A Paris-Inspired Vegan Egg Benedict, Made at Home

By Julie Tourangeau | julietour.com

Sometimes you don’t bring Paris home by recreating it… you bring it home by trusting yourself more.

There’s a moment that happens after Paris.

Not when you land, not when the suitcase is unpacked—but a few days later, standing in your own kitchen, when your body remembers something before your mind does.

The way food felt slower there.

The way nothing was rushed or optimized.

The way a simple plate could feel intentional instead of indulgent.

I always think I’ll bring Paris home with me in big ways—new habits, new routines, a whole new version of myself. But it never works like that. What actually comes back with me are small things. Textures. Instincts. The confidence to trust my taste.

Paris has a way of reminding you that pleasure doesn’t need permission.

Eating Our Way Through Paris

Part of what made Paris linger this time was the food my fiancé and I shared.

Not just the meals themselves, but the way they unfolded—slowly, attentively, without excess. Fresh vegetables that actually tasted alive. Delectable tarts and flans that were rich without being heavy, elegant without trying. Food that didn’t shout, but stayed with you.

One Sunday, we wandered into a quaint vegan restaurant in the 11th arrondissement—the kind of place you could miss if you weren’t looking for it. Small wooden tables. Soft light. Quiet confidence. No spectacle.

I ordered a vegan Benedict that tasted like something dreamed up, not engineered. Silky sauce. Perfect balance. Comforting without being dull. The kind of dish that makes you pause mid-bite, smile, and know you’ll be thinking about it long after the plates are cleared.

It wasn’t about novelty. It was about restraint. About trusting ingredients. About letting vegetables lead and seasoning support rather than disguise.

Sitting there together, sharing bites and glances and that unspoken this is good, I didn’t realize it at the time—but that meal would follow me home.

Vegan dreams are made of moments like that.

Je rêve.

Bringing the Feeling Home

Back in my own kitchen, that memory showed up quietly.

Buttered rustic sourdough toast. A bed of arugula. A soft vegan egg. And a sauce I didn’t measure.

I wasn’t trying to recreate Paris exactly. I wasn’t chasing “authentic.” I just wanted the feeling…that café-morning sense where food is made to be enjoyed.

So I made my own version.

A silky, lemony sauce built from vegan mayo, mustard, nutritional yeast, and black salt—warmed gently and loosened with a touch of water. A dusting of piment d’Espelette, because once you’ve used it in France, you never forget it.

Was it Parisian?

Not technically.

But it felt right.

That’s what Paris teaches you if you’re paying attention: you don’t bring it home by copying it. You bring it home by trusting yourself more.

By letting intuition lead instead of rules.

By choosing what feels good over what’s correct.

By understanding that my version isn’t a compromise—it’s the point.

This wasn’t really about eggs Benedict. It was about remembering that pleasure can live in your own kitchen. That you don’t need a reservation, or a plane ticket, or a €12 coffee to feel nourished.

Paris reminds you who you are.

Home is where you practice it.

And sometimes that practice looks like standing barefoot at the counter, sauce still warm, thinking:

Yeah. This is good. Magnifique.

Paris-Inspired Vegan Egg Benedict (My Way)

A flexible, intuitive recipe — adjust by taste, not rules.

Ingredients

• Toasted bread of choice, buttered

• Fresh arugula

• Vegan egg (such as Serve Yo Egg), prepared according to package instructions

Silky Vegan Hollandaise-Style Sauce

• ¼ cup vegan mayo

• 1½–2 teaspoons lemon juice

• ½ teaspoon yellow mustard (or more to taste)

• ½–1 teaspoon nutritional yeast

• Pinch of black salt (kala namak), to taste

• ½–1 teaspoon warm water (for silkiness and warmth)

• Piment d’Espelette, for finishing

Method

1. Make the sauce:
In a small bowl, whisk the vegan mayo and mustard until smooth. Slowly add lemon juice, then nutritional yeast. Add warm water a little at a time until the sauce becomes glossy and spoonable. Season gently with black salt.

