Don’t Just Take the Meat Out: Innovation in Vegetarian Cuisine – Food & Beverage Magazine

With more and more of us taking a closer look at how we consume, our eating habits have never been more relevant. Whether for environmental reasons, ethics, or personal health, there has been a massive surge of people switching to vegetarian and vegan diets over the last ten years. A 2017 study found that 14% of the Swiss population eat vegetarian or vegan diets (11% vegetarian, 3% vegan), while 17% call themselves flexitarians. Approximately one-third of the population is therefore consciously following a meat-free or a low-meat diet.

When I first started cooking professionally 18 years ago, as far as many of us were concerned, eating habits were just a superficial trait you were vegetarian, maybe vegan, or you just ate meat like everyone else. Someone whose ideology influenced their eating habits was seen as extreme and frankly, most of us werent interested in hearing what that ideology was. Like most Chefs who have worked in high-stress Michelin kitchens, I never held vegetarianism in any high regard. I wanted to slow cook melting chunks of meat, chargrill marbled steaks to perfection, make rich and intense jus from the bones and everything in-between.

When I became Head Chef of the Verbier Lodge, I had to deal with suppliers face to face, and this was when I began to see the pressure that the meat industry is subject to. In many cases, profit and productivity are placed at a much higher value than animal welfare and sustainable farming practices.

I started to understand that the meat industry is exactly that an industry. Many of us have come to believe that meat is a commodity, and we should be able to have it whenever we want. Because of this mentality, weve lost a certain connection to the food we eat.

I know there are a great many livestock farmers, butchers, and restaurants that care immensely about animal welfare and are very committed to delivering sustainable, ethical products. But I think even they would agree that overall, this is not the driving force of the market.

Its no secret that the livestock industry is responsible for 14.5% of our total greenhouse gas emissions. But as a Chef, what are you meant to do? I used to use my profession to justify my diet choices, but if Im honest with myself I think there was a certain amount of willful ignorance involved. The more informed I have become about the meat industry, the harder it is to ignore its negative and harmful impact.

So Ill ask the question again: as a Chef, what are you meant to do?

Dont just take the meat out!

When the opportunity arose to work on a brand-new vegetarian program at Culinary Arts Academy Switzerland, I jumped at the chance. For the past few years, Ive identified as a flexitarian, meaning I generally follow a plant-based diet. I will not order meat, choose it on a menu, or buy it for my home, but if I go to someones house for dinner and they have prepared meat, then I wont be going hungry!

I remember hearing the word flexitarian for the first time and finding it ridiculous, but it means you are thinking about the ways you consume and the choices you make as a consumer. I dont believe anyone can tell you how you should or shouldnt eat as it is a very complex issue, but the more informed we are, the better we can reflect and have honest discussions.

A frequent complaint when it comes to vegan and vegetarian gastronomy is that chefs will often simply remove the meat from a dish and call it the vegetarian option. This is a perfectly valid complaint part of being a Chef is being creative with food and searching for new ways of transforming an ingredient. Vegetarian and vegan cooking shouldnt consist of traditional meals with the animal products removed half the time, that will leave us with a plate of lettuce. Instead, vegan and vegetarian cuisine should be seen as a blank canvas on which chefs can create something new and interesting by drawing on all their experiences and understanding of products.

A lot of our favorite foods are born from the creativity of cultures and communities whose aim is to make the most of whatever ingredients they have on hand and in abundance. The examples of this kind of innovation are endless: when wine was clarified using egg whites, the Bordeaux Canel was created to avoid wasting the yolks. The French soup Bouillabaisse was initially made from damaged fish that fishermans wives knew couldnt be sold. During the war in the UK we would add herbs and breadcrumbs to sausages to stretch the quantity now this recipe is a proud regional specialty.

These examples go to show that an abundance of fresh or imported ingredients doesnt always lead to the best dishes- its often when faced with a challenge that the best dishes and ideas are born. Removing ingredients from our diet is not restrictive, it merely demands you to be innovative.

With the growing popularity of vegan, vegetarian, and flexitarian diets, the world is moving toward a higher consumption of plants. Taking this direction with our diet seems to be a sustainable choice for the future and is an exciting opportunity for the culinary industry to adapt to new trends.

Chef Darren Burke trained in an Italian gastronomic restaurant in the UK and went on to become Head Pastry Chef at a Michelin-starred restaurant in the North of England. He has worked for Sir Richard Branson in Morocco and Switzerland. Most recently, he held the position of Chef-Owner of Restaurant Le Bois Sauvage, a restaurant focused on sustainable dining and local produce. Since 2019, he has been sharing his expertise with the students at Culinary Arts Academy Switzerland, where he is Chef Instructor.

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Don't Just Take the Meat Out: Innovation in Vegetarian Cuisine - Food & Beverage Magazine

The most popular vegan dishes in SA revealed – IOL

By Lifestyle Reporter Oct 30, 2020

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Veganism is on the rise as more South Africans opt for meat-free meals. With November being World Vegan Month, the spotlight will firmly be on plant-based diets.

This week, food ordering and delivery service platform Uber Eats released a compiled data around customers eating habits when it comes to vegan dishes, including the rising popularity of vegan dishes in the app, and their favourite meals in cities and countries across Europe.

Uber Eats experienced a 71% increase in healthy orders made during the hard lockdown, a trend which has since continued. However, in true South African form, locals have found where pleasure meets plant-based.

