When I first began rebuilding my health decades ago, I had to face a hard truth: the foods I grew up loving weren’t loving me back. As someone who once lived on ice cream, M&Ms, and whatever convenience food fit into my programmer lifestyle, I had no idea how deeply blood sugar swings, inflammation, and poor metabolic health were affecting my energy and long-term health.
After losing my mom far too young, and watching conventional nutrition advice fail both of us, I made a commitment to figure out how to make healing food taste amazing.
That’s why recipes like this raw vegan, gluten free lasagna matter so much to me. They’re a bridge between comfort and transformation. You get the flavors you crave, the satisfaction of a rich, layered dish, and the peace of knowing every bite is working for you and your body. It is good for your hormones, your blood sugar, and your long-term metabolic health. This is empowerment disguised as deliciousness.
What Is Dairy Free, Gluten Free, Raw Lasagna Made Of?
This vegan, keto lasagna swaps the heavy pasta, dairy, and refined oils for fresh zucchini “noodles,” homemade marinara, rich dairy free nut cheese, and layers of fresh greens. Zucchini brings structure and lightness. The marinara provides a deep tomato flavor. The dairy-free cheese adds creamy satisfaction without hormones or saturated fats. And the spinach and basil add color and freshness. Every layer is intentional with flavor first and benefits built in.
How Do You Make This Vegan, Keto Lasagna?
Making this dairy free lasagna feels more like assembling art than “cooking.” You start by slicing the zucchini paper-thin, mandolin-style, so it mimics real pasta sheets. (You can also use a knife or even a vegetable peeler). A gentle massage with lemon or salt softens the slices just enough to fold into silky layers.
Then you begin building: a swath of bright marinara, a creamy layer of nut cheese, a generous blanket of spinach. Repeat the stack, swirl a final kiss of cheese into the sauce, and decorate with basil or tomatoes if you're feeling fancy.
A short visit to the dehydrator warms and melds the flavors, giving you that cozy lasagna vibe without the heaviness. It’s simple and elegant.
How Do You Customize This Recipe?
This lasagna is endlessly flexible.
If you want a different “pasta”:
Use butternut squash ribbons, yellow squash noodles, shaved daikon sheets, or even thin-sliced turnips or jicama for a crisp, low-glycemic alternative.
If you don’t have a dehydrator:
Serve it as a fully raw layered lasagna. It is still delicious. You can also warm it in the oven on low or even bake it, if you wish.
If you need lower oxalates:
Swap spinach for arugula, Romaine, bok choy, lightly wilted cabbage, or massaged lacinato kale.
If you want extra richness:
Add olives, a drizzle of cold-pressed olive oil, or a thin layer of pesto.
If you like heat:
Top with chili flakes, freshly ground black pepper, or minced fresh basil and garlic.
If you want more protein or texture:
Add hemp seeds, pumpkin seeds, or a sprinkle of nutritional yeast.
Want to try other “pasta” recipes? Try my favorite Rawvioli or this Cauliflower Alfedo over squash noodles.
How Do These Ingredients Help With Blood Sugar, Heart Health, and Hormones?
This lasagna tastes rich and decadent but actually supports your hormones instead of throwing them out of whack. Zucchini keeps your blood sugar steady, so you’re not riding the insulin roller coaster. The homemade marinara loads you up with lycopene to protect your metabolic and cardiovascular systems. And that creamy dairy free cheese? It fuels adrenal, thyroid, and sex-hormone pathways without the inflammatory baggage of dairy. Layer in the spinach and basil and you’ve got detox support and clean, steady energy.
Zucchini (instead of pasta)
Zucchini’s low glycemic load helps reduce the post-meal glucose and insulin spikes triggered by traditional pasta. More stable blood sugar means less pancreatic stress, improved insulin sensitivity, and a reduction in the hormonal dysregulation associated with insulin resistance.
Its fiber and water content promote satiety without calorie overload which supports balanced leptin and ghrelin signaling and helps maintain a healthier weight. This is also critical for sex-hormone and adrenal balance.
Zucchini also contains polyphenols that reduce inflammatory signaling and support mitochondrial function. Its trace minerals, including manganese and magnesium, assist thyroid hormone metabolism and cellular energy production. Zucchini helps regulate hormone metabolite clearance through the gut–liver axis by supporting digestion, hydration, and elimination,
Homemade Marinara
Homemade marinara avoids the inflammatory oils, added sugars, and endocrine-disrupting preservatives found often in conventional jarred sauces. Its primary phytonutrient, lycopene, becomes more bioavailable after cooking. Lycopene helps lower oxidative stress in endocrine tissues, modulates insulin-like growth factor (IGF-1), and may support healthier estrogen and androgen balance.
Reduced sodium, absence of chemical stabilizers, and zero added sugars make homemade marinara a supportive choice for metabolic health. The antioxidants in tomatoes, especially lycopene and vitamin C, help reduce inflammation affecting the thyroid, pancreas, ovaries, and adrenal glands. This translates into smoother metabolic signaling and reduced risk of hormone-related cancers.
Dairy-Free Nut Cheese
Nut-based cheeses avoid the naturally occurring hormones and saturated fats found in dairy that can elevate insulin, IGF-1, and inflammatory processes. Cashews and macadamias provide monounsaturated fats that act as building blocks for steroid hormones while improving insulin sensitivity. Their minerals, especially magnesium and potassium, help stabilize cortisol, support thyroid function, and enhance adrenal resilience.
These nuts also contain antioxidants that protect endocrine tissues from oxidative stress and inflammation. Their fiber supports gut health which helps to enhance estrogen metabolism and improves hormone detoxification through the estrobolome. Compared to store-bought vegan cheeses, homemade versions eliminate additives and emulsifiers that may disrupt gut or hormone balance.
This raw vegan lasagna delivers everything you want from lasagna. It is comforting, creamy, and full of flavor. It’s a dish that leaves you energized instead of exhausted, nourished instead of bloated, and satisfied knowing you’re supporting your metabolism, hormones, and long-term health. This is food that keeps people off the path my mother unknowingly walked and one I worked hard to climb off myself.

Raw Lasagna
Equipment
- 1 Mandolin slicer
- 1 dehydrator
- 1 mixing bowls
Ingredients
- 1 pc zucchini per person
- 1 recipe Tomato Sauce
- 1 recipe Dairy Free Nut Cheese
- Spinach, basil leaves, grape tomato halves, nutritional yeast for garnish
Instructions
- Slice the zucchini lengthwise using a mandolin to get very thin “pasta” sheets.
- Massage gently with a sprinkle of salt or lemon juice until flexible.
- Spread a layer of marinara in your dish, add a layer of nut cheese, then tuck in a layer of spinach.
- Repeat with more zucchini and sauce.
- Dehydrate for an hour or so until warm and soft. (completely optional - you can eat it raw as it is)
- Finish with a swirl of cheese and garnish with spinach or basil.
Nutrition
Where Can You Find More Recipes Like This?
This recipe appears in the Healing Kitchen episode “Recipes for a Gluten-Free Holiday” inside the Unstoppable Health Community.
Join us for a free Healing Kitchen class and see how delicious healing can be. You’ll learn to create hormone-balancing meals, gut-healing snacks, and functional recipes that transform food into powerful medicine.
For more recipes like this, explore our recipe books inside the Unstoppable Health Hormone Harmony Marketplace.







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