In Pie We Crust: A Seasonal, Plant-Based Guide to Eating Through Autumn

The autumn leaves are falling down like pieces into place and we’re dreaming of cosy days indoors, plaid scarves and pumpkin pie – mainly thanks to seasonal vegan cooking queen Katie White. In this extract from her debut book The Seasonal Vegan, Katie takes us into the kitchen and through her garden to guide us on what’s in season now, before sharing a heavenly pumpkin and cream cheese pie recipe that has us drooling. Eating plant-based? Easy as pie!


left THE SEASONAL VEGAN, OUT NOW right KATIE WHITE, PHOTO BY KELLY HARWOOD

IN THE KITCHEN

Autumn is when I go through my hot chocolate phase. As the mornings get cooler and cooler, the first thing I do when I get up is make a rich, comforting cup of hot chocolate to start the day. Autumn cosiness doesn’t end there, either! I’ll make endless batches of hot cross buns to share with neighbours and friends. 

Cooking in autumn is all about warming up and stocking up in preparation for winter. Luckily, the fruit and veg at this time of the year is in abundance: it’s typical for gardeners to end up with a pantry full of beautiful pumpkins to savour through the colder months to come. I like to use mine to make sweet pumpkin pies.

But, most importantly, autumn is when figs are in season. In my opinion, figs are the most beautiful fruit available to us. I harvest outrageous amounts and make endless batches of fig pasta. Sometimes I forgo cooking entirely and treat myself to high-quality vegan cheese on crackers with fresh figs. Of course, I still have too many left and need to find other ways to use them up. One of my favourite ways to do this is to make huge batches of fig and ginger jam; I always have enough to last the year plus extra to give away as gifts. If you find yourself fortunate enough to have more figs than you know what to do with, jam is definitely the way to go!

IN THE GARDEN

In the second half of autumn, it’s time to plant your winter crops, including brassicas, potatoes, carrots, beetroot, onions and greens such as lettuce. Plant brassicas in the beds with the best soil, as they are heavy feeders. Potatoes and onions are less fussy and will tolerate sandier soils.

WHAT’S IN SEASON NOW?

Apple
Beetroot
Chestnut
Fig
Guava
Horseradish
Jerusalem artichoke
Kiwifruit
Lilly pilly
Macadamia
Mushroom
Nashi pear
Papaya
Pear
Persimmon
Pomegranate
Potato
Pumpkin
Quince


WANT MORE RECIPES FOR YOUR STASH? RIGHT THIS WAY!


above PUMPKIN AND CREAM CHEESE PIE, PHOTO BY KATIE WHITE

Pumpkin and cream cheese pie 

Serves 6-8

This heavenly smooth and tasty pie is an absolute winner for lunch with a fresh salad. The tang of the cream cheese balances out the sweetness of the pumpkin, assisted by the savoury notes of rosemary in the pastry and spring onions in the filling. 

Ingredients

Rosemary pastry 

1 cup plain flour 

1/4 cup wholemeal flour 

1/2 cup vegan butter 

1/2 tsp crushed or finely chopped rosemary 

1 tsp salt 

3 tbsp cold water 

Filling 

2 cups boiled pumpkin 

250g vegan cream cheese 

1/2 tsp garlic powder 

1 tsp salt 

1/4 cup finely sliced spring onion 

1 tbsp nutritional yeast 

2 tbsp cornflour 

1/2 tsp ground turmeric 

Topping 

70g vegan cream cheese (or cashew cheese spread) 

2 tbsp vegan feta 

3 tbsp soy milk

Method 

Preheat the oven to 180˚C. Start with the pastry: put the flours, butter, rosemary and salt into a food processor and pulse until a crumb-like consistency forms. Next, add the cold water and pulse again until the dough starts to come together. Tip it out onto your bench and knead it together with your hands, then roll the dough out into a round a little larger than your tart tin. 

Grease the tart tin (unless it’s non-stick) and then carefully lay the pastry into it. Push the pastry up the sides and tightly into the corners of the tin, then use a butter knife to trim any excess around the rim. Line the pastry with baking paper, fill with baking beads (or uncooked rice or beans) and blind bake for 35 minutes. 

Meanwhile, place all filling ingredients in a blender and blitz until completely smooth. 

When the pastry is baked, remove the baking beads and paper from the tart tin and pour the pumpkin filling in. It should come up to about 3 mm below the top of the pastry. 