The most popular vegan item ordered was the traditional vegan patty burger, sans the mayo, a wheat-based Margherita pizza, and roasted butternut curry rounded up the top three. Uber Eats data also shows that soya butter chicken was the most ordered meal for those who are not yet ready to make the jump from vegetarian to vegan.

Given the increased demand for healthier alternatives, the app has further on-boarded a variety of restaurants to cater to any craving and lifestyle needs. This year's orders from January to October have doubled as compared to last year of the same period and tripled since 2018.

In a statement, the delivery service's head of operations, Shane Austin said locally, they are excited by the continued uptake of vegan orders on the app. What they have seen is that South Africans are slowly leaping vegetarianism into veganism, as restaurants are now offering vegan-friendly substitutes for some of their most iconic dishes.

According to the food delivery service, South Africa is ranked within the top five countries for the most ordered vegan dishes globally which highlights how locals are loving this lifestyle. Some of the most popular requests made by citizens on their vegan orders include adding a teaspoon of cocoa to oat milk to give it a chocolate flavour while swapping yoghurt for hummus.

Earlier this year, findings from South African retail stores Pick n Pay and Checkers showed that plant-based eating habits are on the rise.

In a statement, Head of Innovation and Trend at Pick n Pay, Nicki Russell said that their research shows more customers are opting for a "flexitarian" diet which incorporates more plant-based options and less meat.

What started as Meatless Monday has since expanded to include more and more days of the week.

"Weve been working really hard to bring customers new and innovative local plant-based offerings to create a one-stop destination for customers wanting to adopt a more plant-based lifestyle.

"The new PnP plant-based products will give customers greater variety. We have more on-the-go snacks and fresh plant-based convenience meal options such as our Bean and Corn Bites, as well as more indulgent plant-based items, like our frozen samoosas and pies, and vegan chocolates, said Russell.

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The most popular vegan dishes in SA revealed - IOL

Need to get fit? Need to lose weight? Go vegan say experts! – Gulf News

A vegan menu consists of no ingredient that comes from animals, including meat, cheese, milk, and even honey Image Credit: pexels.com

For years, it was just a minor offshoot of vegetarianism, more associated with barefoot walking and bohemian wear. Were talking veganism.

Today, it is a mainstream lifestyle as across the globe, plant power has taken hold.

And theres no better time to indulge your interest in veganism than November - World Vegan Month.

Established in 1994 and kicked off by Vegetarian Awareness Month in October, this 30-day celebration of a plant-based lifestyle is all about discovering some key arguments and mooing over why ditching meat helps.

What is veganism?

A vegan menu consists of no ingredient that comes from animals, including meat, cheese, milk, and even honey. Instead its back to the basics, consuming grains, legumes, vegetables, fruits and beans, and dairy alternatives such as almond, soy or coconut milk. Whoever said going vegan wasnt cost-effective simply doesnt know this list debunking the vegan-is-too-expensive myth isnt difficult when you look at some of the staples of the diet.

Is it an expensive lifestyle?

As the oldest vegan organisation in the world, The Vegan Society, says, Ultimately, even though a vegan diet can theoretically be expensive, the perception that veganism will automatically cost you more is not an accurate reflection of every vegans experience."

Even lifelong meat eaters can abide. Vegan staples are not all about tofu, and no, you dont live just on lettuce.

For example, you could be saving about Dh7 to Dh10 per day when you eliminate thechicken from your home-cooked meal of vegetables, lentils,and rice might (based on market prices and consumption of volume). That's a whopping Dh210 to Dh300 per month.

The 78 million people around the world who have adopted the lifestyle would agree.

How popular is it?

Veganism has surprised detractors by rising high up the approval charts. The knock-on effect has seen vegan menus sit alongside existing ones, supermarkets carry vegan ranges, and whole restaurants now having only have vegan offerings on the menu.

Festivals, cookbooks and documentaries centred around veganism have sprouted, and theres vegan versions for so much vegan mayonnaise, vegan turkey and sausage, yogurt without dairy, vegan mozzarella, and even nuggets (made of pea). Tastes and textures of meat are being recreated by companies such as Beyond Meat. Vegan celebrities abound, from Bollywoods Sonam Kapoor and Aamir Khan to Hollywoods Natalie Portman, Benedict Cumberbatch and Ellen Page. Fast food companies from McDonalds to Burger King have introduced vegan options. Vegans have never had it easier.

Jackfruit pulled chicken and burgers that bleed like meat (via beetroot juice), anyone?

Social media has given the movement a lot of airtime recently and helped spread the word. Data from Google Trends shows interest in veganism is at an all-time high, while #vegan has about 102 million posts on Instagram. Proof of further popularity is theres now two months to celebrate it besides November, remember the Veganuary movement in January, where you got to try the lifestyle for a month with a whole community, advice and recipes?

And meat-free meat just got a huge boost in Europe when the European parliament ruled that vegan/vegetarian products that do not contain meat can continue to be termed sausages or burgers, rejecting a proposal backed by the meat industry to ban the labels.

The benefits of going meat-free

Its benefits reach far outside the kitchen. Your motive for a shift towards veganism could be three-fold - for your health, for animals or for the environment. With a diet high in fibre and low in cholesterol and salt, vegans score high on health markers. Cutting down on meat means cutting down on saturated fat. Vegans tend to have better heart health in comparison to their meat-eating counterparts. They also have a lower body mass index. Studies show overweight or obese individuals who switch to a plant-based diet lost body fat and have better insulin sensitivity and gut bacteria.

Meanwhile, University of Oxford researchers found cutting meat and dairy from your diet could reduce a person's carbon footprint from food by up to 73 per cent.