2. Assemble:
Layer arugula onto buttered toast. Add the warm vegan egg. Spoon the sauce generously over the top.

3. Finish:
Dust lightly with piment d’Espelette. Serve immediately, while everything is warm and relaxed.

Bon appétit 😋

Vegan French Onion Soup with Homemade Fettunta

The best vegan French onion soup I’ve ever had—rich, comforting, and made with love. Instead of traditional cheese and beef broth, this version brings deep umami flavors and a beautifully melted vegan mozzarella topping. Served with homemade Fettunta using sourdough and ancient grains for extra nourishment.

Ingredients:

For the soup:

• 5 large onions, thinly sliced

• 1 tbsp sugar

• 1 tsp salt

• 3 tall glasses of hot water (~6 cups)

• 1 small scoop vegan bouillon (or mushroom broth) to taste

• 1 tbsp Vegemite (for depth and umami) (faux beef flavor)

• 2 tbsp olive oil or vegan butter

For the cheese topping:

• 1 ½ cups Violife vegan mozzarella (or any melty vegan cheese)

• 2 tbsp vegan butter

• 1 tbsp tapioca flour (for stretch)

• ¼ cup plant-based milk (for creaminess)

Thyme spice for the top as desired.

For the bread:

Homemade Fettunta: Rustic sourdough (50% ancient grain emmer flour)

• OR stale/toasted bread if preferred

Instructions:

1. Caramelize the onions – Heat olive oil in a large pan on low heat. Add onions, sugar, and salt, stirring occasionally for 2 hours until deep golden brown.

2. Prepare the broth – Mix hot water with vegan bouillon and Vegemite until dissolved. Pour into the pan with onions and let simmer for 30 more minutes.

3. Make the cheese sauce – Melt vegan butter in a saucepan, whisk in tapioca flour, then slowly add plant-based milk and mozzarella, stirring until smooth and stretchy.

4. Assemble & broil – Preheat the broiler on high. Place 4 small soup bowls on a baking sheet. Fill each with 3 ladles of onion soup, top with half a Fettunta slice, and drizzle with the vegan mozzarella sauce. Add Thyme if desired on top.

5. Broil for 5 minutes – Until golden and bubbling.

6. Serve & enjoy – The flavors deepen with every bite. Bon appétit!

Ancient grains nourish the body, compassion nourishes the soul. Missing Paris, but bringing it home one bowl at a time.

Here’s how to make Fettunta (Tuscan Garlic Bread):

🥖 Brush rustic sourdough with olive oil.

🔥 Grill until golden with perfect char marks.

🧄 Rub with a raw garlic clove while warm.

🌿 Drench in high-quality extra virgin olive oil.

🧂 Sprinkle flaky sea salt & enjoy!

Vegan Chicken and Waffles

Compassion begins on your plate! 💚🌱And, wow, what a whole lot of good food on my plate!

Use your leftover Beer-Battered Chick’n Fried Tofu from dinner for breakfast by topping it on a golden, vegan waffle and drizzling it with vegan ranch. Just reheat in your oven for about 10 mins at 350 degrees.

My dad used to make us heart shaped, Bisquick waffles every weekend. When I realized Bisquick waffle mix was vegan, I quickly ordered a heart shaped waffle maker just like we had growing up.

You can veganize almost any of your favorite pancake and waffle mixes by subbing almond milk when it calls for milk and the Follow Your Heart Vegan Egg when it asks for eggs. Just double check the ingredients to make sure it’s free of dairy.

I used :

2 cups Bisquick mix

1 1/2 cup unsweetened organic almond milk

2 tbsp Follow Your Heart Vegan Egg whisked with 1/2 cup ice cold water

2 tbsp organic canola oil

I cooked 3 golden waffles and topped with the reheated beer-battered tofu chicken. I buttered the waffles with Earth Balance and drizzled it all with Organicville Vegan Ranch.

This was the most epic vegan southern-style breakfast a girl could ask for. Holy comfort food.

Enjoy!