Serves 4
Time: 45 minutes

Photo by VK Rees
This vegan tempeh sausage pasta is such a great weeknight meal and will break you out of your pasta rut. Saucy orzo, velvety ribbons of spinach, bites of sundried tomato, and lots and lots of garlic, topped with crumbled anise tempeh sausage. It gets its name because it destroys cities, and because “Vegan Orzo With Spinach, Sundried Tomatoes, and Tempeh Sausage” is too long to type.
This one’s been kicking around PPK since 2011 and the comments section is full of readers who’ve been making it for years. If you’re coming back for a refresh, hi. If you’re new, welcome to the cult.
What really makes it work is the contrast: soft, saucy orzo underneath, crisped tempeh sausage crumbles on top, wilted spinach winding through. Once you start eating it’s hard to stop.
How to make the tempeh sausage for this vegan orzo
The tempeh is the best part. Tear it into bite-sized pieces, steam for ten minutes to mellow any bitterness, then crumble it in a hot pan with olive oil, anise seed, coriander, and soy sauce until the edges crisp up. The anise gives it a warm, sausage-y flavor, almost like Italian sausage. If you’ve been anise-curious in savory cooking, this is a good way in. That said, you can also sub in crushed fennel seed.
The sauce comes together fast. A small red onion and a lot of garlic, a cup of dry white wine reduced down with rosemary and chopped sundried tomatoes, then vegetable broth and nutritional yeast to give it body. Spinach wilts in by the handful at the end. Toss the cooked orzo through the sauce and pile the tempeh crumbles on top.
VEGAN TEMPEH ORZILLA FAQ:
Can I skip the wine in this tempeh sausage pasta? For sure. Sub an extra cup of vegetable broth plus a tablespoon of lemon juice or white wine vinegar to get back some of that bright acidity. Lighter flavor but still really good.
Is the anise necessary? What does it taste like? Yup yup yup, the anise is doing a lot of the work. It gives the tempeh that warm, sausage-y thing you’d get from fennel in Italian sausage. If you really can’t stand anise, swap in fennel seed 1:1. They’re close cousins and fennel is a little milder.
Can I use a different pasta? You can, but orzo gets sauced in a way longer pastas don’t. If you want to sub, a small shape like ditalini or pastina works. Long pasta will feel like a different dish. But try whatever pasta you have, how bad can it be? Its a great tempeh sausage pasta no matter what.
Can I use oil-packed sundried tomatoes instead of dry? Yeah. Just drain them well and use a little less olive oil when you sauté the onion. The oil-packed ones are softer so they’ll break down more in the sauce, which is fine.
Can I make this vegan orzo ahead? The sauce and tempeh crumbles both keep in the fridge for a few days and reheat well. Cook the orzo fresh when you’re ready to eat because reheated orzo gets gluey.
Can I double it? For sure. Everything scales up cleanly. Use a bigger pan for the sauce so the spinach has room to wilt.

Tempeh Orzilla
Ingredients
- 8 oz orzo
For the tempeh
- 8 oz tempeh
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 1/2 teaspoon dried coriander
- 1/2 teaspoon anise seed
- 1 tablespoon soy sauce
For the sauce:
- 2 teaspoons olive oil
- 1 small red onion thinly sliced
- 4 cloves garlic minced
- 1/2 cup sundried tomatoes (dry ones, not the oil packed kind)
- 1/2 teaspoon dried rosemary
- 1 cup dry white wine
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- Fresh black pepper
- 1 cup vegetable broth
- 2 tablespoons nutritional yeast
- 3 cups baby spinach
Instructions
To prepare the tempeh:
- For time management, I steam the tempeh first, and prep the veggies, then rinse out the pot and boil salted water for the orzo. So, tear the tempeh into bite sized pieces and steam for 10 minutes. Set tempeh aside and proceed with the recipe.
- Preheat a small pan over medium heat. Saute tempeh in oil for about 10 minutes, mashing the tempeh into crumbles with your spatula as you go. Add the spices and soy sauce, and saute another 2 minutes, then turn off the heat and cover until ready to use.
To prepare the pasta and sauce:
- Boil orzo until al dente, then drain.
- In the meantime, preheat a large pan over medium heat. Saute the onion in olive oil with a pinch of salt until soft, about 5 minutes. Add garlic and saute for 30 seconds more.
