Oh and have a look in Holland and Barret, lots of veggie food in there. The dried soya is great. Put it in a bowl add boiling water and a stock cube, leave for a minute. Then cook as you would meat. So maybe chilli con carne, or bolognese.
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I have been vegetarian for years and have a friend who is vegan. I eat cheese only occasionally now but would find it hard giving up eggs. I'm slowly but surely moving over to vegetable spread instead of butter in my baking (which I do a fair bit of) and am toying with trying egg substitute too. Has anyone tried this?When weeding, the best way to make sure you are removing a weed and not a valuable plant is to pull on it.
If it comes out of the ground easily, it is a valuable plant.
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Thanks everyone you've all been very helpful (knew you would!) - lots of ideas for me to think about.
I'll pop into Holland & Barrett next time I'm in town and see what they have to offer. T*sco today was rubbish - and everything I looked at seemed to contain some sort of animal product
Looks more and more as if I will have to make everything from scratch, but that's not really an issue.
It's only from a health point of view that I'm looking into becoming a dietary vegan - up to now I've eaten anything and I don't want to make a big thing about it. I just want to eat more healthily and that seems to discount animal food products.
Very disappointed though to find that most veggie items contain animal products.Forbidden Fruits make many Jams.
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I've used egg substitute and it worked fine for some things, less well for others. Have a look at the link for the vegan chocolate cake- no eggs and tastes great! Think it's mainly quorn that contains eggs and dairy, others not so bad. Have a look at tofu as well.http://togrowahome.wordpress.com/ making a house a home and a garden home grown.
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I've been vegan but it's not for me. I could probably say I'm addicted to dairy products and back when I first went veggie (was not much out there marketed to us) I had to pour over every food package and I don't miss questioning every thing I eat.
I hope it goes well for you though.
Originally posted by zazen999 View PostI think you just need to point out that vegans don't wear leather. End of.
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Originally posted by veggiechicken View PostWhy don't you go veggie first LL, get used to that and gradually cut out the things that aren't suitable for vegans.
Perhaps I'm just being too drastic but I'd like to give it at least 3 months until I'm due for another blood test to see what the effect is.
Ps I've just got a book from the library - "Vegan Cooking for Dummies" and it seems quite comprehensive. Lots of useful information as well as loads of recipe suggestions.Last edited by ladylottie; 31-01-2013, 05:27 PM.Forbidden Fruits make many Jams.
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Originally posted by rabbit View PostWhile technically you are probably right, there are other issues to wearing leather and the choice not to. Personally I do have a pair of leather shoes, it's biodegradeable, a natural product unlike plastic, it's a byproduct of a huge industry, it probably is more environmentally sound as long as the meat isn't bred especially for the leather. I agree with a previous poster that says there are a lot of different reasons for being vegetarian and vegan, religious, health, environmental, animal welfare etc etc.
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Originally posted by ladylottie View PostVery disappointed though to find that most veggie items contain animal products.
I guess I'm Neargan (nearly vegan), though it's not something I'm consciously trying to be. Since I went on these painkillers I've lost what was left of my appetite (which I don't mind, I'm one of those weird people that don't live to eat).
Belvita biscuits are just about all that I'm tolerating right now, plus I have a bowl of chocolate soya porridge for either breakfast or lunch, then a jacket potato with chilli-non-carne or similar. I eat cheese if it's in the fridge, I don't really like eggs. I take my coffee black, and I'm off alcohol.
I don't feel deprived at all; I've lost a dress size without trying; I'm saving money (mostly from not buying booze, but I also don't buy meat or processed foods). I don't look my age (I'm told, but that's by 8 year olds in my class!).
If you can get a control of your eating, and don't fret about it, it's all good, nothing but benefits to a meat-free lifestyle.
(PS, much as people want to pick a fight with me about my diet, I don't preach veggie, nor do I force it on anyone else: I made fish soup for the OH tonight, and stripped the skin off the poor dead wee fishie for the dog).All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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Originally posted by Two_Sheds View PostDo you mean most processed products?Forbidden Fruits make many Jams.
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Apologies for butting in as im neither veggie or vegan, i just wonder why there is a market for things that taste and look like meat?? It's something that does genuinely puzzle me. I tried quorn mince once, it was like eating the rubbers off the ends of pencils...Last edited by Prince of Durham; 31-01-2013, 10:56 PM.Cryin won't help you, prayin won't do you no good!
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I don't eat meat (although I do eat fish) so I'm not a veggie - just want to be clear to everyone here!!
My take on the pseudo meat stuff is that it is to help people who are finding the transition from meat to non-meat easier - by having something that looks vaguely like meat and has a similar texture. My memory of some beef mince was that it was like eating pencil rubbers too - It is over 25 years since I ate any meat so maybe its softened up since then!!
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