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This fluffy, vegan omelet is fluffy and full of veggies but no tofu. Learn how to make the perfect egg-free chickpea flour omelet! This post was originally published on sept 2 , 2014

Table of Contents
Vegan omelets are tricky. Some have the right texture, some have the right flavor, some have a bit of both but not exactly. Chickpea flour makes a good substitute for an omelet, it being high in protein and yellow :). There’s 10 gm protein and 5 grams fiber in each chickpea omelet! They however can have a dense texture once they cool. You want to serve these right off the skillet for the best fluffier texture.
This format of vegan omelet recipe comes courtesy of my husband, Vivek. If you want to get to know Vivek, we did a recipe video together on YouTube with my chickpea loaf.
When Vivek cooks weekend brunch, he goes for Indian breakfast dishes like chilla,(which is unleavened chickpea flour pancakes) or poha .

One weekend, he decided to up his game and experiment with my chickpea flour omelet recipe. He wanted buttery onion-tomato uttapam (South Indian pancakes made gotu style from his fave breakfast place), so he improvised to make the chickpea flour pancake with onion and tomato slices.
I often make it his way. Other times I chop up veggies and add to the batter along with some vegan cheese.

I add some baking soda and non dairy yogurt for fluffiness and moisture, some flax seed meal for binding, Kala namak(Indian sulphur salt) for the eggy flavor.
This vegan omelet is super versatile! Make it your own by adding nutritional yeast for a cheesy flavor or leaning more into that Indian chilla flavor with some carom seedsor Cumin seeds.

For an even fluffier chickpea flour omelet, blend the batter in a blender. That will add more air to the batter. The texture is best when hot off the skillet. Chickpea flour, lentil flour pancakes set up and get denser as they sit. So serve freshly made. You can make the batter and refrigerate for upto 3 days so you can make the omelet when needed!
No matter how you prepare it, this egg-free omelette is absolutely delicious with a light, fluffy texture.

Why You’ll Love this Vegan Omelet
- light and fluffy texture, very similar to eggs
- incredible flavor from garlic powder, black salt, cumin, and veggies
- versatile! Play with mix-ins and even adjust the texture to suit your tastes.
- naturally gluten-free, soy-free, and nut-free.
More Vegan Egg breakfast
Chickpea Flour Vegan Omelet

Ingredients
Dry Ingredients
- 1 cup chickpea flour
- 1 tablespoon flaxseed meal or chia seed meal
- 1 tablespoon potato starch, or tapioca starch or cornstarch
- 1 tablespoons nutritional yeast, optional
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 teaspoon turmeric
- 1/4 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1/4 teaspoon kala namak, Indian sukphur salt
- 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/4 teaspoon black pepper
Wet Ingredients
- 3 tablespoon non dairy plain yogurt, unsweetened or lightly sweetened
- 1 1/4 cup water or stock
- veggies, like sliced tomato, red onion, mushrooms, jalapeño slices or pickled jalapeño slices, and chopped cilantro, chopped spinach
- mix-ins, like vegan cheese and green onions, optional
Instructions
- In a bowl, mix all of the dry ingredients. Add the non-dairy yogurt and pour 1/2 cup of the water to the dry mixture, while mixing in. Once the water is mostly combined, Pour more water, keep mixing, stopping after every 1/4 cup to combine well, keep adding more water to make a thick pourable batter. Mix well so there are no lumps. (If you dump the entire water into the flour mixture, it will get lumpy and be really hard to get a smooth batter). You can also blend the ingredients in a blender. Let this batter sit for 2 minutes. If you want, you can add vegan cheese, green onions, and other mix-ins to the batter at this point.
- Heat a heavy-bottomed skillet at medium heat. When the skillet is hot, brush oil to grease. Pour 1/3 cup or more batter using a ladle and spread on the pan, (spread using your ladle or by moving the pan) then place the vegetable slices on the batter. Make thinner and smaller pancakes to get a hang of these to start with. Alternately, you can mix things like vegan cheese and chopped veggies into the batter
- Cover the pan and cook for 2 mins then uncover and cook for another 2-3 minutes, depending on your pan and the thickness of the vegan omelet. The first one usually takes longer as the pan heats up.
- Once the center is set, flip and cook for another 2 to 3 minutes and serve. For extra eggy flavor, sprinkle a pinch of Kala namak on the omelet. The Kala namak flavor fades in cooking, so use it in the end to add a stronger egg flavor.Serve hot with ketchup, Sriracha, chutneys, roasted potatoes, hash browns or other breakfast fixin's.
Video
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Ingredients
- chickpea flour – This is the base for your vegan omelet. Learn about the difference between besan and chickpea flour, if you’re not sure which is which.
- potato starch- or cornstarch. Adds a bit of binding
- flax meal – Or use chia seeds. This is the binder that helps the omelette stay together.
- salt and spices – Kala namak gives this vegan omelet an eggy flavor. You also season it with turmeric (for color), garlic powder, black pepper, and table salt.
- baking soda – Helps it rise and get fluffy.
- non-dairy yogurt – The yogurt gives this an amazing, eggy texture with no eggs!
- veggies and mix-ins – Use veggies of choice! I am using tomato, red onion, spinach, and mushrooms to top one of my chickpea omelets and making another one plain but adding vegan cheese and green onions to the batter.
💡Tips
- You want a smooth, pourable batter. Whisk in more water by pouring it slowly so that it can incorporate into the flour instead of making pools of water in the batter
- You need a good nonstick or well-seasoned cast iron pan to make this recipe. Chickpea flour batter loves to stick to the pan! If it does stick, simply pivot from making an omelette to a scramble.
How to Make a Chickpea Flour Omelette
In a bowl, mix all of the dry ingredients.


