Do I ever have a delicious vegan meal for you to kick off 2011!
I must admit, this lentil loaf gave me a few grey hairs over the past couple days.
I made 4 trials of this lentil loaf.
I tried the Lentil Apple Walnut Loaf from Clean Food cookbook and also the old-fashioned Lentil Loaf from The Vegan Table Cookbook, in addition to a couple others. I was on a mission to find my perfect lentil loaf!
This one below is from The Vegan Table:
I had problems with binding, so I decided to process (in food processor) 75% of the cooked lentils to help it stick together. I also ground up some oats to make oat flour and added some flax in addition to some other modifications. Good things happened!
Note: This recipe below has been updated and improved! Feb. 2016
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Ultimate Lentil Walnut Loaf
Yield
8 slices
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
This lentil walnut loaf is so delicious, you'll find it hard to resist. Raved about by readers, husbands, children, and recipes testers alike, many claim it’s better than traditional meatloaf. The beauty of creating a lentil loaf (as opposed to a meatloaf) is that you can taste the mixture as you go without having to worry about the raw meat. This results in a perfectly seasoned loaf and, trust me, the batter tastes so good! Lentil loaves can be temperamental, so it’s best to follow the directions exactly as written as I’ve tested this multiple ways. Even minor changes to this recipe can result in a loaf that doesn’t stick together as well. I love to serve this loaf with my stunning Cauliflower Carrot Mash, applesauce, and/or steamed broccoli or greens. This lentil loaf is inspired by Terry Walters' Clean Food Lentil Loaf recipe.
Ingredients
For the Lentil-Walnut Loaf:
- 2 (14-ounce/398 mL) cans of lentils, drained and rinsed*
- 1 cup walnuts, finely chopped
- 2 teaspoons (10 mL) extra-virgin olive oil
- 2 cups finely chopped sweet onion
- 3 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 cup finely chopped celery
- 1 cup grated carrot
- 1/3 cup peeled and grated sweet apple
- 1/3 cup dried cranberries (chopped) or raisins
- 2 teaspoons fresh thyme (or 1 teaspoon dried thyme)
- 1 teaspoon dried oregano
- Fine sea salt, to taste (I use about 1 teaspoon)
- Freshly ground black pepper, to taste
- 3 tablespoons ground flax
- 1/2 cup oat flour
- 1/2 cup spelt bread crumbs (or bread crumbs of choice)
- 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes (optional)
For the Balsamic-Apple Glaze:
- 1/4 cup (60 mL) ketchup
- 2 tablespoons (30 mL) unsweetened applesauce or apple butter
- 2 tablespoons (30 mL) balsamic vinegar
- 1 tablespoon (15 mL) pure maple syrup
Directions
- Preheat the oven to 325°F (160°C). Grease a 9x5-inch loaf pan, and then line it with a piece of parchment paper cut to fit the length of the pan.
- If using canned lentils, rinse and drain them in a colander. If using lentils cooked from scratch, follow the directions in the note below. After draining, add them into a very large bowl and mash the lentils with a potato masher. The goal is to create a lentil paste while still leaving about 1/3 of the lentils intact.
- Spread the chopped walnuts onto the baking sheet. Toast the nuts for 8 to 12 minutes until fragrant and lightly golden. Set aside to cool.
- Increase the oven heat to 350°F (180°C).
- Add the oil into a large skillet, and increase the heat to medium. Stir in the onion and garlic and season with a pinch or two of salt. Cook for 4 to 5 minutes until the onion softens.
- Stir in the celery and carrot, and continue cooking for another few minutes.
- Finally, stir in the grated apple, dried cranberries (or raisins), thyme, oregano, 1/2 teaspoon salt, and black pepper. Cook for a couple minutes longer.
- Into the bowl with the mashed lentils, stir in the walnuts, ground flax, oat flour, and bread crumbs until combined.
- Stir in all of the veggie mixture until combined. Add the red pepper flakes, if using. Taste and add more salt (I usually add another 1/2 teaspoon). If the mixture seems dry, add a tablespoon or two of water and mix again.
- Press all of the lentil loaf mixture into the prepared loaf pan. Pack it down as firmly as you can as this will help it hold together after cooling.
- In a small bowl, whisk together the ketchup, applesauce, vinegar, and maple syrup until combined. Using a pastry brush (or simply a spoon), spread all of the glaze over top of the lentil loaf.
- Bake the lentil loaf, uncovered, at 350°F (180°C) for 50 to 60 minutes until the edges start to darken and the loaf is semi-firm to the touch. Place the loaf pan directly onto a cooling rack for 15 minutes. Then, slide a knife around the ends to loosen, and carefully lift out the loaf (using the parchment paper as "handles") and place it directly onto the cooling rack for another 30 minutes.