You could be going vegan as a form of protest against the meat industry and its ugliness. You could have been persuaded by gory visuals from slaughterhouses, or hard-hitting climate change stats. Whatever the reason, the gains far outweigh what youre giving up.

Just limiting your animal product intake to a few days a week can make a huge difference you can be vegan in stages.

Plunging right in isnt for everybody, and adopting a flexitarian approach a primarily plant-based diet with occasional meat consumption works well at the start.

If you ever doubt the lifestyle, remember, bread is vegan. A lifestyle that allows you to have carbs cant be bad at all!

And we would love to help you along, so here are a few recipes from restaurant chefs in the UAE so you can dip your toe into veganism:

RECIPES

Mixed mushroom salad

50gm king oyster mushrooms

50gm brown shimeji mushrooms

2 tbsp freshly squeezed lemon Juice

Optional (birds-eye chilli, whole if you want to spice it up!)

Boil all the mushrooms until theyre 90 per cent cooked (2-3 mins).

Cut all the vegetables, place in a bowl. Add the mushrooms and cashew nuts and mix well.

Place the coriander, coriander root, garlic, sugar, salt, lemon juice, water and chilli (optional) in a pestle and mortar and pound for 30 to 45 seconds.

To serve, pour the dressing over the vegetables and mushrooms in the bowl, mix well and sprinkle some coriander on the top.

- Recipe courtesy of Caf Isans head chef and co-owner, Chef New Chaklang

Chili sin carne

Cooking time: 30-40 minutes

Scant 1 14 cups (250g) dried red beans

1 garlic clove, peeled and finely chopped

1 onion, peeled and finely chopped

A little olive oil for frying

5 tbsp (80g) tomato paste

2 large eggplants, washed and cut into small cubes

2 red bell peppers, washed, seeded, and cut into small cubes

450gmbutton mushrooms, washed and chopped

4 ripe tomatoes, washed and chopped

12 tsp mild chilli powder

4 tbsp (60gm) vegan cream cheese

4 tbsp (60gm) pico de gallo (made by combining diced onions, tomatoes, jalapeno, cilantro, salt and lime juice)

Soak the dried beans in a bowl of cold water overnight or for at least 10 hours. Drain and put the beans in a large saucepan of fresh, salted water.

Bring to a boil, boil for 10 minutes, lower the heat, and simmer for 1 hour 30 minutes or until the beans are tender. Drain.

Fry the garlic and onion in a little olive oil in a large saucepan over low heat. Stir in the tomato paste and all the vegetables, and continue frying.

Pour in the water and add the spices, bay leaf, and red beans. Bring to a simmer and continue cooking till all the vegetables are tender.

Divide among 4 plates and accompany each serving with a tbsp of vegan cream.

Remove and discard the bay leaf and season with salt and pepper. Divide cheese and pico de gallo. Accompany with lime wedges to squeeze over.

- Recipe courtesy of Wild and the Moon

Chia rose pudding

Prep time: 10 mins plus refrigeration time

1 1/2 cups dairy-free milk (use creamier milks for creamier, thicker pudding, such as full-fat coconut or cashew)

1-2 tbsp maple syrup (more or less according to taste)

1/2 tsp vanilla seeds (or vanilla extract)

A pinch dragonfruit (pitaya) powder for natural colour

Sliced strawberries and blueberries, to serve

To a mixing bowl, add dairy-free milk, chia seeds, maple syrup (to taste), vanilla, rose water and dragonfruit powder. Whisk to combine.

Cover and refrigerate overnight (or at least 6 hours). The chia pudding should be thick and creamy. If not, add more chia seeds, stir, and refrigerate for another hour or so.

Serve in a glass topped with sliced strawberries and blueberries.

- Recipe courtesy of 100 Caf at The Hundred Wellness Centre

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Need to get fit? Need to lose weight? Go vegan say experts! - Gulf News

OPINION: Vegetarianism isn’t a cure-all The Daily Evergreen – The Daily Evergreen

Cutting meat isnt going to fix all your dietary problems; it requires careful thought

ANISSA CHAK

Vegetarianism and veganism can be good, but you need to ensure you get the right nutrients and vitamins.

If you look at celebrities today, you will notice that many follow a new fad diet focused around vegetarianism. Fans want to mimic their idols in everything, including eating habits.

There are many reasons to become vegetarian, but I want to highlight some of the health benefits. Lets look together at the benefits and limitations of being a vegetarian. I want to be clear it is about being vegetarian, not vegan.

April Davis, clinical assistant professor of nutrition, said vegetarians can still eat animal products like eggs and milk. However, vegans do not eat any animal byproducts only plant-based products. I think this is a crucial difference to understand.

First of all, a healthy human diet should include many micro and macromolecules to keep us healthy and alive. Some vital amino acids are only in the food we can get from animals.

There are nine amino acids that our bodies cannot produce, Davis said. We need to get them from another source. Some of them we can get from plants and some from animals.

Animal food consists of significant elements we need to build up our bodies to survive. Amino acids are vital for building muscular tissue and proteins. Proteins provide a crucial role in every mechanism in the human body.

I think it is probably better to have meat for some micronutrients, but we do not need it every day for sure, said Franck Carbonero, assistant professor of nutrition. A few times per week will be enough to supply us with the necessary nutrients.

Some people can argue that we can get those nutrients from special supplements and not kill animals. I think we should realize that many people today do not have access to those supplements and meat is their only source of the amino acids.

