Last Wednesday, I drove straight from hot yoga, sweaty and all, to girls’ night. My girls love me, so they didn’t complain. Lately, girls’ night has turned from dinner together to a more casual snacks-and-wine-after-the-kids-go-to-bed affair, which is just as much fun, anyway.
Margaret poured us each a drink and we sat down around her dining table, which she had decked out with an impressive assortment of appetizers. Hummus, crackers, chocolate-covered almonds and a cheese plate were in attendance, and my offering of candied nuts fit right in.
We celebrated good news together and I showed Tessa how to use the puppy dog Snapchat filter. In between the laughs, I remembered how fun sharing food with loved ones can be. It fills in the pauses between conversations as we pass food around the table and comment on it.
I’ve been so caught up in the nitty-gritty cookbook details and making sure everything is just right that I’ve almost forgotten the point of it all.
I’m so determined to get the recipes just right because I want them to turn out beautifully in your kitchens, with minimal stress along the way. I want you to be able to trust my recipes and relax with your family and friends, or have a fun evening making yourself nourishing food to last through the work week. That’s the whole point, and sometimes it escapes me during late nights. At girls’ night, I fell in love with food again.
Which brings me to my partners at Frontier Co-op and their #cookwithpurpose campaign. I’m continuing to share how I cook with purpose. This time, it’s by making recipes that you can share with your family and friends.
Vegetable Enchilada Notes
These enchiladas are a casual, hearty entree that will be met with delight as you pass it around the table. When the dust settles from the cookbook, I’m going to invite friends over for an enchilada party.
These enchiladas are somewhat similar to the spinach artichoke enchiladas you all have enjoyed so much, but with no artichoke and half as much beans. I covered them with my go-to homemade enchilada sauce, of course. They’re just cheesy enough, with a filling of sautéed bell pepper, broccoli, onion, spinach, black beans and some warming spices.
This recipe isn’t the quickest option around, but it is totally worth the effort. If you love it, be sure to check out the roasted sweet potato enchiladas in my cookbook (it’s out now!).
Watch How to Make Vegetarian Enchiladas
Please let me know how these veggie enchiladas turn out for you in the comments! I’m always so eager to hear from you.
Craving more hearty, veggie-packed main dishes? Here are a few of my favorites:
- Roasted Veggie Enchilada Casserole
- Spinach Artichoke Enchiladas
- Black Bean Sweet Potato Enchiladas
- Best Vegetable Lasagna
Veggie Black Bean Enchiladas
- Author:
- Prep Time: 15 mins
- Cook Time: 45 mins
- Total Time: 1 hour
- Yield: 4 servings 1x
- Category: Entree
- Method: Baked
- Cuisine: Mexican
- Diet: Vegetarian
Amazing vegetarian enchiladas stuffed with black beans, broccoli, bell pepper and spinach, topped with homemade red sauce. My favorite enchilada recipe! Recipe yields 8 enchiladas, enough for about 4 servings.
Ingredients
- 2 cups homemade enchilada sauce
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 cup chopped red onion (about 1 small red onion)
- 1 red bell pepper, chopped
- 1 bunch of broccoli or 1 small head of cauliflower (about 1 pound), florets removed and sliced into small, bite-sized pieces
- 1 teaspoon Frontier Co-op Ground Cumin
- ¼ teaspoon Frontier Co-op Ground Cinnamon
- 5 to 6 ounces baby spinach (about 5 cups, packed)
- 1 can (15 ounces) black beans, drained and rinsed, or 1 ½ cups cooked black beans
- 1 cup shredded Monterey Jack cheese, divided
- ½ teaspoon salt, to taste
- Freshly ground black pepper, to taste
- 8 whole wheat tortillas (about 8” in diameter)
- Handful of chopped cilantro, for garnishing
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit with one rack in the middle of the oven and one in the upper third. Lightly grease a 13 by 9-inch pan with olive oil or cooking spray.
