Skip to content
ScaleRecipe

Vietnamese · Vegetarian

Vietnamese-style veggie hotpot

Cook mode
Watch video
Vietnamese-style veggie hotpot

About this recipe

Vietnamese cooking layers fresh herbs (mint, basil, cilantro) into nearly every dish, served alongside grilled meats, broths (pho being the most famous), and the salty-sour-sweet-spicy balance of nuoc cham. Heat is on the table, not built into every dish.

As a vegetarian dish, Vietnamese-style veggie hotpot is meatless but not minimal — built around vegetables, pulses, dairy, and grains that anchor every cooking tradition's day-to-day repertoire.

The scaler above rewrites every measurement to your target serving count, with proper culinary fractions (½, ⅓, ¼) instead of decimals so the recipe stays measurable. Cook Mode steps you through it hands-free.

Curated by the ScaleRecipe editorial teamReviewed

Recipe data is sourced from TheMealDB's open community database; ScaleRecipe handles the curation, the scaling math, the editorial commentary, and the conversion utilities woven into each page.

Translate this recipe

Reading in English

Listen to this recipe

No matching voice on this device

Method

  1. step 1
  2. Heat the oil in a medium-size, lidded saucepan. Add the ginger and garlic, then stir-fry for about 5 mins. Add the squash, soy sauce, sugar and stock. Cover, then simmer for 10 mins. Remove the lid, add the green beans, then cook for 3 mins more until the squash and beans are tender. Stir the spring onions through at the last minute, then sprinkle with coriander and serve with rice.

Cooking notes

Most vegetable dishes scale linearly, but be mindful of pan crowding — vegetables that should brown will steam instead if packed too tightly.

For volume-to-weight conversions of any ingredient — flour, sugar, butter, salts — use the ingredient converter. To translate the recipe's oven temperature between °C, °F and gas mark, see the temperature converter.

When you scale this recipe up or down, remember that cooking time does not scale linearly. A doubled cake takes longer, but not twice as long; a doubled soup takes roughly twice as long. The cooking-time guide gives sensible starting estimates by dish geometry.

Scaling notes

Scaling Vietnamese-style veggie hotpot

Vietnamese-style veggie hotpot is written for around four servings as it stands on this page — scaling it up for a party or down for a meal-for-one is the small math problem most home cooks face every week. Here's how this particular dish responds to scaling, what changes linearly, and what doesn't.

Vegetarian recipes like Vietnamese-style veggie hotpot are among the easiest to scale because most ingredients respond linearly to multiplication. The main constraints are pan capacity (crowding causes steaming, not the browning the recipe assumes) and seasoning intensity (use 1.5× the salt and spices when doubling, taste, adjust upward).

Butter is one of the easier ingredients to scale because it's sold in standardised sticks: 1 US stick = 8 tablespoons = ½ cup = 113 g. Any fractional scaling lines up neatly on a kitchen scale, and grocery-store butter packaging is already pre-marked in tablespoon increments along the wrapper.

Skip the math entirely — ScaleRecipe's scaler rewrites every ingredient line above with proper culinary fractions and smart unit promotion the moment you change the serving count. Open the scaler →

Beyond the recipe

Substitutions & make-ahead — Vietnamese-style veggie hotpot

Two things home cooks ask about most when they're outside the recipe's exact assumptions: what swaps work for which ingredients, and how the dish behaves when you make it ahead. Both depend on what Vietnamese-style veggie hotpot is doing structurally — here's the practical version.

Substitution ideas

Butter

For sautéing or browning, equal-weight olive oil or a neutral oil works directly. For baking, equal-weight coconut oil (melted, then chilled to the same softness the recipe expects) gives a buttery richness; a quality vegan butter brick is the structural match for cookies and pastries where firmness matters.

Brown sugar

Brown sugar = white sugar + molasses. For 1 cup light brown sugar, use 1 cup granulated sugar + 1 tbsp molasses; for dark brown, 2 tbsp molasses. Coconut sugar is a near-1:1 swap with slightly less caramel depth — works for both light and dark.

For weight-based swaps and arbitrary quantities, the ingredient density converter and the cup-to-grams chart cover most pantry staples.

Make-ahead and storage

Vegetarian dishes like Vietnamese-style veggie hotpot sit comfortably in the make-ahead window — they store and reheat better than meat-centric dishes. Refrigerate 3-4 days; freeze most pulse, grain, or cooked-vegetable preparations for up to 2 months. The exceptions are dishes with raw or barely-cooked elements (salads, fresh herbs, anything crispy) — those components should be added at serving time, not stored with the rest.

Recipe video

Vietnamese-style veggie hotpot

Ready to cook?

Scale it to your table, then get into the kitchen.

Send this recipe to the main scaler for further editing, or jump straight into Cook Mode for a hands-free walk-through with timers running.