Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Simplify your vegan cooking with these AI tools

From newsbytesapp.com

In 2026, plant-based meal planning is made easier with AI-powered tools that offer personalized recipes, grocery lists, and weekly menus.
These applications cater to vegan or vegetarian preferences and adapt to dietary needs like allergies and schedules.
By automating various aspects of meal planning, these tools help users maintain a healthy diet effortlessly. 


Here are five AI tools that can enhance your plant-based meal planning experience. 

Planeat AI: Automated weekly meal plans

PlanEat AI is an award-winning app that generates completely automated weekly plant-based meal plans according to the user's preferences, routine, and time limitations.

It creates grouped grocery lists by store section and enables easy swaps for vegan recipes. This way, it reduces decision-making fatigue for busy users by simplifying the entire process of planning to shopping.

FoodiePrep: Custom plant-based solutions

FoodiePrep provides a truly end-to-end solution, especially when it comes to the custom plant-based plans, like high-protein vegan options or family-friendly meals. It generates recipes from pantry ingredients, builds smart shopping lists, and even offers real-time cooking help, like substitutions for plant alternatives. With this, you'll have everything on your hand for a successful plant-based diet.

Ollie: Personalized vegan menus for households

Ollie is perfect for homes that want to create customized weekly vegan menus. The app employs AI to understand your tastes, leftovers, and allergies while automating shopping lists (with grocery delivery integration). By making the most of ingredients, Ollie also minimizes waste in the plant-based preparation.

Fitia: Adaptive meal plans with multiple styles

Fitia goes a step further with adaptive AI meal plans. These include over 15 styles, such as clean eating and budget-friendly vegan options. It personalizes macros as per your plant-based goals and even allows flexible swaps in the menu plan. You can even integrate services like Instacart to order groceries in one click directly through the app.

PlateJoy: Nutrition-focused plant-based planning

Focusing on nutrition logic, PlateJoy creates structured weekly plant-based plans based on dietary preferences such as veganism. It offers guided recipes along with optimized grocery lists for health-focused eating without being too strict on tracking—making it easier than ever to stay on top of nutritious choices week in and week out.

UK: 10 Vegan Mini Eggs to Make Easter Eggs-ellent

From peta.org.uk

By Emily Rice

Whether you’re looking for treats to delight kids on an Easter hunt, decorating Easter nests or cakes, or just want to indulge in the spirit of the season, vegan mini eggs are the perfect bite-sized treat.

Small enough to hide easily, but bursting with flavour, and – best of all – free from dairy, our egg-citing picks are perfect for a kind, nostalgic Easter.

Here’s where to buy vegan mini eggs in the UK.

Tesco Finest Mini Salted Caramel Eggs

Mini eggs get fancy with these salted caramel mini eggs from the Tesco Finest Range. Perfect for anyone with allergies, they’re gluten-free, wheat-free, and milk-free, so no one has to miss out on the hunt.

Mummy Meegz Chickee Eggs

The original vegan upgrade to a hard-shelled candy egg, Mummy Meegz Chickee Eggs add a pastel pop to any Easter hunt or table. Palm oil free, you can snack with abandon – but remember to leave some for the hunt.

Sainsbury’s Free From Mixed Choc & White Choc Mini Half Eggs

White and dark chocolate lovers alike will love these gluten-free Free From Mixed Choc & White Choc Mini Half Eggs from Sainsbury’s, made with Rainforest Alliance Certified chocolate. Flat on the back, they’re perfect for popping on top of a cake, but no one will judge you if you decide to eat them in front of the TV.

Moo Free Fondant Filled Mini Eggs

Rainforest Alliance Certified chocolate, and bursting with creamy fondant? Yes, please! Moo Free’s Fondant-Filled Mini Eggs are the best of both worlds, while also being gluten- and soy-free, making them a hit with pretty much everyone.

Fetcha M*lk Bunny and Eggs

Looking for mini eggs fit for a King? PETA Vegan Food Award Winners, Fetcha Chocolates are famed for being the choice of King CharlesThis pack includes both eggs and bunnies, ensuring your guests crown you Easter royalty. 

