List of vegetarian and vegan companies — BrandWiki
List of vegetarian and vegan companies
This is a list of vegetarian and vegan companies that do not use animal products or animal-based products in their goods. Such companies include food manufacturers and cosmetics companies, among others.
Vegetarian and vegan companies
General
Adyar Anandha Bhavan – restaurant company offering snacks and sweets
Amy's Kitchen – family-owned, privately held company in Petaluma, California, that manufactures vegetarian organic food and non-GMO convenience and frozen foods.
Bikanervala – vegetarianIndian sweets and snacks manufacturer based in Delhi, India.
The EVERY Company – produces several vegan alternatives, most notably bioidentical egg whites through a fermentation process.[1][2]
Eat JUST, Inc. – founded in 2011 as Hampton Creek Foods, Inc. Several products, including non-GMO, egg-free, gluten-free, Kosher spread and dressing. Just Mayo
Dairy, milk substitutes and drinks
Alpro – European company based in Belgium that markets organic and non-organic, non-genetically modified,[3][4]soy based food and drink products.[5] Alpro became a division of Danone with its 2016 acquisition of WhiteWave Foods.
Beyond Meat – producers of mass-market pea protein-based products designed to replace animal protein. (El Segundo, California)
Boca Burgers – a soy protein and wheat glutenveggie burger manufactured by Boca Foods, a subsidiary of Kraft Foods.[8][9]
Fry Group Foods – family-owned manufacturer of vegan meat substitutes founded by South Africans Wally and Debbie Fry in 1991.
Gardein – meat-free foods developed by CanadianYves Potvin (formerly of Yves Deli Cuisine) as Garden Protein International, manufactured from soy, wheat, grains and vegetables, including
Others and unsorted
JUST, Inc. – founded in 2011 as Hampton Creek Foods, Inc. Several products, including non-GMO, egg-free, gluten-free, Kosher spread and dressing. Just Mayo launched in 2013.
La Loma Foods – formerly Loma Linda Foods. Food manufacturer of "Loma Linda" brand vegetarian and vegan foods.[12] Acquired in 1991 by Morningstar Farms originator, Ohio's Worthington Foods, which was then acquired, in 1999, by Kellogg's and then, in 2015, by the Atlantic Natural Foods Company (Meatless Select, Caroline's brands), of Nashville, North Carolina.[13][14][15]
Cosmetics and skin care
Beauty Without Cruelty – British company that manufactures vegancosmetics,[32][33] which contain no animal products, and are not tested on animals.[34]
Lush – cosmetics company that produces creams, soaps, shampoos, shower gels, lotions, moisturizers, scrubs, masks and other cosmetics using only vegetarian or vegan recipes.
Tropic Skincare – British natural skincare and cosmetics company.
Follow Your Heart – makers of Vegenaise and other vegan and vegetarian food products.
Food For Life Global – a non-profit vegan food relief organization founded in 1995 to serve as the headquarters for Food for Life projects. Food For Life engages in various sorts of hunger relief, including outreach to the homeless, provision for disadvantaged children throughout India, and provision for victims of natural disasters around the world.
Goshen Alimentos – Brazilian vegetarian and vegan food manufacturer.
Happy Family – manufacturer of vegetarian, organic Happy Baby foods.
Nature's Fynd – produces vegan foods, meatless and dairy-free, using nutritional fungi protein.
Daiya – Canadian dairy alternative food company located in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Earth's Own Food Company – Canadian health food manufacturing company that manufactures the So Good soy beverage in Canada owned by the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
Eden Foods Inc. – organic food company in the United States[7] that produces the Edensoy line of organic soy milk.
Innocent Drinks – produces and purveys smoothies and juice products.
Oatly – oat-based dairy substitutes founded in Sweden.
Silk – American manufacturer of dairy substitutes. Initially a manufacturer of soy milk, but has since expanded to other dairy substitutes such as almond milk, cashew milk, coconut milk, and oat milk.
Tofutti – American vegan cheese and ice cream company.
Make My Day Foods Inc – manufacturer of the Veggie Puck, founded in 2016 in Toronto, Canada.
MeliBio – manufacturer of Mellody vegan honey from Oakland, California.
Miyoko's Creamery – creates non-dairy products; established in 2014 by Miyoko Schinner.
Morning Star Farms – Worthington Foods of Ohio developed vegetarian, soy-based meat alternative food products.[17] In 1999, Worthington Foods was acquired by Kellogg's and then, in 2015, by the Atlantic Natural Foods Company, without the Morning Star brand.[18][19] In the 21st century, Morning Star manufactures a variety of vegetarian foods.
Nayonaise – founded in Leominster, Massachusetts, in 1977 as Nasoya Foods, Inc., acquired by Vitasoy in 1990, which was then acquired by Pulmuone Co., Ltd. in 2016.
Perfect Day – American manufacturer of whey and casein produced for dairy via fermentation in bioreactors.
Plamil Foods – British manufacturer of vegan food products.[20]
Ripple Foods – California producer of non-gmo, gluten-free, soy-free, non-dairy, pea protein-based Ripple dairy alternatives, made without carrageenans.[21]
Sabra – U.S.-based Israeli company which produces dips such as hummus, guacamole and other food products.[22] All Sabra products are certified kosher and vegetarian.[23][24][25]
Sahmyook Foods – South Korean food company producing a large range of soy milks and vegetarian products,[26] which is owned by the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
So Good – manufacturer of soy beverages, foods, and desserts.
Somenoya – manufacturer of tofu and eco-friendly soy-based foods located in Chuo Ward, Tokyo.
Sweet Earth Foods – manufacturer of vegan, ready-made meals based in Moss Landing, California. Acquired by Nestlé in 2017.
Veganz – world's first vegan supermarket chain, headquartered in Berlin, Germany.[30]
Violife – vegan cheese Thessalonica, Greece.
WhiteWave Foods – plant-based foods and beverages, and organic produce distributed throughout North America and Europe. WhiteWave was purchased by Danone on 7 July 2016, and was rebranded as DanoneWave, then subsequently rebranded as Danone North America, in 2018.[31]
14.Shurtleff, W. Soyinfo Center: History of Soybeans and Soyfoods, 1100 B.C. to the 1980s "Loma Linda Foods: Work with Soyfoods" (chapter of unpublished manuscript); by William Shurtleff and Akiko Aoyagi; Lafayette, California, 2004.^
15.Shurtleff, W.] Soyinfo Center: History of Soybeans and Soyfoods, 1100 B.C. to the 1980s "Worthington Foods (1939 – ): Work With Soyfoods" (chapter of unpublished manuscript); by William Shurtleff and Akiko Aoyagi; Lafayette, California, 2004.^