Being wise in everything we are doing is the key. Any fanaticism in a daily diet is wrong. Overeating meat is wrong because it can make you sick. If you cannot get all the necessary vitamins and nutrients, the diet is wrong, even if you think it looks correct based on your personal moral code.

Carbonero said having a balance in food is critical for the human bodys welfare. Too much meat also can cause many diseases, including high blood pressure, problems with blood vessels and others.

If your idea of a vegetarian diet is one is full of minimally processed vegetables, fruits, grains, beans, nuts and other plant-based foods, said Pablo Monsivais, associate professor of nutrition, there is no doubt that it is a healthy pattern.

Theres nothing necessarily wrong with eating anything you want, but it is a good idea to talk to your physician first. If you do not know how to balance your daily food, it is worth talking to a specialist.

If you want to be a vegetarian all your life, you can have a balanced diet and never eat any meat, Davis said.

The main component of being healthy is to have a balanced diet, full of vegetables and fruits and less processed food full of sugars. It is a personal choice to eat meat or not. Its always a good idea to talk to your physician before making any radical changes in the food.

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OPINION: Vegetarianism isn't a cure-all The Daily Evergreen - The Daily Evergreen

6 easy ways to transition to a plant-based diet – Big Think

Industrial farming is having a catastrophic impact on the planetand our health. It's tough to separate the two given how dependent we are on the environment for survival. While author and farming industry executive Philip Lymbery strikes an apocalyptic tone, his message is not overstated.

"Every day there is a new confirmation of how destructive, inefficient, wasteful, cruel and unhealthy the industrial agriculture machine is. We need a total rethink of our food and farming systems before it's too late."

Earth is not resource-infinite. We're destroying entire ecosystems to feed our destructive food habits. Nutrition isn't the only concern. One of the major culprits of deforestation is palm oil, which is widely used in skincare products as well. Everywhere we turn, we're decimating ecosystems and species for personal gain.

While a plant-based diet isn't the solution to every problem, it can certainly help. Whether you're concerned about your own health or that of the planet, transitioning to a plant-based diet isn't impossible. In fact, it can be quite delicious. Below are six strategies to help the process along.

Quarantine offered an entire world the opportunity to get into the kitchen and put on a chef's apron. Complaints about "not enough time" are the biggest barriers to preparing home-cooked meals. Of course, pandemic fatigue has resulted in a number of recent chefs ordering out more. That said, this is the perfect time to try your hand at new dishes. With infection rates increasing across the country, stocking up on seasonal vegetables is a great idea.

Simple seasonal ways to begin your plant-based exploration include roasted kabocha squash, Bombay potatoes, and no-chop pumpkin soup. If you're feeling a bit more adventurous, Masoor Dal Tadka will keep you warm into the winter months. A delicious sweet potato salad will never fail you. This round-up of 25 vegetarian recipes will keep you busy for a few months (or a month if you're ambitious).

Education is essential for beginning any endeavor. Weeding through propaganda and bunk science to find credible evidence of any diet is difficult, though many experts agree that for individual and societal health, a plant-based diet is key.

Even vegetarianism has its pitfalls. For example, one-fifth of all calories consumed by Americans come from nutritionally-worthless white flour. If you're eating processed bread every day, you're missing out on the benefits of a rich and varied diet.

Many of the "diseases of affluence," such as cardiovascular and obesity-related ailments, originate with a poor diet (and lack of exercise). Meat has been an essential component of the human diet throughout our evolution. Today, we eat too much of itand too much of it is produced in factory farms. Transitioning to a plant-based diet could help cut down on carbon emissions and the aforementioned diseases.

Plants are full of valuable phytochemicals and antioxidants that support a strong immune system. A (non-processed) plant-based diet reduces inflammation and offers plenty of fiber. It has been shown to reduce your risk of diabetes, stroke, and heart diseases. Those are all great reasons to transition.

Going cold turkey rarely works for addicts. The same is true of diets. If you're interested in a plant-based diet, try to eat veg every other day for a few weeks. Notice how your body reacts on days you eat this way compared to other days. Gradually phase out meat products. Attempt meat-free weekdays and see if your craving for meat persists on the weekend. Try using meat as a garnish instead of the main course.

More importantly, have a replacement plan. Dropping all meat products to consume frozen dinners isn't the best course of action. Filling your cart with bags of foods you've never eaten before will overwhelm you. Prepare meals as you taper off of meat; arm yourself with a broad knowledge of healthy plants and vegetables. At some point, you might forget what you've been missing.

Photo: anaumenko / Adobe Stock

The good news is that you likely have a number of plant-based side and main dishes that you love. Transitioning into a new diet requires a certain level of enjoyment. Otherwise, you're going to loathe eating, and eating should bring some level of satisfaction.

Try a one-to-one ratio to begin. On one night, cook a meal you love. Then try something completely new the next night. Follow that up with old faithful. This way, you constantly have new dishes to look forward to yet don't get stuck in thinking you have to be creative every single day. You'll likely find some winners and decide not to repeat other dishes. Regardless, you'll have a broader menu to work from.

The produce section of your grocery store provides almost everything you need to survive. You can likely pronounce every ingredient in this section. There's a vast difference between food and foodstuffs. Plenty of plant-based companies offer too much of the latter. Potato chips are technically vegetarian, and some use simple ingredients, yet it's easy to fill your cart with foodstuffs. The health benefits of this are not only negligible but potentially dangerous.

Qi Sun, an assistant professor of nutrition at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, explains. "If you eat a vegan diet, but eat a lot of french fries, refined carbs like white bread, white rice, that's not healthy." He suggests "emphasizing fruits and vegetables. Not fruit juice but whole food. And nuts."