ASDA Free From Easter Mini Eggs

It’s always handy when your Easter hunt ingredients can be collected with your weekly shop. These egg halves are festooned with festive sprinkles for extra joy and are also ideal for kids who are allergic to gluten, eggs, and milk.

Catherine’s Originals Muddled Minis

Craving chocolate and mystery? Catherine’s Originals have you covered with their Muddled Minis. Featuring 9 mini eggs in a mix of exciting filling flavours – Strawberries & Cream, Caramel, and Lemon & Elderflower – these individually-wrapped eggs are a tasty twist on the classic.

M&S Made Without Mini Eggs

Filled with ooey-gooey caramel and enrobed in creamy chocolate, M&S Made Without Caramel Eggs are the perfect size for little hands; smooth and sweet, with a satisfying centre.

Hotel Chocolat

If you prefer mini bunnies to eggs,  these creamy, tasty little bunny bites from Hotel Chocolat are for you. Solid and made with 45% nut milk chocolate, they’re as cute as they are delicious. Did someone say, “melt them into hot cocoa?”

How to Use Vegan Mini Eggs

When it comes to vegan chocolate, more is more, but while giant vegan Easter eggs are wonderful, the beauty of mini eggs is that they also make adorable additions to Easter baking.

Add colour to your brunch table with this mini-egg-topped doughnut recipe from Sweet Freedom, or enlist the kids to craft some adorable chocolate nests.  

Why Choose Dairy Free?

Mother cows don’t make milk so that we can have dairy chocolate; they make milk for the same reason we do – to nourish and bond with their babies!

For us to take their milk, cows on dairy farms are repeatedly and forcibly impregnated. Like us, they carry their babies for 9 months, but, for us to steal cows’ milk, calves are removed from their mothers shortly after birth, leaving their mums to bellow in anguish.

If the calf is female, she will likely follow in her mum’s sad footsteps. If male, he will likely be slaughtered for veal. When their milk production drops, cows used for dairy are slaughtered.

Choosing vegan Easter eggs means taking a delicious stance against cruelty and oppression.

https://www.peta.org.uk/lifestyle/vegan-mini-eggs/ 

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Beyond (Meat) On Why It Rebranded & What’s Next For Plant Protein

From greenqueen.com.hk

By Anay Mridul

Beyond Meat has rebranded to Beyond The Plant Protein Company as it expands into whole-food proteins and drinks – is the vegan pioneer having an identity crisis reflective of the times?

As with many food businesses post-pandemic, stability has been hard to come by for the pioneer of the modern meat-free burger.

Over the last year, on the back of decreasing sales, Beyond Meat has significantly expanded its distributionrelaunched its Starbucks collaboration in the UK, and raised more money than any other plant-based company.

Concurrently, the plant-based meat giant has witnessed its share price fall to an all-time low, to the point that it became a meme stockreceived a delisting warning from Nasdaq, and was forced to deny rumours of bankruptcy.

The firm’s turnaround plan has hinged on a move, well, beyond meat, with a new fava bean mince that doesn’t intend to mimic animal protein, and a line of sparkling protein drinks that sold out quickly in the initial drop.

All this is wrapped neatly in a rebrand for Beyond Meat, which is now called Beyond The Plant Protein Company – although the change has officially yet to be announced and reflected on its social channels.

“We plan to use ‘Beyond’ more frequently as our primary brand name going forward. We’ve already been using the shorter name in some places, and we think it better reflects who we are today,” a spokesperson for the company told Green Queen.

“It puts less focus on mimicry, an increasingly complicated and limiting frame, and more focus on the high-quality plant protein products we offer. It also gives us room to grow beyond centre-of-the-plate protein and meet a broader range of consumer protein needs over time,” they added.

“In the coming months, we’ll share more about how we’re continuing to roll this out and expanding our use of the Beyond brand.”

