crispy vegan snack

Vegan Breaded Cheese Bombs

vegan breaded cheese bombs

There are snacks you make because something indulgent is needed. And then there are snacks like these Vegan Breaded Cheese Bombs — the kind that come out of the oil or air fryer shatteringly golden, and when you bite into them reveal a molten, gooey center of melted vegan cheese that pulls into long strands and makes the entire effort feel completely, absolutely worth it. This is that snack. The one that makes people stop talking the moment they bite into the first one. The one that disappears in minutes and has everyone asking for the recipe before the plate is empty.

These cheese bombs are made by wrapping cubes of vegan mozzarella in a simple dough or coating, double breading them in a panko crust, freezing briefly to lock the cheese in place, then frying or air frying until the exterior is deeply golden and the inside has melted into a gooey, stretchy center. The brief freeze is the key step — it ensures the cheese stays contained during cooking rather than leaking out before the crust has had time to set.

What makes these bombs so outstanding is the contrast between the shatteringly crispy exterior and the molten, creamy, pulling cheese center — a textural combination so specifically satisfying that it is genuinely difficult to eat just one.

This recipe is 100% vegan, ready in about 35 minutes including the freeze, and absolutely wonderful served immediately while the cheese is still melted and the crust is at its crispiest, with a marinara or ranch dipping sauce alongside.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeFreeze TimeCook TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
15 mins15 mins8 mins38 mins4~290 kcal

Ingredients

For the Cheese Bombs

  • 250g vegan mozzarella block, cut into 2cm cubes (must be a firm, meltable block variety)

For the Coating

  • ½ cup (60g) all-purpose flour
  • ½ cup (120ml) plant milk
  • 1 tsp apple cider vinegar
  • ½ cup (50g) panko breadcrumbs
  • 2 tbsp nutritional yeast
  • ½ tsp garlic powder
  • ½ tsp smoked paprika
  • ½ tsp salt

For Frying

  • 3 cups (720ml) neutral vegetable oil (for deep frying), or oil spray for air frying

For the Marinara Dipping Sauce

  • 1 cup (240ml) tomato passata
  • 1 clove garlic, minced
  • 1 tsp olive oil
  • ½ tsp dried oregano
  • Salt and pepper

Optional Variations

  • Add dried herbs to the panko coating for extra flavor
  • Mix chili flakes into the breadcrumbs for a spicy version
  • Use a smoked vegan cheese for a deeper, more complex flavor

Instructions

  1. Prepare the cheese cubes. Cut the vegan mozzarella block into 2cm cubes. Place on a parchment-lined tray and freeze for 15 minutes — this step is non-negotiable.
  2. Set up the coating stations. Combine the plant milk and apple cider vinegar and let sit for 2 minutes. Place the flour in one shallow dish, the plant milk mixture in a second, and the panko breadcrumbs mixed with nutritional yeast, garlic powder, smoked paprika, and salt in a third.
  3. Double coat the cheese bombs. Working quickly with the cold cheese cubes, dredge each one in flour, then dip in the plant milk mixture, then coat in the panko mixture, pressing firmly. Repeat the plant milk and panko steps for a second coat — the double coating is essential for preventing leakage during cooking.
  4. Freeze again briefly. Return the coated bombs to the freezer tray for 5 more minutes while the oil heats.
  5. Fry or air fry. For deep frying, heat oil to 375°F (190°C) and fry the bombs in small batches for 2–3 minutes until deeply golden all over. For air frying, spray generously with oil and air fry at 400°F (200°C) for 6–8 minutes until deeply golden.
  6. Make the marinara sauce. Heat the olive oil in a small pan. Add the garlic and cook for 30 seconds. Add the passata, oregano, salt, and pepper. Simmer for 5 minutes.
  7. Serve immediately. Serve the hot cheese bombs with the marinara sauce while the cheese is still molten inside.

Pro Tips

  • Use a firm, meltable block vegan mozzarella — pre-shredded vegan cheese does not hold together or melt in the same way.
  • Do not skip the initial freeze — this is what keeps the cheese from melting out through the unset coating in the first moments of cooking.
  • Double coat without exception — a single coat is rarely thick enough to contain the melting cheese throughout the full cooking time.
  • Work quickly when coating the cold cheese — the warmth of your hands begins to soften the cheese, so coat and return to the freezer promptly.
  • Serve within 2 minutes of cooking — melted vegan cheese firms up faster than dairy cheese as it cools.

