9 responses

  1. anjali dasi
    August 18, 2009

    so….is a lacto vegetarian one that eats only vegan foods + milk?
    …or would that be a lacto vegan?

    im whatever that is.

    Reply

  2. Zucchini Breath
    August 26, 2009

    All fish contain mercury. Look it up.

    Reply

  3. Laura
    August 26, 2009

    This article is wrong in several ways.

    1. vegan food can and does taste good. It’s only a lack of imagination when cooking that would cause a vegan cooking to be bland.

    2. Vegan diet can be as high in fat as any other diet if it’s unhealthy one. Eating fries for every meal would be vegan, but not low in fat, for example.

    3. People who eat meat or fish – pescetarians, flexitarians, etc, are not types of vegetarians. Vegetarians don’t eat meat or fish ever.

    Reply

  4. Tracy
    August 26, 2009

    This is no such thing as a lacto vegan. Vegan means NO ANIMAL PRODUCTS! And Vegan is not just a diet, it is a lifestyle. We do not use products that were tested on animals (tortured is more the proper term) or go to circus’s where animals are beaten, abused, etc. We believe in no harm!

    And the “dictionary definition” of a vegetarian was originally someone who eschewed all animal products until people started misusing the word to include people who ate dairy and egg. Pescatarians, flexitarians, etc are NOT vegetarian! This is just further perverting the word.

    Vegan diets are not tastless! They are also not necessarily always low fat. My vegan friends and myself make wonderful tasting meals. I have many non vegan friends who come to my home to eat specifically because they love my food.

    Reply

  5. Michelle
    April 3, 2013

    I am a dietary vegan, not an ethical vegan. I adopted a healthy vegan diet in response to some health problems I was experiencing due to eating incorrectly for too long. I have been a dietary vegan for nearly two years now and all the health issues I was having that prompted the change have not only cleared up, but they cleared up immediately…within a month of going dietary vegan, all of my health issues had corrected themselves.

    No more swollen feet, no more shortness of breath, my waistline returned as the excess weight I had carried around for most of my adult life began to fall off, my muscles and joints stopped aching and hurting.

    Now I can stand for prolonged periods of time, I am regular, I can walk and breathe at the same time…and all of this just because I adopted a healthy vegan diet I was not, and am not doing this for the sole purpose of losing weight, the weight loss is a happy by-product of treating my body right…feeding it whats good for it.

    As for food tasting good…I would not have been eating vegan for this long if the food did not taste good, who would do that and be able to keep it up for any length of time if they hated what they were eating.

    But rather I have found that vegan food actually tastes better…you have to be creative and learn to cook all over again without using the old standbys that everyone everywhere uses…butter, eggs, milk, and cheese…not to mention meat, fish or poultry.

    But rather with vegan cooking you experiment with herbs and spices, different grains, every fruit and veggie…the possibilities are endless and limited only by the imagination of “le nouveau chef”.

    If you make collard greens and you have always flavored them with ham hocks, smoked shanks, fat back, bacon or some other pork meat…you learn as a vegan that you can flavor those greens instead with some veggie stock, fresh minced garlic, sliced onions, black pepper, a little prepared mustard of your choice, a little extra virgin olive oil, crushed red pepper flakes (if you are from the northeast like me) and a dash of salt, then you cover and simmer those greens letting that liquid reduce and when they are done those greens are tender and flavored to perfection…healthy and vegan.

    If you like them with a little cornbread on the side you can make that vegan as well, corn meal, whole grain flour, baking powder, pure coconut oil, pinch of salt, a little raw sugar, cornstarch for the binder, and almond milk or water…and voila!!

    And to those two I would also add some additional sides such as rosemary oven roasted potatoes, sweet carrots, and maybe some roasted summer squash….umm umm good!!!

    It takes a little planning and research but really, what I do is look at my favorite recipes and figure out how can I make them vegan…and I am eating what I like and trying new things as well…everything is vegan and it’s healthy.

    Reply

    • Nickie
      July 11, 2018

      Thank you Michelle.
      You have helped me so much in my decision to start eating a vegan diet for the rest of my life.
      Thank you again.

      Reply

  6. Maggie
    October 23, 2013

    I’m more than vegan. I also do not eat ANY wheat, soy, peanut (all other nuts are okay), or anything made of corn or high fructose corn syrup (liquid death, as I call it). and yes, it is a lifestyle. I also eat raw about 80% of the time to ensure I get the best amount of nutrients from my foods. I have never felt more alive, energetic, and younger in my life and I’m almost 52 now. The other poster was correct…vegan food is NOT tasteless…I have some websites I regularly peruse for recipes “thisrawsomeveganlife.com” is one of my favorites. The goal is not to live to be old, the goal is to live to be old and VERY HEALTHY. It’s worth the investment. I tried vegetarian, but once I dropped the dairy products, my skin got amazingly soft and better, and i look so much younger now. My arthritis is completely gone in my feet. No more pain! Either way, trying to avoid spending money on the government-run “meat making machines” is always good. Watch ‘Vegucated’. I bet you’ll never look at your bacon the same way again.

    Reply

  7. Ishidore
    October 1, 2015

    I’m a complete vegetarian in the sense of not drinking soft drinks, sucking and drinking of sock stuffs such as cream biscuits,chocolates, cookies, ice creams, plus other products that made up from sugar content. My objection towards that lifestyle is to promote my personality and of course the welfare of my hygiene. Also this helps me to move very fast in all aspects of life. For example, I got good GPA from my academic year, I woke up very early in the moring without bodyache, I understrand difficult question less than 0.5 seconds, I make decision very clear and precise related to hypotatical and catogorical oriented laws, and I play, entertain, run, perform at all sporting events, etc. That is not I’m acclaiming to be but because of withstanding that sort of lifestyle I can see changes and differences that defines me. So become fully satisfied vegetarian you will have the natural might like propet Daniel in the times of Bybilons. He said not to Kings meat and yes to eat native foods like fruits, vegetables, nuts, etc. And so I was able to link that historical scene towards my way forward.
    Again the term ‘Vegetarian’ itself we all know it’s about setting up permanent boundries towards the kind of meals that induce us the attitude of eating meat. Not only meat, there are some minor issues that affiliate to be a fully satisfied vegetarian. And that having strict towards the ordinary meals whether indoor or out door meal we have to initiate that kind of restriction upon that sort of daily consumption.
    Please try that lifestyle and you see the differences.

    Reply

  8. Angelo Cazzola
    October 23, 2015

    When somebody ask me what is the difference between vegetarian and vegans I usually explain them that vegans is one type of vegetarian (the strictest).

    Vegetarianism isn’t white or black, it have several gray tones, semi-vegetarian maybe are closer to white and vegan are closer to black.

    Many people annoy to say flexitarians are vegetarians, but in my opinion they are. Vegetarianism is a lifestyle, this mean anybody is free to live it in the form they think is better.

    You forgot to mention that vegans do not use leather, honey, silk and dont go to zoos or circurs (which use animals). I think veganism is mainly related with animal care while vegetarianism might be related with animal care and health improvement.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top
mobile desktop