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Vegans?

(244 Posts)
phoenix Thu 30-Mar-17 23:42:07

Hello all, first if this has already been covered, I apologise, and would appreciate a point in the direction of any relevant threads.

However, whilst I can have some understanding of those who choose to be vegetarian, I have a bit of struggle with people who adopt a vegan lifestyle (actually, not very keen on the word "lifestyle", always seems a bit Sunday supplement?) especially if they are doing it because of "love of animals".

I love animals, and want those that I eat to have had a good life and a humane death. (I used to keep a 50 head flock of sheep, and they and their lambs were treated very well)

If we all adopted a totally vegan approach to food, clothes, home fabrics etc, surely many of our domestic farm animals would become of no use, and possibly endangered species!

And as for vegans objecting to the content of animal product in the new notes becoming part of our currency, what should we do?

Palm oil has been suggested, but apparently that isn't an environmentally good option.

Shall we go back to trading in beans? But what if they have been grown in land fertilised by animal manure?

Where does it actually reach a sort of semi sensible conclusion?

Faye Tue 04-Apr-17 04:08:41

Humane killing, what's that about, what can be humane about being slaughtered. Animals are absolutely terrified when they make the journey through the gates of the abbotoirs. I saw a video that showed them trying desperately to turn around. Apparently they know when they are in the holding yards. I really don't understand when people say they love animals then they eat them. You can not love something and eat it, you just can't.

thatbags Mon 03-Apr-17 22:29:59

Well said about preserving choice, roses. There's a lot of talk of diversity these days. Well, here's a chance for everyone to embrace diversity of food choices among human beings. Being omnivorous (notwithstanding exceptions because of intolerances, etc) is a good thing for species survival and adaptability.

rosesarered Mon 03-Apr-17 21:43:20

Being omnivorous seems to have done very well for us as a species.smile

rosesarered Mon 03-Apr-17 21:41:52

To answer the OP, the only sensible conclusion to be reached is to allow the choice that we all have to eat meat, not eat meat, be vegan etc. And for firms to try and use vegetable oils where possible in consumer goods.Surely it must always be possible, or nearly always.The world runs best where many choices are allowed and catered for without putting any one food choice above another.

durhamjen Mon 03-Apr-17 19:53:13

Sorry, first sentence - our ability to absorb it reduces with age.

durhamjen Mon 03-Apr-17 19:52:11

I don't have any supplements, Jayanna, apart from CoQ10, which I am reliably informed everyone of a certain age needs as our ability to absorb it. Vegans can only get it from nuts and soya oil.
I started taking it when I was on statins after a problem with my aorta and haven't stopped, although I stopped taking the statins.
In the 70s when we became vegetarian, food combining was the thing to do. Since then it has been realised that if you eat a variety of protein foods over the week, there is no need to worry.
The easiest thing to think about is having a variety of colours every day. Different colours usually mean different vitamins and minerals. Until the next idea comes along, of course.

I know people who have happy hens. They complain like mad if the hens are taken by foxes, but I tell them that foxes are only doing what they are supposed to do. We can rationalise our food needs, and grow a bigger variety.

Sorry I took so long to answer. I've been making and eating my vegan dinner!

nightowl Mon 03-Apr-17 19:49:08

I don't think the OP is aggressive but it does seem to be asking vegetarians and vegans to explain their 'lifestyle choice' (not a term I care for either phoenix) and might therefore put us on the defensive. Particularly when most of us have been asked the same sort of questions over the years and very often ridiculed for those choices, in my experience. And yes it does still happen and comes in many guises. I have been told outright that I am stupid for not eating meat confused. But the most common response is the 'jokes' people seem compelled to make along the lines of 'I love animals as well, especially when they're roasted and served with gravy'. Well excuse me if I don't split my sides but I've heard similar comments a million times and they're boring.

With respect to one point in the OP, I don't think you would find many people who would say they became vegan because they love animals. Most vegetarians and vegans I know would not use this phrase. It's one of my pet dislikes because it is meaningless. Perhaps we should respect them more and love them less.

Esspee Mon 03-Apr-17 19:21:57

Durhamjen, you sound very defensive and aggressive. Everybody should eat what they want to without criticism. My attitude is live and let live. I have no problems cooking for a mixed group and simply make a very large veggie dish (today it was roast sweet potato topped with mixed beans in a delicious tomato, onion and sweet pepper sauce topped with grated cheddar and had there been any vegans I would simply have missed out the cheese and topped it with nuts) plus a meat dish served separately to be eaten with the veggies. It is not rocket science.
What I very much object to is being berated for my choices by the holier than thou born again food police.

