The Complete Guide to Vegan Cheese (2024)

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Do you still miss cheese, even after years of being vegan? If you said yes, you’re not alone— when I polled my Instagram audience about the hardest food to give up after going vegan, the most common answer was, not surprisingly, cheese!

And I get it. Cheese is salty, creamy, and tangy, and every time you eat a piece, it releases an explosion of dopamine in our brains, which some people think is as addictive as drugs.

But conquering these cravings has never been easier thanks to the growing selection and ever-improving quality of vegan cheese alternatives.

Nowadays, there are endless varieties of vegan cheese to choose from. You can buy almost every type of cheese you love from well-stocked grocery stores or even make them yourself at home.

This comprehensive guide to vegan cheese will fill you in on what this delicious alternative is all about. You’ll learn what vegan cheese is typically made of, our favorite store-bought brands, and how to make vegan cheese at home. Plus, you’ll find inspiration on how to use all of them!

Most importantly, this guide will help you conquer your cravings so you can ditch dairy once and for all!

Table of Contents:
1. What is vegan cheese?
2. What is vegan cheese made of?
3. Homemade vs. store-bought vegan cheese
4. Store-bought vegan cheese we love
5. How to make vegan cheese from scratch

The Complete Guide to Vegan Cheese (2)

What is vegan cheese?

Vegan cheese often looks just like regular dairy cheese and some of them taste very similar to it as well, but the cheese is made with plant-based ingredients instead of animal milk. Nowadays, there are endless varieties to choose from, like shredded cheese, liquid cheddar or mozzarella-style sauce, sliced Swiss cheese, and even vegan parmesan.

It’s important to understand that vegan cheese, being made with different ingredients, typically does not taste exactly like traditional dairy cheese. However, it does replicate some of the flavors and textures that you might remember from dairy cheese and tastes great in its own right.

Even if vegan cheese hasn’t 100% replicated the taste and texture of dairy-based cheese, it’s a great alternative for dairy-free eaters and vegans, as it doesn’t cause pain or suffering to cows and other animals.

What is vegan cheese made of?

While dairy cheese is made from curdled dairy milk, the ingredients in vegan cheese are much more unique.

The base of vegan cheese is typically made with wholesome ingredients, like nuts, seeds, tofu, oats, or beans. They’re often thickened with starch or flour, then given a realistic flavor with simple flavoring agents, like spices, herbs, and condiments.

Below are some common ingredients you’ll find in homemade and store-bought vegan cheese:

  • Nuts and seeds: Cashews, almonds, macadamia nuts, pistachios, sunflower seeds, or pumpkin seeds.
  • Tofu/soy
  • Coconut: Coconut oil or coconut milk.
  • Starches/flour: Potato starch, all purpose flour, tapioca starch, cornstarch, agar agar, or carrageenan.
  • Flavoring agents: Nutritional yeast, garlic powder, cumin, salt and pepper, apple cider vinegar, paprika, liquid smoke, dry mustard powder, miso paste, dry herbs, lemon juice, and more.

New to vegan cooking? Check out The Ultimate Vegan Grocery Shopping List to answer all your grocery shopping-related questions, then hop on over to The 5 Best Vegan Protein Sources to learn how to incorporate plant protein into your diet.

Homemade vs. store-bought vegan cheese

We love making vegan cheese at home because it gives us complete control of the ingredients and flavors. They’re typically easy to make, too, and the only special tool you need is a blender. But when you need vegan cheese in a hurry, that’s where store-bought cheese shines.

Picking up vegan cheese from grocers has never been easier than it is now. When I went vegan in 2016, there were only a handful of options, most of which were barely edible. Now, you’ll be lucky if you don’t face decision fatigue!

