The first time I tried Daiya was at Pizza Pi in Seattle, Washington, about two years ago. I hadn’t had cheese or anything cheese-like for the past four or five years, so biting into that first slice of amazing dairy-free Daiya-laden pizza was sort of shocking and weird, but in a very good way. Trying out this soft and slightly gooey fresh soy- and nut-free homemade vegan mozzarella brought back that same kind of omgwhatisthisamazingness feeling, although the taste of this cheese is very different from Daiya’s flavor and texture. To give this mozzarella its uniquely soft and velvety texture, I tweaked the the original recipe by adding in some tapioca flour and slightly increasing the amount of coconut vinegar, which reduced the agar’s ability to fully gel and set. This final texture is perfect for dolloping on to a pizza and, when removed from a piping hot oven, is beautifully melted and releases an amazing cheesy aroma.

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Fresh Vegan Mozzarella Pizza

FRESH VEGAN MOZZARELLA PIZZA


5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

4.7 from 6 reviews

Ingredients

  • 1 can good-quality coconut milk
  • 1 tsp coconut vinegar
  • 2/3 tsp salt
  • 3/4 tsp agar powder
  • 1 TB tapioca flour


Instructions

  1. Place the coconut milk into a small saucepan over medium-low heat. Whisk until well-emulsified. Add in the vinegar, salt and agar and whisk frequently for about 15 minutes, or until a small boil occurs. Reduce the heat immediately, then whisk in the tapioca flour and heat for 5-10 minutes more.
  2. Transfer to a flat-bottomed glass pyrex dish to slightly gel for about an hour.
  3. Place small dollops of the cheese onto a homemade or prepared pizza crust with other desired toppings and bake on a pizza stone at 450 degrees for 10-12 minutes.

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44 Comments

  1. I am so excited about trying this. I haven’t been able to have cheese as the store bought kind contains xanthan gum which I can’t tolerate. I could only find agar flakes not the powder. Do I simply put it in my food processor? I hope that is not a stupid question. I am a newbie at cooking from scratch but I’m trying thanks to multiple new food sensistivites.
    Thank you so much for sharing this recipe.

    1. Hi Gina, not a stupid question at all! If you have the flakes, you can grind them in a food processor, but a coffee grinder would be best if you have one. You can also purchase agar online in powder form (Amazon sells Telephone brand in small packets, which is great). I hope you enjoy the recipe!

  2. I will definitely give it a try. I've tied several brands of vegan cheeses here in the US and so far they've all disappointed me. Daiya cheeses taste horrific to me 🙁

  3. this recipe is wonderful. I've tried it melted on sandwiches, on pizza and both ways it is very tasty. Have you ever tried making it with light coconut milk?

    1. Thanks for trying it out, and glad you like! This recipe is completely dependent upon a good amount of fat, so I am not sure using a light coconut milk would work here.

  4. I just tried the recipe for coconut milk mozerella. I even found the coconut vinegar at whole foods. I couldn't resist after 2 hours in the frig. The consistency is more like jello that is not yet firm. I cut a small piece and it collapsed before I could get it out. I dipped a cracker in, it tastes ok, but basically is nto firm. Any suggestions?

    1. This cheese is supposed to be sort of gooey so you can dollop it onto pizza. If you want it more firm, just add in a little more agar powder and be sure to boil it to activate it.

  5. This recipe is so good! I made it for calzones and the result was perfect. So creamy and delicious! Not only was it wonderful in the calzones, but it was tasty by itself. I tend to be very picky about vegan cheese that is cracker worthy, but the texture of this one is so smooth i could just eat it straight out of the bowl.

  6. I'm super pumped about this.. I just experimented adding nutritional yeast and smoked paprika. It's setting up now. I used 1/2 tbsp red wine vinegar and increased the agar to 1 tsp.

  7. i just tried this with cornstarch in place of tapioca flour & white balsamic instead of the coconut vinegar. i added a tsp of applewood liquid smoke as well… yum!!! perfect for my detox pizza. 🙂

  8. I made this yesterday and have just finished off the leftover pizza this evening and wanted to report back on how fabulous it was. The taste, texture and appearance were so much like I remember dairy mozzarella to be like it was bizarre. I used agar flakes and just tripled the amount and had no problems. Thank you for the recipe.

  9. Does it taste like coconut? I can't imagine it tasting like cheese, but I'd love to try it some time!
    Your blog is amazing, by the way. I hope you always leave it open for everyone to read:)

  10. Tried this recipe today and substituted the coconut vinegar with apple cider vinegar. It was absolutely AMAZING. So delicious! Will make this again. Thank you!