- In a large skillet over medium heat, warm the olive oil until simmering. Add the onions and a pinch of salt. Cook, stirring often, until the onions are tender and translucent, about 5 to 7 minutes. Add the broccoli and bell pepper, stir, and reduce heat to medium-low. Cover the skillet (I don’t have a lid for mine, so I just placed a cookie sheet on top). Cook, stirring occasionally, for about 8 to 9 minutes, or until the broccoli is brighter green and just starting to turn golden on the edges.
- Add the cumin and cinnamon to the skillet and cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add the spinach, a few handfuls at a time, stirring until it has reduced in size. Repeat with remaining spinach and cook until all of the spinach has wilted.
- Transfer the contents of the pan to a medium mixing bowl. Add the drained beans, ¼ cup cheese and a drizzle of enchilada sauce (about 2 tablespoons). Season with ½ teaspoon salt and some freshly ground black pepper, to taste.
- Assemble the enchiladas: Pour ¼ cup enchilada sauce into your prepared pan and tilt it from side to side until the bottom of the pan is evenly coated. To assemble your first enchilada, spread ½ cup filling mixture down the middle of a tortilla, then snugly wrap the left side over and then the right, to make a wrap. Place it seam side down against the edge of your pan. Repeat with remaining tortillas and filling.
- Drizzle the remaining enchilada sauce evenly over the enchiladas, leaving the tips of the enchiladas bare. Sprinkle the remaining shredded cheese evenly over the enchiladas.
- Bake, uncovered, on the middle rack for 20 minutes. If the cheese on top isn’t golden enough for your liking, carefully transfer the enchiladas to the upper rack of the oven and bake for an additional 3 to 6 minutes, until sufficiently golden and bubbly.
- Remove from oven and let the enchiladas rest for 10 minutes (they’re super hot!). Before serving, sprinkle chopped cilantro down the center of the enchiladas. Serve immediately.
Notes
Recipe adapted from my spinach artichoke enchiladas.
Make it vegan: I believe you could just skip the cheese altogether and still end up with awesome enchiladas. You might top them with sliced avocado for some extra creaminess.
Make it gluten free: Substitute certified gluten-free “flour” tortillas, or use corn tortillas (they’re smaller than my 8″ tortillas, so you might need more than 8 tortillas). If you use corn tortillas, you’ll need to gently warm them before you try to roll them up, or they might break.
Serving suggestions: These enchiladas are great with a green side salad or my healthy slaw!
Storage suggestions: I just covered my enchiladas with plastic wrap and reheat enchiladas as necessary. If you want to warm them in the oven, cover the top of the baker with parchment paper or foil to prevent them from getting too browned.
▸ Nutrition Information
This post was created in partnership with Frontier Co-op and I received compensation for my participation. Opinions are my own, always. Thank you for supporting the sponsors who support C+K!
Rakhee
My husband loves these enchiladas! Thank you so much for sharing this recipe.
Jacquie
Is this something you can make in advance and freeze? Of course leaving out the sauce until right before cooking. Thanks!
Kate
Hi! Yes, this one does make a good freezer option. I hope you enjoy it, Jacquie!
Angela
It’s a pretty good recipe, but I feel it’s been to watered down by trying to go fancy with all the different veggies. I don’t use all the other veggies, I just stick to using beans, red onions and bell peppers. The sauce was fine. I like to use fresh red tomatillo salsa instead of tomato paste for the sauce. I also use the Mexican style melting cheese to put on top of the enchiladas and Queso Fresco inside too. I recommend it, or using Oaxaca or Cotija. It gave more of an authentic taste.
★★★
Kate
I’m sorry you didn’t love it as is. I appreciate your feedback, Angela.
Stefanie
I’m so excited to make these for a gathering this week! My guest list has grown to 14 – so Looks like I will have to multiply the recipe by 4 or more!
Any tips for increasing this recipe(and sauce) or prepping ahead?
for example: should i Prep all the veggies and sauce the night before, assemble enchiladas the morning of, refrigerate, then cook the evening of the gathering?
i’m worried that if I cook them a day or so before they will get soggy. also nervous about multiplying the recipe.
ps-i’m planning on making cashew cheese for on top!
Kate
Hi! I would just increase it by serving size and then use more pans and a larger pot to make the sauce. I wouldn’t recommend assembling before at risk of not getting the best result from the tortillas. Let me know how it turns out!
