Friday, July 10, 2026

Vegan at Disneyland: The Complete 2026 Guide to Plant-Based Food

From vegansbaby.com

By Diana Edelman

Where to eat vegan at Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure in 2026 — by restaurant, with the exact dishes to order 

Disneyland is a very vegan-friendly destination. 

Over the years, the Anaheim resort has become one of the easier theme parks to eat well at as a plant-based traveller. Both Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure mark every vegan item with a green leaf icon on menus and in the Disneyland app, so you’re never guessing. 

Your guide to eating vegan at Disneyland



How to find vegan food at Disneyland

Before you go, open the Disneyland app and check the menu for wherever you’re planning to eat. Plant-based items are flagged with a small green leaf icon at every quick-service spot, table-service restaurant, and snack cart. Menus change seasonally, so def give it a quick check the morning of your visit rather than relying on last year’s list. A few of the best options (like the vegan Mickey waffles at Plaza Inn) aren’t printed on the regular menu at all, so don’t be afraid to tell your server or the cast member at the counter that you’re vegan and ask what they can do.

Best vegan food in Disneyland Park

Docking Bay 7 Food and Cargo (Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge)

This is the best vegan meal in the park. The Felucian Garden Spread pairs Impossible meatballs with herbed hummus, a tomato-cucumber relish, and pita for around $13. Pair it with Blue or Green Milk from the Milk Stand next door.

Ronto Roasters

Ask for the Ronto-less Garden Wrap, the plant-based version of the park’s popular grab-and-go wrap.

Plaza Inn

Tell the cast member you’re vegan when you’re seated and ask for the vegan Mickey waffles and tofu scramble at breakfast. They exist, even though they’re not on the printed menu. For lunch and dinner, the penne with marinara is the vegan option, usually served with breadsticks, a salad with vinaigrette, and vegan ice cream for dessert.

Carnation Cafe

The house-made veggie burger and the garden salad are both plant-based. For dessert, ask for the brownie à la mode. At breakfast, oatmeal is a safe bet, and the Mickey waffles can be made plant-based on request.

Blue Bayou

Disneyland’s most atmospheric restaurant (the one inside Pirates of the Caribbean) has a vegan menu offering eats like a heirloom tomato and watermelon salad, a pistachio lemon basil pasta as the main, and a vegan crème brûlée tart for dessert. The same vegan crème brûlée shows up at Café Orleans nearby, too.

Tiki Juice Bar

The classic pineapple Dole Whip soft-serve is vegan and dairy-free. And, yeah, it’s still the best vegan snack in the park.

Best vegan food in Disney California Adventure

Lamplight Lounge

For brunch, you can order the vegan potato flautas. Then, for lunch and dinner, there’s a small vegan line-up of a Brussels Caesar salad, an Impossible burger, and a vegan brownie for dessert. As of early 2026, there’s also a new plant-based Bulgogi Bean Salad with cucumber, edamame, chickpeas, and bell peppers in a ginger-scallion dressing.

Award Wieners

Order the Plant-Based Philly Dog. It’s a toasted bun topped with mushrooms, grilled onions and peppers, and vegan crema.

Tips for eating vegan at Disneyland

  • Look for the green leaf icon on menus and in the Disneyland app. It marks every plant-based item park-wide.
  • Some of the best vegan options (Plaza Inn’s waffles, Carnation Cafe’s Mickey waffles) aren’t on the printed menu so always ask.
  • Menus rotate seasonally, so check the app the day of your visit rather than planning entirely off an old list.
  • If you have a table-service reservation, note “vegan” in the special requests when you book so the kitchen is ready for you.

Planning a vegan trip to Disneyland?

Food is only one piece of it — if you want help building out the rest of the trip, from where to stay to how to spend your days, check out our vegan travel planning guide.

https://vegansbaby.com/vegan-at-disneyland-2026-guide/

Will Amy's Kitchen ever go fully vegan? The founders on discontinued favourites, secret new products and more

From creators.yahoo.com

By Robin Raven

Rachel and Andy Berliner opened up about the vegan pot pie fans keep asking for, new products in development, ultra-processed food and the future of the organic brand they built from their kitchen


This story is based on the author's exclusive interview with Amy's Kitchen co-founders Rachel and Andy Berliner.

Nearly four decades before "plant-based" became a buzzword, Rachel and Andy Berliner were standing in their kitchen making vegetable pot pies by hand. Today, Amy's Kitchen is one of the largest family-owned organic food brands in the United States, was just named Organic Company of the Year at Expo West, and uses more than 100 million pounds of organic ingredients every year across 141 products.

In an exclusive interview, the founders got candid about the vegan products customers are begging them to bring back, whether the company will ever go fully vegan, and the new vegan items they're keeping under wraps for now.

