This recipe for vegan coconut payasam was originally shared with us by Chef Jason Wyrick of The Vegan Taste. Payasam (or kheer) is a traditional South Asian pudding that is made by boiling rice or broken wheat with milk, ghee (butter oil), and sugar, and flavoring it with cardamom, raisins, saffron, pistachios or almonds. Though it’s often served with a meal, in Southern Bangladesh payasam is made with glutinous rice and coconut milk for a creamier, dessert-type dish. Chef Jason used this as his inspiration to create a delicious dairy-free and egg-free dessert that is optionally gluten-free and quite low in sugar.
Vegan Coconut Payasam: It’s Like Rice Pudding, Only Better
This vegan kheer is a cool dish that gets underlying sweetness from the coconut milk, milk beverage, raisins, and almonds. The touch of added sugar helps to round it out. Adding bay leaf gives depth to the dessert and the cardamom gives it an aromatic quality which really brings out all the other flavors in the dish. Chef Jason offered more tips to ensure this vegan coconut payasam works perfectly for you.
Suggested Presentation
Serve this coconut payasam in small glasses. It’s the right size for a dessert and it showcases the color. Put a bay leaf in each glass for an exotic look and good color contrast.
Time Management
You can make this recipe several hours ahead of time. If you do, plan on adding more coconut milk before serving. The rice will absorb quite a bit of liquid over that time.
Complimentary Food and Drinks
This is a nice accompaniment to spicy cauliflower or tomato dishes, because it offers contrary coolness, starchiness, and sweetness.
Interesting Facts
This dish is also called kheer in parts of India and in the Middle East, it is called sheer. Payasam is often served at special occasions. Legend says that the temple at Ambalapphuza serves pasayam because the king of the region lost a chess game to Lord Vishnu. Lord Vishnu, disguised as a sage, challenged the king to a game of chess who had to put one grain of rice on the chess board if he lost and double the rice for every square. Naturally, the king lost and the constant doubling of rice depleted his rice stores and put him in debt to Lord Vishnu. In order to pay his debt, Lord Vishnu told the king that the temple must serve free pasayam from then on.
And if this formula sounds a bit familiar, it’s because many say the English version of rice pudding is a direct descendant of Pasayam.
Special Diet Notes: Coconut Payasam
By ingredients, this recipe is dairy-free / non-dairy, egg-free, optionally gluten-free, peanut-free, optionally nut-free, optionally soy-free, vegan, and vegetarian.
Vegan Coconut Payasam

Author: Chef Jason Wyrick
Recipe type: Dessert
Cuisine: Indian
- 1½ cups canned coconut milk, plus additional as needed
- 1½ cups soymilk or almond milk beverage
- ½ cup long grain rice
- 4 teaspoons slivered almonds
- 4 teaspoons turbinado sugar
- 1 tablespoon currants or raisins
- ½ teaspoon ground cardamom
- 2 bay leaves
- In a medium pot, bring the coconut and almond milk to a boil. Add the rice, almonds, sugar, currants or raisins, cardamom, and bay leaves. Cover the pot and reduce the heat to low. Cook for 18 to 20 minutes.
- Refrigerate the dessert for about 30 minutes. If it becomes too thick while chilling, whisk in coconut milk as needed.
Vermicelli Option: Toast ¼ cup broken vermicelli pasta in a dry pan over medium heat until it browns. Add it to the pot of boiling milk beverage with the rest of the ingredients.
Serving size: ¼ batch Calories: 337 Fat: 23.9g Saturated fat: 19.3g Carbohydrates: 29.6g Sugar: 7.4g Sodium: 83mg Fiber: 3.1g Protein: 4.6g
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