The General Organics products are all "veganic" as well. Some of the products smell kind of sharp and like vitamins. I also use Earth Juice (original), the Bloom doesn't smell as strong as the Grow and the Catalyst just smells sort of sweet.
Botanicare Pure Blend Pro doesn't smell very bad as I remember... one part Grow and one part Bloom.
But if you're using liquid organic products, yes many of them are going to have some kind of odor. Maybe some of us just don't mind or get used to it.
You can do organics and not really have to use any kind of liquid products, though. You could load your mix up with dry organic nutrients (such as widely available Espoma -Tone products), guano and kelp meal; then use water only or water with some blackstrap molasses. This works for soil\soil-less mixes and would probably work for coco coir as well. Coir just doesn't have much in the way of nutrients or microbes by itself. You could mix some dolomite lime into it and then pick a general purpose dry organic plant food like Espoma Bio-Tone, Plant-Tone, Garden-Tone or Tomato-Tone and then supplement that with an appropriate kind of guano and the kelp meal.
For example, make a base mix with the coir, a tablespoon of dolomite per gallon, a tablespoon and a half of Bio-Tone per gallon, a tablespoon of kelp meal per gallon (optionally) and half a tbsp of high N guano per gallon. When you go to transplant with a mix such as that you'd want to fill your container partially (say it's a 1 gal. container), throw down a several inches of mix and then add more nutrients to the floor of the container, like another tablespoon of Bio-Tone, a teaspoon or two of high-N or Peruvian Seabird guano, swirl that together roughly and then put down some more base mix with another teaspoon of kelp meal, and then in goes your plant. The idea is that most of the nutrients the plant is going to need are in the container and the roots are going to grow slowly into the more nutritive zone, all you'd have to do is water. You'd do pretty much the same thing when you go to transplant before bloom, except you cut back on the kelp and use a high-P guano.