Showing posts with label Oktoberfest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oktoberfest. Show all posts

Saturday, October 4, 2025

The Ultimate Guide to Vegan Oktoberfest Recipes

From peta.org/living

Oktoberfest, the annual German festival, features oceans of beer, mountains of hearty food, and fun group songs.

Vegan Oktoberfest has been an option from the very start—most pretzels and beer are inherently vegan. And now, vegan Oktoberfest is more exciting than ever thanks to new plant-based versions of beloved Oktoberfest dishes. Dig into the tradition and discover some of our favourite vegan Oktoberfest recipes.

Where Is Oktoberfest Celebrated?

The mothership is in Munich, where more than seven million people gather over a couple of weeks to enjoy Bavarian food, games (crossbow competition!), quaint tradition, and rides, along with more than seven million liters of beer. That’s nearly three Olympic-sized swimming pools full of beer.

While Munich is the largest (it’s officially the biggest folk festival in the world), there are numerous other Oktoberfest celebrations in Germany and around the world. The best known in the United States include Cincinnati, OhioFredericksburg, Texas, and Denver, Colorado. And you can find smaller Oktoberfest celebrations all over the place at German restaurants and beer gardens.

Oktoberfest has been evolving since it began more than two centuries ago. Today, even the main event in Munich features vegan options (although others need a little encouragement). You can even roll up to Oktoberfest in vegan lederhosen—the traditional heavy-duty Bavarian shorts.

Vegan Oktoberfest Beer

Most beer is vegan, including many made in Germany, in part because of their strict purity laws that limit the ingredients these beers can contain, banning animal-derived substances such as gelatine. 

In Munich, Oktoberfest features Märzen lager and a paler Festbier. That’s it. No IPA or fruit-flavoured abominations. Just basic beer. So much of it.

It’s served in comically large one-litre glass steins that at first you don’t think you can finish, but later you wonder how you could have had so many.

If you’re not in Munich, you don’t have to stick to the traditional Märzen if you don’t want to. There are tons of vegan beers to try.

Vegan Oktoberfest Food

Germany has an active community of animal advocates, and PETA Germany has been getting a lot done for animals. So it’s no surprise that there is now plenty of tasty vegan German food to be had.

It’s easy and fun to create your own vegan Oktoberfest. You’ve already got your beer in hand, so let’s go!

Vegan Oktoberfest Snacks

Pretzels (Brezeln)

Many store-bought soft pretzels are “accidentally vegan”—just be sure to check the label for ingredients like eggs before you buy. You can also make your own with this recipe for Vegan Soft Baked Pretzels.

Bavarian Radish Salad

This refreshing radish salad is the perfect dish to accompany richer dishes like sausage and schnitzel, or eat it like they do in Munich, alongside your beer.

Vegan Oktoberfest Main Dishes

You need heartier fare to soak up all that beer (don’t ask me how I know). Fortunately, German cuisine has definitely got you covered in that department.

Beer-Basted Tofurky Beer Brats With Caramelized Onions and Hot Mustard

You can’t go wrong with this classic: savoury brats under a blanket of caramelized onions with the tang of hot mustard. The sausages are basted with beer on the grill, giving them a juicy sweetness.

Vegan Pesto Cheese Spätzle (Vegane Pesto-Käsespätzle)

Spätzle are similar to noodles or small dumplings, and you’ll see them everywhere at Oktoberfest in a variety of sauces. This recipe features a cheesy vegan pesto sauce and more caramelized onions.

Vegan Oktoberfest Desserts

Somehow it’s possible to keep going after all that food and beer. It doesn’t hurt that these vegan German desserts are just the right balance of sweet and fruity.

Apple Strudel With Vanilla Sauce

Paper-thin dough is the key to this decadent apple strudel, served with a thick vanilla sauce.

Vegan Kaiserschmarrn with Plums

Kaiserschmarrn is a traditional thick fluffy pancake that is cut into pieces and served with a seasonal fruit puree and a generous helping of powdered sugar.

Oktoberfest is a lot of fun, and it’s even more enjoyable without cruelty. Sausages and other foods made with meat contain the remains of dead pigs. Pigs are smart individuals with unique personalities who feel pain and fear, experience joy, and value their lives. Millions of these sentient beings are held captive in misery.