There's a lot of terrible adviceand worse, propagandaon the internet. While you likely don't want to eat eggs every day, they're not "toxic," as one popular documentary claims. Eggs are one of the best low-cost, high-value foods around.

Read websites like Everyday Health, which uses clear language, like "may improve" and "may decrease," with links to credible studies. This way you follow the going science without becoming fanatical about a particular diet or being disappointed if it turns out the research doesn't hold up. Good science evolves with evidence. And right now, the evidence points to more vegetables in our diets.

--

Stay in touch with Derek on Twitter and Facebook. His new book is "Hero's Dose: The Case For Psychedelics in Ritual and Therapy."

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International Coffee Day 2020 Quotes & HD Images: Quirky Thoughts And Instagram Captions to Share With Photos of a Hot Cup of Coffee! – Yahoo…

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Keiko Seto pushes the limits of vegan food – The Japan Times

Mique, an eight-seat vegan restaurant run out of a garage in Komazawa, is sometimes mistaken for someones home. The space is bright and airy, and the walls are filled with rotating art exhibits. Its here owner-chef Keiko Seto crafts an astounding variety of plant-based delicacies that have drawn the attention of chef Amanda Cohen of New York Citys groundbreaking vegetarian restaurant, Dirt Candy, and garnered inclusion in Momoko Nakamuras Plant-based Tokyo.

Back in 2011, Seto was the art director for an international advertising agency. When the Great East Japan earthquake and nuclear disaster struck, she found herself at a pivot point.

Some people think I made a drastic change from being an art director to cook, she recalls as she dices mushrooms for the evening dinner service, but for me its the same flow. The medium has changed, but Im still doing something creative.

It was a life-changing moment for me. When the earthquake came, she says. I thought I should focus on what I love, and that was food.

Seto resigned and enrolled at the Natural Gourmet Institute in New York, attracted to the institutes focus on vegetarian and plant-forward cuisines within a broad range of traditions. When I was a child, I had eczema, and certain chemically treated foods cause symptoms, so my passion was healthy food and doing something positive for the planet, Seto says. Vegan food was the only choice for me, but I didnt want to put myself in a box. The school gave me more freedom to be creative by not limiting me to a certain type of cooking.

After graduation, she honed her culinary skills at restaurants in New York and New Orleans before returning to Japan in early 2013 to work at a Michelin-starred kaiseki (traditional multicourse) restaurant in Tokyo. But Seto soon learned of a space a former snack bar available in Shinagawa. It was tiny, old and needed lots of work, but she decided to take the opportunity to step out on her own.

When Mique finally opened in early 2015 after a year of renovation, Seto knew it would be a waiting game. Though vegan and vegetarian restaurants were finding success in places like New York and London, they hadnt made much ground in Japan. At the beginning, I only got people I knew, she says. I opened just two or three days a week, but I was committed. I believed in the positive effects of plant-based eating and practicing vegetarianism for the planet and all living beings.

Plant-based fusion: Miques menu incorporates French, Ayurvedic, Italian and Japanese traditions. | MICHAEL HARLAN TURKELL

Seto illustrates her conviction with mouthwatering recipes forged from the seasonal bounty of the organic growers and producers in her network. A single menu blends French, Ayurvedic, Italian and Japanese traditions together for a meal unlike any other anywhere else in Tokyos plant-based scene.

The result is dishes such as zunda croquette (fried green soybean and potato balls); cappelletti pasta filled with lentils, mushrooms and walnuts; or a savory onion tart infused with rum and cloves accented by a decorative cup of homemade mustard or jewel-toned pickled Brazilian peppers and tiny cucumbers. On another day, she might offer tofu noodles dressed with sesame chili oil and topped with filaments of long onion, cilantro and a single pansy on a handmade ceramic plate. I sometimes pick ideas from shjin ryri (Buddhist cuisine), raw food or open a traditional French cookbook and convert the recipe into a vegetarian or vegan dish, Seto says.

When she learned the Shinagawa building was to be demolished in 2017, a friend suggested Seto rent their garage. Not much bigger than the first Mique, Seto snapped it up. The small, now renovated space, suits her style. I like to pay attention to each small detail when cooking, she says. By doing everything with my own two hands, I transmit my love, dedication and care into the food, and people can feel it.

Three years later, and eight months into the pandemic, Seto and Mique are still going strong. Although she temporarily reduced the number of seats from eight to six, and now only takes reservations, her passion is not curbed.

Food serves a purpose, Seto says. It makes people happy. When people tell me this food was really yummy and they feel nourished, its the best reward I could get from creating something.

For more information, visit mique-plantbasedfood.com. Women of Taste is a monthly series looking at notable female figures in Japans food industry.

In line with COVID-19 guidelines, the government is strongly requesting that residents and visitors exercise caution if they choose to visit bars, restaurants, music venues and other public spaces.

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Keiko Seto pushes the limits of vegan food - The Japan Times

What Science Says About the Health Benefits of Plant-Based Diets – Discover Magazine

Whether to eat meat or not can be a very personal decision. The choice is often tied to our beliefs about humans relationship with animals, as well as to our upbringing, values and identity.

There are multiple reasons that someone might decide to reduce their meat consumption or ditch it from their diets completely. And over the last decade, theres been a growing trend of people going meatless all the time, or just sometimes, for their health. Its a shift that raises some important questions: Is a diet without meat truly better for you? And, if so, what is it about plant-based diets that our bodies love?

