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Vegan Turkey Cutlets (Wait … That’s Not Turkey)
super easy
The hardest part of making these Vegan Turkey Cutlets turned out not to be the recipe — but the name. When my son heard the word turkey, he stopped me immediately and said, “Wait … that’s not turkey.” Because to him, turkey is an animal, not dinner. And moments like that are a good reminder that kids pay close attention when something suddenly seems different.

Kids Notice Everything
This happens more often than we think with food.
- Sometimes it’s a name
- Sometimes it’s the shape
And sometimes it’s the grocery store quietly updating the packaging on the one brand of crackers your child has eaten every day for six months.
- Same ingredients
- Different wrapper
That’s a hard no from my child — and many like him. Kids seem to notice changes adults barely register especially at the grocery store.
Things like:
- A new box
- A different name
- A slightly different shape
- The word “new” on the label
And when something seems different, kids often respond before we even realize what changed. That’s exactly what happened the first time my son saw these Vegan Turkey Cutlets — especially when he heard the name.
Now he helps me make them.
So What Are Vegan Turkey Cutlets?

We start with a block of tofu. Roll up our sleeves and get a little messy.
• Cut the tofu into rectangles so they start to look like little cutlets
• Brush on some melted plant-based butter for that savory flavor
• Dust them in flour so the coating has something to hold onto
• Dip them into a flax egg so everything sticks
• Roll them through breadcrumbs until they’re completely coated
Then into the pan they go, where the outside turns golden and crispy while the inside stays tender.
Suddenly the thing that started as a plain block of tofu looks like something entirely different — and the cutlets disappear before they even make it to the plate.

The first time I made these, my son questioned everything about them — especially the name. Now he eats them all the time, sometimes even cold straight from the fridge. A reminder that kids who struggle with change often just need:
- Time
- Patience
- And a chance to be part of the process
Let Kids Be Part of the Change

One of the easiest ways to make a food feel less unfamiliar is to let kids help build it. Try setting up a hands-on activity like this:
- Set up four bowls
One with melted plant-based butter, one with flour, one with flax egg, and one with breadcrumbs mixed with seasoning. - Cut the tofu into rectangles
Let kids see where the “cutlets” begin. - Dip each piece step by step
Butter → flour → flax egg → seasoned breadcrumbs. - Lay each coated piece on a parchment-lined baking sheet
Watch the tray slowly fill up as the cutlets take shape.
By the time the cutlets go into the oven, the change has already happened right in front of them.
When kids help build the food instead of just seeing it appear on the plate, it doesn’t feel nearly as unfamiliar — which is exactly the idea behind the Messy Plate Method.
Discover the Messy Plate Method
Mealtime solutions for modern parents
Helping kids eat better — making mealtimes simpler

Messy Little Readers Library
The Worry Box by Suzanne Chiew
The Story & Recipe Pairing
The Worry Box follows a child who feels worried about different things throughout the day. Instead of holding those worries inside, the child learns to place them in a special box — giving the worries somewhere safe to go.
Making Vegan Turkey Cutlets can bring up similar feelings for kids when something about the food suddenly seems different.
- A new name
- A different shape
- Something that doesn’t quite look the way they expected
But when kids get to watch the tofu being cut, coated, and cooked, that unfamiliar feeling starts to soften. The change is no longer a mystery — it’s something they’ve seen happen right in front of them.
Best For:
All ages are welcome, but it’s typically best suited for ages 3–8, especially children who experience worry when things feel unfamiliar or unexpected.
Read Along Focus:
Encourage kids to notice how the character learns ways to handle worries instead of keeping them bottled up.
Sometimes understanding something helps make it feel less scary.
Things to Point Out While Reading:
- The character notices worries as they appear
- The worry box gives those worries a place to go
- Talking about worries helps them feel smaller
Simple Lessons (No Lecturing):
- It’s normal to feel worried when something feels different
- Understanding something can make it feel less scary
- Small steps help build comfort over time
Kitchen Tie-In:
While making the cutlets:
- Let kids cut the tofu into rectangles and see how the shape changes
- Watch how flour, flax egg, and breadcrumbs coat the tofu
- Notice how the cutlets turn golden and crispy in the pan
Seeing the process helps turn something unfamiliar into something understandable.
The Moment You’re Creating
What once made my son stop and say, “Wait … that’s not turkey,” eventually becomes just another familiar food on the plate.
Little by little, the worry about something being different fades.

Vegan Turkey Cutlets
Ingredients
- 15.5 ounce package of tofu
- 3 flax eggs
- 1 cup bread crumbs
- 1 cup all purpose flour
- 2 tablespoon everything but the leftovers seasoning
- 2 tablespoon vegan butter melted
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.
- Make the flax eggs in a small bowl by combining 3 tablespoons of ground flaxseed with 9 tablespoons of water.
- Combine the bread crumbs and Everything but the Leftovers seasoning in another bowl.
- Add flour to a seperate bowl.
- Drain the water from the tofu, slice the tofu into four 1/4 inch thick rectangular slices.
- One at a time, dip each slice into the butter, then flour, then flax egg and then bread crumbs, covering each side. Place onto a baking sheet.
- Bake until golden brown, for 15 to 20 minutes, flipping halfway through.
- Serve for dinner with your favorite sides or for a holiday dinner! Enjoy!
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