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Vegan Grain-Free Beet Burgers {oil-free}

Your new favorite veggie patties: my Vegan Grain-Free Beet Burgers! They are loaded with nutrition, oil-free, gluten-free, and absolutely scrumptious!

Vegan beet burger on a bun with mashed avocado and vegetables

It may only be March 2, but I am already dreaming of sunny summer days, lazy afternoons by the pool, and breezy sundresses.

Summer weather will likely arrive in my part of Texas in another month (perhaps weeks), but I am an impatient lass. So, I’m making burgers.

Not just any burgers, either, but easily the best meatless burgers I’ve ever eaten. When I say they are amazing, I mean it.

They’re gorgeous, too.

stack of vegan beet burger patties

Beets: The Perfect Ingredient for Plant-Based Burgers

Beets make these burgers especially beautiful, and exceptionally delicious, too. I had a great meatless burger, years ago, that had beets in the mix, but up until now, I have not included beets in any of my own burger combinations.

But lately I’ve spotted some sensational beet burger photos that have rekindled memories of that yummy burger.

Given the plethora of beets I bought the other week for my vegetable flatbreads, combined with my husband frowning at said plethora of beets taking up refrigerator space,  it became clear to me that the timing was right for my own version of beet burgers.

Ready? Let’s go!

How to Make Vegan Beet Burgers

I started with a pound of beets (about 3 medium-large). I trimmed off the ends, gave them a quick scrub, wrapped them in foil, and slid them into a 375F oven.

3 medium-large raw beets on a cutting board

Roast the Mushrooms and Beets Simultaneously

I love mushrooms in meatless burgers, mostly because of their umami flavor. However, I didn’t want to fuss with sautéing them for this recipe.

Instead, I made things easy on myself (and all of you): while the beets roasted, I quartered the mushrooms, placed them on a piece of parchment paper, and spritzed with cooking spray.

Once the beets roasted for 35 minutes, I opened the oven and added the mushrooms to the sheet pan. In 10 more minutes, both beets and mushrooms are done (and only pan to clean up!).
overhead shot of roasted beets and roasted mushrooms

Shortcut Idea: Use Canned or Ready-Roasted Beets

The beets and mushrooms need to cool completely at this point, so these burgers do require some advanced planning. That is, unless you take my shortcut version (canned or ready-roasted beets + stovetop-sautéed mushrooms). I like options, don’t you? 🙂

How to Assemble the Vegan Grain-Free Beet Burgers

Once the vegetables are cooled, the burger making begins, and it’s pretty simple. I process the beets and mushrooms in the food processor first, and then add the beans for a few pulses. The vegetables will be chopped relatively fine, and the beans broken down, but stop far short of making a puree.

Home stretch! Scoop your beet blend into a large bowl and break up any stray big pieces with a fork. The mixture should already clump together, to some degree, because of the beans, in particular, but some binder is still needed to achieve a burger-like, meaty consistency.

It took me awhile to figure out what to do here. I’ve seen beet burgers with quinoa, oats, and/or brown rice, but I wanted something different with a more cohesive texture. It would be great if it was grain-free, too.

Finally, it came to me: Coconut Flour.

overhead shot of a bowl of coconut flour

Oh my goodness, I love what coconut flour does for these burgers!

Yes, it binds them, but it does more than that: when combined with the beets, beans and mushrooms, it produces a meaty, but not heavy texture (no leaden veggie burgers!). It’s exactly what I have been craving–for a LONG time–in a meatless burger. I cannot wait to try coconut flour in some other burger combinations (stay tuned).

In case you are leery of coconut in your burgers, let me emphasize that there is no taste of coconut from the coconut flour. I use strong spices in the burgers (smoked paprika, cumin, garlic powder), so in the end, there is no one dominant flavor of any one ingredient, especially not coconut. Instead, the end result is a smoky, meat-y, vegilicious burger.

Make the Burgers Ahead of Time

Not ready to cook? No problem. You can make these ahead, too, and store in the refrigerator or freezer until you are ready to heat and eat.

If the flavor of the patties alone is not enough incentive to make these, make and eat them for your health, because they are BURSTING with great nutrition (e.g., antioxidants, almost 8 grams of protein per patty, and ridiculously high amounts of potassium–over 600 mg per patty–and fiber).

Each patty tallies up to a mere 119 calories, which to me means lots of leeway for piling on assorted accoutrements, such as guacamole, hummus, barbecue sauce, more vegetables, a great bun, or whatever else floats your boat.

Enjoy, everyone, and have a great weekend!

