A New Generation Of Alt Cheese Startups Are Ditching Allergens: Meet 5 Global Nut-Free Innovators


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The dairy-free cheese alternative market is huge and it’s growing fast. Analysts expect the global plant-based cheese segment to double from its current $2.7 billion to more than $4.5 billion by 2025.

With as many as 4 in 10 consumers worldwide now flexitarians, even big food corporations like Bel Brands and Danone are jumping to launch their own vegan cheese.

But the majority of brands on the market are offering alternatives based on nuts, such as cashews and almonds, which aren’t suitable for people with nut allergies. There’s now a new crop of companies looking to do something different, ditching nut-based recipes for unusual ingredients like cauliflower, sunflower seeds, fava beans, and more, to create their just-as-delicious animal-free cheeses. Let’s take a look at five startups that are changing the game. 

Source: Grounded Foods

1. Grounded Foods is all-in on ugly cauliflower and hemp 

Los Angeles-based Grounded Foods makes nut-free, soy-free, plant-based cheeses out of cauliflower and hemp seeds. What’s more, it sources “ugly” ones from local farms to help cut down on food waste and ensure the products are as sustainable as possible. Just landed on the market in 2021, the startup’s vegan and keto-friendly range boasts three products: Marinated Hemp Seed Goat Cheese, Hemp Seed Cream Cheese, and Cheese-Free Cheese Sauce. 

Source: Stockeld Dreamery

2. Stockeld Dreamery makes feta from peas & fava beans 

Swedish startup Stockeld Dreamery has chosen pea protein and fava beans as its star ingredients. The first product, a plant-based feta cheese, took hundreds of iterations to develop and is made through a fermentation process. The end product is a totally nut-free, vegan feta alternative that rivals the nutrition, taste, and look of the real deal, and will soon be making its first debut in Stockholm via a food service launch. 

Source: Change Foods

3. Change Foods is changing it up with recombinant proteins

The first and only fermentation dairy startup with a base of operations in Asia-Pacific, Change Foods is a U.S.-Australian food tech using microbial precision fermentation or recombinant technology to make their animal-free cheese. The startup is working to create lactose-free dairy alternatives that are bio-identical to real dairy-based cheeses.

Source: Spero Foods

4. Spero Foods’ cream cheeses are powered by sunflower seeds 

Spero Foods is ditching nuts for sunflower seeds, all in the name of making plant-based dairy affordable to all. Founded by former Cornell University researcher Phäedra Randolph, who believes that the use of nuts as the primary base for vegan cheeses is making it “prohibitively expensive” for mass consumers, Spero Foods is making their nut-free cost-comparable range of cream cheese out of sunflower seeds, agave, coconut oil and natural flavourings like cinnamon, strawberry powder, herb blends, and spices. 

Source: Climax Foods

5. Climax Foods is all about the data 

Berkeley, California-based food tech Climax Foods is basing its cheese on one primary technological ingredient: data. The startup, the brainchild of former Google, SpaceX, and Impossible Foods scientist Dr. Oliver Zahn, is harnessing data science and machine learning frameworks to find out the perfect formulation to create the most delicious plant-based cheese. Taking home US$7.5 million in 2020, the company is now hard at work to develop a vegan-friendly alternative to aged cheese – and we can’t wait to hear about what will no doubt be a unique ingredient list. 

Author

  • Sally Ho

    Sally Ho is Green Queen's former resident writer and lead reporter. Passionate about the environment, social issues and health, she is always looking into the latest climate stories in Hong Kong and beyond. A long-time vegan, she also hopes to promote healthy and plant-based lifestyle choices in Asia. Sally has a background in Politics and International Relations from her studies at the London School of Economics and Political Science.


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