Say cheese. But is it? Lab-made non-dairy breakthrough acts, tastes and cooks like cheese - Action News
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Kitchener-Waterloo

Say cheese. But is it? Lab-made non-dairy breakthrough acts, tastes and cooks like cheese

It slices, it dices and it melts. But is it cheese? University of Guelph researchers are working on a non-dairy "cheese analogue" that they think is more nutritious and better for cooking than many plant-based cheese products currently on the market.

University of Guelph researchers develop plant-based cheese alternative

University of Guelph researcher Stacie Dobson and professor Alejandro Marangoni have been working on a 'cheese analogue' a non-dairy cheese using plant-based ingredients. (Andrew Coppolino/CBC)

It looks like cheese, melts like cheese, evenstretches like cheese. But it's not cheese.At least, not a cheese made from milk.

Researchers in the Department of Food Science at the University of Guelph, Ont. have been working on a "cheese analogue" a non-dairy cheese that they are confident is more nutritious and better suited for a variety of cooking applications than many non-dairy cheese products currently on the market.

"This is a new plant-based cheese. A lot of other products don't stretch or melt, or have [milk-based cheese's] high nutritional value. We're using the fundamental knowledge that we have about plant-protein ingredients to create something that has the desired texture and taste," said researcher Stacie Dobson, a Ph.D. student in food science at the university.

For several years, Dobson has been creating iterations ofplant-based cheeseand testing them in foodssuch asgrilledsandwiches, striving to perfect the recipe.

Advising Dobson in her research is Alejandro Marangoni, Canada Research Chair and professor of food, health and aging in Guelph's food science department.

Samples of experimental plant-based cheese await the ultimate test at the University of Guelph lab: Can it melt and get gooey in a grilled sandwich like dairy cheese? (Andrew Coppolino/CBC)

"The work that Dobson and the rest of us are doing here in the lab is to improve on the nutritional properties, increasing protein content, increasing micro-nutrient content as well as improving the functionality of the product," Marangoni said.

Building blocks of plant-based cheese

The team uses familiar kitchen tools includinga hotplate,spatula, cutting board andknife. But there'salso a "texture analyzer," a machine that mimics chewing and provides data about properties such as hardness, chewiness and springiness. Dobson's main ingredients are a plant protein, starch, coconut oil, salt, lactic acid and water.

"Most of the foods that you eat are proteins, starches and carbohydrates, and fat. Those ingredients, depending on how we mix them together, are the same building blocks that we're using to make plant-based cheese," Dobson said.

Understanding the intrinsic qualities of the ingredients allows Dobson to create recipes that meet the needs of various culinary applications the functionality of the "cheese."

"With food science, we can change the properties of the cheese. I can make it a drier texture similar to Parmesan versus one that you want to be ooey-gooey like mozzarella, or something like a cheese slice," she said.

Grilled cheese test

On the lab bench are a half-dozen labelled bags containing bits of shredded white "cheese" that look like what you might find in a grocery store dairy case.

Stacie Dobson preps a grilled cheese sandwich using the product they've created in the lab. Shredded, it looks just like cheese. (Andrew Coppolino/CBC)

Dobsonswitcheson the hot plate and readies a frying pan; she spreads margarine on slices of German sourdough bread, loadssome plant-based cheeseonthe lower slice and crowns itwith another bread slice. She thenplaces the experimental sandwichinto the pan.

In about the same time it would take anyone to make a grilled cheese sandwich at home,Dobson has flipped the cheese lab sourdough sandwich a couple of times and cooked itto a golden brown.

Bits of the cheesethat have hit the hot pan melt and then get crispy, like the "cheese skirt" of anymelted cheeseburger or sandwichthat's been seared on a flat-top grill.

When the bread slices are tentatively pulled apart, strings of cheese stretch between the two slices. Acting like dairy cheese when cooked is the latest labadvancement.

Next step: retail-level production

Among your neighbourhood grocery store's current plant-based cheeses are products by Daiya, a Vancouver-based manufacturer of dairy-free foods, and a partial funder of Dobson and Marangoni's research. The company will use the University of Guelph technology and scientific developments in the manufacture of plant-based foods.

Stacie Dobson pulls the pieces of bread apart in the grilled cheese sandwich to show the 'cheese analogue' melts and becomes stringy like cheese. (Andrew Coppolino/CBC)

"The next steps are to begin the scaling [formanufacture] of the product and hopes to reach retail-level production," Dobson says.

Environmental motivator

Creating a delicious, plant-based cheese is first and foremost for the lab; however, reducing the impact that food production has on the environment is a close second, according to Marangoni.

"We live in very critical times in our world right now. One of our main motivations is to improve the sustainability of our food supply. We're not here to replace animal products with plant-based, but rather to create a variety in which we decrease our impact just because we are so many humans in the world," he said.

Marangoni, citing the latest report from the Good Food Institute, saysthe demand for animal-based products will reach 400 milliontonnes by 2030.

"We will be close to only replacing six per cent [of that]. It's a gigantic transition that would have to take place. We need to produce enormous amounts of plant protein and starches and build factories that can produce these products," he said.

But does it taste like cheese?

When I took a bite, Dobson's grilled "cheese" sandwich was crispy on the outside and creamy and gooey inside with hot cheese that had good "stretch."

You wouldn't have been able to tell it was a plant-based productand, as Marangoni adds, you're also getting less fat in your diet.

Can this cheese analogue, still being developed in the lab, replacea nice chunk of Beemster or a creamy Havarti? Well, it's really not designed or intended to do that, say the researchers.

"To me, this cheese analogue gets there. It doesn't exactly mimic a dairyproduct, but for most industrial applications," he saidsuch as in cooked products or even retail burgers or grilled sandwiches "I think you'd have a really hard time telling our plant-based product from the animal-based one."