The answer isnt as simple as saying meat is bad and plants are good.

Plant-based diets come in many stripes. And though the diet plans that completely omit meat probably get the most attention, theyre relatively uncommon. Around 3 percent of Americans consider themselves vegans, and 5 percent consider themselves vegetarians, according to some reports.

Most vegetarians eat a lacto-ovo diet, which means they eat fruits and veggies, beans, nuts, grains and soy, as well as animal byproducts like eggs, dairy and honey. Vegans are vegetarians that dont eat anything that comes from an animal. But there are some beegans out there vegans who eat honey.

Other plant-based diets incorporate some meat or fish: The pescatarian diet is similar to the lacto-ovo vegetarian diet, but with the addition of fish. Theres also the flexitarian diet, which encompasses a spectrum of semi-vegetarianism: heavy on plants and light on meat and animal products. Even the Mediterranean diet is technically plant-based, and its one of the most-studied and deemed healthy ways of eating.

A number of studies have shown that a diet low in meat is linked to longer lifespans. But the matter is far from settled, as some studies havent found a significant difference in life expectancy between meat eaters and vegetarians.

But there is growing evidence that plant-based diets are associated with benefits like lower blood pressure, cholesterol, blood sugar and reduced body weight. These improved health measures often translate to less risk of heart disease, diabetes, cancer and other diseases. Eating more whole, plant-based foods could help lower the risk of some health conditions, and might even help people live longer. But researchers also suspect that vegetarians are more health-conscious overall so, theyre likely to be drinking and smoking less and moving their bodies more than the general population which complicates some study results.

Still, emerging research points to a potentially helpful role of plant-based diets in managing some chronic health conditions. For instance, some studies suggest that plant-based diets veganism in particular may help control rheumatoid arthritis.

A 2018 review of nearly a dozen studies most of them randomized controlled trials, the gold standard in research found that eating a plant-based diet can help manage type 2 diabetes. People who followed a plant-based diet experienced greater improvements in blood sugar and cholesterol levels, body weight and mental health compared with people who did not follow plant-based diets. Some participants who avoided animal products were able to reduce or eliminate the use of diabetes medication, the review found.

Beyond that, preliminary research shows the MIND diet (MediterraneanDASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay) can help slow cognitive decline and rates of Alzheimers in old age.

The idea that fruits and vegetables are good for us is so ingrained in us that we dont really give it much thought. But what is it about plant-based meals that make them healthful?

According to GingerHultin,a Seattle-based registered dietitian and spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, plant-based diets tend to be lower in saturated fat and higher in fiber, vitamins and minerals.

But linking nutrition to health effects is where things get a bit tricky. A 2019 review in Nature found evidence that supports many plant-based diet health claims, but they were unable to uncover the specific mechanisms that delivered the benefits. In other words, they werent sure if the benefits were related to nutrition, caloric intake, avoidance of animal products or other factors you might associate with a plant-based diet.

But perhaps the answer is rooted in our microbiomes. Increasingly, scientists are learning that whats good for our health comes down to whats good for our microbiomes. Research is revealing that a diet high in fiber seems to nourish the trillions of bacteria living inside our guts that impact our health. A 2019 review published in Frontiers in Nutrition concluded that diet is the most significant factor that influences microbiome composition. Plant-based diets encourage greater microbial diversity the hallmark of a healthy gut. Lower microbe diversity has been linked to conditions such as obesity and type 2 diabetes.

Humankinds relationship with meat is complicated. We evolved the ability to eat meat, and it changed us. Yet meat is not essential to the human diet, Hultin says.

The only vitamin in the human diet that must come from animal sources is B12 the result of an evolutionary glitch. But this requirement can be met with a supplement. And in case youre wondering, protein deficiencies are uncommon in America, even among vegetarians, Hultin added.

These are not diets where you just eat salad, for example. If a person is hungry or unsatisfied, or [is experiencing] low energy on a plant-based diet, theyre missing something, said Hultin. Its important to know how to meet your needs on a plant-based diet, just like you would on an omnivorous diet.

Undeniably, many people simply like the taste and texture of meat and cannot imagine a Thanksgiving without turkey or a barbecue without burgers. And a healthy diet can certainly include animal protein. But surveys show were leaving little room on our plates for much else these days.

Annual red meat and poultry consumption in America has reached 222 pounds per person on average an amount that has doubled since the 1960s. Only 1 in 10 American adults gets enough fruits and vegetables in their daily diets, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has found. The recommendation is 1.5 to 2 cups of fruit and 2 to 3 cups of vegetables per day.

Americans eat a lot of meat; more than they need, most likely. One of the biggest problems here is that consuming more than the recommended intake of protein in the form of high-fat meats can easily exceed saturated fat recommendations, Hultin says.

If youd like to reap some of the health benefits of a plant-based diet, you may not need to go cold turkey on meat.

I often recommend experimenting with familiar foods that just dont have meat. For example, instead of a soup with meat in it, try one with lentils in it. Instead of taco meat, try crumbled tempeh. If you order Thai food to go, order it with tofu instead of meat, Hultin says. Think simple swaps. Make meals that you enjoy but just with different ingredients, so foods are familiar and delicious but also meet your goals of being more plant-based.

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What Science Says About the Health Benefits of Plant-Based Diets - Discover Magazine

10 Vegetarians Tell Us How They Really Feel About Impossible Burgers and Beyond – Chowhound

In May 2020, Impossible Foods and Beyond Meat saw a spike in demand as the COVID-19 pandemic slowed production of the beef and pork industries. Most famous for their burger alternatives, these products are part of a food category known as meat analogueplant-based products designed to imitate meatwhich explains why a demand was created when actual meat was in shorter supply. But it also begs the question: are Impossible and Beyond Burgers really intended, or suitable, for vegetarians?

