15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (2024)

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (1)Lee Funke

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What is a buddha bowl? A buddha bowl is a whole bunch ofgood stuff in a bowl topped with more good stuff. Today we are talking whole grains, lean proteins, tons of veggies, nuts, seeds, and dressings! Some people call buddha bowls, meal prep bowls. Whatever you call it, we are going to break it all down so you can make the best meal prep bowl for your week!

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (2)

All About Buddha Bowls

Bowls bowls bowls, I’m all about that bowl. Especially…buddha bowls! Why? Bowls = meal prep at its finest. If you haven’t jumped on the meal prep bowls bandwagon, get on it! Meal prep bowls will make your life so much easier during the week and it will help fuel healthy habits.

Today, we are breaking down the anatomy of a buddha bowl and we are sharing recipes to inspire you to start making meal prep bowls in your own kitchen! One way to shake up your Buddha bowl is with spices. Simply Organicand Penzysare my go-to spice brands for adding amazing flavor to anything that I make. They’ve got literally every spice under the planet, plus some awesome blends that I use daily.

Really the main goal of a buddha bowl recipe is to eat as many colors and nutrient dense foods as possible. No two buddha bowls have to be the same, so tailor your Buddha bowl to your taste preferences and get creative! Words of wisdom- when in doubt, if it’s a whole food, add it to your bowl. Below I’ve laid out some of my favorite Buddha bowl add-ins by category!

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (3)

Anatomy of a Buddha Bowl

What is a buddhabowl? My classic vegan buddhabowl recipe includes a whole grain, lean protein, tons of vegetables, nuts, seeds, and a dressing of your choice.

Whole Grains

Add your favorite whole grain to your buddha bowl. I think of it as the ‘base’ to my meal prep bowl. My go-to grain is always quinoa because it is a complete protein and it is ready in minutes! However, I have gotten out of my comfort zone recently and tried new grains like farro in this Roasted Butternut Squash Kale Salad with Farro. It’s pretty dang good! Now, I’ve listed out some of my favorite whole grains below!

Lean Protein

Think more about high protein and less about calorie count! Classic buddha bowls are vegan buddha bowl recipes (plant-based), but you always have the option to add in some animal protein to your buddha bowl recipe if you would like. Here are some protein options for a vegan buddha bowl or a meal prep bowl!

Vegetables

Vegetables are one of my favorites parts of a buddha bowl! Why? Because the options are endless. You can use any veggie that is left over in your fridge or decide on what direction you’re going to take your Buddha bowl based on what veggie you choose! In my opinion, you can’t go wrong with roasted sweet potatoes. Check out our post on how to roast sweet potatoes for a quick way to roast your taters!

Another easy way to add vegetables to your buddha bowl is to prepare a salad and divide it up between your meal prep bowl for the week! Try adding this Massaged Kale and Fennel Salador this Thai Chili Corn Salad.You can’t go wrong with some massaged kale, either.

  • Brussels Sprouts
  • Sweet Potatoes
  • Carmelized Onions
  • Butternut Squash
  • ANY OTHER VEGGIE

Nuts/Seeds/Dressing

Don’t forget to add crunch and more flavor to your buddha bowl with nuts, seeds, and dressing! I love to add roasted pecans or pumpkin seeds to my salad for extra crunch and fiber. Any nut or seed will do! As for dressing, I love a classic green goddess dressing. Sometimes I’ll even skip the dressing and use a dollop of hummus. It makes my buddha bowl creamy and delicious! Guys, the sky is the limit!

  • raw nuts (cashews, walnuts, almonds, pistachios, etc.)
  • seeds (sunflower seeds, pepitas, hemp seeds, etc.)
  • dressing:(vinegar-based, avocado-based, olive oil)
  • Hummus

Now that you know the ins and outs of what’s in a buddha bowl, I’m going to share a basic vegan buddhabowl recipe for you to sink your teeth into. This recipe is 100% plant based and a great starter buddha bowl recipe for you to add to.

