A vibrant arrangement of fresh spices, herbs, and aromatics spread across a dark surface

How to Use This Database

Every ingredient has a flavor personality. Some are loud and smoky. Others are quiet and earthy. The magic happens when you introduce them to each other properly. Think of this as a dating app for your pantry — except the matches actually work.

Pick Your Profile

Use the filter buttons below to narrow down by flavor personality. Craving smoke? Tap Smoky. Need brightness? Hit Citrusy. We don't judge.

Explore Pairings

Each card shows you the core ingredients, their best partners, recommended seasonings, and recipe ideas that actually make sense together.

Stack the Flavor

Combine pairings using the Flavor Stack method. Layer salt, acid, fat, heat, and aroma to build a dish that makes people ask for the recipe.

The Science

Flavor pairing is grounded in food chemistry. Ingredients that share volatile aromatic compounds tend to taste harmonious together. This is why tomato and basil work (they share linalool), why mushrooms and soy sauce create umami thunder (both are glutamate-rich), and why lime and cilantro feel inevitable (complementary terpene profiles). We did the research so you can just cook.

The Pairings

Filter by flavor profile. Click a category to see only the pairings that match your mood, your pantry, or your desperate Thursday night energy.

Dried chipotle peppers with smoky char marks
Smoky

Chipotle + Maple + Lime

The holy trinity of smoky-sweet-sour. Chipotle brings the campfire, maple rounds the edges, and lime slaps you awake. Use on roasted sweet potatoes, grilled corn, or black bean tacos.

Best with: Sweet potato, corn, black beans, jackfruit, tempeh

Seasoning allies: Cumin, smoked paprika, garlic powder, smoked salt

Rich red smoked paprika powder in a small bowl
Smoky

Smoked Paprika + Roasted Garlic + Lemon

Smoked paprika delivers warmth without heat. Roasted garlic adds sweetness and depth. Lemon brightens the whole affair like opening a window in a log cabin. Perfect for roasted cauliflower steaks.

Best with: Cauliflower, chickpeas, white beans, zucchini, eggplant

Seasoning allies: Oregano, black pepper, flaky sea salt, olive oil

Bright yellow lemons cut in half showing juicy interior
Citrusy

Lemon + Capers + Fresh Dill

Mediterranean brightness in three ingredients. Lemon juice is your acid layer, capers bring briny punch, and dill adds anise-like freshness. This combo makes artichokes weep with joy.

Best with: Artichokes, asparagus, potatoes, white beans, tofu

Seasoning allies: Fleur de sel, white pepper, extra virgin olive oil, garlic

Fresh oranges and ginger root arranged together
Citrusy

Orange Zest + Ginger + Tamari

East-meets-citrus flavor bomb. The orange oils from the zest are floral and bright, ginger adds sharp warmth, and tamari delivers the umami anchor. Stir-fry perfection. Tofu's therapist.

Best with: Tofu, broccoli, snap peas, carrots, edamame, tempeh

Seasoning allies: Sesame oil, rice vinegar, red pepper flakes, sesame seeds

Fresh mixed mushrooms including shiitake, oyster, and cremini varieties
Earthy

Mushroom + Thyme + Balsamic

The forest floor in a pan. Mushrooms deliver glutamate-rich umami, thyme adds herbal complexity, and balsamic vinegar concentrates into a sweet-tart glaze. This is what autumn tastes like if autumn had a Michelin star.

Best with: Portobello, oyster mushrooms, lentils, polenta, risotto

Seasoning allies: Truffle salt, black pepper, rosemary, garlic, nutritional yeast

Deep red roasted beets with golden cumin seeds scattered nearby
Earthy

Cumin + Tahini + Roasted Beet

Earthy cumin meets the mineral sweetness of roasted beets while tahini adds creamy nuttiness. This is the pairing that converts beet-haters. Serve as a hummus variation or a grain bowl base.

Best with: Beets, lentils, chickpeas, quinoa, roasted carrots

Seasoning allies: Lemon juice, za'atar, smoked salt, sumac, olive oil

Vibrant red gochujang paste in a traditional Korean bowl
Spicy

Gochujang + Sesame + Rice Vinegar

Korean fermented chili paste meets toasted sesame warmth and rice vinegar's clean acidity. This is the sauce that makes you forget you're eating vegetables. Sweet, spicy, funky, sharp — all at once.