Beyond Meat’s rebrand has been rolled out in phases

                                                                                  Courtesy: Beyond Meat/Green Queen

The first time Beyond Meat publicly announced a rebrand was in July 2025, when founder and CEO Ethan Brown told Fortune that he planned to drop the word ‘Meat’ from the company’s name to spotlight traditional plant proteins and reflect its forthcoming product diversification.

“If you’re the best in the world at making plant proteins, why confine yourself to the centre of the plate?” he said. “Instead of thinking about a simple replacement for animal protein, what if you just thought about your daily protein consumption, and I started to try to replace as much of that as I can with plant protein, any form that I could?”

Brown hinted at everything from a centre-aisle offering with 30g of protein and zero fat to post-workout products inspired by Roman gladiators. “You’ll see us come out with things like, maybe, lentil sausage,” he said. “Or chickpea hot dogs.”

His comments were followed by the launch of Beyond Ground, the first product to be marketed under just the ‘Beyond’ label. Almost as a reinforcement of its original identity, it was rolled out alongside the much-anticipated whole-cut mycelium steak on its new Beyond Test Kitchen website.

The accompanying press release referred to the brand as ‘Beyond’, but the rebrand still hadn’t been made official, and subsequent announcements – whether it was a partnership with Hard Rock CafĂ© or the launch of a new value pack in Canada – continued to use the full Beyond Meat name.

Beyond Meat ‘remains committed’ to meat alternatives

                                                                                                Courtesy: Beyond Meat

This was true even for the January introduction of Beyond Immerse, a range of protein-infused carbonated beverages that marked the firm’s second foray away from meat-mimicking proteins. The announcements for the initial launch and the flavour expansion last month both spotlighted ‘Beyond Meat’ as the brand name.

“We plan to bring our pioneering expertise in unlocking the power of plants to a variety of categories to meet today’s consumer needs, starting with a functional beverage line,” the spokesperson said when asked about Beyond Meat’s future product plans.

Despite the diversification, meat is still very much in its sights. “As the company expands into new categories, Beyond remains committed to category leadership in plant-based meat,” they said.

“Our expansion into additional protein categories builds on our core competencies in an innovation-first approach, culinary standards, and sustainability principles that define us, and strengthens our ability to meet more consumer needs.”

The rebrand raises some largely unanswered questions about its future direction. Does it now change its logo, which features a cow? Is the refresh only for the US and Canada, or its international business too? The company’s representative did not respond to these questions when approached by Green Queen. As it stands, its websites in other countries still have the Beyond Meat name.

Marketing experts are divided over Beyond Meat’s rebrand

                                                                                          Courtesy: Damian Dovarganes/AP

Some marketing experts remain sceptical about the name change. “‘Beyond Meat’ told you what it was straight away. ‘Beyond The Plant Protein Company’ feels much looser,” Anita Moorthy, co-founder of B2B marketing solutions platform RockSalt, said in a LinkedIn post.

“It could cover meat alternatives, drinks, bars, supplements, pretty much anything in the protein aisle. Maybe that breadth is the point, but it also strips out a lot of the distinctiveness the original name had,” she added.

“They’re distancing themselves from the category while still playing in it. How’s that going to work?” commented Archana Kalegaonkar, a brand strategist. “The name is clumsy, so ding on the memorability and mental availability.”

She continued: “And what happens when protein is no longer the flavour of the day? They could have just kept it to Beyond, in my opinion – that would have retained their core promise of a brand that goes beyond existing options and allowed flexibility to evolve the product portfolio without losing brand equity.”

Others laud the move. “I think it’s very smart. It’s reality,” Lu Ann Williams, co-founder and president of Innova Market Insights, told Green Queen at the Future Food-Tech conference in San Francisco this month.

“I don’t know if it’s going to work because it comes down to the execution. What’s the price? How do they communicate to consumers? What’s the nutrition?” she said. “But in terms of a total pivot, I think they were going to have a hard time trying to just do a pure meat mimic.”