- After cooling, carefully slice the loaf into slabs. Serve immediately. The loaf will continue to firm up as it cools. Some crumbling is normal if sliced while warm.
Tip:
- * If you'd like to make lentils from scratch, swap the two cans of lentils for 1 cup of uncooked lentils. Add the lentils into a pot and cover with water. Bring to a low boil over high heat, reduce the heat to medium-high, and then simmer the lentils uncovered for 20 to 30 minutes until tender. Drain well.
Nutrition Information
(click to expand)When the lentils are finished cooking (and cooling), take 75% of the lentils and process them in a food processor until almost smooth.
While the lentils are cooking, prepare the rest of the recipe.
Sautee your garlic and onion.
Add in the grated carrot and optional celery or green onion.
Mix well and cook over low heat for several minutes.
Add in the grated apple, raisins, and chopped walnuts (do not chop the walnuts as small as shown below- it was from an earlier trial).
Cook for a couple minutes.
Add in kosher salt, Thyme, and black pepper.
In a large mixing bowl, mix the flax, lentils (processed and non-processed), breadcrumbs, veggie mixture, oat flour (I processed 1/2 cup regular oats), and ground flax. Stir well.
It will look like this:
Press firmly into a loaf pan lined with parchment paper.
When I pressed it into the pan, I immediately knew that this loaf would hold together thanks to the ground oats, flax seed, and processed lentils.
It was much different than the previous trials…(note how crumbly it looks even in the pan before baking)
Now spread on the glaze:
Perfecto!
Now bake for 45 minutes at 350F, uncovered.
Cool for 10 minutes.
Makes about 8 thick, mouth-watering slices. I knew that this loaf was a crowd pleaser when Eric got really excited over it! He said he would take this over meatloaf any day.
We enjoyed our lentil loaf with sautéed spinach greens and applesauce! Quick, easy, and delicious.
I did a HUGE happy dance when this lentil loaf turned out. Eric and I both agreed that it is the best vegan loaf we’ve ever tried. I hope you enjoy it too! It makes a wonderful New Year’s meal if you aren’t feeling the Black Eyed Peas.
It is delicious, chewy, crunchy, and topped with the most addicting sweet glaze.
As for the crumbly leftovers from the previous 3 trials?
Eric suggested they would make a great vegan taco filling! I think that is a great idea. I’m going to freeze a bunch of it too.
Have a great start to 2011!








Angela,
I’m so excited to try this recipe for Thanksgiving!! I was a vegan in my early 20s, and I “came home” to veganism earlier this year. Thank you for working out the kinks and coming up with a great recipe!
Blessings,
~Stacey
Minneapolis, MN
I have just made this for dinner. I shared it with my daughter, we both loved it. I would have to say it is the best lentil loaf ever. Thank you. I served it with green and orange veg. I am freezing 4 slices, wrapping them in baking paper and then storing them in Tupperware. I am confident they will store well. The loaf is so moist it is a pleasure to eat.
Hi, this looks delicious and I would love to try it for Christmas dinner this year (heheh, with a few of your other recipes!). Just wondering if this could be made a day in advance and if so, how would I preserve it? Sorry, I have no cooking smarts – wondering if I make it raw and keep it in the fridge overnight and then pop in the oven when I’m ready? Can it be frozen before cooking or should it be frozen after cooking? (Ore just kept in the fridge). Thanks sooo much!!! :)
Not sure if you have been asked this or ever considered it, but what do you think about adapting this a bit into a wellington? If you did, what modifications would you make? Looking to make this a bit fancier for Christmas dinner. If you think it wouldn’t work, then feel free to let me know so I don’t spend time and money and then it turns out badly. <3.
HI! I made this and was delicious!! added dried red bell pepper and spinach; used 2 eggs instead of flax egg; didn’t have ketchup so used dijon-apricot-balsamic and it was delicious!! Thank you!@
I made this recipe from your book yesterday. Couldn’t be happier with the result, the glaze is wonderful!
My family loves this recipe! My dad hasn’t even figured out that there is no meat in it yet. We’ll keep it that way. Does anyone know if I can use yellow lentils instead of green lentils?
I will be trying this this weekend. It will be this instead of turkey for me. Do you think the recipe would work well with cashews? We seem to have an abundance of them in our house!
Thank you!
Hi Clancy, I haven’t tried this recipe with cashews, so I’m really not sure! I think pecans might be a better swap, but if you do try cashews I’d recommend chopping them very finely since they are so firm. Hope this helps! I’d love to hear how it goes.