Store-bought vegan cheese we love

With so many realistic-tasting choices available these days, we don’t want you to feel overwhelmed with the options. That’s why we’ve put together a list of store-bought vegan cheese brands we love and how to use each one below:

Cream Cheese

  • Kite Hill Foods Cream Cheese Alternative: Their almond-based vegan cream cheese (original + a few other flavors) is quite nice. It has a subtle tang and is made with wholesome ingredients. I use the plain variety in recipes, but prefer the chive flavor when spread on a bagel.
  • Tofutti Better Than Cream Cheese: This may not be as wholesome as the above option, but it tastes JUST LIKE dairy cream cheese. I can’t even taste the difference. I highly recommend using it for vegan cheesecake or when you really want that authentic cream cheese taste.

How to use: Depending on the brand, vegan cream cheese will give homemade cheesecake a thick and sturdy structure and a tangy, creamy flavor. Otherwise, spread it on bagels for breakfast or use it to make cream cheese frosting for desserts.

Shredded Cheeses

  • Chao Creamery Vegan Shreds: This is our go-to vegan cheese for grilled cheese sandwiches. The shreds melt great and have a nice mellow, neutral cheesy flavor with no weird aftertaste.
  • Parmela Creamery Shreds: This aged shredded cheddar-style cheese is made from cashew milk and melts well. It’s a smaller brand, but you can find them at Whole Foods and Wegmans.
  • Violife Shreds: Violife has both mozzarella and cheddar shreds. While they don’t stretch like traditional cheese (most vegan cheeses don’t), they do melt quite nicely (especially in a covered pan).
  • Daiya Cutting Board Collection Shreds: A marked improvement from the classic Daiya shredded cheese that’s one of the OG dairy free cheeses. The mozzarella melts well and tastes pretty good, too.

How to use: Shredded vegan cheese is very versatile. It’s particularly great in grilled cheese sandwiches because the small shreds melt more readily than sliced vegan cheese, which can be trickier to melt before the bread burns.

Sliced Cheese

  • Field Roast Chao Creamery Slices: I love the original creamy vegan cheese slices from Field Roast/Chao Creamery. They’re made from coconut and fermented tofu, which makes them tasty enough to snack on raw (they don’t have any artificial or off putting taste). They also melt quite well.
  • Violife Mature Cheddar Slices: These are a great option too. Soft, flavorful, and they melt pretty well.
  • Follow Your Heart Smoked Gouda Slices: I haven’t tried all the FYH sliced cheese varieties, but the Smoked Gouda is tasty and melts and stretches pretty well.
  • Daiya Swiss Style Slices: The Swiss cheese slices taste remarkably similar to dairy-based Swiss cheese.

How to use: Layer the slices into sandwiches, grilled cheese sandwiches, or melt them on veggie burgers.

Parmesan

  • Follow Your Heart Dairy Free Parmesan: The best store-bought option for pre-shredded parmesan with a nice neutral taste. I like to chop up the shreds or pulse them a few times in the food processor because they’re pretty large. They also melt really great in the oven!

How to use: Use vegan parmesan in stuffed shells or any other baked pasta recipe. It’s also a wonderful finishing cheese you can sprinkle over pasta dishes, vegan pizza, and risotto. Use it in pesto, too!

Feta

  • Violife Just Like Feta. The best store-bought vegan feta I’ve tried. Sold in a block, it’s salty and briny and tastes like a hybrid of goat cheese and feta.
  • Trader Joe’s Vegan Feta Cheese Alternative: This one is a close second. Tastes remarkably similar to dairy-based feta and sold at a very reasonable price.
  • Follow Your Heart Feta Crumbles: A good vegan feta option that’s pre-crumbled, sharp and tangy, and even melts well (not that feta needs to melt, but this one does and is great on an oven-baked flatbread). It’s also very allergen-friendly.

How to use: Feta is perfect in pasta salads and leafy green salads. We especially love it as a tangy and cheesy element in watermelon and cucumber salads with fresh basil.

