Seagull58
In the Algarve
The vegan diet
Find out how to be healthy on a vegan diet, including vegan sources of calcium, vitamin D, vitamin B12 and iron.
www.nhs.uk
Bottom trawling alone releases as much CO2 annually as the entire airline industry so perhaps not.No doubt a pescatarian diet has a lower impact than an omnivorous one.
Would that be a whole jar...?No problem having a tartare starter
A well-done steak or over-cooked tuna are enough to turn anyone vegan.
Years ago, I worked in a pub kitchen and the only thing that saddened me more than having to cremate steaks for philistines was the time a woman sent back her tuna as it wasn't cooked enough
The Bird burger restaurant I go to does not like to cook burgers well done. I was there with a spanish girl who asked for her burger well done. She was challenged and after some discussion backed down and went for medium. Their menu states:You’re a cook, the customer is paying, do as your told, btw I don’t like ‘cremated steak’ but if somone does and they are paying then I certainly wouldn’t judge!
Plenty of studies that show a balanced vegan diet is fine for all stages of life.A decent balanced diet I think is the most sensible . Avoid fried food and anything processed like bacon etc. Red meat max of once a week , plenty of fruit and veg and oily fish .
Being vegan doesn’t make you healthy in my view as you are missing out in vital vitamins and minerals and I certainly won’t encourage a child to be vegan.
Yes. Vitamin B12 is added to some alternatives to milk products, vegan spreads, nutritional yeast flakes, yeast extracts and breakfast cereals.
Vitamin B12 is not found naturally in fruits or vegetables.Vitamin B12 in beetroot, mushrooms, butternut squash, apples, bananas, oranges and blueberries.
On a related theme, I know a few cafes and brunch places which now refuse to deviate from their menu i.e. can I have that with blah blah taken off and replaced with blah blah. Oh, and a coffee shop which bans parents with babies/children.You’re a cook, the customer is paying, do as your told, btw I don’t like ‘cremated steak’ but if somone does and they are paying then I certainly wouldn’t judge!
Personally, I like soy milk (with B12) on granola or in porridge.Most of which are UPFs though and best avoided. It's a bit of a minefield. Maybe fortified nutritional yeast is the way to go for a helthy vegan diet?
Bottom trawling alone releases as much CO2 annually as the entire airline industry so perhaps not.
Also something like 40% of the plastic in the Pacific garbage patch is fishing nets.
It's not a great industry whichever way you look at it, but I'm not going to tell people to stop eating it.
And to answer the original question, yes I'm vegan.
Eat lots of marmite too.Vitamin B12 is not found naturally in fruits or vegetables.
Vitamin B12
Vitamin B12 is needed to help speed up chemical reactions in our bodies.www.vegansociety.com
My other half doesn't like baked beans so when we ordered breakfasts in this cafe once we asked if hers could be done without baked beans. Waiter says "no, no substitutions". Fine, we're not asking for a substitution though. We just don't want one of the plates to have beans. "No, can't do that". What? You can't just...not...cook...the beans?On a related theme, I know a few cafes and brunch places which now refuse to deviate from their menu i.e. can I have that with blah blah taken off and replaced with blah blah. Oh, and a coffee shop which bans parents with babies/children.
I gnerally support the move as well. I spoke to the manager of one brunch place and she said it was becoming a real pain, slowed things up, can lead to error (plus the associated issues of one dish being served and another having to be cooked from scratch) and was more down to unadventurous punters than those who have specific dietry needs. A typical scenario is a customer will ask about an ingredient they have not heard of, say harissa, and still feeling uncomfortable after the explanation ask for it to be removed. The hospitality sector is brutal these days and on an ecominic basis they cannot cater for everyone's whims.My other half doesn't like baked beans so when we ordered breakfasts in this cafe once we asked if hers could be done without baked beans. Waiter says "no, no substitutions". Fine, we're not asking for a substitution though. We just don't want one of the plates to have beans. "No, can't do that". What? You can't just...not...cook...the beans?
So I ended up with two helpings of beans
Broadly speaking though, I do tend to agree with the no substitutions policies. Menus are agonised over and if something has been put into a meal it's there for a reason. But this place was a pretty standard greasy spoon, hardly Michelin fare.
YuckEat lots of marmite too.
Surely that depends what the request is? Obviously if harissa is an ingredient in one of those dishes beloved by Masterchef where the ingredients are all piled together, then it's not going to be practical to leave it out. But if it's just a matter of not putting beans onto a plate, that shouldn't be hard to do. (If the electric system they use for ordering can't cope, then perhaps they could go back to pencil and paper.)I gnerally support the move as well. I spoke to the manager of one brunch place and she said it was becoming a real pain, slowed things up, can lead to error (plus the associated issues of one dish being served and another having to be cooked from scratch) and was more down to unadventurous punters than those who have specific dietry needs. A typical scenario is a customer will ask about an ingredient they have not heard of, say harissa, and still feeling uncomfortable after the explanation ask for it to be removed. The hospitality sector is brutal these days and on an ecominic basis they cannot cater for everyone's whims.
It's not helped by the place being near a large chain hotel so they get clientel who would not typically frequent this place asking about the seemingly exotic ingredients. This said they do cater heavily for vegarians and vegans.
Yes, I know that thank you, I was just replying to David in Southampton who mentioned itThey don't. They call themselves pescatarian.
The impression I got it might only seem like a small thing to you and I, but if multiple people are asking for stuff to be taken off, and possibly a replacement item added/price adjustment etc, it becomes time consuming. It also increases the risk of the kitchen making an error with the subsequent fall-out of a dish having to go back to the kitchen with the disgruntled punter waiting whilst others sit and eat. They make great dishes and use great ingredients which are integral to the dish even if some can be taken out.Surely that depends what the request is? Obviously if harissa is an ingredient in one of those dishes beloved by Masterchef where the ingredients are all piled together, then it's not going to be practical to leave it out. But if it's just a matter of not putting beans onto a plate, that shouldn't be hard to do. (If the electric system they use for ordering can't cope, then perhaps they could go back to pencil and paper.)
(My local cafe does bacon, sausage, egg, tomato, mushrooms, beans, tea/coffee, bread/toast/fried bread, and substitutions work just fine. And all for £4.50. They haven't heard of harissa - and I'm not sure they've heard of vegans either! )
I should hope so. Tomato on but no black pudding? What sort of backwards place do you live in?(My local cafe does bacon, sausage, egg, tomato, mushrooms, beans, tea/coffee, bread/toast/fried bread, and substitutions work just fine. And all for £4.50. They haven't heard of harissa - and I'm not sure they've heard of vegans either! )