Stop Calling Vegan Food “Fake”

Vegan cheese is cheese. Vegan meat is meat. Let’s get on with it.

Tim Donnelly
Published in
7 min readOct 28, 2019

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Image: Peakpx

Michaela Grob posted a framed sign on the wall of Riverdel, her gourmet vegan cheese shop in Brooklyn, that both assuages the believers and challenges the doubters. It lists an ancient definition for the word “cheese” that traces back to its Indo-European root, which just meant “to ferment, become sour.”

The sign welcomes visitors into New York City’s first dedicated vegan cheese shop, which specializes in artisanal items like cashew truffle and macadamia-based fresh mozzarella, plus a sandwich counter with versions of deli favorites like bacon, egg and cheese and a McMuffin.

What you don’t find on the sign, or any description of her products, is the word “fake, as in, “fake cheese,” the oft-used shorthand way to refer to a plant-based alternative. “Fake” has been in the vegan nomenclature for years, dating back to the woeful era of frozen Boca burgers, pasty soy cheeses, fakin’ bacon and other foods that were were meant to be one-to-one imitations. Grob finds it a little offensive.

When we say “fake” elsewhere, we mean a tacky pretender: fake nails, fake blood, fake plastic trees, fake friends.

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