Stefanie
Party Food!
I multiplied everything by four for 14 guests.
I made your recipe for enchilada sauce on Wednesday night. I used a medium sized le Creuset pot/pan and it worked well.
Thursday morning I made a cashew-based cheese sauce(from a vegan mac and cheese recipe)
I made filling for the enchiladas Thursday night. This is hard to multiply by four because I just did not have a large enough pan. I did the onions and peppers in one pan and i added most of the spices. Then I transferred that to a very large mixing bowl and sautéed the broccoli with the remainder of the spices. Next i mixed that all together with some of the enchilada sauce and a little of my cheese sauce.
Friday morning I assembled the enchiladas and cooked them.
The day got pretty crazy and i ended up leaving them inside my oven to cool but forgot to refrigerate them before the party! (I know this is not a good idea because of food safety issues, but since there was no meat and no cheese products I felt OK serving these to my guests )
At party time I just reheated and they were great!
they were not the total over the top hit I was hoping for – but everyone seemed to like them. I’m wondering if some of the deliciousness got lost in translation with multiplying the recipe by four.
i’ll definitely make again and this time I’ll double instead of quadruple the recipe.
I had a ton of leftover cheese sauce and enchilada sauce.
★★★★★
Nalisha
I just made this for my family and it’s delicious. Thank you so much :)
★★★★★
Penny
I found the filling to be rather muddled and bland – the veggies just blend together and lack any zing. I think simplifying it with one or two veg plus the beans would make it more balanced. The sauce was OK – next time I’d add some cayenne for spice.
★★
Kate
I’m sorry you didn’t love it. Did you use fresh spices? If they are old, they tend to lack more flavor.
Siobhan
Hello Kate, Siobhan from Ireland again. I’m doing enchiladas for my friend and was wondering if I made them this evening won’t they be all soggy by tomorrow. I mean, aren’t enchiladas a meal that can’t really be made in advance lie that, unless freezing them of course. Would my only option be to make them on the day I am seeing her? What would you suggest please.
Kate
Hi, I would suggest making them and then reheating them. They do make pretty good leftovers!
Anna
I started eating vegetarian in college and didn’t know how to cook much at all when I first moved out on my own, let alone vegetarian main dishes. I’ve been making recipes from this blog for 2 years now with generally really good results, but I made these for my boyfriend who is a meat eater and he loved them so much he asked me to make them again before we even finished the tray. I don’t think he’s ever been EXCITED about vegetarian dinner before, but he absolutely loved these. I came back today to add the ingredients to my grocery list again but wanted to comment and just say thanks so much for all the wonderful recipes!
★★★★★
Kate
That’s great to hear, Anna! I’m happy to hear you are enjoying the recipes on the blog and that this one was a hit with your boyfriend. A good one for all types of eaters. Thanks for your review!
Monica
Wow these are awesome! The whole family love it :)
★★★★★
Rachel
For the first time making enchiladas ever, these are a hit, easy to follow, and yield a delicious outcome. I used all of Kate’s recipes from prepping the dried black beans, to making the enchilada sauce, and adding the side of pickled onions. The assembly all came out great. I used cauliflower florets and added lots of spinach. I only had mazarella cheese, so it’s probably more tasteful with the Monterey Jack. Otherwise, when I do this again, I’ll add more spice and a dash more salt. This was so fresh, colorful, clean, and healthy. Thank you!
★★★★★
Kate
I love that, Rachel! Thank you for sharing.
Siobhan
Greetings from Ireland Kate!! I used your recipe and it is a real winner! Thank you for your replies by the way, Siobhan.
Smita
Love this recipe
Absolute favourite at our place!
★★★★★
Uthra
These are fantastic. I’ve made them for guests a few times now and have been complimented on how authentic the sauce is! So easy to put together! I love your recipes – fail proof and so yum!
★★★★★
Kate
I’m happy to hear that, Uthra! Thank you for your review.
Jaki
These are to die for! Hands down my family’s favourite recipe! I use the store bought Frontera enchilada sauce and sometimes throw in shredded chicken too. Absolutely delicious!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Jaki! I’m happy you enjoyed them.