Why the Freeze Step Is So Important

When vegan cheese meets high heat it melts rapidly — faster than the outer crust can set if the cheese starts at room temperature. Freezing the cheese before coating means the cheese begins at a much lower temperature when it enters the fryer, giving the outer crust 30–45 additional seconds to set into a solid shell before the cheese reaches melting temperature. Those extra seconds are what make the difference between a cheese bomb that holds its shape and delivers a molten center, and one that leaks cheese into the oil before the crust has formed.


Flavor Variations

  • Spicy Cheese Bombs: Add chili flakes and smoked paprika to the breadcrumb coating and serve with a chipotle dipping sauce.
  • Herb Cheese Bombs: Mix dried Italian herbs into the panko coating for a more herbaceous, fragrant version.
  • Jalapeño Cheese Bombs: Press a thin slice of jalapeño against each cheese cube before coating for a spicy surprise inside each bomb.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving — 4 bombs)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~290 kcal9g24g2g18g

Storage

  • Best fresh: These bombs are at their absolute best within 2 minutes of cooking while the cheese is still fully molten.
  • Refrigerator: Store cooked bombs for up to 2 days. Reheat in an air fryer at 375°F (190°C) for 3–4 minutes — the cheese will remelt inside.
  • Freezer: Freeze uncooked, coated bombs on a tray until solid then transfer to a freezer bag for up to 1 month. Fry or air fry directly from frozen, adding 2–3 extra minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What vegan mozzarella works best?

A firm, block-style vegan mozzarella specifically marketed as meltable produces the most satisfying molten center. Brands vary widely in melt quality — check reviews or packaging for melting claims before purchasing.

Can I bake these instead of frying?

Yes — bake at 425°F (220°C) for 10–12 minutes. The result will be slightly less golden and the cheese may not melt as dramatically as in frying, but still delicious.

Can I make these gluten-free?

Yes — use a gluten-free flour and gluten-free panko breadcrumbs. All other ingredients are naturally gluten-free.


Tried this recipe? Leave a comment below and let us know how it turned out! Tag us on Instagram and Facebook — we love seeing your plant-powered creations. Looking for more addictive vegan snack and appetizer recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!

Vegan Mediterranean Spinach and Feta Cheese Chips

vegan mediterranean spinach and feta cheese chips

There are snacks you make because something crunchy is needed between meals. And then there are snacks like these Vegan Mediterranean Spinach and Feta Cheese Chips — the kind that come out of the oven as thin, shatteringly crisp rounds studded with flecks of spinach and crumbled vegan feta, intensely savory and deeply herbaceous, so satisfyingly crunchy and so completely addictive that they replace every other snack in the house the moment they appear. This is that snack. The one that disappears before the baking sheet has cooled. The one that people eat standing at the kitchen counter before it even makes it to a serving bowl.

These cheese chips are made by mixing crumbled vegan feta with finely chopped spinach, herbs, and a binding of chickpea flour and nutritional yeast into small rounds, baked at high heat until the cheese has melted and crisped into thin, golden, lacy crisps that shatter on the first bite and deliver an intensely savory, salty, herbaceous flavor that is genuinely more interesting than any commercial chip available.

What makes these chips so outstanding is the vegan feta — its salty, tangy character concentrates dramatically during baking as moisture evaporates, producing a chip with a flavor intensity that is far beyond what the mild pre-baking mixture would suggest.

This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free, ready in just 25 minutes, and absolutely wonderful served warm from the oven as a snack, alongside soup, or crumbled over salads as an extraordinary savory topping.


Recipe Information

Prep TimeCook TimeTotal TimeServingsCalories
10 mins15 mins25 mins4~140 kcal

Ingredients

For the Cheese Chips

  • 200g vegan feta, crumbled into small pieces
  • 1 cup (30g) fresh spinach, very finely chopped
  • 2 tbsp chickpea flour
  • 2 tbsp nutritional yeast
  • 1 tsp dried oregano
  • ½ tsp garlic powder
  • ½ tsp dried thyme
  • ¼ tsp black pepper
  • ¼ tsp chili flakes (optional)
  • 1 tbsp olive oil

Optional Add-ins

  • 1 tbsp sun-dried tomatoes, very finely diced
  • 1 tsp lemon zest for brightness
  • 1 tbsp fresh dill, finely chopped instead of dried thyme
  • A pinch of smoked paprika

To Serve

  • Alongside hummus for dipping
  • Crumbled over Greek salad
  • On top of soups as a crunchy garnish
  • With vegan tzatziki alongside
  • As a standalone snack with olives and roasted peppers