This issue came to light lately when I was dining with a longtime vegetarian friend, Ali Ryan. She snapped a picture of the menu of the pub where we were eating to add to her growing catalog of restaurants that have recently replaced their more traditional veggie burger options with an Impossible or Beyond burger.

For someone who has been a vegetarian either their whole life or the majority of their life, there is simply no desire for the taste of meat. If anything, there is an aversion, says Ryan. Replacing a true veggie burgersomething hearty and palatable to a vegetarian dressed up and served in a bunwith an imitation beef burger is effectively taking away an option for a vegetarian, and adding one for a meat eater entertaining the idea of meatless Mondays.

As a lifelong omnivore whod recently tasted an Impossible burger, I could see her point. Had I not known what I was eating, Id have found it to be an underwhelming, but acceptable hamburger. Do other vegetarians feel this way, I wondered? Naturally, no tidy consensus was to be found, not all vegetarians being alike in preferences or reasons for becoming one, but those queried had strong opinions, and many interesting issues were raised.

Related Reading: 6 Grilling Tips from Vegan Chefs for the Best Plant-Based BBQ

I spoke to about 10 vegans and vegetarians with a wide range of timelines in their plant-based journeys, wondering whether there was a neat split on the Impossible issue between those who had been accustomed to eating meat for some significant portion of their life, and those that were lifelong vegetarians. No such clear lines were drawn, however, with answers ranging from never tried them, to I hate themnot my jam at all, to Impossible is next fucking level.

While tastes werent entirely split among lifelong versus recent vegetarians, something I noticed was that those who had already green-lighted Boca burgersanother soy-based meat analoguewere more likely to find Impossible and Beyond products agreeable, given that they felt them a vast improvement upon Boca in both flavor and texture.

Related Reading: 11 Best Veggie Burgers Are Easy to Make & to Love

It may be a matter of what qualifies as a veggie burger. Many I spoke to cited a strong preference for other kinds of vegetable, legume, or grain-based patties with intentional flavors that didnt mimic meat or even include a smoky char to imitate a grill.

Karly Szczepkowski says, I prefer a veggie burger: black bean, mushroom, falafel. They all taste so different from each other than I never think its just a burger! Amy Pagett concurs, Places like Trader Joes started carrying veggie burgers with Indian flavors, Mexican, whatever. And all this is awesome for people like me.

One of the early talking points of the Impossible burger was that it has a bleeding effect, created by a compound found in soybeans called leghemoglobin. Like animal protein, it is rich in iron and has a blood-red color that can give the Impossible burger a look akin to a rare hamburger. Beyondwhich is based on pea proteingets its color from beets, but to the same effect.

Related Reading: How Do Vegans and Vegetarians Get Their Protein?

This is, understandably, off-putting for those whose choice to become vegetarian is rooted in animal rights, all the more so when the Impossible burger makes it hard to tell the difference. Says Heather Nessinger, a vegetarian of about seven years: I find it to be very real in taste and texture, which can be confusing to me, and I often find myself checking it to make sure its not a real burger!

For those whose relationship with meat ended only recently, however, whether for health, animal, or environmental concerns, its very meatiness can also be a treat: I think these products are amazing and delicious but should be treated like a cheat day, says Rose Bruno Bailey, a lifelong omnivore whose vegetarian journey started within the last couple of years.

Baileys point about a cheat day brings up another factor, though. Many queried spoke to the fact that Impossible or Beyond burgers went against the grain of a healthy, whole food diet, vegetarian or otherwise, considering their very processed nature. Packing about as much fat as a traditional beef burger, a Beyond or Impossible burger has an ingredient list of about 20 items, whereas a traditional hamburger patty only has one: beef.

Vegetarianism isnt always synonymous with healthy eating, and there are plenty of vegetarian junk food aficionados, but those who ascribed to a more whole-food based approach pointed out the staggering nutrition stats of the beef alternatives: They may be marginally better for you than a beef hamburger, but they are in no way filling your body with good fuel, says Pagett.

This is the one element in which everyone I heard from agreed. If these sort of meat alternatives get more people on board to the cause, then their very existence is great, personal preference notwithstanding.

From Kale Walch of The Herbivorous Butcher: Its a very exciting time to be in the plant-based food industry. Its really inspiring to see large companies like Beyond and Impossible have such a big impact on fast food, the food service industry, things like that. In the grand scheme of things, theyre doing a lot of good for the animals. Vegan chef Lemel Durrah concurs, especially on the fast food element, where in the case of some merchants a veggie protein option never before existed: I think that both brands have made great contributions to the plant-based foods movement. They both have made an impact in the fast food industry adding their products to menus across the country.

But Ian Ljungquist presses the point, even while liking both products, of who they are actually intended for: I have absolutely no problem with products attempting to taste like meat. It brings more people to the vegetarian table. The one thing most people say in response to finding out I have been a veggie for so long is that they generally agree that factory farming is gross and bad on many levels, but they could never live without the taste of meat. These products are going after people like that, not necessarily people like me.

Put it on your menu in addition to a veggie burger, not instead of one, pleads Ryan, to New York restaurants that have recently taken on the Impossible or Beyond.