HI Angela!
We made this and absolutely loved it! Even my hubby who is a meat and potato kind of guy begrudgingly admitted he liked it. I ended up using Walnuts because we had to make a extra store trip anyway. I followed your recipe basically to a T except I didn’t have flax. So I substituted flax with ground chia seeds and it stuck together (I only used half the Amt because chia loves water) and it stuck together wonderfully. So basically it was a hit!
We just picked up your cookbook today and I am excited to try your recipes. While I was browsing through I noticed a recipe (protein goddess bowl) and you got the idea from the Coup! That is one of my absolutely fav restaurants as they are veg and also support local first. After I saw that I realised you are a fellow Canadian! So hi from calgary and thank you for all of your awesome recipes!
Clancy
This Lentil Walnut Loaf was amazing! I made it for Easter and was perfect – shared with some non-vegans who loved it as well. I cooked it 30 minutes longer than suggested. The loaf was full of flavor and different textures. We all felt we were eating something very healthy and hearty – and we were! I will for sure be making this again. Thanks for sharing your recipe for all to enjoy!
I’m so happy to hear the recipe was a hit, Jane!
Just made this and it was delicious! My first vegan loaf ever and it made for the best Sunday evening dinner – with some mashed cauliflower and sauteed spinach. The only thing that is a bit weird is that I never saw where the walnuts are supposed to be added in the recipe instructions. I figured it out – add when veggies, etc are added – but weird that it never mentioned walnuts later in the mixing instructions.
Also, I omitted breadcrumbs and had dried cherries on hand instead of the raisins/cranberries. Delish!!
I tried this loaf a couple of months ago, It was the best lentil loaf I have ever made. It had so much flavour and texture.. Delicious. I read on the blog that it did not freeze well so I tested it for 3 months and it froze and thawed beautifully, it tasted better/as good as it did when first made. I have found that most dishes of this type “flavour up” if served the next day – whether meat or lentils. This loaf stays moist.
Thanks for the great and helpful comment, Vivien. I’m so glad you like the recipe, and it’s great to know freezing it worked out well for you. I’m sure lots of other readers will appreciate the info, too!
This sounds delicious and I’d like to try this! Would you please clarify the flax egg instructions. Do you mean we make a flax egg (which I don’t see listed in ingredients, but I believe it’s adding ground flax and water) and add that (and that is separate from the additional ground flax? Or do we make an “egg” with the flax you have listed? So flax is added only once? I hope this question makes sense. And can I substitute an egg (but still add the flax)? Sorry for my confusion.
I now see that you have an updated “revisited” version of this recipe that clarifies the flax egg step and also simplifies the recipe. So, I’ll use that version of the recipe. Thanks.
Hi Jane, I’m so glad the revisited recipe helped clear things up with the flax egg! If you have any more questions, please don’t hesitate to ask. I’d love to help! I hope you enjoy the walnut loaf when you give it a try. :)
Just made this – followed recipe to a t. Delish!! I’m 40 weeks pregnant (due today) and this was perfect today and also freezing for after baby is born. Absolutely wonderful – thank you! My favorite part is probably toasted walnuts and also glaze is key. My husband declared it once of the best things he ever ate and far better than any meat loaf he had. Also mine totally held together – no crumbling. Thanks!
Congratulations, Elizabeth! I’m sending you and baby-to-be tons of well wishes. So glad to hear you enjoy the recipe – it’ll definitely be great to have leftovers on hand after the little one arrives! :)
Can this be frozen?
Fantastic! Tempted by the glaze (I make my own catsup and apple butter). Moist and easy to cut. I grilled some today for a sandwich
My favourite lentil recipe. A bit of extra work the first time I made it, but now it so fast and so yummy! Leftovers are even better.
Hi. Good looking recipie but I’m a bit confused about the flax seed. In the picture captions you say “prepare the flax egg”. Is this the ground flax mentioned in the ingredients list soaked in water (how much) or an additional item?
Thanks
Hey! Oh, great question! I actually have revised this recipe which is why the blog post directions and actual recipe do not match up anymore. Thanks for the heads up. Please follow the recipe itself as it’s correct. :)
I have a bean/ legume allergy and I can still eat soy thank goodness. I was wondering what you would recommend to replace the lentils? I would like to eat more plant base.
Thanks
You mention “flax egg” twice in this vegan lentil loaf recipe….what is that? It’s not in the ingredients list…just with the pictures and instructions
Made this last night….loved it! Left out the olive oil and used fresh bread crumbs, super moist and delicious!
Happy to hear it was a hit, Joe!