Not the moment for plant-based meat?

The most prominent instance of Beyond Meat’s drive to reshape its identity came during Natural Products Expo West in Anaheim, California, earlier this month, when the company overhauled its website to largely remove the ‘Meat’ moniker and introduce itself as Beyond The Plant Protein Company, or simply Beyond.

Still, the shift doesn’t seem to have fully been implemented yet. The company’s stall at Expo West featured the new branding, though the business’s legal name remains Beyond Meat.

Curiously, its social media accounts still carry the original name. That wasn’t always the case – when Beyond officially announced its new identity online, it altered its name to Go Beyond (at least on LinkedIn), before changing it back to Beyond Meat.

The move indicates an evolution of the company’s mission from feeding a better future by shifting from animal- to plant-based meat, to doing so with “clean plant-based protein”. Its motivations – or at least the ones it thinks consumers care about – have shifted from a focus on the climate and animal rights to centring human health.

“Our mission has always been about unlocking the power of plants to transform how we think about protein. As we continue to innovate and expand beyond meat mimicry, this updated positioning reflects our commitment to offering nutritious plant protein options made with clean, simple ingredients across a variety of categories, and designed to meet the evolving needs of today’s consumers,” the spokesperson said.

“For me, it is an opportunity to reshape the company around very real food that is directly from plants,” Brown told the Associated Press. “It’s about delivering all those benefits of the plant kingdom to the consumer in ways that they’re going to be able to easily integrate it into their lives.”

Doubling down on the diversification past meat alternatives, he said these products will be a “much more dominant choice” over the next decade or two. He added that Beyond Meat is currently tackling “a period of confusion” for the sector. “It’s just not the moment for plant-based meat right now,” he said.

He isn’t wrong. Sales of plant-based meat have fallen by 26% over the last two years, according to NielsenIQ data cited by the AP. Beyond itself posted a 13.3% year-over-year decline in revenue in Q3 2025, revising its final-quarter forecast to $60-65M, below analysts’ estimates of $70M.

Can repositioning itself as a plant protein company bring back the fame that engulfed Beyond Meat in the late 2010s?

https://www.greenqueen.com.hk/beyond-meat-the-plant-protein-company-rebrand/

Meera Sodha’s vegan recipe for clementine and sesame seed silken tofu

From theguardian.com

A blast of flavour and crunch makes this an ideal light evening meal

In my cookbook East, I wrote a recipe for silken tofu, a fragile, creamy block, topped with a quick blast of pine nuts, pickled chillies, soy sauce and herbs. It was based closely on a dish at My Neighbours the Dumplings in east London, which I loved deeply. It was fast, delicious and filling, and I ate it over and over again for weeks on end with rice. Since then, I’ve always wanted a variation on the formula, and now, seven years later, here it is. It’s spunky thanks to the citrus and ginger, crunchy thanks to the carrot and sesame seeds, and very worthy of consideration as a midweek meal.

Clementine and sesame seed silken tofu


Photograph: Louise Hagger/The Guardian. Food styling: Emily Kydd. Prop styling: Jennifer Kay. Food styling assistant: Eden Owen-Jones.

This is on the light side for an evening meal, so you’ll probably need to bolster it with something else. I like it with fried green beans or sprouting broccoli covered with a simple, quick, stir-together gomae-style sauce that I make by mixing tahini with agave, soy and toasted sesame oil.


Prep 10 min
Cook 10 min
Serves 2


300g silken tofu
2 carrots
 (150g), trimmed and julienned
20g mint, leaves picked
3 tbsp toasted sesame oil
4 tbsp light soy sauce
6 tbsp fresh clementine juice
 (from 1-2 clementines)
2cm x 2cm piece fresh ginger, peeled and finely grated
1 tbsp rice vinegar
30g black and white toasted sesame seeds
1 tsp chipotle flakes
Sushi rice or jasmine rice
, to serve

Carefully take the tofu out of its box, drain well and place on a lipped plate.