- Add rosemary, wine and sundried tomatoes. Season with salt and pepper and turn the heat up to bring the sauce to a simmer. Let simmer until reduced by about half, 5 minutes or so.
- Add broth and yeast and warm through. Then add the spinach in handfuls, letting each batch wilt before adding the next. Cook until spinach is thoroughly wilted then turn the heat off, add the orzo, mix well, and serve topped with tempeh crumbles.
2 drops of liquid smoke.
Oh but fennel would be sooo good in this!! Sounds awesome DESPITE. We have tons of orzo too – all over this recipe.
It’s really exciting to hear that such an accomplished cook still learns things. 🙂
I have the same orzo phenomenon….my pantry is loaded with bulk orzo pasta. I will have to make this for certain!
[…] Post Punk Kitchen – Vegan Recipes & Awesomeness […]
HA! “wine wine”
Tempeh Orzilla smash city!!
Yum! I love orzo! I will definitely be trying this recipe out in the near future, thanks!
I love how complex this sounds but how easy it seems to put together. I’m on it!
I just made this and while I thought it was good, my boyfriend, an omni, pointed out that ‘tempeh always tastes metally’. Then I noticed it as well. Could this be because because I didn’t steam it long enough?
otherwise was it was pretty good.
esen
I made this tonight for dinner. It was so easy to put together! It was so yummy too! Thanks Isa for making a great tasting meal. You rock!
Making this tonight! Orzilla sounds so Spanish by the way. I’m into it.
Mmmm this sounds wonderful!
I love love love love PPK! Thank you so much for sharing all your great inspirations!
Here’s a green request. Is there some way you could alter your website so that I could print out just a recipe? Without the intro and the pages of comments? The way it works now, especially if it’s an old recipe with many comments, we are talkin’ a lotta trees.
Thank you so much!
Yes, I need to get that done. Thanks for the reminder!
Having just decided to try living a vegan lifestyle for one month (from being vegetarian), I’ve just bought Veganomicon and have discovered your website too – I am very happy 🙂
There’s so much I can’t wait to try out and there aren’t enough meals in the day to discover the wonderful recipes you have. My friends are very lucky at the moment – I’m inviting them to dinner to be guinea pigs to test meals out! Looking forward to trying this recipe too.
How much can you taste the anise in here? Is it a dominant flavour or just one of those things that gives it a sort of depth without really tasting like plain or relatively unadulterated anise? Because that sounds good except I REALLY do not like the taste of anise.
It’s subtle, but definitely unmistakable. Do you like fennel seed?
Love this recipe! I made it for dinner last night, and the non-veg boyfriend came back for seconds and thirds (he’s usually skeptical of any kind of soy product – no matter how many times I prove him wrong, he’s got this idea in his head that everything soy = bland, mushy tofu).
I made one change – instead of steaming, I just set the tempeh aside to marinate in the oil and spices for about 20 minutes, then dumped the whole thing into a pan to fry it up. Deelish!
Why didn’t I think to look here for a tempeh recipe? I had to use up some and ended up just crumbling it up and using it in spaghetti. lame. Next time!
[…] from when I made Isa Chandra’s Tempeh Orzilla. Not my favorite meal ever, but still quite tasty. Clearly catching up on blogs at […]
This was so super yummy…thanks! So happy I found your site, I’ve got 4 recipes picked out for thisvweek already!!!
Made this last night. Huge hit with the husband. First time I ever steamed tempeh before using it, makes a big difference in the dish. Thanks!
I’ve never cooked with wine before–does it make a difference if I use cooking wine (like in the spices aisle) or a drinking wine?
Drinking wine has a better flavor, but cooking wine works in a pinch! Just be sure to use a dry wine, nothing sweet. And I always go cheap, too.
Quick question.. Does tempeh taste like tofu? I haven’t had it yet.. I would like to try it, but unsure of the type of brand to get? What brand do you recommend?
It isn’t like tofu in taste or texture. Think of it more as a soybean cake. It has a nutty, yeasty flavor, it’s not neutral like tofu. And I haven’t had a brand that I don’t like.
Would it be total madness to make this using Barley instead of Orzo? I know that would be essentially a different recipe, but I’ve head Orzo used to be made out of Barley, so I don’t know if it would be a dramatic change. Thoughts?
Ok, we just had this for dinner tonight and it is the bomb!!! The only thing I changed was switching fennel for the anise seed (’cause I was scared : ). Amazingly good; if this is in your next cookbook, I am so going to buy it!