Healthy Meal Prep Bowl Recipes

  • Meal Prep Vegetarian Kung Pao Quinoa Bowls
  • Grilled BBQ Chicken Bowls
  • Sheet Pan Meal Prep Tofu Quinoa Burrito Bowls
  • Slow Cooker Carnitas Burrito Bowls
  • Vegetarian Meal Prep Roasted Brussels Sprouts Polenta Bowls
  • Healthy Thai Coconut Quinoa Bowls
  • Cilantro Lime Shrimp Bowls
  • Black Bean Breakfast Bowls
  • Instant Pot Moroccan Chicken Bowls
  • Sweet Potato Vegan Buddha Bowl Recipe
  • Team Fit Foodie’s Go To Meal Prep Bowl
  • Butternut Squash Buddha Bowl
  • Copy Cat Chipotle Chicken Burrito Bowl Recipe
  • Pesto Chicken Meal Prep Recipe

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (4)

5 from 5 votes

Basic Vegan Buddha Bowl Recipe

This is our basic vegan buddha bowl recipe. It's made with quinoa, roasted sweet potato, garbanzo beans, massaged kale, bean sprouts, and green goddess dressing. Get creative with your Buddhabowl and use whatever grain and protein you desire!

Prep:30 minutes minutes

Cook:45 minutes minutes

Total:1 hour hour 15 minutes minutes

Fat

Carbs 87

Protein 22

Yield: 1

Print Rate

Ingredients

  • 1 cup cooked quinoa
  • 1/2 cup roasted sweet potato
  • 1/4 cup garbanzo beans
  • 1 cup massaged kale*
  • a handful of bean sprouts
  • 1 fresh radish sliced
  • 1 teaspoon sesame seeds
  • 1 tablespoon vegan dressing here's my fav green goddess dressing

Instructions

  • Place all ingredients into a bowl and dig in!

Tips & Notes

  • For 1 cup of massaged kale, you'll need about 2 cups of kale, .5 tablespoons olive oil, and a pinch of salt. Massage until kale is shiny and more wilty looking.

Watch It

Nutrition facts

Calories: 581kcal Carbohydrates: 87g Protein: 22g Fiber: 16g Sugar: 14g

Author: Lee Funke

Similar recipes:

  • Mediterranean Vegan Buddha Bowl Recipe

  • Sweet Potato Vegan Buddha Bowl Recipe

  • Kung Pao Quinoa Bowls

  • Butternut Squash Buddha Bowls

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (9)

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (10)

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About Lee Funke

Lee is the founder of Fit Foodie Finds and based in Minneapolis, MN. She started this website in 2010 as a way to share her love for real food and wellness. The internet has changed so much since then and so has Fit Foodie Finds. Today we're a female-run recipe website publishing hundreds of tried and true recipes developed and tested by our team.

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (15)

Lisa

Posted on 9/12/2019

Did you really mean 5 tablespoons of olive oil in the recipe? That is a lot. Also, 5 tablespoons of olive oil has about 600 calories, which is more than it shows is in the whole recipe. 🙂

1

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (16)

Lisa

Posted on 9/12/2019

Reply to Lisa

I see now that it is .5. haha oops!

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (17)

Alaina

Posted on 2/5/2021

Reply to Lisa

It says .5 tablespoons so its only half a tablespoon

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (18)

Posted on 7/9/2019

Recipe Rating :

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (19)
Never developed the habit of eating healthy, until i found your site! Thank you

1

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (20)

Loshern

Posted on 7/9/2018

Unexpectedly Delicious
I’ve subjected myself (& my boyfriend) on a 7-day plant based vegan, with exceptions, detox. Now I had no idea what I was getting myself into since I’m the person that requires animal protein with nearly every meal, yet here I am Day 2 and no meal planned. With all of the veggies and fruits I have in my fridge surely I could come up with something just as delicious and filling sans meat. After scouring numerous websites then settling on preparing my very own Buddha bowls for tonight’s dinner, Google search stared me in this direction – SCORED! A little improvising, addition of seasonings and successfully cooking a pot of tri-color quinoa, my boyfriend and I sat to a very yummy but uber healthy meal that’s sure to make another appearance at my dinner table.

Thank you and keep them coming! Cheers

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (21)

Posted on 6/15/2018

Nice Post… thanks for sharing this yummy and healthy food recipes ides with us…Plezs share more recipes with us..Yummy recipes

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (22)

Posted on 6/13/2018

Such a delicious roundup…perfect for meal prep!