Put the carrots and mint in a heatproof bowl. Combine the sesame oil, light soy sauce, clementine juice, grated ginger, rice vinegar, sesame seeds and chipotle flakes in a small saucepan, put it on a low to medium heat and warm through gently for a few minutes; don’t let it come to a boil. Pour the sauce over the carrots and mint, and toss to coat.

Using clean hands, lift up the carrot salad and place it on top of the tofu. Pour the dressing from the bowl all over the top and serve with rice.

https://www.theguardian.com/food/2026/mar/21/clementine-sesame-seed-silken-tofu-vegan-recipe-meera-sodha

6 Best Shredded Cheeses Made Without Cellulose or Anti-Caking Agents

From eatthis.com

By Leah Groth

Many shredded cheeses contain anti-caking agents, but these six brands are made without them

There are lots of shredded cheese options at your local grocery store, but some might be better for you than others. Many shredded cheeses are made with cellulose or anti-caking agents. What is cellulose? “Cellulose is a naturally occurring plant fibre found in fruits, vegetables, and other plant foods. In shredded cheese, it’s typically derived from wood pulp or plant fibres and used in very small amounts to prevent shreds from clumping. It’s considered safe by the FDA and passes through the body as insoluble fibre, meaning it isn’t digested,” explains Tara Collingwood, MS, RDN, CSSD, LD/N, ACSM-CPT, a Board Certified Sports Dietitian and co-author of the Flat Belly Cookbook for Dummies

Anti-caking agents are ingredients added to prevent foods (like shredded cheese) from sticking together. Common examples include cellulose, potato starch, or calcium sulfate. “They help maintain texture and convenience but don’t add nutritional value,” she says.  “Ingredients like cellulose or starch in shredded cheese are safe and used in tiny amounts for functionality, not nutrition. The bigger nutritional considerations are still saturated fat, sodium, and portion size, regardless of whether a cheese contains anticaking agents or not.” If you want to avoid them, here are 7 of the best shredded cheeses made without cellulose or anti-caking agents.

Raw Farm Shredded Cheddar

Raw Farm Shredded Cheddar
Raw Farm

Raw Farm Shredded Cheddar is truly raw, with zero cellulose. “Being raw and free of cellulose may appeal to consumers seeking minimal processing. Nutritionally, it’s still a source of saturated fat and sodium, so portion awareness matters,” says Collingwood.

Whole Foods 365 3-Cheese

Whole Foods 365 3-Cheese
Amazon

While cellulose-free, Whole Foods 365 3-Cheese melts perfectly, per customers. “Cellulose-free products may melt more smoothly, but from a nutrition standpoint, the difference is minimal,” Collingwood says.

Tillamook Farmstyle Cut Shreds

Tillamook Farmstyle Cut Shreds
Tillamook

Tillamook Farmstyle Cut Shreds, which hails from the Tillamook creamery in Oregon, uses starch, not cellulose. “Functionally similar as an anticaking agent, with negligible nutritional impact given the small amounts used,” Collingwood says.

Miyoko’s Organic Vegan Shreds

Miyoko's Organic Vegan Shreds
Miyoko’s Creamery

Miyoko’s Organic Vegan Shreds is a plant-based option with no wood pulp. “Nutritionally very different from dairy cheese.  It has no protein and is higher in added saturated fat (coconut oil) and very little calcium, so it’s not a direct nutritional substitute,” she says.

Organic Valley Thick Cut

Organic Valley Thick Cut
Target

Organic Valley Thick Cut is made with minimal starch, offering it a better melt and texture. “As with most cheeses, watch portion size due to calories, saturated fat, and sodium,” Collingwood recommends.

Applegate Naturals Shredded Cheese

Applegate Naturals Shredded Cheese
Instacart

Applegate Naturals Shredded Cheese is made with clean and natural ingredients. “That can be appealing, but nutritionally it’s still similar to other cheeses,” Collingwood reminds.

https://www.eatthis.com/shredded-cheeses-without-cellulose/