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How to Convert Any Recipe to Vegan

The complete guide

How to Convert Any Recipe to Vegan: The Complete Guide

By Vegan Recipe Converter Β· Published June 19, 2026 Β· 8 min read

Converting a traditional recipe to vegan used to mean guessing which substitutes would work and hoping the dish didn't fall apart. Today, the process is far more predictable. Every common animal-based ingredient β€” eggs, milk, butter, cheese, cream, meat, honey, gelatin β€” has at least one reliable plant-based replacement, and in most cases you can swap them at a known ratio without redesigning the recipe.

This guide walks through the entire conversion process step by step: how to audit a recipe for non-vegan ingredients, how to choose the right substitute for each one, when you need to adjust technique or timing, and how to rescue a conversion that goes sideways. Whether you're adapting a grandmother's lasagna or a random recipe from a magazine, the same framework applies.

Step 1: Audit the Recipe for Non-Vegan Ingredients

Before you swap anything, read through the entire ingredient list and mark every item that comes from an animal. The obvious ones are easy β€” eggs, milk, butter, chicken, beef β€” but a surprising number of recipes contain ingredients that are technically animal-derived without being obviously so. Look for these common hidden ones:

Tip: If you just want the audit done for you, snap a photo of the recipe with our free AI Vegan Recipe Converter β€” it flags 60+ non-vegan ingredients automatically.

Step 2: Replace Eggs

Eggs are the trickiest ingredient to replace because they do different things in different recipes: they bind, they leaven, they add moisture, they provide structure, and they emulsify. The right substitute depends on which of those jobs the egg is doing in your specific recipe.

For binding (cookies, muffins, pancakes, quick breads)

Use a flax egg: 1 tablespoon ground flaxseed meal + 3 tablespoons water, let sit 5–10 minutes until gelled. One flax egg replaces one egg. A chia egg works the same way with ground chia seeds and has a slightly more neutral flavor.

For leavening (light cakes, cupcakes, scones)

Use 1 teaspoon baking soda + 1 tablespoon vinegar (apple cider or white) per egg. The acid-base reaction creates lift. Add it last and bake immediately.

For moisture and density (brownies, dense cakes, muffins)

Use 1/4 cup unsweetened applesauce or 1/4 cup silken tofu blended smooth per egg. Both add moisture and a tender crumb.

For egg whites (meringues, mousses, macarons)

Use aquafaba β€” the liquid from a can of chickpeas. 2 tablespoons of aquafaba equals one egg white, and 3 tablespoons equals one whole egg. Whip it with cream of tartar just like egg whites and it forms stiff peaks.

For a deep dive, see our complete vegan egg substitutes guide with a full comparison chart.

Step 3: Replace Dairy

Milk

Replace cow's milk 1:1 with an unsweetened plant milk. Soy milk is the closest in protein and behaves most like dairy milk in baking. Oat milk is excellent for creamy sauces and lattes. Almond milk is low-calorie but thinner. Coconut milk adds richness for curries and desserts. Always choose unsweetened and unflavored for savory recipes.

Butter

Use vegan butter sticks (not tub spreads) at a 1:1 ratio β€” they're formulated to match the fat and water content of dairy butter. Refined coconut oil also works 1:1 in baking; use refined if you don't want coconut flavor. For sautΓ©ing, olive oil or avocado oil are usually better choices anyway.

Heavy cream

Use full-fat coconut milk or coconut cream 1:1. For a neutral option, blend 1 cup soaked raw cashews + 1/2 cup water until completely smooth β€” this makes a versatile cashew cream that works in sauces, soups, and desserts.

Cheese

For flavor, nutritional yeast adds a savory, cheesy depth β€” use 2–3 tablespoons in place of 1/2 cup of Parmesan. For melting, use store-bought vegan cheese shreds (check ingredients β€” some melt better than others). For a homemade melty option, blend soaked cashews, nutritional yeast, lemon juice, and a little tapioca starch.

Sour cream and yogurt

Use coconut yogurt or soy yogurt 1:1. For sour cream, blend soaked cashews with lemon juice, apple cider vinegar, and a pinch of salt until smooth.

For the full breakdown, see our vegan dairy substitutes guide.

Step 4: Replace Meat

Meat substitution is less about exact ratios and more about matching texture and absorbing flavor. Think about what role meat plays in the dish:

See our vegan meat substitutes guide for cooking methods, marinades, and nutrition comparisons.