Can I just say this is maybe the best recipe I’ve tasted in a long long time! My picky-eater boyfriend requests this all the time! So, yeah, you kick a fair amount of ass.. just sayin’..
Thank-you for this recipe! This is my favorite thing that I’ve made from your website! So delish my “meat-a-tarian” boyfriend requested it again!
This looks awesome!! Nutritional Yeast is really expensive here however. Is it really necessary, or can it be replaced with something else? Also, I’ve never seen sundried tomatoes that aren’t in a jar with oil. If I cant find these dry ones you mention, would the oily ones be ok?
I have made this twice now and it is amazing:) Both my partner and I love it and will continue to make this recipe!
Loved it!- Quick, easy, and I never knew about simmering tempeh in water before using it to mellow it out! That explains why i liked it out but not at home- until now! Thanks!
So I SWEAR I had turned my back burner off when I was juggling boiling the orzo and sauteing the veggies, until the manfriend said, “Uhh, what’s burning?” Several obscenities and sniffles later after tossing out the tempeh I’d spent about 25 minutes preparing, I trudged on and added a trusty can’s worth of rinsed garbanzos, along with the anise, coriander, and a splash of soy sauce. And this was still freakin’ delicious! We also added some vegan parmesan and a bunch of red chili flakes. Just FYI for anyone out of tempeh. When in doubt, garbanzos. (I’m getting that tattooed on me.)
[…] Tempeh Orzilla (theppk.com) […]
We LOVE this meal! It’s a little fussy, but gets easier every time. My 11moth old son gobbles this down so fast it’s unbelievable. Husband raves about it too. I’d make it more often if I had tempeh and white wine (suitable for cooking) on hand without having to make a special trip to health food store and liquor store, but when I have both, it’s on the menu! Love your site – very inspiring.
[…] Tempeh Orzilla (theppk.com) […]
[…] Tempeh Orzilla (theppk.com) […]
I’d like to make this for some friends this weekend. Will it work okay to simply double the recipe?
[…] is something called Orzilla and the recipe is from the PPK blog. It’s called that because it destroys cities. I like how she thinks! I made it with this box […]
Okay, I know that I am late finding this recipe but this is awesome!! Thank you so much for sharing. It was truly a great dish.
I just made this tonight after weeks of meaning to. It was worth the wait!!! Thank you Isa!
My God this looks sooo amazing..you’re making me hungry Isa! I’m so making this asap 🙂
[…] recipe was inspired by the great vegan cook Isa Chandra Moskowitz. Her Tempeh Orzilla was on heavy rotation when I was trying REALLY hard to eat vegan. Well, since then I’ve […]
[…] Risotto from Vegan Yum Yum Creamy Barley Risotto with Thyme and Star Anise from Let Them Eat Vegan Tempeh Orzilla from Post Punk Kitchen Pesto Risotto with Roasted Zucchini from Post Punk Kitchen Saffron Speltotto […]
[…] Risotto from Vegan Yum Yum Creamy Barley Risotto with Thyme and Star Anise from Let Them Eat Vegan Tempeh Orzilla from Post Punk Kitchen Pesto Risotto with Roasted Zucchini from Post Punk Kitchen Saffron Speltotto […]
This was SOOO yummy AND i finally got to use my penzeys anise seeds that have been patiently waiting in the pantry. Perfect meal for a rainy monsoon evening in phoenix! Significant other went back for seconds. Drank the remaining bottle of wine as well…. Thanks for this recipe it made our night an even more enjoyable one!
Hey Isa! have you ever tried cooking orzo like its risotto? I did, got confused and it does do a creamy thing like risotto but retains an interesting texture. My Italian husband is a foody and liked it. Just curious what you might do? LOVE you recipes and have turned friends onto to your site. Thank you 🙂
Cooked the sauce with a few olives and poured it over quinoa. The texture and flavour matched the tempeh sauce nicely.
[…] recipe is from Isa over at Post Punk Kitchen. It is another one of our favorite go-to recipes. It is also just as delicious the day after. Not […]
My husband made this as our dinner entree for Valentine’s Day, and it is DELICIOUS. I don’t often eat Italian dishes because I thought the only vegan protein in Italian food was Tuscan white beans. The spiced tempeh crumbles here are heavenly. Can’t wait to pick up your new cookbook in October, Isa!
[…] Tempeh risotto, baked broccoli, an […]
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