  11. Do you think this cheese recipe would be good for lasagna? OR would another cheese recipe you have be a better fit?

  12. Hi, this looks great. I am only 4 months into being vegan and miss cheese sooooo much. I am also trying to cut out wheat. Trouble is so much wheat free and vegan recipes have tapioca in them. I really don't like its smell or taste (makes me feel yucky). Is there anything else I can use instead of tapioca in this recipe. I would so like to try it. 🙂

    1. Hi jadmrs! I hope you find the coconut cheeses on my site helpful as you totally transition away from dairy-based cheeses. I think that you would be able to sub arrowroot powder here for the tapioca. Start with 1/2 TB of it, then slowly increase as needed to get a gooey consistency. Arrowroot is totally tasteless, should it should not interfere with or impart any other strange flavor here — good luck!

      check out more homemade vegan cheeses here: https://olivesfordinner.com/search/label/homemade%20vegan%20cheese

  13. Erin, did you end up trying to replicate Anonymous' 'mistake' that resulted in yoghurt? If so, I'd love the recipe! 🙂

    1. I have not … yet! But this recipe is fun to experiment with — just a slight modification with ratios can result in completely different results like Anonymous had.

  14. Thank you so much for this recipe! Can't wait to try it but never heard of coconut vinegar before, plus used up my tapicoa flour last night. As soon as I can find the ingredients I will be trying this out….I miss cheese so much. (I have to be gluten-free, caisin free, soy free, and shellfish free)

  15. Anonymous — thanks for the update! I am intrigued with this "mistake" and will have to now try this out myself! I love it when things like this happen. Enjoy your yummy vegan tzatziki!

  16. Erin, thank you so much for the quick reply. I made a new batch today, and it was a huge success! I endorse this recipe 100 percent. Everyone should be making this!

    Couple of notes:

    I ground my agar down to a finer consistency for better dissolution, and made your recommended adjustments for a slightly firmer cheese. Those who want the firmer version should probably use agar powder, rather than flakes.

    Also, I went ahead and strained that first, "failed" batch, and was shocked at the result: an awfully good vegan yogurt! So this was like two recipes in one. I could not be more thrilled. Tomorrow night will see some delicious tzatziki sauce in my house!

  17. Talbot, I updated the directions to include this step. Agar can be pretty hard to work with, as the batches vary in quality. Hopefully this will avoid any future mishaps!

  18. Talbot — it may be your agar. Although this doesn't need to be super-firm (it will melt on the pizza anyway), the bits of agar left over means they didn't dissolve the way they should have. If you use the same agar batch again, I would increase the cook time, then add in the tapioca flour at the very end. You may even want to strain the final product to avoid seeing the bits in your mozzarella.

  19. I just finished whipping up a batch of this, but after an hour of set time, I have a mostly liquid product with bits of agar suspended within. Was I supposed to grind the agar flakes to a finer consistency? They were quite coarse.

  20. I'm so glad you liked the mozz, Mary! Your photos are gorgeous — now I want to make your polenta sandwiches!

  21. i have to try this mozarella.. it looks so delicious! we havent had cheese in a long time now tooo.. i dislike daiya for the weird oily chewyness

  22. Thanks Caitlin! You can cut back the vinegar to a 1/2 tsp and up the tsps of agar to about 7-8, and you'll have the perfect Daiya alternative you can shred on a cheese grater! It does taste very different from Daiya — I hope you and Dayv enjoy it!

  23. i love your techniques and ingredients. you are amazing and this cheese look delicious!

    dayv doesn't care for daiya, but i use it sparingly on a lot of his food because it's the closest cheese substitute out there. i will really have to try this out!

  24. Angry Asian: hmmm, I am not sure you can sub regular vinegar here — the coconut vinegar has such a distinct flavor to it. I hope you can try it out — the taste and texture is seriously amazing!

  25. please tell me that regular vinegar can be substituted for coconut vinegar?

    i miss cheese and i miss pizza. badly.

  26. IJustMadeThatUp: No, this doesnt have any coconut flavor at all — that's what makes this cheese so amazing. The high fat content just gives it a rich, super-creamy (non-coconuty)flavor!

  27. OMG! That looks incredible! I usually don't miss cheese and don't care but your mozzarella pizza is making me wish I could eat it right now. 🙂

  28. This looks fantastic, but I'm not sold on coconut flavoured cheeze … is it a strong coconut flavour?