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven. Preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C). Line two large baking sheets with parchment paper — do not use a silicone mat as parchment produces a crispier bottom.
  2. Finely chop the spinach. Chop the fresh spinach as finely as possible — almost to a mince. Larger pieces of spinach create uneven chips that do not crisp uniformly. Press between paper towels to remove any excess moisture.
  3. Make the chip mixture. In a bowl combine the crumbled vegan feta, finely chopped spinach, chickpea flour, nutritional yeast, oregano, garlic powder, thyme, black pepper, chili flakes if using, and olive oil. Mix thoroughly until everything is evenly combined into a cohesive, slightly sticky mixture.
  4. Shape the chips. Drop tablespoon-sized mounds of the mixture onto the prepared baking sheets, spacing them at least 5cm apart. Flatten each mound with the back of a spoon or your fingers into a thin, even round approximately 5–6cm in diameter and no more than 4–5mm thick. The thinner the chip, the crispier the result.
  5. Bake until crispy. Bake for 12–15 minutes until the chips are deeply golden, the edges are beginning to darken slightly, and the surface looks dry and set. The chips will not look completely crispy in the oven — they crisp further as they cool.
  6. Cool on the tray. Let the chips cool completely on the baking sheets before removing — they are fragile when hot and firm up into crisp, shatteringly crunchy rounds as they cool. Do not attempt to move them until fully cooled.

Pro Tips

  • Make the chips as thin as possible — thickness is the enemy of crispiness in cheese chips. Press firmly and evenly to achieve the thinnest possible round without holes forming.
  • Chop the spinach very finely and press dry — large wet pieces of spinach prevent the chip from crisping evenly and create soft patches.
  • Let them cool fully on the tray before moving — vegan cheese-based chips are softer when hot than dairy cheese crisps and need the cooling period to fully firm up.
  • Do not overcrowd the baking sheets — chips need space and airflow to crisp properly rather than steam from neighboring chips.

Why Vegan Feta Makes Such Outstanding Chips

The quality that makes vegan feta ideal for baking into chips is the same quality that makes it challenging in other applications — its relatively high moisture content compared to some other vegan cheeses. In chip making this moisture evaporates rapidly in the hot oven, concentrating the salty, tangy flavor dramatically and allowing the remaining protein and fat to crisp and set into a firm, shatteringly thin round. The chickpea flour acts as both binder and additional crisping agent, providing structure that prevents the chip from collapsing as the moisture leaves.


Flavor Variations

  • Kalamata Olive and Feta Chips: Add finely minced kalamata olives to the mixture for a deeper, brinier, more intensely Mediterranean flavor.
  • Za’atar Feta Chips: Replace the dried oregano and thyme with za’atar seasoning for a Middle Eastern-inspired version with beautiful herbal complexity.
  • Sundried Tomato and Basil Chips: Add very finely diced sun-dried tomatoes and dried basil for a Caprese-inspired version with a slight sweetness against the salty feta.

Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)

CaloriesProteinCarbsFiberFat
~140 kcal6g8g2g10g

Storage

  • Room temperature: Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days. These chips soften slightly during storage — return to a 375°F (190°C) oven for 4–5 minutes to restore crispiness if needed.
  • Freezer: Not recommended — the texture does not survive freezing and thawing well.
  • Best fresh: Like all homemade chips, these are at their absolute peak within 30 minutes of baking and cooling, when the crispiness is at its maximum.

Frequently Asked Questions

What vegan feta works best for this recipe?

A firm, crumbly vegan feta that holds its shape when handled produces the best chips — avoid very soft or creamy vegan feta styles that are too wet to crisp properly.

Why are my chips soft instead of crispy?

Soft chips are caused by chips that are too thick, spinach that was not dried thoroughly, or chips removed from the oven before fully baked. Make the chips as thin as possible, press the spinach very dry, and bake until the edges are noticeably golden. Remember the chips also crisp further as they cool.

Can I use frozen spinach?

Yes — thaw completely and squeeze extremely thoroughly until almost completely dry before chopping and using. Frozen spinach releases significantly more water than fresh and must be drier than seems necessary before adding to the mixture.


Tried this recipe? Leave a comment below and let us know how it turned out! Tag us on Instagram and Facebook — we love seeing your plant-powered creations. Looking for more addictive vegan snack and appetizer recipes? Browse all recipes on Easy Vegan Recipes — new recipes posted every single week!