Spreadable Cheeses

  • Miyoko’s Creamery Cheese Wheels: Miyokos is a vegan cheese OG (the founder, Miyoko Schinner, even wrote a book on homemade vegan cheese!) and their cheeses are made with wholesome ingredients. The spreadable cheese wheels are great slathered on baguettes, crackers, crudites, etc.
  • Treeline French-Style Cheese: These soft, spreadable cheeses are rich and satisfying but made with wholesome plant-based ingredients (mostly cashews and live cultures). They’re perfectly tangy IMO.

How to use: Grab some crackers or fresh bread and slather the cheese on top!

Ricotta Cheese

  • Kite Hill Foods: Unfortunately the Kite Hill Foods ricotta can be difficult to find (sometimes Whole Foods has it, and other smaller gourmet markets might have it), but if you can find it, it is SO good.
  • Tofutti: This is a delicious ricotta that mimics dairy-based ricotta quite well!

How to use: If you’re making vegan lasagna, then you NEED vegan ricotta. Otherwise, use it as a dip or spread on a flatbread pizza or with fresh bread, crackers, and fresh fruit.

Mozzarella

  • Miyoko’s Pourable Mozzarella: Aside from making liquid vegan mozzarella yourself, this is the only pourable version on the market right now! It’s the ultimate vegan cheese for pizza or pasta bakes because it bubbles and browns as it cooks and tastes deliciously gooey.
  • Violife Mozzarella-Style Shreds: A creamy melting cheese made from minimal ingredients. Sprinkle the shreds on a pizza, flatbread, pasta, and more.

How to use: Mozzarella is a must on pizza because it’s so stretchy and gooey. The shreds or liquid vegan mozzarella would also be delicious melted on top of vegan lasagna or baked pasta.

How to make vegan cheese from scratch

There are endless benefits to making homemade vegan cheese. It’s more affordable, you’re in control of the ingredients and flavors, and it’s relatively easy! Plus, there’s a recipe out there for everyone, regardless of allergies, flavor preferences, and dietary needs.

This list of homemade vegan cheese recipes and how to use them will help you get started:

For snacking…

My Fermented Cashew Cheese is the spreadable vegan cheese of your dreams.

It’s a sliceable and spreadable cashew cheese made from pantry staple ingredients. The real kicker, though, is that it’s fermented over one or two days! This makes it feel fancier than your average homemade cashew cheese and packs it with tangy, umami flavors.

Fermented Cashew Cheese

A sliceable, spreadable vegan cheese that will blow your mind! This cashew-based cheese is made with just a handful of ingredients and is an explosion of salty, cheesy, tangy, and umami flavors thanks to fermentation.

Check out this recipe

How to use: Spread it onto crusty bread or use it as a sandwich spread, include it on a cheese board with crackers, olives, fruit, and vegetables, or use it as a dip with pita bread.

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When you’re in the mood for Greek food…

Then you need to make this Vegan Feta!

Regular feta is salty, creamy, tangy, and crumbly. My Greek-style tofu feta is close to the real thing, with all of the classic flavors of the original.

Best of all, it’s just plain easy! Cut a brick of firm tofu into cubes, let it hang out in a tangy and herbaceous marinade, and use it throughout the week.

Greek-Style Vegan Feta

Vegan feta that tastes so similar to classic feta but without any dairy! Tangy and salty with Greek flavor, and easy to crumble into salads.

Check out this recipe

How to use: This vegan feta is particularly great in salads, like watermelon or cucumber salads and Greek salads, and on top of grain bowls, flatbread pizzas, and couscous. The cheese adds a burst of tang to my Lemon Orzo Pasta Salad and the Greek Gigantes Plaki in my cookbook, The Vegan Instant Pot Cookbook!

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For a Mexican-inspired feast…

You need my Vegan Queso!

This is an addictive vegan cheese sauce that tastes just like real queso. It’s easy to make with 10 wholesome ingredients, like cashews, pickled jalapeños, salsa, and coconut yogurt. Blend them all together and you have a creamy and spicy queso you can use in a ton of Mexican-inspired recipes!

Vegan Queso

The vegan queso recipe you’ve been waiting for — creamy, spicy, AND cheesy. Perfect for burritos, quesadillas, tacos, nachos, and more!