 

Vegan Grain-Free Beet Burgers {oil-free, gluten-free}

Vegan Grain-Free Beet Burgers {oil-free, gluten-free}

Yield: 6 patties
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour 15 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 35 minutes

Your new favorite veggie patties: my Vegan Grain-Free Beet Burgers! They are loaded with nutrition, oil-free, gluten-free, and absolutely scrumptious!

Ingredients

  • 1 pound trimmed, scrubbed beets (about 3 medium)
  • 8 ounces white mushrooms, quartered
  • 1 15-ounce can black beans, rinsed and drained
  • 2 teaspoons smoked paprika
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons ground cumin
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons garlic powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
  • 1/3 cup water
  • 1/4 cup coconut flour

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 375F.
  2. Tightly wrap beets in foil and place on one side of a large rimmed baking sheet. Bake for 35 minutes.
  3. Meanwhile, place mushrooms on a piece of parchment paper (roughly half the size of baking sheet). Lightly spry with cooking spray and sprinkle with salt.
  4. Open oven and place parchment with mushrooms on other side of sheet. Bake for 10 minutes longer. Remove from oven and let mushrooms and beets cool completely.
  5. Peel the cooled beets and roughly cut into medium pieces. Place beets and mushrooms in a large food processor; pulse until finely chopped (but not a puree). Add the beans, paprika, cumin, garlic powder, salt and pepper; pulse until beans are roughly chopped (but not a puree). Transfer mixture to a large bowl.
  6. Stir in the water until blended, and then stir in the coconut flour. Let stand for 10 minutes. The burger mixture should be stiff enough to form into patties (if not, add more coconut flour, a teaspoon at a time).
  7. Using a heaping 1/2-cup for each, form the mixture into 6 equal patties, about 3/4-inch thick. Store the patties, or cook.
  8. Baking the patties: Preheat the oven to 400F. Spray a large baking sheet with cooking spray. Place patties on sheet, spacing evenly. Spray patties with cooking spray.
  9. Bake in the preheated oven for 25 to 30 minutes, until heated through and slightly crispy at edges.
  10. Serve with any and all of your favorite accompaniments.

Notes

Storage: Store the burgers, individually wrapped in parchment or wax paper , in an airtight container in the refrigerator for 3 days or the freezer for up to 6 months.

Shortcut version: Omit the roasting of the beets & mushrooms. Instead, use 1-1/12 (15-ounce) cans of whole baby beets (NOT pickled), drained, or 2 packages of ready-roasted beets (in the produce department). Saute the mushrooms in a large skillet, in 2 teaspoons of oil, for 6 to 7 minutes until softened and browned, Cool mushrooms completely, Proceed as directed in recipe.

Smoked Paprika Sub: An equal mount of chili powder can be used in pace of the smoked paprika.

Nutrition Information
Serving Size 1 patty
Amount Per Serving Calories 119Total Fat 1.2gSaturated Fat 0.2gCholesterol 0mgSodium 521mgCarbohydrates 23.4gFiber 7.5gSugar 5.5gProtein 7.1g

Did you make this recipe?

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Shannon

Sunday 21st of May 2023

Can these be done on a BBQ?

Camilla

Monday 22nd of May 2023

I think so, but have not tried it. To prevent breaking, I would suggest using a some sort of topper (like a grill basket--I use these a lot on the grill). :)

Susie

Sunday 26th of June 2022

Absolutely delicious! I am going to make them again and wondering if you have reheated on the grill ? I want to give it 5 stars, but do not see how to do that from the comment section.

Amelia

Tuesday 26th of October 2021

Thank you for the recipe! Wondering if you could suggest a different flour than coconut for this? Would flax work?

Camilla

Friday 12th of November 2021

Hi Amel! Almond flour or any nut or seed flour meal would work (but you will need to use at least twice as much as the amount of coconut flour; the latter is unusual, it is used in very small proportions). Flaxseed meal could work, too— I would add a little bit more than the amount of coconut flour, then more as needed.

Ananya

Thursday 26th of August 2021

Hi I love your recipes ! I had a question Cooking/heating coconut directly produces cholesterol So can coconut flour be baked ?

Camilla

Thursday 9th of September 2021

Hi Ananya, Do you mean eating cooked/heated coconut directly produces cholesterol? I don’t know of the science that supports that claim, but would be happy to know if you can direct me to the source(s). Direct causality between consumption of specific foods and health outcomes is not possible with most research, so I think it is safe to say that there is direct link. Regarding coconut flour specifically: it is the defatted product leftover from coconut milk production, so no worries about cholesterol/fat, heated or unheated ?

Seweryn

Monday 22nd of March 2021

Hi Camilla! Is it possible to use canned chickpeas instead of black beans in this recipe?

Camilla

Friday 14th of July 2023

Yes!

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