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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Fri 18 Mar 2005 06:37:47p, jmcquown wrote in rec.food.cooking:
> Dave Smith wrote: >> Dan Abel wrote: >> >>> I don't agree with Dave's attitude on this, but he is correct in >>> posting that many people give a vegetarian diet a try for a year or >>> so and then give it up. I read something written by a doctor who >>> said that he did not have any special advice for vegans who weren't >>> getting enough vitamin B12, because the body has a three year supply, >>> and most people don't stay vegan that long. >> >> You don't agree with my attitude? My attitude is that I am not >> interested in indulging people who are temporarily adopting a diet >> that is different from mine. My system does not agree with cabbage >> and tomatoes. If I knew someone who had to have cabbage rolls for >> dinner I would not invite them either. I don't care care if people >> are vegetarians. Hell, it helps keep the price of meat down. They can >> boycott meat until the cows come home. I'm just not interested in >> catering to their diet. If they want to come to a dinner party and >> bring their own food that would be great. If they want to come to a >> dinner party and eat just vegetables that is fine, but I will be >> damned if I will cook a vegetarian meal for them. The closest I come >> to a vegetarian meal is macaroni and cheese or three cheese penne, and >> when I do that I have to listen to a carnivore wife complain. >> >> >> >>> My son tried a vegetarian diet for about a year and then gave it up. >>> On >>> the other hand, my daughter went vegetarian at 13 and not only stuck >>> it out for 6 years, but has now gone vegan (she gave up eggs and >>> dairy). >> >> I am sure that you can appreciate that she is more the exception than >> the rule. Care to make a bet that she will stick to it forever? > > Well let's see... my friend Sujata is a vegetarian and has been for 30 > years; she was raised that way. Her husband, on the other hand and her > young daughter, eat meat. So she prepares meals acceptable for both. > She's not adverse to preparing meals with meat in them, she just won't > eat them. She does eggs/dairy, grains, veggies; no chicken or fish. I > wouldn't say she's going to fall off this "diet" any time soon. I would hazard a guess that most "lifetime" vegetarians were raised that way, either in a vegetarian culture or a home environment that was vegetarian. I've never personally met anyone who "decided" to become vegetarian and lived the rest of their lives as one. > Having said that, I agree with not going too far out to cater to a > guests particular diet, be it a fad or not. If you invite people over > and they know you are carnivores, they have the right to say "no > thanks". Still, I'd make an effort to have *something* if they said > they would like to attend, even if it's just grilled or steamed mixed > vegetables or couscous or something. Maybe they just like the company > of the friend doing the inviting. > > Jill -- Wayne Boatwright ____________________________________________ Give me a smart idiot over a stupid genius any day. Sam Goldwyn, 1882-1974 |
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