Best with: Tofu, mushrooms, sweet potato, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower

Seasoning allies: Garlic, ginger, maple syrup, soy sauce, scallions

Fiery red harissa paste with chili peppers and spices
Spicy

Harissa + Preserved Lemon + Olive Oil

North African heat with citrus soul. Harissa brings smoky chili complexity, preserved lemon delivers fermented brightness that fresh lemon simply cannot match, and olive oil ties the room together. Drizzle on literally everything.

Best with: Carrots, chickpeas, eggplant, couscous, roasted peppers

Seasoning allies: Cumin, coriander, mint, flaky sea salt, pistachios

Golden miso paste in a ceramic bowl with ginger root
Umami

Miso + Ginger + Maple

White miso is concentrated umami in paste form. Ginger adds aromatic heat. Maple syrup caramelizes under high heat to create a glaze that makes roasted vegetables disappear from the pan at suspicious speed. This is the glaze.

Best with: Eggplant, salmon (or king oyster mushrooms), sweet potato, carrots, delicata squash

Seasoning allies: Rice vinegar, sesame oil, toasted sesame seeds, scallions

Golden nutritional yeast flakes with garlic cloves and black peppercorns
Umami

Nutritional Yeast + Roasted Garlic + Black Pepper

The vegan "cheese" flavor bomb that actually earns the comparison. Nooch delivers B-vitamins and glutamates, roasted garlic adds mellow sweetness, and black pepper provides piperine that makes everything taste more vivid. Popcorn will never be the same.

Best with: Popcorn, pasta, kale chips, roasted broccoli, potatoes

Seasoning allies: Smoked paprika, onion powder, flaky salt, lemon zest

Sliced cucumber with fresh mint leaves and lime wedges
Fresh

Cucumber + Mint + Lime

Maximum refreshment with zero effort. Cucumber's cool crunch, mint's menthol brightness, and lime's sharp acidity create a flavor profile that tastes like a spa day for your mouth. Perfect for summer salads, spring rolls, and raita.

Best with: Rice paper rolls, grain bowls, yogurt dressings, watermelon salads

Seasoning allies: Flaky sea salt, Aleppo pepper, rice vinegar, sesame seeds

Sliced avocado with radish and fresh cilantro on a cutting board
Fresh

Avocado + Radish + Cilantro + Lime

Creamy meets crunchy meets herbaceous meets tart. Avocado provides the fat layer, radish brings peppery bite and snap, cilantro delivers its polarizing but essential herbiness, and lime keeps everything honest. Taco Tuesday's best friend.

Best with: Tacos, grain bowls, toast, sushi rolls, summer salads

Seasoning allies: Flaky salt, jalapeño, cumin, nutritional yeast, hemp seeds

Fresh basil leaves with pine nuts and lemon zest
Herb-Forward

Basil + Pine Nut + Lemon Zest

Classic pesto DNA, deconstructed. Sweet basil's eugenol, the buttery richness of pine nuts, and the floral citrus oils from lemon zest create the most Mediterranean thing you can put on food without booking a flight. Beyond pesto — think stuffed peppers, grain salads, and bruschetta.

Best with: Tomatoes, zucchini, pasta, bread, white beans, roasted peppers

Seasoning allies: Garlic, flaky salt, extra virgin olive oil, nutritional yeast, black pepper

Fresh rosemary sprigs with garlic bulbs and Dijon mustard
Herb-Forward

Rosemary + Garlic + Dijon Mustard

French bistro energy for your home kitchen. Rosemary's piney camphor notes pair with garlic's pungent allicin while Dijon mustard adds creamy acidity and sharp heat. Roast potatoes with this combination and watch people's eyes close involuntarily.

Best with: Potatoes, carrots, parsnips, white beans, lentils, tempeh

Seasoning allies: Thyme, black pepper, fleur de sel, olive oil, shallots

Fresh Thai basil leaves with lemongrass stalks and red chilies
Spicy

Thai Basil + Lemongrass + Bird's Eye Chili

Southeast Asian aromatic heat in three ingredients. Thai basil's licorice notes, lemongrass's bright citral compounds, and the clean, sharp heat of bird's eye chili create curries, stir-fries, and soups that make restaurant takeout seem lazy. Which it is.

