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Home » Vegan Recipes

Vegan Chocolate Frosting with Adzuki Beans

Updated: Apr 17, 2026 · Published: Feb 15, 2025 by Vegin Vegan Vegun! · This post may contain affiliate links · 1 Comment

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🇯🇵日本語で読む

This vegan chocolate frosting is made with cooked adzuki beans — no coconut cream, no dairy, no soy.

Think of it as a lighter, Japanese-style vegan Nutella — but made with adzuki beans instead of hazelnuts. The beans’ natural bitterness and depth create a flavor surprisingly close to chocolate.

Just blend a few simple ingredients together for a smooth, pipeable frosting that holds its shape, even without refrigeration.

vegan chocolate frosting made with adzuki beans, piped smoothly in a cup, coconut cream-free and soy-free

If you've tried my vegan chocolate truffles, this frosting uses the same base — just a little softer and ready to spread or pipe straight from the blender.

🤍 Why You'll Love This Frosting

  • No coconut cream, dairy, or soy — just a few simple ingredients
  • Heat-stable, so it pipes cleanly without melting
  • Ready in minutes with a blender
Jump to:
  • 🤍 Why You'll Love This Frosting
  • 🧺 What Are Adzuki Beans?
  • 🍫 Why Adzuki Beans Work for Chocolate
  • 🫘 Ingredients
  • 📖 Instructions
  • 📘 Tip: How to Get a Smoother Texture
  • 🫙 Storage
  • 📚 FAQ
  • 📕 More Adzuki Bean Recipes
  • 🍡 Traditional Japanese Sweets
  • 📖 Recipe Card

🧺 What Are Adzuki Beans?

Adzuki beans are small red beans widely used in Japanese and East Asian cooking. In Japan, they are most often simmered with sugar and turned into anko, a sweet red bean paste used in traditional wagashi such as ohagi, daifuku, and dorayaki.

They are also used in savory dishes — for example, sekihan, a simple rice dish cooked with adzuki beans and finished with sesame salt, often served on special occasions. From everyday sweets to celebratory dishes, adzuki beans appear in many parts of the Japanese table.

Two types of sweet red bean paste (anko) made from adzuki beans, used in Japanese desserts

🍫 Why Adzuki Beans Work for Chocolate

Adzuki beans might not seem like a natural choice for chocolate desserts, but they work surprisingly well. Their subtle bitterness and earthy depth, combined with cocoa powder, create a flavor remarkably close to real chocolate.

My vegan chocolate truffles are a perfect example — blended with prunes and coconut oil, they roll into melt-in-your-mouth truffles. The same base also makes my no-bake salted chocolate rosemary cookies, with a soft, truffle-like texture.

Keep a batch of cooked adzuki beans in the fridge, and you're always just minutes away from a chocolate-flavored vegan treat.

🫘 Ingredients

ingredients for vegan chocolate frosting with adzuki beans, cocoa powder, prunes, and maple syrup
  • Cooked adzuki beans (unsweetened): The base of this frosting. For this recipe, you want them slightly softer and more moist than you would for my vegan truffles — they blend more smoothly that way. See how to cook adzuki beans from scratch. You can also use store-bought sweetened adzuki beans; if so, skip the maple syrup and reduce the prunes to adjust sweetness.
  • Maple syrup: Adds sweetness and helps mask the beany aroma.
  • Cocoa powder: Use pure, unsweetened cocoa powder — no added sugar.
  • Prunes: Add natural sweetness and depth of flavor.
  • Coconut oil (optional): Makes the frosting richer and more chocolatey. Leave it out for a lighter, less rich result.

📖 Instructions

adzuki bean chocolate frosting mixture before blending in a pot
  1. Combine the ingredients: 
    • Add all ingredients except the coconut oil to a bowl or food processor.
🌿 Remove any pits from the prunes before adding.
blending vegan chocolate frosting made with adzuki beans until smooth
  1. Blend until smooth: 
    • Use a hand blender or food processor and blend until completely smooth. Add the coconut oil if using, and blend once more to combine.
    • Use immediately for piping or spreading, or refrigerate to firm it up — chilled, it’s easy to roll into truffle shapes and enjoy as vegan chocolate truffles.
smooth vegan chocolate frosting piped neatly, made without dairy, soy, or coconut cream

📘 Tip: How to Get a Smoother Texture

If your blender or food processor leaves the frosting a little grainy, press it through a fine-mesh sieve.

