous ticket donation and to everyone for participating. I really appreciate all of your lovely comments by the way.
If you are still thinking about attending the conference (and I think you should!!), there are still tickets for sale.
Looks delicious!! But where’s the rollatini recipe? =)
I’m on a sugar/wheat detox so I’m drooling at these shells as I have a lack of pasta in my current life, but the rollatini I could have!
Hi Rachel,
Here’s how I made it:
I used 2 eggplants. I left the peel on for photo purposes, but I don’t eat the peel so it’s probably easier to just peel it beforehand (and it’s easier to slice without the peel too). First, pre-cook the eggplant to release some of the water. Preheat oven to 400F. Slice eggplant lengthwise into ¼ inch pieces – this part is a bit tricky, but don’t worry too much if you get the odd piece that doesn’t slice properly. Lay eggplant slices flat on a baking sheet lined with parchment and brush slices with oil. Sprinkle with salt and pepper (the salt helps draw out water). Bake for about 8 minutes and remove from oven. Set aside to cool. After that, you just add your tofu ricotta in the centre and roll it up. Place it seam-side down in the dish. Bake it the same way you do the shells.
The eggplant works nicely to make a “noodle”, however I find it to be a bit watery, even with the pre-cooking. It’s not the end of the world, but I just wanted to mention it so you aren’t alarmed!
Sweet! Thanks!
No problem, enjoy!
That would have been my question, too! Thanks for that comment, Angela! Looks great!
I was just curious if there is anything else I can use besides Tofu? I am new to the dairy free lifestyle and I am not sure if I want to venture to the Tofu. I have heard so many mixed opinions about it. Not sure if it is right for me or not. I was thinking I could soak some cashews, and use a food processor to make them into a spread “or cheese” I can add garlic, olive oil, and other seasonings to make it italian flavored..?? Please let me know what you think!
Thank you!
Hey Victoria, I linked to a cashew cheese in my post that I used for my lasagna (found here: http://ohsheglows.com/2011/11/07/vegan-lasagna-with-basil-cashew-cheeze/ ) Im sure that would work just fine
You could also roast cauliflower and blend with cashews. It’s a touch lighter than straight cashews but super delicious!
A tip I use sometimes to make things less watery is to add some flax seed mill. In this case the gold would be better color wise. It absorbs the liquid like crazy and adds so much good stuff :) I’m sure im not telling you anything new and i’m by all means NO expert but I thought I might add as its helped me. Thank you soo much for helping me in my quest for a healthier family!
I made this last night…it was so good! I actually processed the veggie mix (with spinach) too and it created a lovely smooth texture!
I have a bottle of White Linen just waiting for a delicious recipe like this! Can’t wait to try it. Sending lots of sunshine your way :)
Please send more sunshine because it doesn’t seem to be working! hah. I clearly jinxed it when I mentioned spring-like weather on the weekend.
These look just like one of my favorite childhood dishes that my mom used to make. Except dairy-free, of course :) Delicious!
I’m now officially on the hunt for gluten-free shells! If worse comes to worse, I suppose I could stuff the mini ones….right? Or is that only something a crazy-gluten-free-vegan would do?
Sarah it’s funny you mentioned that because Eric suggested it the other day. I said have fun with that. lol
Hey, don’t know if somebody already mentioned this, but Tinkyada (my favorite brown rice pasta brand) sells grand shells that are GF for pretty cheap! I’m going to order a couple boxes of these because I cannot WAIT to make this recipe!
http://www.luckyvitamin.com/p-104647-tinkyada-pasta-brown-rice-pasta-grand-shell-with-rice-bran-8-oz
Awesome!!! Thanks, I love Tinkyada too.
Do you know where they source their brown rice from? Because a lot of brown rice grown in the US has extremely high levels of arsenic.
Or maybe it would be easier in the meantime to use a gluten free lasagna noodle and roll it up. If that is easier to find.
Tinkyada brand makes large brown rice flour shells that hold up well and have a nice bite. They are tricky to find, though. I was in an Athens, GA Walmart (shame) with my teenage son cursing the experience when I found them on the shelf!!!
Those look great! Stuffed shells are such a great comfort food!
Angela,
This post is a perfect example of why I love your blog so much! Your food looks fresh, tasty and healthy.. and you offer alternatives in your recipes (soy-free filling, if I am so inclined).
