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Allergy-Friendly Vegan Cream of Mushroom Soup
by Melanie Carver

Many casserole recipes call for cream of mushroom soup, but the canned versions available at the store are filled with milk, soy and wheat (not to mention fat and salt).  This recipe provides a delicious alternative that avoids those allergens and is also vegan and gluten-free.  I prefer it to be very flavorful and chunky, so I pack it with herbs and use lemon juice to make tangy "buttermilk" for the base.

With this recipe, you can make a variety of Thanksgiving dishes for those with milk and/or soy allergy, are vegetarian/vegan, or have Celiac disease.

Ingredients
3 Tbsp olive oil
3 Tbsp gluten-free flour (I use garbanzo bean flour)
1 cup diced/sliced cremini or white mushrooms
1/4 cup finely diced white onion
1 1/4 cup original or unsweetened milk alternative (I use So Delicious coconut milk beverage)

1 Tbsp lemon juice (or vinegar)
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper

pinch dried rosemary

pinch dried oregano

1/4 tsp poultry seasoning or Garlic & Herb Mrs. Dash
3 Tbsp minced fresh parsley (optional)

soup1

Substitutions and Notes
Poultry seasoning is just a blend of spices that is pre-mixed for you. You can also make your own using any combination of thyme, parsley, oregano, sage, rosemary, marjoram, celery seed, black pepper.  Alternately, you can use a Mrs. Dash blend, if safe for you.

If you don't want your soup to be really chunky, reduce the amount of mushrooms and onions and use a food processor to chop finely.

Any gluten-free flour should work, I prefer the nuttiness and fullness of garbanzo bean flour for this recipe. You can also use rice flour, sorghum flour, or millet flour.

Instructions
In a large saucepan or bistro pan, heat the oil on medium heat. Add the chopped mushrooms and onion and cook for several minutes.

Pour and measure the milk beverage into a measuring cup and add the lemon juice (or vinegar) to it so that it can begin to sour into "buttermilk".  This process takes about 10 minutes, so you do want to do this step early on.

When the mushrooms and onions have softened and reduced in size, add the gluten-free flour to the pan and whisk.  The flour will "gum" with the oil/liquid.  Allow to cook for a few minutes while you prepare the spices or chop the parsley.

The milk is ready to pour in when there are separated "blobs" in it.  Pour the milk in slowly, and continue to whisk.  Allow it to slowly come to a boil (still on medium heat) and then reduce the heat to medium-low.

Add the spices (dry and fresh) and continue to simmer until the soup has thickened and reduced.

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The final product will fit in a standard mason jar (about 400 mL); which is a little more than one store-bought condensed cream of mushroom can.

Serve the soup to eat right away or use it in another recipe that calls for cream of mushroom soup (casserole, vegetable dishes, etc.).

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The information shared here is for your convenience only, it is not an endorsement or guarantee of the product's safety. Please read the ingredient labels and contact the manufacturer if needed to confirm the safety of a product for your child.

Melanie Carver is the Vice President of Community Services for the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America (AAFA). (Kids With Food Allergies is a division of AAFA.)  She is a long-time vegan and has a special interest in nutrition. She is the mother of two, one of whom still has food allergies.

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Images (3)
  • Milk-Free Cream of Mushroom Soup Recipe Ingredients
  • Cream of Mushroom Soup
  • Homemade Cream of Mushroom Soup Stored in Jar

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Comments (32)

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Hi Kathy,

Yes, I would assume this would do nicely with celery instead of mushroom.  I've not made it myself (I'm just now convincing myself that it's okay to eat celery twice a year ).

 

I would suggest replacing the 1 cup of mushrooms with about 3/4 cup  diced celery.

 

For the cream of mushroom soup, it is delicious on pasta -- I mix it with broccoli and served on gluten-free pasta. 

 

Also--good for casserole; but if you're storing it before use, it will really thicken/condense (garbanzo flour is a very strong thickener), so it will need to be thinned out with additional milk alternative (e.g. So Delicious) if you're using it for a casserole or pasta. In it's condensed form -- delicious spread on toast or biscuits.

 

 

Melanie Carver
To do cream of chicken, I normally saute onion and celery minced in the oil. Add the flour and blend that all up. Then instead of milk substitute, I use chicken stock. I generally use a rice flour blend - there is one called Kathy P's brown rice flour mix which is my go to. You can us? A commercial blend. I habe not tried it with garbanzo like this recioe. I use 1 tbsp fat, 1 tbsp flour, and 1 cup stock for a slightly thickened sauce. If I want it thicker, I go up to 1.5 tbsp fat/flour (those should always be the same amount) to the 1 cup stock.
Kathy P

Couple of questions: 1) How long can this safely be stored in the fridge (i.e. could I make it this weekend and use it in a recipe Tuesday night?) 2) I suppose this could also be used as a base in a pot pie recipe for leftovers next weekend - if it does store, or can it be frozen? and 3) Does the coconut taste come through? (not a coconut fan...)

 

I have never made a green bean casserole but now I want to try!

Allison

Hi Allison!  I haven't made this recipe specifically, so I'm not sure on the storing or freezing of it, but I can answer your third question.    We use the unsweetened coconut milk all the time--in the green SoDelicious box (the picture above shows the "original" SoDelicious coconut milk, which is slightly sweetened), in savory dishes like mac n' cheese, and mashed potatoes and we've never noticed a coconut flavor at all. 

Starkled

I don't find the green SoDe has a coconut flavor.  I'm not a big fan of coconut flavor either, and that is my go to milk sub.

 

I'm not sure how long it will store in the fridge.  Some thickeners hold up better than others and I haven't use garbanzo flour.  I find most times, if I use a gf flour mix, thickened things hold up pretty well or even get a little too thick and need to be thinned a little when I reheat it.  I'd probably not keep it more than 3 days in the fridge.  But that's more based on food safety guidelines.

Kathy P
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