Step 5: Replace Honey and Other Sweeteners

Honey is the non-vegan ingredient people most often forget. Replace it with:

Step 6: Watch for Texture and Timing Changes

Most vegan conversions cook in the same time as the original. A few adjustments to keep in mind:

Step 7: Taste and Adjust Seasoning

Plant-based substitutes often have slightly different salt and acidity profiles than their animal counterparts. After converting a recipe, taste it at the end and adjust:

Common Conversion Problems and How to Fix Them

Your cake sank in the middle

This usually means too much moisture or not enough structure. Try switching from applesauce (moist) to aquafaba (leavening), or add 1–2 tablespoons of extra flour. Don't open the oven door during baking.

Your cookies spread too thin

Vegan butter melts faster than dairy butter. Chill the dough for 30 minutes before baking, or swap half the vegan butter for coconut oil, which is solid at room temperature.

Your sauce broke or separated

Cashew cream and coconut milk can split under high heat. Lower the temperature, whisk vigorously, or add a teaspoon of cold water or starch to re-emulsify.

Your "meat" is bland

Plant proteins need more seasoning than animal meat. Double the marinade time, add an umami booster (soy sauce, miso, tomato paste), and don't skip the browning step β€” a hard sear on tofu or tempeh makes a huge difference.

The Fast Way: Let AI Do the Audit

If you'd rather not manually identify and substitute each ingredient, the Vegan Recipe Converter automates the whole process. You take a photo of any recipe β€” from a cookbook, a handwritten card, or a screenshot β€” and the AI reads the text, detects every non-vegan ingredient, and rewrites the entire recipe with specific substitute ratios. You get an original vs. vegan side-by-side comparison, and you can share the result to WhatsApp or save it (Pro). It's free for 2 conversions per month.

A Worked Example: Converting a Classic Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe

Original ingredients: 2 sticks butter, 1 cup brown sugar, 1/2 cup white sugar, 2 eggs, 2 tsp vanilla, 2 1/4 cups flour, 1 tsp baking soda, 1 tsp salt, 2 cups chocolate chips.

Vegan conversion:

Technique note: chill the dough 30 minutes because vegan butter softens faster. Bake at the same temperature and time. The result is indistinguishable from the original in most blind taste tests.

Summary

Converting a recipe to vegan is a repeatable process: audit the ingredients, swap each animal product with the right plant-based alternative for its function, watch for timing changes in baking, and adjust seasoning at the end. Once you've done it a few times, the substitutions become second nature. And when you want to skip the manual work, the AI converter handles the whole thing in seconds.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can any recipe be converted to vegan?

Yes. Nearly every recipe can be converted to vegan by replacing animal-based ingredients with plant-based alternatives. Eggs, dairy, meat, honey, and gelatin all have reliable vegan substitutes. The few exceptions are recipes where an animal product is the structural centerpiece (like a cheese soufflΓ©), but even those can usually be adapted with extra technique.

What is the easiest way to convert a recipe to vegan?

The easiest way is to use an AI recipe converter like the one at veganrecipeconverter.co β€” snap a photo of the recipe and it automatically detects non-vegan ingredients and rewrites the recipe with substitutes. Manually, start by listing every animal product in the recipe, then swap each one using a substitution chart.

Does converting a recipe to vegan change the cooking time?

Usually not significantly. Plant-based substitutes generally cook at the same rate as their animal counterparts. The main exception is vegan baking, where egg-free batters may bake 5–10% faster because they have less protein to set. Check baked goods a few minutes early the first time you convert a recipe.

What are the most common ingredients I need to replace when going vegan?

The five most common are eggs, cow's milk, butter, cheese, and honey. Other frequent ones include heavy cream, yogurt, sour cream, gelatin, meat stock, Worcestershire sauce, and fish sauce. Hidden ingredients to watch for are whey, casein, lactose, and shellac (confectioner's glaze).

Is it cheaper to cook vegan versions of recipes?

Often yes. Plant-based staples like beans, lentils, tofu, oats, and seasonal vegetables are typically cheaper than meat, dairy, and eggs. The biggest cost savings come from replacing meat with legumes or tofu. Specialty products like vegan cheese and mock meats can be pricier, so use them selectively.

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