Substituting Eggs

This is the time of year when I start thinking seriously about desserts. I mean, what is Thanksgiving without Pumpkin Pie or Christmas without cookies ?

Those of us who eat a whole food plant-based diet making desserts is really a challenge. There is a lot of substituting that has to be done. For most things it is relatively easy to substitute For example you can substitute:

  • Milk = Nut milk
  • Gluten based flours = gluten-free baking mix or brown rice flour
  • Sugar = honey, maple syrup, coconut sugar or stevia
  • Butter = Coconut Oil

The real challenge is substituting eggs.  Especially when baking. Baking is a little fussy and requires more planning.  Remember that eggs serve three main purposes:

  1. to act as a leavening agent so that food is light and fluffy
  2. to act as a binder for the dry ingredients so the food holds together
  3. add moisture to keep food from being dry in your mouth

It can get a little complex but there are 2 simple things to remember going in:

  1. Replacing more than 2 eggs in any recipe starts to get very dicey (sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t)
  2. You must (one of the very few musts in cooking) figure out what the eggs are used for in the original recipe: leavening, binding or moisturizing

Here is a table that distills all my current information about foods where I substitute something for egg. I have tried all of these and know they work and work well.

  Substitute Equivalent to 1 egg
Brownies & Cake where eggs work as both a binding and a leavening agent
Applesauce 1/3 cup or 1/4 cup + 1 tsp Baking powder
Bananas 1/4 cup  (ripe and mashed)
Coconut Oil 1/4 cup
Ground Flax Seeds 1 Tbl flax+3 Tbl water
Pureed Pumpkin 3 Tbl
Potato Starch 2 heaping Tbl
Tapioca 1 Tbl tapioca +3 Tbl water
White Vinegar & Baking Powder 1 Tbl vinegar+1 tsp baking powder
Fizzy water/Soda Water 4 oz (1/4 cup)
Casseroles where Eggs act as a binding agent 
Mashed Potatoes 1/4 cup
Bread Crumbs 1/4 cup
Cooked Oatmeal 1/4 cup (cooked)
Cookies where Eggs act as a binding agent and a moisturizer
Applesauce 1/3 cup or 1/4 cup + 1 tsp Baking powder
Bananas 1/4 cup (ripe and mashed)
Coconut Oil 1/4 cup
Ground Flax Seeds 1 Tbl flax+3 Tbl water
Pureed Pumpkin 3 Tbl
Muffins where eggs act as a binding agent and a moisturizer
Applesauce 1/3 cup or 1/4 cup + 1 tsp Baking powder
Bananas 1/4 cup  (ripe and mashed)
Coconut Oil 1/4 cup
Ground Flax Seeds 1 Tbl flax+3 Tbl water
Pureed Pumpkin 3 Tbl
Pies & Puddings where eggs act mostly as a binding agent
Cornstarch 2 Tbl cornstarch+ 2 Tbl water
Flour, oil and liquid  1 Tbl flour+1/2  tsp oil+1/2 tsp baking powder + 2 Tbs liquid (water/coconut milk/nut milk)

There are a few other things people recommend that I have not used and here they are:

  • Mayo – 3 Tbs
  • Nut Butter – 3 Tbs
  • Tofu – 1/4 cup blended to smooth and creamy
  • Soy yogurt = 1/4 cup
  • Yeast – 1 tsp + 1/4 c warm water

Finally, you can always use a commercial product like Ener-G. It contains Potato Starch, Tapioca Flour, Leavening (Calcium Lactate, Calcium Carbonate, Citric Acid), Sodium Carboxymethylcellulose, Methylcellulose. Probably all ok stuff, but I am always leery of foods that used things that I don’t recognize or can’t pronounce.  Something like this is not exactly a whole food plant-based item. But the truth is that my big complaint is that they leave a funny aftertaste.

Takes some practice to get this down, but I promise you will get it with time and practice.

About Genene Cote

Genene Coté -- Nutrition Advocate, Counselor and Coach who is also a Whole Food Plant Based Eater (vegetarian/vegan), cook and gardener.
This entry was posted in baking, dessert, diary-free food, Eggs, gluten-free food, sugar-free food, vegan, vegetarian and tagged , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

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