Everyone who goes vegan spares the lives of nearly 200 animals every year, dramatically shrinks their carbon footprint, and lowers their risk of suffering from numerous ailments, including heart attacks, strokes, cancer, and obesity.

https://www.peta.org/living/food/vegan-oktoberfest-recipes/

Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Vegan Versions of Classic Dishes to Be Offered at Oktoberfest 2022

From vegconomist.com

A significant shift is set to take place at Oktoberfest 2022, as several vegan options are added to menus for what may be the first time in the event’s history.

The Munich-based beer festival is known for its meat-heavy dishes, with 435,000 chickens and 124 oxen said to be consumed each year. But change is coming — the Ochsenbraterei, a venue best known for publicly grilling oxen on a rotisserie, has hired chef Sebastian Copien to develop vegan options. With Copien’s help, the menu now features three plant-based dishes — vegan patties with potato salad, vegan bratwurst with sauerkraut, and mushroom goulash with pulled plant-based meat.

“Vegetarian and vegan diets are not a trend, but have been proven to be good for people and nature,” Ochsenbraterei landlady Antje Haberl told Suddeutsche Zeitung.

© Oktoberfest

Vegan Weißwurst

This year, Oktoberfest visitors will also be able to enjoy vegan Weißwurst (white sausage) for the first time. The festival has partnered with German alt-meat brand GREENFORCE to develop the sausage, which is made from pea protein, spices, and parsley.

It took a year of R&D and a €500,000 investment to perfect the recipe. Oktoberfest host Michael Käfer previously invested in GREENFORCE in 2021.

Oktoberfest at Bundobust

Though Oktoberfest is based in Munich, other cities across the globe also celebrate the festival. In Manchester, UK, vegetarian Indian restaurant Bundobust will be offering free beer from its brewery alongside meals during the festival. The dishes will be plant-based and Indian-inspired takes on German festival food, with examples including currywurst koftas and spiced pretzels.

Oktoberfest 2022 will take place from September 17 to October 3.

https://vegconomist.com/fairs-and-events/vegan-oktoberfest-2022/ 

Saturday, September 28, 2019

Vegans rejoice, you can once again drink steins and eat bratwurst in October

From metro.co.uk

Oktoberfest is already in full swing in Germany, but vegans in the UK will need to wait until next month to enjoy (meat-free) bratwurst and vegan steins. The festival known as Vegtoberfest – which claims to be the UK’s first-ever vegan Oktoberfest – will return for its second round on 12 and 19 October at Fest in Camden.

There is plenty on the agenda. On the drinks side, you can enjoy Bavarian beers like Spaten and Lowenbrau or sample local vegan craft ales, as well as vegan vine, mulled wine (it’s a bit early, we know, but go with the flow) and cocktails. The food will be served up by the street food chefs from Rudy’s Dirty Vegan Diner, with a menu that includes vegan Bavarian Wiesswurst, Bratwurst and Bockwurst with the usual trimmings – sauerkraut and mustard, most likely. You can also stuff your face with the Dirty Burger, topped with ‘baycon’ or kartoffelpuffer (German potato pancakes). Fest’s own restaurant, Birdcage, will even transform into a vegan diner for the day, serving up stone-baked pizza, loaded fries, pretzels and ice cream.

                                               It’s all vegan (Picture: Vegtoberfest.co.uk)

No Oktoberfest is complete without entertainment. The main room of the venue will be decorated into a festival-themed beer hall, where guests can listen to live music by Old Dirty Brasstards and Brasstermind, as well as watch shows by Lolo Brow – a ‘female drag queen sideshow nut’ – who will perform on 12 October. The following Saturday, cabaret, comedy and magic star Dee Riley will take the stage.

Tickets start from £10, and last year’s shows were sold out, so if you want one you best hurry. If the weather allows, there’s also the option of swinging by Wonderfest Rooftop, for a beer and sunset view of Camden Stables Market.

https://metro.co.uk/2019/09/27/vegans-rejoice-can-drink-steins-eat-bratwurst-october-10817546/