Makes 2 pounds
Total time: 1 hour || Active time: 10 minutes

This is the easiest vegan simmered seitan, gently flavored with chicken-y stuff so that you can use it in any kind of cuisine. Italian, Thai, Mexican…it goes everywhere. The key is forming them into cutlets with a smooth surface and then, the most important part: simmering, not boiling, so that the seitan forms a skin and cooks through inside. Be patient and you shall be rewarded.
Even though the simmering is precise, everything else is pretty easy. You mix the dough, shape it into cutlets, and let them swim in garlicky broth for about 45 minutes. That’s it. You can slice it up (pictured above), turn it into cutlets (pictured below), mince it, dice it, sear it, fry it. Make a batch on Sunday and you’re set for the week.
If you’ve ever been disappointed by rubbery, bland homemade seitan, this recipe is here to fix that. The chickpea flour and nutritional yeast keep things tender, the soy sauce and sage give it that savory depth, and simmering low and slow in broth is the secret to a texture that people love.
A few recipe to use seitan in:
Seitan Piccata – savory cutlets in lemon caper sauce.
Seitan & Broccoli With BBQ Sauce – an easy stir-fry!
Seitan Negamaki – scallion wrapped rolls with hoisin.
One-Pot Chili Mac With Seitan – like a hamburger helper.
A little backstory: This recipe has been on the internet for over a decade, and the comments section on the original post is basically a love letter from people who’ve been making it for years (plus a few complaints but what are you gonna do). I’ve streamlined it a bit here, but the bones are the same. When a recipe survives that long and still gets rave reviews, you know it works.
EASY CHICKEN-STYLE SIMMERED SEITAN FAQ
What do I do with the leftover broth? Don’t toss it! It’s basically a rich, garlicky stock at this point. Use it to cook rice, quinoa, or lentils. It makes a great base for gravy or soup. You can also freeze it for later.
My seitan came out spongy and weird. What happened? Your broth was probably boiling too hard. This is the number one thing that goes wrong with simmered seitan. You want a gentle simmer…small bubbles lazily rising, not a rolling boil. If the broth starts to pick up speed, just turn it down a notch. Water-logged seitan is called “seitan brains,” and once you see it you’ll understand why. You can still eat it, it just won’t be pretty!
Can I make this in a slow cooker? I haven’t done it myself, but several people in the comments have had great success with 3 hours on high. It takes the guesswork out of monitoring the simmer, which is a nice perk if you tend to wander off and do other things while cooking.
Can I bake it? I’d recommend sticking with simmering for this recipe, people in the comments say they have baked it, but do we trust them?
Can I make this soy free? I haven’t tried it, but here’s an idea: replace the ¼ cup soy sauce with an additional ¼ cup vegetable broth and 1 ½ teaspoons salt. Another idea, for more depth: try an additional ¼ cup vegetable broth and 2 tablespoons chickpea miso instead. Others in the comments reported using coconut aminos. Again, I haven’t tested these but, eh, give it a shot.
Can I use something other than chickpea flour? The chickpea flour is what keeps the seitan tender. If you’re allergic to chickpeas try pea flour. But I wouldn’t leave the second flour out altogether.
Can I leave out the nutritional yeast? Ok, stop it.
What broth should I use? For the most chicken-y results, use an unchicken broth like Better Than Bouillon Vegetarian No Chicken Base. You can also use a chicken-style bullion. Any yummy broth works, though.
Can I freeze this? Yes! Freeze the cutlets submerged in broth in an airtight container or freezer bag for up to 3 months. Thaw in the fridge overnight before using.
How long does it keep in the fridge? About a week, stored in a tightly covered container submerged in broth. The longer it sits, the more flavor it absorbs.


Easy Chicken Style Seitan
Ingredients
For the broth:
- 8 cups vegetable broth
- 6 garlic cloves smashed
- 2 bay leaves
For the seitan:
- 2 cups vital wheat gluten
- ¼ cup nutritional yeast
- ¼ cup chickpea flour
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- 2 teaspoons onion powder
- 1 teaspoon dried sage
- 1¼ cups vegetable broth
- ¼ cup soy sauce
- 2 teaspoons olive oil
Instructions
- Fill a stockpot with the 8 cups vegetable broth, smashed garlic, and bay leaves. Cover and bring to a boil.
- While the broth heats, whisk together the vital wheat gluten, nutritional yeast, chickpea flour, salt, onion powder, and sage in a large bowl. Make a well in the center and add the 1 ¼ cups broth, soy sauce, and olive oil. Mix with a fork until a dough forms, then knead with your hands for about 3 minutes, until firm and evenly combined.
- Divide the dough into 8 equal pieces. An easy way to do this: divide the dough in half, then divide those halves, then those halves again so you have eight pieces. Stretch each piece into a cutlet, pressing it against the counter to smooth the surface.
- Once the broth reaches a full boil, lower the heat to a gentle simmer. This part is important: if the broth is at a rolling boil, the seitan can get waterlogged and turn spongy (aka “brains”). Add the pieces of seitan to the pot and partially cover so steam can escape.
- Simmer for about 45 minutes, turning occasionally and keeping an eye on the heat to maintain a steady, low simmer- not a boil. When the seitan is done, you can let it cool right in the broth or pull some out to use immediately. For storage, keep the cutlets submerged in broth in a tightly covered container.
Delciious! I swapped out onion powder for asofoeteida because I have an intolerance to FODMAPS. But your recipe is awesome. Thanks for sharing it!
This tastes amazing!!! Thank you! Does it freeze well?
It is showing up. And your comment is extremely rude and disheartening. I’ve shared recipes online for free for over a decade. Stuff like this makes me not really want to. So how about be a nice person and don’t spoil things for others?