In a clean blender, pulse all the topping ingredients until smooth, then place blobs of the mix on top of the pumpkin mixture and use a teaspoon to lightly swirl it with the pumpkin filling. 

Bake for 35 minutes, or until cracks form around the edge of the filling and it does not wobble in the middle when you jiggle it. Allow to cool a bit to set then serve with a fresh salad.


This is an edited extract from The Seasonal Vegan (Affirm Press) by Katie White out now.

You might also like

JOIN OUR MAILING LIST

Brighten up your inbox with our not-too-frequent emails featuring Peppermint-related news, events, competitions and more!

explore

More articles

Imagine a table big enough for everyone, breaking bread and finding common ground with those we may see as ‘different’, but are at heart the same. Enter Feast for Freedom: a call for connection across cultures, and to say, ‘you are welcome here’.
Coffee begins long before your morning cuppa! Papua New Guinean farmer Elizabeth Duna shares what it takes to grow great coffee, strengthen communities, and lead as a woman in farming, as 2026 marks the Year of the Woman Farmer.
Salt air, good vibes and bold ideas will soon collide at the Sunshine Coast’s annual Horizon Festival. Celebrating ten years of creativity this May, Horizon brings art, music, performance and radical imagination to Kabi Kabi and Jinibara Country.
Looking for a beach (or backyard) brolly that’s anything but boring? Come stand under Basil Bangs’ umbrella! 17 years into their journey, this Northern Beaches-based company is actively pursuing B-Corp certification.
🎵 I’m coming out! I want the world to know, I’ve got to let it show… 🎵 The Sydney Mardi Gras isn’t just a celebration of glamour, grit and queer pride, it’s an act of defiance built on a background of activism and ongoing discrimination.

Have you made the Viola Quilted Jacket yet? This pattern hits the sweet spot for both established sewists keen to learn a new skill (quilting!),…

Hang out with us on Instagram

Pull up a chair… there’s room at this table!⁠
⁠
For the first time, Feast for Freedom is bringing people together for a spectacular long-table dinner as part of the Melbourne Food & Wine Festival.⁠
⁠
A Longer Table is exactly what it sounds like: one beautiful shared table inside the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (@Asrc1), piled with generous dishes inspired by this year’s hero cooks, Noha and Nige.⁠
⁠
From 6 to 9pm on Wednesday, 25 March, this is what you can expect:⁠
🍽 A three-course shared feast⁠
🍷 Matched drinks⁠
🎶 Live entertainment⁠
✨ A room full of good humans⁠
⁠
Your ticket doesn’t just buy you a delicious dinner. It supports the ASRC’s vital work and helps create a fairer future for people seeking asylum.⁠
⁠
Seats are limited, and long tables have a way of filling up quickly – head to @MelbFoodAndWine’s website to book now: feastforfreedom.org.au/mfwf⁠
⁠
#FeastForFreedom #MelbourneFoodAndWineFestival #LongTableDinner #FoodForChange ⁠
Sew versatile! 🪡

Another great make from Lisa from @SunnySewsEveryday:

My #PeppermintWaratahWrapDress is finished and I’m so proud of it. It has been designed not to flap open and flash your pants in the wind, so I feel confident it will be a great wheelchair or standing dress in English weather.

#PeppermintPatterns #WrapDress #WrapDressPattern
✨ INSTANT CLASSIC ✨

The Peppermint Myrtle Shift Dress is a beginner-friendly make with a few special details based on the ever-stylish shift shape – the perfect dress you need in your wardrobe right now! 

Myrtle cuts above the knee with options to customise the length. Don’t think she’s reserved for hot weather either: try a heavier-weight fabric to turn your Myrtle into a pinafore-style garment for layering.

For our fabrics we chose two from our lovely sewing partner @Karmme_Apparel – the bold Rottnest Stripes in a lightweight, soft-drape cotton, and the quality linen in the handpainted Mexico Collection. 

Get making the Myrtle – the only question is, can you stop at just one?

Link in bio 🪡

Fabric: @Karmme_Apparel
Sewist: @Laura_The_Maker
Photos: @KelleySheenan
Models: @SerahSews and @Pins_And_Tonic
Location: @ShareTheDignityAustralia

#PeppermintMyrtleShiftDress #PeppermintPatterns