Check out this recipe

How to use: There are so many ways to use this vegan queso. You can try it in my Buffalo Chickpea Quesadillas, Vegan Crunchwrap Supreme, or Breakfast Burritos. It’s also delicious with vegan nachos and as a dip with tortilla chips.

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If you’re craving cheesy vegan pasta…

Then this creamy Vegan Ricotta will take it over the top.

Ricotta is one of the cheeses I missed the most when I first went vegan. It’s an incredibly creamy and indulgent cheese, but that same indulgence is easy to recreate with cashews! A blend of simple seasonings and wholesome ingredients gives this vegan ricotta an irresistibly savory flavor that is an integral part of all of your comfort foods.

Easy Vegan Cashew Ricotta

Vegan Cashew Ricotta that’s creamy and indulgent but made with healthy, simple ingredients. 10 minutes to make. Just like classic ricotta!

Check out this recipe

How to use: Just like traditional ricotta, you can use vegan ricotta in lasagna and stuffed shells. It’s also fantastic as a dip with crackers or fresh bread, or spread on bagels and flatbread.

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For your nut-free friends…

Treat them to this Nut-Free Vegan Cheese Sauce.

In addition to being nut-free, this healthy cauliflower cheese sauce is soy-free and oil-free, too. Admittedly, some of my other recipes taste a bit cheesier and more indulgent, but if you’re intolerant to nuts or looking for a low-calorie option, then this is the cheese sauce for you!

Nut-Free Vegan Cheese Sauce (Oil-Free and Soy-Free)

This Nut-Free Vegan Cheese Sauce is made with nourishing, wholesome ingredients. Say hello to mac’n cheese, quesadillas, and more!

Check out this recipe

How to use: This is my go-to sauce for a meaty Buffalo Jackfruit Vegan Grilled Cheese. It’s also wonderful in mac and cheese, drizzled over nachos, or baked on a homemade pizza. And when you want to jazz up roasted vegetables, add some of this vegan cheese sauce on top!

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More recipes with vegan cheese

  • Vegan Nachos
  • Crispy Baked Vegan Mac and Cheese
  • Cheesy Baked Butternut Squash
  • Vegan Pumpkin Ricotta Stuffed Shells
  • Vegan Quesadillas with Smoky Cheese and Refried Beans

Whether you crave cheese or not, I hope this thorough guide inspired you to get creative with vegan cheese! Be sure to leave a comment below if you found it informative or if you have any feedback :)

The Complete Guide to Vegan Cheese (2024)

FAQs

Is vegan cheese healthier than regular cheese? ›

Is vegan cheese healthy? In terms of health, vegan cheese is generally considered better for you than dairy cheese as it's lower in saturated fat and often has added vitamin B12, which contributes to a healthy nervous system.

What is a good vegan substitute for cheese? ›

SAY CHEESE- 10 VEGAN SUBSTITUTES TO SATISFY YOUR CHEESE CRAVINGS”
  • Cashew Cream Cheese: Creamy Dream Come True. ...
  • Nutritional Yeast: The Cheesy Secret. ...
  • Tofu Ricotta: ...
  • Tahini – ...
  • Roasted salted almonds – ...
  • Hummus – ...
  • Peanut Butter or Sunflower Butter. ...
  • Avocado –
Oct 20, 2023

What cheeses do not use animal rennet? ›

Cheeses That Don't Use Rennet

Soft-style cheeses often use an acid, such as lemon juice, vinegar, or whey. "Many softer styles of cheese like mozzarella, paneer, ricotta, and cream cheese use whey or another type of acid as their coagulant instead of rennet, so they will be safe for vegetarians," says Birnbaum.

Will vegan cheese ever taste like real cheese? ›

It's important to understand that vegan cheese, being made with different ingredients, typically does not taste exactly like traditional dairy cheese. However, it does replicate some of the flavors and textures that you might remember from dairy cheese and tastes great in its own right.