Best with: Tofu, eggplant, green beans, coconut milk curries, rice noodles

Seasoning allies: Galangal, kaffir lime leaves, soy sauce, palm sugar, coconut cream

Fresh sage leaves with toasted walnuts on a rustic surface
Earthy

Sage + Brown Vegan Butter + Walnuts

Autumn on a plate. Fried sage leaves get crispy and nutty, browned vegan butter develops toasted milk-solid-adjacent flavor (thanks, science), and walnuts add tannins and crunch. Drizzle this over pumpkin ravioli and try not to cry.

Best with: Butternut squash, pumpkin, gnocchi, pasta, sweet potato

Seasoning allies: Nutmeg, black pepper, flaky salt, lemon juice, maple syrup

Pairing Pro Tips

Rules are made to be broken, but learn them first so you break them with style.

The Rule of Three

Most great flavor combinations use exactly three dominant flavors. More than three and you risk "confusion stew." One flavor leads, one supports, and one surprises. Think: smoky (lead) + sweet (support) + sour (surprise).

Flavor Bridging

When two ingredients don't obviously pair, find a "bridge" ingredient that shares aromatic compounds with both. Mushrooms bridge earthy and umami. Citrus bridges fresh and spicy. Garlic bridges literally everything because garlic is a team player.

The Under-Seasoning Epidemic

The number one reason plant-based food tastes bland is not the absence of meat — it's the absence of adequate salt, acid, and fat. Season aggressively. Taste as you go. Finish with flaky salt and a squeeze of citrus. Your vegetables have been begging for this.

Temperature Matters

Flavor perception changes with temperature. Cold food needs more seasoning than hot food. That's why your leftover soup tastes bland from the fridge but perfect reheated. Always re-season cold dishes right before serving.

Quick Pairing Cheat Sheet

When in doubt, consult the chart. Each flavor profile has a go-to acid, fat, and finishing move.

Flavor Profile Go-To Acid Go-To Fat Finishing Move Emergency Salt
Smoky Lime juice or apple cider vinegar Avocado oil or coconut cream Smoked paprika dust + flaky salt Smoked salt
Citrusy Lemon or yuzu juice Extra virgin olive oil Fresh zest + herbs + fleur de sel Fleur de sel
Earthy Balsamic or red wine vinegar Walnut oil or tahini Truffle salt + fresh thyme Himalayan pink salt
Spicy Rice vinegar or tamarind Sesame oil or coconut milk Fresh chili + toasted seeds Black lava salt
Umami Rice vinegar or miso broth Toasted sesame oil Nori flakes + sesame seeds Kala namak
Fresh Lime juice or champagne vinegar Avocado or hemp seed oil Micro herbs + Maldon flakes Maldon sea salt
Herb-Forward White wine vinegar or lemon Extra virgin olive oil Fresh herb chiffonade + flaky salt Fleur de sel

Flavor Pairing FAQ

Flavor pairing works by combining ingredients that share aromatic compounds or create complementary taste sensations. In plant-based cooking, you layer flavors across five profiles — salt, acid, fat, heat, and aroma — to build complexity. For example, smoky chipotle pairs with sweet maple and tangy lime because the smoke compounds complement the caramelized sugars while the acid provides brightness and balance.

The strongest vegan umami pairings combine multiple glutamate-rich ingredients: miso paste with roasted mushrooms, soy sauce with nutritional yeast, tomato paste with dried seaweed, or fermented black beans with caramelized onions. Layering 2-3 umami sources in a single dish creates depth that rivals any meat-based stock. Smoked salt as a finishing touch adds another dimension.

Smoky flavors need acid and sweetness to stay balanced. Pair smoked paprika or liquid smoke with citrus juice, vinegar, or a touch of maple syrup. The acid cuts through the heaviness of smoke while the sweetness rounds it out. A finishing salt with flaky texture adds crunch that contrasts the dense smoke flavor.

Classic herb pairings follow regional traditions: basil + oregano + thyme (Mediterranean), cilantro + mint + Thai basil (Southeast Asian), dill + parsley + chives (Eastern European), and rosemary + sage + thyme (French). The rule of thumb: herbs from the same cuisine almost always work together because they evolved alongside the same dishes.

Absolutely. Each pairing card includes ingredient suggestions, complementary seasonings, and recipe ideas. Start with the dominant flavor profile you want (smoky, citrusy, earthy, etc.), explore the recommended pairings, then build your dish using the Flavor Stack method — layering salt, acid, fat, heat, and aroma for maximum impact.

Ready to Build Your Stack?

Now that you know what pairs with what, learn the five-layer system that turns good dishes into unforgettable ones.

Learn the Flavor Stack Rescue a Vegetable