The recipe doesn’t show up when you’re on your phone- the only thing that does is all these comments, maybe that’s why the person above got annoyed (a lil over the top tho :D)
I cannot get the recipe to show up
I am on my computer
How do I find it?
Thank you
Mary Jean
I too am having problems with the recipe showing up. I tried using firefox, safari, and chrome on my computer and then tried using my phone as well and nothing’s working! It would be lovely to make this recipe, could someone help?
Thank you
I just sent an email, but now that I’m at the bottom of the replies, I see that I’m not the only one who can’t see the recipe. I tried on ipad, iphone, and computer. Not showing. Sorry and disappointing to see “admin” respond so aggressively.
YEA!!! today the recipe is showing up for me.
So thankful and now to get into the kitchen for those waffles and “chicken”
The recipe has disappeared? 🙁
I think this is going to be amazing. I’m steaming mine (because apparently I’m incapable of simmering based on past attempts).
One thing I noticed is that the onion powder and sage in the ingredient list don’t show up in the actual how-to. I’m going to assume those go in with the dry ingredients, but sadly I didn’t notice them until after I’d kneaded…so I may have seitan with sage and onion powder stripes 🙂
I use the left over simmering broth to make a really delicious gravy
Hi Isa,
Although my English isn’t too great (I’m from the Netherlands), I’d really like to thank you for this wonderful recipe! This was my first attempt at creating seitan in a broth (I already made some sausages in the oven) and it turned out great! Yesterday we ate a smaller portion in a curry, I put another portion in the freezer and today we eat a light soup with the smaller pieces of ‘chicken’. My kids (three hungry teenagers) love the taste of it – and so do I, so I’m sure this will be on the menu a lot of times
??
The directions confuse me. How much of the 8cups of broth are used in mixing with the dry ingredients and how much is used to simmer?
In the meantime, together the vital wheat gluten, nutritional yeast and chickpea flour and salt in a large bowl. Make a well in the center and add broth, soy sauce, and olive oil. Mix with a fork and then use your hands to knead for about 3 minutes, until it’s a firm dough and everything looks well incorporated. Divide into 8 even pieces. An easy way to do this is to divide the dough in half, then divide those halves and then divide those halves. Ta-da! 8 pieces. Stretch each piece into a cutlet, pressing the cutlet into the counter to smooth the surface. Let rest until the broth has come to a full boil.
THis is good
Thank you Isa, this recipe is amazing. Thank you for sharing your recipes online, they have enriched my life and made it so much yummier as a VEGAN!
Recipe not showing on iPhone safari
Max, this should be working now!
I can’t see the recipe. 🙁
Hoping it will show up on another day.
Me neither. I had tried this recipe a couple years back, but hadn’t written it down anywhere – I remember it being really good, so it’s a shame that it’s not appearing. Was hoping to make it again!
Hey NT, this is fixed now!
Hi Lisa, this recipe is fixed now!
For some reason, the recipe does not show up. I had been able to see the recipe before so I don’t know what has changed. Kind of disappointed that so many people are having the issue with no resolution.
Sorry Kendra, this is fixed now!
Hi – have you taken down your original seitan recipe? I can’t find it anywhere and it’s my all-time favorite seitan ever. This recipe looks a bit different from what I remember and I don’t want a chicken style seitan right now. I checked ‘vegan with a vengeance’ and that recipe is different too. Thoughts?
Thank you,
Brian
[…] This recipe is based on a stuffed seitan invention, long perfected and fine-tuned by Ileana. If you already know how to make a good seitan this should be easy, just follow your own recipe and the stuffing technique described here; if not – be ready to experiment a bit to get that perfect seitan texture and flavor! For more of a guide for a seitan roast recipe with more exact measurements, check out this one. […]
Mine is cooking in the stock pot right now and it smells amazing! I can’t wait to fry it up tonight with some waffles and dive in! Thank you!
Well, the recipe shows up just fine for me. I am making it tomorrow, ran out of time today.
I’m with Brian (December 10, 2019). I loved, loved the original recipe on your website and thought I wrote it down but can’t find it anywere. Would you be so kind as to e-mail it to me? I know it didn’t have any garbanzo flour in it.
Thanks for such a great website and yes I have at leaast 3 if not more of your books.
[…] I love to use Homemade Seitan in this recipe. And you can streamline the seitan recipe, too. Leave out the garlic since […]
This is the best seitan recipe I’ve tried so far. I’ve made about 5-6 different kinds now. I really like the flavor and texture for this one. Will work fantastic in my tacos and chicken noodle soup. The broth is incredible too. Highly recommend an un-chicken type of broth. Thanks for the recipe!
That was a mean comment Tayne, it’s always generous of others to share recipes for free 🙂
Hi,
Can someone tell me how much of the broth should be added to the dry ingredients/Seitan itself?
Thanks 🙂
Sorry, I just saw it now! 🙂
[…] Chicken Stylee Seitan […]
I just made this recipe and it’s perfect! It was very easy and has a wonderful flavor and texture. I think this will become my go-to seitan recipe. Thank you so much for developing and sharing it!
If I want to freeze some, would I just take the cutlet out of the broth and wrap it in foil/a zip lock? I’m assuming freezing it with broth isn’t advised?
Hi! Thank you for the recipe! Question – when simmering, the pieces have a tendency to float and not all parts are submerged. Is this normal? If so, should one try to weigh them down somehow to keep them submerged? Thank you!
this is amazing. i breaded and fried half a batch and served them with baked potato wedges. definitely one of the most delicious dishes i’ve made. isa really is a flavor wizard. every recipe of hers i’ve tried turned out great.