New Straits Times

Sheet-pan suppers without the meat

These recipes will help cut the guilty on your late night cravings, writes Melissa Clark

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MOST sheet-pan suppers rely on meat or fish as the anchor. Toss your chicken or salmon fillets on the pan, surround them with vegetables, and roast until everything turns golden brown, a perfect one-pan meal.

But what if you want your choice of protein to come from plants, not animals? It’s no harder to build a sheet-pan supper around a vegetarian protein, and there are more options than you might initially think.

Take, for example, beans. While they may not be the first ingredient to spring to mind when you think of a sheet-pan supper, they can work wonderfull­y, whether you want them crunchy and golden, or soupier and more like chilli.

Crisping chickpeas in the oven to serve as hors d’oeuvres or snack is something I’ve been doing for years. Just coat them in oil and spices, and roast at high heat until they sizzle. But to turn them into a sheet-pan supper, I added potatoes. Then, on a separate pan, I roasted chunks of cauliflowe­r strewn with skinny lemon slices. Drizzled with a garlicky herbed yogurt sauce, it’s an incredibly satisfying, richly textured meal zipped up by the caramelise­d bits of citrus.

Building a sheet-pan supper around tofu, tempeh and other sliceable plant proteins is fairly intuitive. Start with the protein, add vegetables, some kind of fat for browning, and any seasonings you like.

One of my favourite tofu recipes calls for marinating it in tamari and honey, coating it in corn starch, then baking it until it’s crunchy and brown.

Turning this basic formula into a sheetpan meal is a cinch: Just stick another pan of veggies in the oven at the same time, and add some herbs and crunchy peanuts as garnish.

Sliced sweet potatoes work particular­ly well as a pairing. The wedges turn velvety, adding texture to the meal. But broccoli, Brussels sprouts, mushrooms or any number or others can work. Watch them as they cook, pulling them from the oven when they’re finished even if that happens a bit before — or after — the tofu is done.

A word of warning: The corn starch coating will most likely cause the tofu to stick to the pan. Using a small metal spatula, either an offset or a fish spatula, will help pry the pieces off for flipping halfway through. You could use non-stick liner here, but it will inhibit the browning and crunch factor. Or skip the corn starch entirely. What you sacrifice in crunch you gain in ease of preparatio­n.

Tempeh and seitan can be used interchang­eably with tofu, though you don’t need to drain them first. And in many cases, they even come marinated and ready to just cut up and bake along with your veggies.

Finally, there is another, even simpler route for a meatless sheet-pan dinner, one I probably use more than any other. Simply roast up your favourite combinatio­n of vegetables, then add a protein-packed garnish at the end. Toasted nuts, crumbled cheeses, yogurt sauces, or fried or hard-cooked eggs can round out your plate with style and verve — no added meat whatsoever.

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