Add the non-dairy yogurt and pour 1/2 cup of the water to the dry mixture, while mixing in. Once the water is mostly combined, Pour more water, keep mixing, stopping after every 1/4 cup to combine well, keep adding more water to make a thick pourable batter. (If you dump the entire water into the flour mixture, it will get lumps and be really hard to get a smooth batter). You can also blend the ingredients in a blender. Let this batter sit for 2 minutes. If you want, you can add vegan cheese, green onions, and other mix-ins to the batter at this point.
Let the batter sit for a few minutes.


Heat a heavy-bottomed skillet at medium heat. When the skillet is hot, brush oil to grease. Pour 1/3 cup or more batter using a ladle and spread on the pan, (spread using your ladle or by moving the pan) then place the vegetable slices on the batter. Make thinner and smaller pancakes to get a hang of these to start with. Alternately, you can mix things like vegan cheese and chopped veggies into the batter


Cover the pan and cook for 2 mins then uncover and cook for another 2-3 minutes, depending on your pan and the thickness of the vegan omelet. The first one usually takes longer as the pan heats up.


Once the center is set, flip and cook for another 2 to 3 minutes and serve. For extra eggy flavor, sprinkle a pinch of Kala namak on the omelet. The Kala namak flavor fades in cooking, so use it in the end to add a stronger egg flavor. Serve hot with ketchup, Sriracha, chutneys, roasted potatoes, hash browns or other breakfast fixin’s.

What to Serve with Chickpea Omelettes
Serve hot with ketchup, Sriracha, chutney, roasted breakfast potatoes, hash browns or other breakfast fixin’s.
Frequently Asked Questions
This chickpea omelet is naturally gluten-free, soy-free, and nut-free (depending on the non dairy yogurt used). It’s also egg-free, corn-free, and coconut-free.
You can use besan(gran flour), you’ll need a bit less water to make the batter. Learn about the difference between besan and chickpea flour here
Oops my bad. You did already write that. 😉
And Ohhh My Gooodness! HOW DELISH!! I ate half before the veggies even finished cooking!
thanks for sharing!
I just made these chickpea omelet/pancake. The first one I poured into pan was a mess that never cooked thru, but I poured another one a lot thinner this time and it worked out. I made 2 successfully and they were DELICIOUS!!!!!! I am so thankful for this recipe. I’ve been waiting for a non tofu based “egg” dish. I got nothing against tofu, but a lil change is nice!!!
Awesome! so glad you made the next one and it worked out! the stove, pan etc change the cooking time. A thinner version will cook up faster and will be easier to flip 🙂
I’m so intrigued by this vegan omlette! It looks delicious and like it would taste much better than a regular omlette! I love that you used chickpea flours and those veggies all look so good 🙂
I made this today and it was lovely! I didn’t have yogurt, so I used sparkling mineral water instead of regular and it added a nice lightness. Thanks for so many wonderful vegan, gluten-free recipes!!
Is there something to use instead of the yogurt? The dairy alternatives here seem to have loads of unrecognizable (aka chemical) ingredients.
you can make your own yogurt using probiotics, or as it says in the notes, use non dairy milk + vinegar.
These look delicious! Need to try them out ASAP (but need more chickpea flour first 🙁 )
I just finished photographing a ‘Pudla’ recipe for my site a few days ago – so easy to make and my little ones love it! My version is more like an uttapum with the veggies and herbs mixed into the batter. I’ll definitely have to try out your recipe next time with the chia seeds – never would have thought to add them in. Thanks!
Had to give it try this morning & was surprised how much I liked them, Richa. Whenever I need chixpea flower, I grind dried garbanzo beans in my coffee mill – works like a charm & way cheaper than the store bought flour! Now that I have divulged my pancake, I will make one for hubby. LOL
Oh, nice one, Richa! What a beauty!
As I first saw this recipe I thought “oh that would be good with probably regular WW flour..” but I’m encouraged to finally stop being lazy/cheap and try chickpea flour instead! This will be on the breakfast menu the next weekend I’m home!