Dairy-Free Recipes
4,179 recipes

Hot Chocolate-Mint Pie with Layered Cookie Crust

Hungarian Goulash with Sourdough Nokerlach Dumplings

Hearty Kale White Bean Tomato Soup with Garlic and Herbs

Frozen Lemon Ice Cream Sandwiches with Soft Sugar Cookies

Broiled London Broil with White Wine Shallot Sauce

Maple Glazed Green Beans with Pomegranate Arils

Marinated Mushroom and Candied Beef Fry Salad

Maple Chocolate Bundt Cake with Espresso and Cocoa Glaze

Balsamic Roasted Portobello Mixed Salad with Honey Dressing

Spaghetti Squash Maple Walnut Kugel Muffins

Moroccan Spiced Carrot Chickpea Salad with Dates and Mint

No-Bake Chocolate Raspberry Energy Bites with Cashews

Asian Marinated Steak Salad with Toasted Ramen Garnish

Peanut-Speckled Vanilla Orange Muffins with Cocoa Topping

One-Bowl Halva Swirl Brownies - Easy Middle Eastern Dessert

Caramelized Onion Chicken Meatball Soup

Orange Pumpkin Streusel Muffins with Whole Wheat Pastry Flour

Oreo Stuffed Chocolate Cupcakes with Cookies and Cream Frosting

Oven-Baked Brown Sugar Glazed Corned Beef Brisket

Pastrami-Wrapped Cocktail Franks with Sweet Paprika Rub

No-Bake Peanut Butter Chocolate Layered Pie

Perfect Crispy Potato Latkes with Almond Flour

Pesach Chocolate Chip Cookies with Potato Starch

Mediterranean Pesto Stuffed Chicken Thighs with Wine
Dairy-free cooking means working without milk, cheese, butter, yogurt, cream, and other products from animal milk. Your kitchen runs on plant-based alternatives, with coconut milk standing in for heavy cream at a 1:1 ratio and olive oil replacing butter in most recipes. Cashew cream blends from 1 cup soaked cashews with 0.5 cups water to create a base for sauces. Nutritional yeast adds cheese flavor at 2-3 tablespoons per dish.
Plant milks come in dozens of varieties. Oat milk foams best for coffee drinks. Coconut milk from cans contains 17-24% fat compared to whole milk's 3.5%. Unsweetened almond milk has 30-40 calories per cup versus dairy milk's 150. Soy milk matches dairy milk's protein at 7-8 grams per cup.
Baking without dairy requires specific swaps. Replace 1 cup buttermilk with 1 cup plant milk plus 1 tablespoon vinegar, letting it sit for 5 minutes. Coconut oil substitutes for butter at a 1:1 ratio in cookies and quick breads. Aquafaba, the liquid from canned chickpeas, whips into meringue when beaten for 10-15 minutes.
Asian cuisines naturally avoid dairy. Thai curries use coconut milk. Japanese cooking relies on miso, soy sauce, and sesame oil. Mexican food adapts easily too, using avocado instead of sour cream and cashew crema for queso.
Read labels carefully. Casein, whey, lactose, and ghee all come from dairy. Non-dairy creamers often contain sodium caseinate. Dark chocolate sometimes includes milk fat. Bread frequently contains milk powder or butter. Restaurant soups and sauces typically start with butter or cream bases.
Stock your freezer with frozen bananas for ice cream, coconut milk ice cubes for smoothies, and dairy-free butter sticks for baking. Keep shelf-stable plant milk boxes for emergencies. Buy nutritional yeast in bulk, storing it in the freezer to maintain its B vitamins for up to 2 years.
Quick Start
Start with coconut milk ice cream, blending 1 can coconut cream with 0.5 cup sugar and freezing in ice cube trays. Make cashew alfredo by blending 1 cup soaked cashews, 1 cup water, 2 garlic cloves, and 0.25 cup nutritional yeast. Replace butter with olive oil at a 3:4 ratio in savory dishes, saving money since olive oil costs $0.20 per ounce versus butter at $0.25. Stock up on canned coconut milk when on sale for $1.50 per can, as it keeps for 2-5 years and works in everything from coffee creamer to whipped cream.
Pantry Staples
Full-fat version contains 17-24% fat for curries and desserts. Refrigerate overnight to separate cream. Lasts 2-5 years unopened.
Adds cheese flavor at 2-3 tablespoons per dish. Store in freezer up to 2 years. Buy in bulk for $8-12 per pound.
Soak 1 cup in hot water for 15 minutes then blend for instant cream sauce. Raw cashews work best. Keep sealed for 6 months.
Sesame seed paste replaces cream in dressings. Mix 3 tablespoons tahini with 3 tablespoons water for sauce base. Refrigerate after opening.
Solid below 76°F, liquid above. Use refined for neutral flavor in baking. Replace butter 1:1 in recipes. Shelf-stable for 2-3 years.
Best plant milk for frothing. Choose unsweetened for cooking. Make your own from 1 cup oats blended with 4 cups water.
Mix 1 tablespoon with 1 cup plant milk to make buttermilk substitute. Also helps cakes rise. Buy raw, unfiltered version.
Chickpea can liquid whips like egg whites. Use 3 tablespoons per egg in baking. Save liquid when using canned chickpeas.
Fermented soybean paste adds umami without dairy. White miso is mildest. Refrigerate for up to 1 year after opening.
Replace butter in savory cooking at 3:4 ratio. Choose cold-pressed for dressings, regular for high-heat cooking.
Watch Out For
Both come from churned cream. Ghee is clarified butter. Watch for these in restaurant vegetables and baked goods.
Includes cow, goat, sheep milk in any form. Check labels for milk powder, milk solids, or milk derivatives.
Made from milk proteins. Includes hard cheeses, soft cheeses, and processed cheese products.
Milk proteins found in protein powders, bars, and supplements. Read nutrition labels carefully.
Milk sugar used as sweetener in medications and processed foods. Check ingredient lists on pills and vitamins.
Many contain sodium caseinate from milk. Look for explicitly vegan versions instead.
FAQ
What plant milk works best for baking?
Soy milk performs best in cakes and breads with its 7-8 grams protein per cup matching dairy milk. For buttermilk substitutes, add 1 tablespoon vinegar to 1 cup soy milk and wait 5 minutes. Coconut milk from cans works in rich desserts but thin it with water at a 1:1 ratio for standard baking. Full-fat oat milk at 130 calories per cup creates tender muffins.
How do I replace cheese in recipes?
Nutritional yeast provides cheese flavor at 2-3 tablespoons per dish, costing $0.50 per ounce in bulk. Cashew cheese forms from 1 cup soaked cashews blended with 0.25 cup water, 2 tablespoons nutritional yeast, and 1 teaspoon salt. Store-bought dairy-free shreds melt at 350°F after 8-10 minutes. For parmesan, pulse 0.5 cup cashews with 3 tablespoons nutritional yeast and 0.5 teaspoon salt.
Which dairy ingredients hide in unexpected places?
Lactose appears in 20% of prescription medications as a filler. Bread contains milk powder in 65% of supermarket loaves. Dark chocolate under 70% cacao often includes milk fat. Wine and beer may use casein or isinglass from milk in filtering, though most bottles don't list this. Restaurant soups start with butter in 80% of cases.