It all started with a pot pie and a baby on the way

In the early days, Amy's Kitchen was a true family effort, with Andy and Rachel Berliner cooking at home alongside their young daughter Amy   (Amy's Kitchen)

The Amy's Kitchen origin story began when Rachel was pregnant with daughter Amy. She was on bed rest when Andy went searching for an organic, vegetarian meal that actually tasted good at their local natural grocery store. Nothing measured up, so the couple went back to their own kitchen and got to work on a vegetable pot pie.

"Those first pies were made by hand, and it really was a family effort," Rachel recalled. Her mother, Ellie, helped develop that first original recipe, and the family had modest ambitions. "At the time, we thought maybe we would be a small company making pot pies. We had no idea it would become what Amy's is today."

The first hint that they'd struck a nerve came in the mail. "The first sign that it meant something to people was the handwritten letters that started coming in from customers. And honestly, those letters meant so much to us and inspired us to keep going," Rachel shared.

Andy remembered just how much the early years demanded. "The early years required everything from our family." Their home became part of the business, the kitchen became a test kitchen, and their barn was eventually converted into an office. "We were not building something to sell. We were building something we wanted to last."

Is the vegan vegetable pot pie coming back?

Amy's Kitchen founders Rachel and Andy Berliner with their daughter Amy, the brand's namesake, who serves as a board member and strategic voice guiding the company's next generation   (Amy's Kitchen)

Ask Amy's most devoted vegan fans about their biggest heartbreak, and one answer comes up again and again: the discontinued vegan version of the original vegetable pot pie. I'm among the vegans who savoured every bite of that pot pie every time I made it, and I personally want it back, too. The Berliners have heard the pleas loud and clear.

"The pot pie will always be emotional for us because it is where Amy's began," Rachel said. "We have heard from people who miss the vegan version, and we take that seriously. When people tell us a product matters to them, especially something as personal as comfort food, we listen."

She confirmed it tops the list of most-requested comebacks. "The vegan vegetable pot pie is certainly one we hear about often." Products like the Vegan Rice Mac & Cheeze have also shown the company how deeply people connect with specific recipes once they become part of a routine.

So what actually happens internally when a beloved vegan product disappears? "It is never only one number," Rachel explained. Sales matter because freezer space is limited and ingredients can be hard to source, but the team also weighs customer letters, social comments, retailer feedback, and whether a product still fills an important need.

The vegan community has directly changed Amy's recipes before. The company's Roasted Vegetable Pizza crust used to be made with honey. "When customers reached out and asked us if we could remove the honey to make it vegan, we replaced it with agave. It allowed us to support our vegan consumer, while still making sure our food tasted great for everyone," Rachel noted.

That feedback loop proved itself again when Amy's brought back the original vegan Cheddar-style cheeze recipe in its Rice Mac & Cheeze after fans made their disappointment known. "It reminded us that these products are not just meals to people. They become routines, comfort foods, safe foods, and family favourites," Rachel reflected.

Will Amy's Kitchen ever go completely vegan?

Amy's now offers more than 80 vegan options, from pizzas and burritos to Pad Thai and Vegan Rice Mac & Cheeze  (Amy's Kitchen)  

With more than 80 vegan options already on shelves, plenty of fans wonder if the vegetarian company will eventually go all the way vegan. Rachel offered a thoughtful answer rather than a hard no.

"We do not see vegan and vegetarian as competing ideas. We see them as part of the same larger mission: helping more people eat organic, meatless meals that taste good and easy to prepare," she said.

Andy pointed out that the founders themselves lean heavily plant-based. "We both eat a predominately plant-based diet about 90% of the time, so we are absolutely still committed to our vegan consumers." At the same time, many Amy's dishes were simply never meant to contain dairy in the first place, including the Roasted Sweet Potato & Coconut Curry, Pad Thai, Chinese Noodles & Veggies, and Asian Dumplings.

"So the goal is not to make vegan food feel niche. The goal is to make vegan food feel delicious, familiar and easy, whether someone is fully vegan or just interested in having a meal without dairy," Andy added.

That inclusive approach matters commercially, too. The Good Food Institute reported that global plant-based retail sales reached an estimated $28.9 billion in 2025, even as U.S. plant-based sales dipped for a second straight year. Andy addressed those category headwinds directly. "The broader plant-based category has had some ups and downs, but people have not stopped wanting convenient, meatless, ingredient-conscious meals." He argued that "the products that will keep winning are the ones that do not ask shoppers to compromise on taste or comfort."

Why is vegan cheese so hard to get right?

