Oat, almond, soy, and other bases verified to source.
Gums, stabilizers, and added vitamins reviewed for status.
Labeled pareve when produced on dedicated equipment.
Oat, almond, soy, coconut, and other plant milks are marketed on their simplicity, but each one is a formulated beverage that pairs a plant base with oils, stabilizing gums, added vitamins, and often flavors and sweeteners. The certification stakes are unusually high here because so many buyers choose plant milks specifically to have a reliable pareve, non-dairy option — which means the pareve designation must be verified at the ingredient and equipment level, not simply assumed from the product’s name. As part of our beverages certification program, we verify both the composition of every plant milk and the integrity of its non-dairy status.
The base — milled oats, almonds, soybeans, coconut, rice, or pea protein — is processed with water, and oat and grain milks in particular use enzymes to break down starches into the naturally sweet, smooth liquid consumers expect. Those enzymes are grown on culture media that must be reviewed, as we discuss in our guide to whether enzymes are kosher. We confirm the source of the base and every processing enzyme or aid used to make it.
To achieve a milk-like body, plant milks rely on gums (gellan, locust bean, guar), emulsifiers, and added oils. Emulsifiers such as mono- and diglycerides can be animal- or plant-derived, gums are fermentation products with their own media questions, and oils must be traced to acceptable sources. We review the full stabilizer and oil system in each formula rather than treating “plant-based” as a guarantee of acceptability.
Plant milks are typically fortified with calcium and vitamins A, D, B12, and others to match the nutrition profile of dairy milk, and vitamin premixes are a frequently overlooked kosher concern. Vitamin D is commonly derived from lanolin or fish sources, and vitamins arrive on carriers such as gelatin or non-kosher oils, as we explain in our guide to whether vitamins are kosher. We verify every fortification premix and its carrier.
The whole appeal of plant milk depends on a trustworthy pareve status, and confirming it means ruling out dairy at both the ingredient and equipment level, as we cover in our pareve, dairy & meat guide. A stray dairy-derived flavor, emulsifier, or shared line can undermine a pareve claim, so we treat the designation as something to be proven for each product.
Many plant-milk producers run their lines in co-packing facilities that also process dairy beverages, or run multiple plant bases through the same equipment. We assess this sharing carefully and set cleaning or dedication protocols so that a pareve, non-dairy carton is genuinely free of dairy contact from blending through filling.
Whether you make oat, almond, soy, coconut, or multi-blend milks and barista formulations, we build certification around your base, your stabilizer and fortification systems, and the pareve status your buyers count on. Our team verifies every ingredient and confirms your equipment so your non-dairy claim is one shoppers can rely on. To begin, request a free, no-obligation quote.