Is Romano Cheese Gluten-Free? Your Guide to This Flavorful Cheese

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GLUTEN-FREE

Romano cheese is naturally gluten-free — milk, cultures, salt, rennet, lipase, no grain.

Yes. Romano (most often Pecorino Romano) is a hard aged cheese made from milk, cheese cultures, salt, rennet, and a lipase flavor enzyme — no wheat, barley, rye, or oats. The lipase that gives Romano its sharp flavor is an enzyme, not a grain, and is gluten-free. Pre-grated Romano uses gluten-free anti-caking agents. The gluten risk is the dish — Romano on wheat pasta or in a flour-roux Alfredo — not the cheese.

Last reviewed: May 15, 2026

Romano cheese is naturally gluten-free. It’s a hard, sharp aged cheese — milk, cultures, salt, rennet, and a lipase flavor enzyme. The reason it comes up is pasta: Romano is grated over wheat noodles and into flour-thickened Alfredo, but the cheese itself is never the gluten.

What’s in Romano Cheese

Romano (commonly Pecorino Romano, a hard aged sheep’s-milk cheese) is made from milk, cheese cultures, salt, and enzymes — rennet plus a lipase enzyme for its sharp, piquant flavor. Per FDA labeling rules, the gluten-containing grains are wheat, barley, rye, and their hybrids — dairy cheese is not one of them, and the lipase enzyme is a flavor enzyme, not a grain.

Katie’s Tip: The lipase enzyme that gives Romano its bite is exactly the same idea as in sharp provolone — a flavor enzyme, not a grain, and gluten-free. Pre-grated/shaker Romano uses anti-caking agents (powdered cellulose, potato starch) that are gluten-free; glance at the package. The real watch-out is the dish: Romano grated over wheat pasta or into a flour-roux Alfredo is wheat from the pasta/roux, not the Romano.

Cross-Contamination Risk

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Manufacturing
Low
  • Hard aged dairy cheese; no grain in production.
  • Lipase is a gluten-free flavor enzyme.
  • Pre-grated uses GF cellulose/potato-starch anti-caking.
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In the Dish
Medium
  • Romano grated over wheat pasta = wheat dish.
  • Romano in a flour-roux Alfredo/cream sauce.
  • The wheat is the pasta/roux, not the cheese.
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Home
Low
  • Sealed wedge/shaker, refrigerate.
  • Verify pre-grated anti-caking (usually GF).

Romano Forms — GF Status

  • Pecorino Romano wedge / block — gluten-free
  • Cow’s-milk “Romano” — gluten-free
  • Pre-grated / shaker Romano — GF; cellulose/potato-starch anti-caking
  • Romano in an Italian cheese blend — generally GF; verify the blend
  • Romano on wheat pasta / in flour-roux Alfredo / breaded — the wheat is the dish, not the cheese

What to Look For — Or Avoid

  • Plain Romano — milk, cheese cultures, salt, enzymes (rennet, lipase)
  • Pre-grated: powdered cellulose / potato starch anti-caking (GF)
  • No wheat/barley/rye in an Italian cheese blend’s ingredient list
  • Romano grated over wheat pasta (the pasta is the gluten)
  • Flour-roux Alfredo/cream sauce with Romano
  • Assuming the lipase flavor enzyme is a gluten ingredient (it isn’t)

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Romano cheese gluten-free?

Yes. Romano (Pecorino Romano) is a hard aged cheese made from milk, cheese cultures, salt, rennet, and a lipase flavor enzyme — no wheat, barley, rye, or oats. Plain Romano is naturally gluten-free.

Is the lipase enzyme in Romano gluten?

No. The lipase enzyme that gives Romano its sharp, piquant flavor is a flavor enzyme, not a grain. It is gluten-free, the same as the lipase used in sharp provolone.

Is pre-grated Romano gluten-free?

Generally yes. Pre-grated and shaker Romano use powdered cellulose or potato-starch anti-caking agents, both gluten-free. Verify the specific package, but pre-grated Romano is typically gluten-free.

Is Pecorino Romano the same as Romano for gluten?

For gluten, yes — both are hard aged cheeses made from milk, cultures, salt, and enzymes, and both are gluten-free. Pecorino Romano is sheep’s-milk; some “Romano” is cow’s-milk. Neither contains grain.

Is Romano on pasta gluten-free?

The Romano is gluten-free, but standard pasta is wheat and a flour-roux Alfredo contains gluten. The cheese was never the issue — use gluten-free pasta and a cornstarch-thickened sauce to keep the dish gluten-free.

Can people with celiac disease eat Romano cheese?

Yes. Plain Romano is naturally gluten-free and safe for celiac disease. The caution is the wheat-based dishes it is used in (pasta, flour-roux Alfredo, breaded) — verify pre-grated anti-caking as well, though it is typically gluten-free.

About the Author

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Katie WilsonRN

Katie is the founder of Lets Go Gluten Free and a registered nurse with a decade of experience helping families navigate celiac disease, gluten sensitivity, and the gluten-free diet. She personally researches every food, ingredient, and brand featured on the site.