I look forward to your blog posts so much. They make my day! I’ve tried quite a few of your recipes (cookie dough balls, voo, lentil spiced soup, green monsters, pumpkin pie smoothie lentil hummus avocado pasta) and I’ve loved them all! I’m trying to turn to more vegetarian/vegan options and your food has never made me (or my meat-loving husband) feel deprived.
Thank you so much. I am really looking forward to your cookbook!
Hi Nan, Thank you, I appreciate that so much!
Mmmm looks delicious! I was just thinking about summer and tomatoes for canning sauces. Also, can you add a gazpacho recipe to your summer to do list? Please and thank you from a tomato lover!
You are in luck! http://ohsheglows.com/2011/05/20/gazpacho/
I have been looking for such a recipe for so long! Thank you, thank you!! Stuffed shells was one of my favorites growing up! Beautiful photography, as always!!
Can’t wait to make these!!
This looks so good! Tinkyada actually does make brown rice jumbo shells. They’re not quite as big white flour ones, but still a great alternative :)
Oh wow- these look delicious! I think I’m going to have to make these immediately! They sound pretty easy also, which I’m a fan of.
I’m not a big eggplant fan though, so I’ll be sticking with the stuffed jumbo shells!
Zucchini would work well too.
I have been craving Italian, and wanted to make lasagna but I am lactose intolerant so ricotta would have made me sick for days, so happy to see a recipe for ricotta cheese it looks great.. :)
Also look at “Trisha’s Kitchen” on Youtube. I make her Black Bean Lasagna a lot and it is really good, the “cheese” in it is better than ricotta.
Angela, I sympathise with your out-of-control photograph plight! For every picture on my blog I have about a hundred others on my hard drive! I haven’t come up with a good system yet :-/ Recipe looks so bright and fresh and ‘springy’! Going to a vegan cheese potluck this weekend and this would be a fabulous dish to bring along. Yum!
Gorgeous photos + meal!!! I looove tofu as ricotta in lasagna and shells, which reminds me I need to make it again pronto. Definitely will try out this version!
That Tofu Ricotta sounds delicious! I’m always looking for new ideas with tofu…it gets boring if you don’t mix it up. Thanks! :)
Looks like Tinkyada makes jumbo gluten free shells. If they are like they’re other pasta they should be pretty good.
http://www.tinkyada.com/ProP1.htm
Thanks for the tip!
Here’s the link for amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Tinkyada-Brown-Pasta-Grand-8-Ounce/dp/B000FK7PP8/ref=sr_1_14?ie=UTF8&qid=1363266858&sr=8-14&keywords=tinkyada+brown+rice+pasta
These look so tasty, is there something I could use in place of tofu? I can’t digest soy any better than I can dairy. :(
Hey Sarah, I linked to a cheese recipe in my post that I used in my lasagna recipe – I’m sure that would work in the shells too. Not sure if you can have nuts but thought I’d give that option.
White beans blend up nice and creamy, too. Don’t know if all legumes are a problem or just soy. Beans make a good spread or mixture that can stand in for tofu or nuts in ricotta-type recipes. I’m not promising that beans will function the exact same way, but they are delicious and nutritious, and they do get creamy. Give ’em a shot! :-)
Thank you both for the replies. Sorry I didn’t see the link to the lasagna recipe. I love beans and nuts, and only have problems with soy (and lactose, but that’s obviously not a problem when eating vegan)
I’ll have to try both! I love beans and nuts, and haven’t had a stuffed shell that hasn’t made me really ill in a long time!
Goodluck & let us know how it goes :)
Made them for dinner tonight, half with the tofu ricotta, but subbing white beans for the tofu, half with the basil cashew cheeze sauce with 2-3T of nooch. We used homemade pasta sauce and sprinkled a very small amount of daiya on top. Cheese on top is definitely unnecessary.
Anyway, very good! We preferred the basil cashew sauce, the punch of basil was really nice, but next time we’re going to try the basil cashew cheeze sauce, sub for white beans, add parsley and perhaps run it through a blender after ingredients are added.
Thank you both for the suggestions and thank you Angela for the delicious recipe! I think I could get fat off of your basil cashew cheeze sauce.
Oh my, thank you!!! I’ve been craving stuffed shells, so this is perfect for my dinner tonight : )
Oh my goodness, those photos made my tummy growl!! This would be perfect for Easter!! I love feeding unsuspecting friends and family vegan food and not telling them it’s vegan. They never notice the difference and always love it!! :)
Good gosh…. you had me at pasta. YUMMY.
Thank you so much for including nutritional information! These are beautiful and I can hardly wait to give them a try.