Anyone who's tried a disappointing dairy-free pizza knows the struggle; the melt, the stretch, and the flavour isn't always great for vegan cheeses. Rachel didn't sugarcoat the challenge behind Amy's signature "cheeze."

"Vegan cheeze is difficult because you are asking plant-based ingredients to behave like dairy, and dairy has very specific qualities," she acknowledged. The team looks at flavour first, then texture, melt, reheating, and how a product holds up from freezer to plate. "We are proud of the progress we have made, but we still see it as a work in progress. That is part of cooking. You keep tasting, improving, and listening."

The popular Vegan Cheeze Pizza Snacks show where that work is paying off, but Andy sees a bigger prize than the snack aisle. "Our Vegan Cheeze Pizza Snacks are very popular, but we do not think the vegan opportunity is limited to snacks." He added, "The biggest opportunity is making vegan food feel less like an alternative and more like something everyone at the table wants to eat."

The secret new vegan products coming in 2026

The Berliners are teasing something big, even if they won't spill the details yet. The focus is proving that convenient vegan food can be made with high-quality, organic ingredients, and without ultra-processed shortcuts.

"We have a few new vegan products in development that we think capture that balance beautifully. We can't reveal them just yet, but I think our customers are going to love what's coming," they revealed.

That anti-shortcut philosophy is having a moment. As scrutiny of ultra-processed foods intensifies, Amy's joined the Non-UPF Verified program, a third-party certification developed by the Non-GMO Project that evaluates not just what's in a food but how it's actually made.

"It means someone outside of Amy's is looking not only at the ingredient list, but also at how the food is made," Andy explained. Most of Amy's products are already Non-UPF Verified across frozen meals, burritos, soups, chili, beans, pizzas, and snacks. "Unlike other companies that are scrambling to change their formulas, we didn't have to change a thing."

He framed the broader cultural shift as validation of a 40-year bet. "We have spent nearly 40 years trying to prove that convenience, quality and integrity do not have to be trade-offs." From the beginning, the approach has meant "no shortcuts, no synthetic flavours, and food we would feel good serving our own family."

What does USDA Organic actually mean right now?

Rachel Berliner, who grew up eating organic from her family's garden, says the USDA Organic seal remains one of the most meaningful food standards available    (Amy's Kitchen)

As mentioned above, Amy's was just named Organic Company of the Year at Expo West by Organic Voices and The Organic Center, recognition tied to a $76 billion organic sector that keeps growing even as the certification faces political scrutiny. Andy came to the seal's defence without hesitation.

"Organic is not just a marketing word. It is a federal standard with rules, documentation, audits and certification behind it," he emphasized. That's backed up by the USDA's National Organic Program, which requires verification by accredited certifying agents, annual inspections, and detailed recordkeeping before any product can carry the seal.

Amy's history with the standard runs deep. The company was organic before national certification existed and advocated alongside other movement leaders for its creation. Andy's message to confused shoppers was direct: "Keep asking questions, but do not dismiss the seal. USDA Organic is still one of the most meaningful food standards we have."

Amy's is coming to Costco, and Gen Z is paying attention

Amy's organic frozen meals are reaching more shoppers than ever, with the brand expanding into more than 150 Costco warehouses    (Amy's Kitchen)

Amy's just landed a major expansion into more than 150 Costco warehouses, starting in Los Angeles, the Bay Area, and Texas. It follows a year in which the company brought organic meals into 45 million new households, with vegan products playing a key role in how people discover the brand.

"Often there is only one member of the family that is vegetarian or vegan and the rest of the family discovers Amy's through them," Andy observed.

The customer base spans generations, too. Rachel described decades-long loyalists who still write letters alongside younger shoppers who care about ingredients, transparency, animal welfare, and climate. "What connects those groups is that they want food they can trust without having to cook everything from scratch."

The company has also faced hard moments, including worker concerns at its facilities. Andy addressed that chapter head-on, describing more regular safety risk assessments, stronger communication, and more ways for employees to shape their work environment. "In 2024, we exceeded our company-wide safety incident reduction goal and brought our recordable rate below 2, which is 43% lower than industry average in specialty frozen food."

Asked what they'd tell their 1987 selves, Rachel kept it playful. "Keep going. People are going to need more than pot pies." Then she turned sincere. "We learned very early that if people are asking for better food, you go back to the kitchen."

Andy summed up the road ahead in one sentence that doubles as a promise to every vegan fan waiting on that pot pie. "The next chapter is about protecting what made Amy's special, while ensuring we evolve for the next generation."

https://creators.yahoo.com/lifestyle/story/will-amys-kitchen-ever-go-fully-vegan-the-founders-on-discontinued-favorites-secret-new-products-and-more-221800094.html