Jayanna9040 Mon 03-Apr-17 18:46:02

Thanks. Used term balanced because I know - think I know?- that food combining is important to access maximum nutrients.
Now what about all these supplements? Are they necessary or are they a rip off by health food companies?
As I said at the start of the thread, vegetarian using dairy products doesn't make sense to me. Either meat or vegan except....
Next door have three very content hens clucking around. No cockerel. Eggs from happy hens?

durhamjen Mon 03-Apr-17 18:32:07

That link didn't appear to work, said it was too long.
Try
www.viva.org.uk

It's on there.

durhamjen Mon 03-Apr-17 18:29:43

If they have the vegetarian society tick on them, Linda McCartney sausages are vegan.
It is possible to have a balanced vegan diet with a nut allergy. Use lots of pulses instead. Are seeds okay?
Just like when you become vegetarian it's possible to just substitute eggs and cheese for meat, you tend to use nuts instead of dairy when you become vegan.
If you go on www.veganrecipeclub.org.uk you will find a list of nutfree recipes. Use the tabs on the left hand side.
I always find it strange when people ask about a balanced vegan diet, as if everybody eats a balanced diet. Most people just eat and don't think about it.
I've cut back on veg, as I found I was eating between ten and twelve portions a day. I now eat eight to ten. It's cheaper, particularly as most of my food is organic.

Jayanna9040 Mon 03-Apr-17 17:58:38

Well I'll just do one at a time. Maybe two. Practical first. Is it possible to have a balanced vegan diet if you have a nut allergy? All the recipe books I've had a look at seem to rely heavily on nuts. And I have Linda McCartney sausages in the oven at the mo. Are they ok?

durhamjen Mon 03-Apr-17 17:23:51

Roses, the thread is about vegans, not about how much you enjoy using animal produce.

Go on then, Jayanna.

Jayanna9040 Mon 03-Apr-17 10:30:38

I do actually have some real, want to know question about a vegan diet. Not ones that have been covered in any book I've read. They might irritate you a bit durhamjen, but they are not wind ups, truly. Would you be prepared to engage?

rosesarered Mon 03-Apr-17 10:11:32

I enjoy many vegtarian meals but would hate to live on it entirely.

rosesarered Mon 03-Apr-17 10:10:18

Lifestyle.

rosesarered Mon 03-Apr-17 10:09:31

durhamjen you sound like the typical angry vegetarian casting around to show why only yourchoice of food is the good one.Do you lecture everbody around you on the subject.....because the vegetarians that I know do not. I enjoy eating meat, and enjoy having leather shoes and handbags.It's a lifestyle choice, not one to beat other people over the head with.

durhamjen Mon 03-Apr-17 08:39:30

So it's okay to mention that we've been eating meat for millions of years and accept that as natural, but not okay for me to remind you that natural is eating it raw?
There is no evidence of fire before 400,000 years. That's a lot of raw meat. You don't see the relevance? Shows you only see what you want to see.

Iam64 Mon 03-Apr-17 08:29:29

Clinton changed his diet after two heart attacks, he had to lose weight and avoid the (delicious) fatty diet previous enjoyed.

rosesarered Sun 02-Apr-17 23:52:57

grin no, me neither, but I am starting to fancy a bacon sarnie.moon

Esspee Sun 02-Apr-17 23:40:07

Durhamjen, There seems to be misinformation that meat is a recent addition to our diet when, as I stated, there is evidence going back more than 2.5 million years that meat was being used by early man. It probably was a very minor part of the diet but as brain capacity increased the ability to hunt successfully and in time domesticate animals increased the availability of that excellent protein source. I did not intend to suggest than early man did not eat vegetables, presumably the diet was similar to that of a chimpanzee. What is clear is that the introduction of meat coincided with mankind's huge developmental advance which has resulted in where we are today in evolutionary terms.
As for your question to me about how much natural raw meat I eat I don't see any relevance but as you ask the answer is none.

HannahLoisLuke Sun 02-Apr-17 23:08:53

Teatime, thanks for the info on how Bill Clinton lost weight. I've been bothered by his appearance lately and thought he must have some nasty illness. Doesn't suit him.
I'm vegetarian by the way and have been since the age of four. I grew up in farming and so was surrounded by animals and the reason for breeding them. It was all a bit too close for comfort for me.

Chewbacca Sun 02-Apr-17 22:40:05

There are certainly more vegan and vegetarian cafes and restaurants these days Roses, and also a much greater choice on mainstream restaurant menus for them, I'm glad to say. Years ago, it was pretty difficult to find anywhere to eat with DS, that catered for his choices but that's definitely not the case now. I must try to remember to ask him, and DIL, if they've had anyone being aggressive or negative towards them, regarding their vegetarianism. I'd be surprised if they had.

rosesarered Sun 02-Apr-17 22:34:16

Wot Elegran says ( with a few choice bells and whistles added.)

Chewbacca I bet very few people these days have any problems with either vegetarians or vegans, certainly none that I have heard of, and there are many all vegetarian cafes around the place.

thatbags Sun 02-Apr-17 22:06:48

I thought vegans were making a fuss about fivers? Have they stopped because palm oil is no better, in fact it's probably worse and ends up killing causing the deaths of animals that we are not going to eat.

Nowt wrong with a properly and humanely run abattoir and nowt wrong with eating meat either.