Which vegan cheese has the most protein? ›

Consider Calcium and Protein

Something to keep in mind: vegan cheese is usually low in protein and calcium compared to the dairy-based kind—so don't rely on it to fulfill those goals. Nut- and seed-based cheeses have the most protein while those made with starches and coconut oil have the least.

Is vegan cheese anti-inflammatory? ›

The dietary fiber and polyphenols in whole plant foods are known to reduce gut inflammation, so a plant-based diet based on whole foods that includes moderate amounts of vegan cheese will likely be overwhelmingly anti-inflammatory.

Is vegan cheese good for gut health? ›

Vegan cheeses with probiotics can offer several potential benefits, including: Improved digestion: The probiotics in vegan cheeses can help improve digestive function and promote healthy gut flora, reducing symptoms of bloating, gas, and constipation.

Is vegan cheese ok for high cholesterol? ›

Unlike traditional cheeses, vegan cheeses contain no cholesterol. They are an excellent option if you want to appreciate the great taste of cheese without causing your cholesterol levels to rise! And even better, plant-based cheeses are known for their high content of phytosterols (or plant sterols).

What replaces milk in vegan cheese? ›

Ingredients and substitutions

Unsweetened soy milk is the best choice because it's neutral in taste and because of its nutrient composition. It will make the best, creamiest, vegan cheese. You can replace soy milk with unsweetened oat milk although the cheese will be slightly less stringy.

What tastes like cheese but isn't cheese? ›

The Best Dairy-Free Cheese Substitutes – Cheese Sauces
  • Whipped tofu. Puree silken or firm tofu in a food processor to create an oozy sauce. ...
  • Dairy-Free Pesto. As I mentioned above, my Sicilian Nut Pesto recipe.
  • Hummus. ...
  • Tahini. ...
  • Almond Butter, Cashew Butter or Peanut Butter.

What can you put on pizza instead of cheese? ›

Vegan White Pizza With Artichoke Tofu Ricotta and Roasted Garlic, right, and Vegan Pizza With Miso-Caramelized Onions and Shiitake Bacon are both great – without cheese. Season dough with dried herbs and paprika for a brighter, better flavor. Artichoke Tofu Ricotta is great on pizza or as a spread or dip.

Are calves killed for rennet? ›

Parmesan cheese is made with animal rennet which is an enzyme that comes from the fourth lining of the stomach of animals, typically calves, goats, and lambs. The animal is usually killed in the process. The rennet is then taken and dried so it becomes solid.

Does tillamook cheese use animal rennet? ›

Rennet is an enzyme that helps coagulate the milk during the cheesemaking process. Since 2016, we have utilized fermentation-produced rennet that has Kosher and Halal certification and is vegetarian. We believe it closely mimics the flavor and quality profiles of a traditional bovine rennet.

Does Sargento use animal rennet? ›

Most Sargento® natural cheeses are made with non-animal rennets. The Sargento® natural cheeses that may contain animal enzymes are those generally considered traditional Italian cheese styles such as Parmesan, Romano, Provolone, Asiago, and Fontina.

Is violife cheese healthy? ›

Depending on which Violife vegan cheese alternative you eat, it is also a source of calcium, fat and Vitamin B12. Vitamin B12 is added, which is a nice touch since vegan diets often lack vitamin B12. Coconut brings nothing on the protein front, so bear that in mind for your daily protein intake.

Is Go veggie cheese healthy? ›

Containing no saturated fats, Go Veggie is considered a healthier alternative to other vegan cheese brands. But what's the good in that if it melts like a crayon? It's 2024, and people expect an alternative cheese that tastes and melts the part — and despite some of your doubts, they do exist.

What does Daiya taste like? ›

All of our taste testers agreed that it tasted the most like real deal cheddar. And while none of the vegan cheeses we tested nailed the "real cheese" texture, the Daiya slices melted nicely and didn't stick to our teeth. Despite not having much stretch, the texture of these slices felt the closest to dairy cheese.

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