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (23)

Posted on 6/11/2018

seriously. I am in love with these bowl recipes. Specially Roasted Chickpea

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (24)

Posted on 3/28/2018

I have been interested in Buddha Bowls for a while. How do you get started and what’s a good size bowl to start ?

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (25)

Posted on 1/3/2018

Love this selections of Buddha Bowl

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (26)

Posted on 11/20/2017

Wow, it is amazing that there is so much choice with the bowl!

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (27)

Rene Claasen

Posted on 1/9/2017

We had our first buddha bowl supper tonight and the whole family loved it!! I want every single recipe. So delish!

Reply

Lee Funke

Posted on 1/10/2017

Reply to Rene Claasen

<3 So good, right?!

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (29)

Cheryl Johnson

Posted on 1/8/2017

these look great, new to meal prep. can you prep/make for the whole week? if so do you freeze or will these items stay in the fridge safely for up to 5 days?

Reply

Lee Funke

Posted on 1/9/2017

Reply to Cheryl Johnson

Hey Cheryl! It should stay good in the fridge for up to 4 days!

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (31)

Posted on 11/14/2016

So may options to choose from. Healthy and very delicious! Can’t wait to try all of them! Cheers!!

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (32)

Posted on 10/23/2016

I love this! I need to get my bowl on. Somehow when you put everything in 1 bowl and throw a dressing on it, it makes something amazing and new! Good way to switch up our dinners.

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (33)

Luna

Posted on 9/25/2016

Buddhists are vegetarian.
You should call these Buddy Bowls or something else unless you emit the animal ingredients.

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (34)

Sophia

Posted on 1/9/2017

Reply to Luna

That’s exactly true. The “Buddha” part of “Buddha bowl” is the vegetarianism/veganism – if you use animal products it’s just a rice bowl.

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (35)

Rachel Alfiero

Posted on 9/7/2016

Couscous is not two words. It’s one word.

Reply

Lee Funke

Posted on 9/9/2016

Reply to Rachel Alfiero

THANKS HOME GIRL!

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (37)

emi

Posted on 7/17/2016

Hi! GREAT post, these look delicious! I wanted to let you know cous cous is not a whole grain, it’s a tiny pasta 🙂 Hulled barley would be a good one to replace it with. Just to be more annoying, based on the reasoning behind the buddha bowl name these should more appropriately be called “bodhisattva bowls” since the large bellied being mentioned here is not Buddha but actually a depiction of a bodhisattva <3

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15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (38)

Lorra

Posted on 7/17/2016

I have to say the amount of commercials/ads are overwhelming, in the way, and annoying, I understand advertising but they r ridiculous, didn’t make me want to purchase anything, jus annoyed the crap out of me

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (39)

Paula S

Posted on 10/31/2020

Reply to Lorra

And also… the name “Buddha Bowl” means that it is vegetarian. If you want to make one with meat, just call it something else. It’s not a Buddha Bowl, by definition. thanks.

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (40)

Jasmine C

Posted on 6/4/2016

I must be missing the links to the actually recipes. Where are they?

Thanks!

J

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (41)

Lorra

Posted on 7/17/2016

Reply to Jasmine C

Lol they r hidden under the ads!
In all seriousness, look delicious but I too wud like the actual recipes
Thanks

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (42)

Posted on 6/2/2016

Hi Lee! Great post! If you’re looking for Buddha Bowls that don’t require much cooking, here’s a quick and easy one: http://www.wellonthego.com/rainbow-buddha-bowl/

Reply

15 Healthy Buddha Bowl Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What are the 5 components of a buddha bowl? ›

In general, there are five basic elements to a buddha bowl.
  • Whole grains.
  • Vegetables.
  • Protein.
  • Sauce/dressing.
  • Toppings.
Aug 15, 2022

How healthy is a buddha bowl? ›

Buddha bowls are filling, healthy and fun meals that pack most of the nutrients your body needs. Preparing Buddha bowls can be a relaxing activity with a very rewarding payoff: you get a delicious and balanced meal that will enrich your day, body and soul, overall health and your Instagram/Pinterest feed.

