Your whole food, plant-based life.

Raw Recipe: Simple Almond Cheese

Nut cheeses are a great item to have in your raw food recipe collection. They are tasty, easily support the addition of many herbs and spices, and will impress your raw and non-raw friends a like! There are a couple of different ways to make nut cheeses.

 

You can make delicious nut cheeses with macadamia nuts, cashew nuts and many other nuts and seeds.

 

Macadamia Nut Cheese made with probiotics.

(From the Rawmazing Holiday Book)

Probiotics: Probably the easiest, but most expensive way to make the “cheese”  is to use probiotics. I love how this “cheese” tastes and the texture is wonderful and it is quite fail-proof. The only drawback is the cost of the probiotics. Most recipes require at least a teaspoon, which can be more than half a bottle of capsules. On the plus side, the cheeses are wonderful, the probiotics don’t require advanced preparation.

 

Cashew Cheese made with Rejuvelac

(recipe here: Cheese)

Rejuvelac: Raw Cheeses made with rejuvilac also have great taste and texture but can be a little more temperamental. Plus, you need to add a couple of days to your process to make the rejuvelac. The grain needs to be sprouted first and then made into rejuvelac. It can be a bit time consuming. That said, it makes a great cheese with wonderful, tangy taste and good texture.

 

Simple Almond Cheese (recipe follows)

Simple Cheese: Simple cheese spreads and simple cheeses can be made with just nuts and no fermentation process. I usually prefer these cheeses for spreads, but they can also be firmed up and dehydrated to form the rind.

Different nuts not only taste different, but also will give different textures. Almonds make a clean tasting cheese that is a little grainy. Macadamias make a beautiful, creamy cheese that develops good firm texture. Cashews make a smooth, easy to flavor cheese that has a bit of a softer texture.

Today’s recipe is pretty simple. I started my “cheese” when I got up. I threw the ingredients in the food processor, spooned it into a nut-milk bad and tossed it in the refrigerator. The next morning, I took it out, patted it into a round and tossed it in the dehydrator (to form a “rind”). By the evening, it was ready to go!

I hope I have inspired you to try your hand at nut cheese making. It is fun and tasty!

Soaked almonds with skins removed. It takes a little time but is very easy. They just pop right off.

The almonds should be well blended and smooth.

The mixture in the nut-milk bag, before putting it in the refrigerator.

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270 Comments

  1. ginger wrote on January 7, 2011

    I used a blender (I don’t have a food processor). My cheese turned out smooth. Though I let it run a good amount of time.

    Reply
  2. Karen wrote on January 7, 2011

    Can I use the vitamix instead of the food processor?

    Reply
    • Susan wrote on January 7, 2011

      Sure.

      Reply
  3. Suzanne wrote on January 7, 2011

    I am so going to try this!

    Reply
  4. Peggy wrote on January 7, 2011

    Wow… this blows my mind. Never thought of nut cheeses before! Definitely interesting!

    Reply
  5. Kat wrote on January 7, 2011

    This looks good and sounds simple I want to try making it

    Reply
  6. ginger wrote on January 6, 2011

    wow. i have never made nut cheeses. but so excited to try the simple almond first. curious about the garlic

    Reply
  7. Susan wrote on January 6, 2011

    Emily, they are a raw BBQ cracker that I created yesterday.

    Reply
  8. Dina wrote on January 6, 2011

    wow i’d never heard of nut cheese before. this is very cool. i’d like to try it!

    Reply
  9. Emily wrote on January 6, 2011

    Ummmm… can’t wait to try. What crackers are pictured with it?

    Reply

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