It takes a bit of extra effort, but the result is noticeably silkier — especially worth doing if you're using it for piping or cake decoration.

straining adzuki bean chocolate frosting through a sieve for a smoother texture

🫙 Storage

This frosting keeps in the fridge for 2 to 3 days.

I usually make a small batch and finish it within a couple of days — just to keep myself from eating too much.

📚 FAQ

My frosting turned out too firm. What should I do?

Add a little plant-based milk or water, a small amount at a time, and blend again until you reach the consistency you want. If it becomes too loose, refrigerate it for a while — the adzuki beans will absorb the excess moisture and firm it back up slightly.

vegan chocolate frosting spread on bread, made with adzuki beans

If you feel like whispering a thought, asking a question, or simply saying hello — the comment section is always open 📮

📕 More Adzuki Bean Recipes

If you enjoyed this recipe, here are more ways to use cooked adzuki beans:

  • Salted Chocolate Rosemary Cookies, no bake vegan cookies topped with salt and fresh rosemary
    No-Bake Vegan Salted Chocolate Rosemary Oat Cookies
  • Oshiruko (Japanese sweet red bean soup) topped with shiratama dumplings
    Oshiruko Recipe (Japanese Sweet Red Bean Soup / Zenzai)
  • A bowl of patjuk, Korean sweet red bean porridge made with glutinous rice
    Patjuk (Korean Red Bean Porridge) – Easy Rice Cooker Recipe
  • Vegan nama chocolate truffles dusted with cocoa powder on a plate. Vegan adzuki bean dessert.
    Vegan Nama Chocolate Truffles (Made with Adzuki Beans)

🍡 Traditional Japanese Sweets

Gently sweet vegan Japanese dessert recipes:

  • Kinako and black sesame mochi (ohagi) with anko tucked inside, lightly sweetened
    Kinako & Black Sesame Mochi (Ohagi Recipe)
  • Homemade ohagi with lightly sweetened tsubu-an — a traditional Japanese sweet rice ball recipe
    Ohagi (おはぎ) — Japanese Sweet Rice Balls with Red Bean Paste
  • Plump, glossy osechi kuromame (Japanese sweet black beans) with beautiful sheen
    Osechi Kuromame (Japanese Sweet Black Soybeans) - Pressure Cooker Recipe
  • Vegan sweet potato oshiruko with shiratama mochi, made from roasted yakiimo and served warm
    Japanese Sweet Potato Oshiruko|A Sugar-Free Vegan Dessert
vegan chocolate frosting made with adzuki beans in a small bowl, smooth and creamy

📖 Recipe Card

vegan chocolate frosting made with adzuki beans, piped smoothly in a bowl, coconut cream-free and soy-free

Vegan Chocolate Frosting with Adzuki Beans

by Vegin Vegan Vegun!
An easy vegan chocolate frosting made with adzuki beans — no coconut cream, no dairy, no soy.
Just blend a few simple ingredients for a smooth, pipeable frosting that holds its shape without melting.
Suitable for vegan and dairy-free diets, and a good option for those avoiding soy or coconut cream.
5 from 1 vote
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 5 minutes mins
Total 5 minutes mins
Course Dessert, snacks
Cuisine Fusion
Servings 100 g

Equipment

  • Bowl
  • Spoon
  • food processor or hand blender
  • fine-mesh strainer (optional)
  • rubber spatula

Ingredients
  

  • 70 g cooked adzuki beans (unsweetened)
  • 30 g prunes (pits removed)
  • 1 1tsp cocoa powder  (adjust to taste)
  • 1 teaspoon maple syrup

Optional

  • 10 g coconut oil (adjust to taste)

Instructions
 

  • Combine the ingredients:Add all ingredients except the coconut oil to a bowl or food processor.
    70 g cooked adzuki beans
    30 g prunes
    1 1tsp cocoa powder 
    1 teaspoon maple syrup
  • Blend until smooth:Blend until completely smooth using a food processor or hand blender. Add the coconut oil if using, and blend again to combine.
    10 g coconut oil
  • Use immediately for piping or spreading, or refrigerate to firm it up.
    Once chilled, you can roll into truffle shapes for vegan chocolate truffles.
Keyword adzuki bean dessert, adzuki bean paste, adzuki beans, dairy-free chocolate frosting, vegan chocolate frosting, vegan chocolate spread

If this recipe made its way into your kitchen, and you'd like to share that moment, feel free to tag @veginveganvegun or use #vegin_vegan_vegun.
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Comments

  1. Vegin Vegan Vegun! says

    March 15, 2025 at 8:55 pm

    5 stars
    質問やコメントお待ちしています♪

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