What to add to a buddha bowl? ›

Try edamame, lentils, black beans (or any kind of beans), or top your grain bowls with cubes of crispy tofu or tempeh. For extra crunch, you could even use roasted chickpeas! Change up the grain. Replace the rice with quinoa, farro, or couscous.

What are those healthy bowls called? ›

No matter what they're called—Buddha bowls, macro bowls, grain bowls, meal salads—we're crazy about meals in a bowl! They're colourful, comforting and the perfect way to turn our leftovers into a healthy feast.

What is the Golden bowl Buddhism? ›

When he finished he took the golden bowl and threw it in the river, saying, "If I am to succeed in becoming a Buddha today, let this bowl go upstream, but if not, let it go downstream." The golden bowl went upstream, all the while keeping in the middle of the river.

What ethnicity is a buddha bowl? ›

It may originate from presenting a balanced meal, where balance is a key Buddhist concept, from the story of Buddha carrying his food bowl to fill it with whatever bits of food villagers would offer him, to the explanation of the overstuffed bowl resembling the belly of Budai, a 10th-century Chinese monk often confused ...

Are healthy bowls good for you? ›

Nutrient-Dense

Grain bowls are packed with nutrients, making them an ideal choice for those looking for a healthy meal. The grains (or sometimes seeds) used in grain bowls, such as brown rice, quinoa, and farro, are rich in fiber, protein, and vitamins.

Are poke bowls and Buddha bowls the same? ›

Think they're the same thing? Then think again! While one is a healthy one-bowl meal inspired by a Buddhist tradition, the other is a marketing salad with dubious eco-friendly credentials. Here's everything you need to know about these two popular dishes.

How to assemble a buddha bowl? ›

How do you make a Buddha bowl?
  1. Choose a grainy base. Fill the bottom of a large (2- to 3-cups is ideal) bowl ⅓ of the way with hot or cold whole grains, like brown rice, bulgur, barley, quinoa, or polenta. ...
  2. Pile on the veggies. ...
  3. Add legumes. ...
  4. Sprinkle with crunch and flavor. ...
  5. Drizzle with sauce.
Jan 15, 2020

What is Buddha sauce made of? ›

Add tahini paste, lemon juice, maple syrup, sesame oil and salt in a cup of a food processor or blender and blend until smooth, gradually adding water. Use the sauce for Buddha bowls, salads, falafel and more. Enjoy!

Does a buddha bowl have meat? ›

Named for its big, round Buddha belly shape, a “Buddha bowl” can mean different things to different people, but let's define it here as a one-dish meal consisting of rice or whole grains, roasted veggies, a dressing and protein (by way of beans, tofu, lentils, or in some cases meat or fish).

What is a Japanese bowl? ›

Bowl is called "Wan" or "Owan" in Japan, and refers to a category of tableware that is deep in depth. In particular, Wan is designed to be lightweight because it is meant to be lifted with one hand, whereas a bowl that is not lifted but left on the table is called “Hachi”.

What is a jack bowl? ›

One of the most important items of bowls equipment is the jack – a small white bowl which acts as a target for the players. The whole purpose of the sport is to make sure your bowl or bowls finishes closer to it than your opponents' bowls do.

What is a buddha bowl called? ›

Buddha bowls, also known as “bliss bowls”, “nourish bowls”, or “power bowls”, are the ultimate one-dish meal. These bountiful bowls can be simple in presentation or elegantly adorned with a variety of colorful, often organic and heirloom vegetables presented like a painter's palette.

What is the difference between a nourish bowl and a buddha bowl? ›

Honestly, they can be very similar. Usually a nourish bowl includes some sort of protein to it, where a buddha bowl is more known as a grain bowl.

What is the difference between a macro bowl and a buddha bowl? ›

Macro Bowls: Nourish Bowl: also called Nourishment Bowls, are filled with simple, nutrient-dense ingredients to make a filling meal. Buddha Bowls: also called Hippie, Glory, or Sunshine Bowls, are often vegan or vegetarian (think: plant-based proteins), but meat is included in some recipes.

What are some facts about Buddhist offering bowls? ›

Offering bowls are placed on the Shrine before The Buddha and often filled with water (daily practice). Mandala sets are used in specific meditations involving offering/giving. The meaning of this is of making oneself open and receptive to the Compassionate influence of the Buddhas.

References

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