Whether this is a national issue or just a regional one is still early days, as Pagett, reporting from Michigan, hasnt necessarily noticed this trend: Sometimes I do see the Impossible-type burger now as a replacement for a veggie burger, but it seems like its usually the types of places that really only had that Morningstar on the menu anyway. Most of the smaller, mom-and-pop types are still making their own yummy creations. Or at least the places I go.

Others share these same concerns, whether or not theyve noticed the sand shifting yet: That is my big fear, says Szczepkowski. I prefer veggie burgers, and dont want to eat meat. And places are replacing delicious veggie burgers, perhaps because they are harder to make or source? Fake meat burgers arent for us veg-enthusiasts.

While a variety of viewpoints were expressed on the suitability of Beyond and Impossible products for vegetarians, when I first posed this question to people, many responded as though I was asking which they preferred, favor-wise. And so I leave you with a hardcore vegetarian, hard rock analogy, care of Ljungquist: Impossible is Slayer, Beyond is Anthrax. If the only tape on a road trip is Anthrax, itll do fine. But if Slayer is available, Anthrax barely ever makes it into the rotation.

Header image courtesy of Bloomberg Creative/Getty Images.

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10 Vegetarians Tell Us How They Really Feel About Impossible Burgers and Beyond - Chowhound

Cambridge University students cry fowl over 17th century painting that upsets vegetarians – The Telegraph

They said: Many people are turning to vegetarianism and veganism as a political choice as much as a dietary one, as we rethink our relationship with animals and their treatment in an industrialised world.

Food choices are not only determined by political concerns about what we eat but also compounded by the moral anxieties which resonate around diet, self-image, over-consumption and our bodies.

As Feast & Fast demonstrates, many of these contemporary concerns about our relationship with food are not new.

The show, which opens on Tuesday, will feature tableau including the recreation of a wedding sugar banquet, which consisted entirely of glittering displays made out of sugar, and an 18th century confectioners shop window.

There will also be a recreation of a 17th century Baroque feasting table complete with swan and peacock. While perhaps incredible - and indeed, offensive - to modern eyes, all of these birds and beasts were available for consumption by wealthy diners across early modern Europe, as made evident in Frans Snyders gigantic workshop copy of The Fowl Market, the Fitzwilliam said.

The Hughes Hall canvas was a mid-17th century copy by an unknown artist in the Antwerp workshop of Snyders (1579-1657), who is renowned for his still-life and animal subjects. The original is in the Hermitage in St Petersburg.

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Vegetarianism, Resistance, and the AmazonHow One Brazilian Journalist Is Fighting Climate Change – Vogue

IT WAS A MONDAY AFTERNOON when day turned into night in the city of So Paulo. I was visiting an expensive nursery school for my 13-month-old daughter, trying to look remotely worthy of such a sophisticated institution. Although it was not supposed to rain that day, the sky suddenly disappeared behind a dense layer of low, heavy clouds. A two-year-old boy stepped out of his classroom, rubbed his eyes, and looked inquisitively at the principal, who said, No, it isnt night yet, dear, and your fathers not here to pick you up. Go back inside.

Later that day, meteorologists struggled to explain the midday darkness. They eventually blamed low-lying clouds from a cold front combined with smoke from the fires in the Amazon rain forest, thousands of miles away. Many people saw this as a sign. While we Brazilians were carrying out our day-to-day activities in oblivion,our rain forest was sending an unequivocal distress signal. How were we going to answer? Was there anything we could do besides posting angry rants on social media?

In August, Brazils National Institute for Space Research reported an 84% increase in fires in the country compared with the same period in 2018. More than half of these were in the Amazon region. Thanks to images from NASA and NOAA satellites, one can see the extent of the devastation: dozens of smoldering patches of land clouding the otherwise dark-green landscape. The smoke from the flames had already swept across several Brazilian states, including So Paulo.

These were not natural wildfiresnor caused by weather and other factors, like the recent, devastating blazes in California. They were likely set by cattle ranchers, farmers, and loggers to clear the land for commercial purposes. Their method is well known: First they pull trees by their roots, using tractors equipped with chains. They wait a few months for the dry season, and when the piles of wood have finally dried, they set fire to everything.

Its been going on for decades. For a while, between 2004 and 2014, a stricter enforcement of environmental laws had effectively curbed the pace of deforestation. But over time, a coalition of landowners, soy producers, and other rural playersthe so-called agribusiness caucushas gained more and more power in Brazilian politics, pushing its economic interests further into the forest. Then came the election of far-right politician Jair Bolsonaroa notorious anti-environmentalist who sneers at the rights of indigenous peopleand all hell broke loose.

Landowners have felt emboldened by the new presidents rhetoric. Some of them even coordinated a recent fire day in the northern state of Par to declare their right to burn land. Worse, several reports have described a gruesome uptick in attacks on indigenous territories since Bolsonaro won the presidency, with several cases of homicide, stoning, and arson. Last January, dozens of men armed with machetes, chainsaws, and firearms entered the protected territory of the Uru-eu-wau-wau tribe to claim land for commercial purposes. They marked trees and staked out plots for sale. For months the tribespeople have fought back. Now part of this territory is on fire.

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Vegetarianism, Resistance, and the AmazonHow One Brazilian Journalist Is Fighting Climate Change - Vogue

World Vegetarian day: Why are top athletes turning to greens, to stay healthy and fit? – Gulf News

World Vegetarian Day Image Credit: Shutterstock

Today, add an extra serving of vegetables to your plate and make a conscious effort to eat your greens. No? Do try, because its World Vegetarian Day.

First celebrated on October 1, 1977, by the North American Vegetarian Society to promote the many benefits of a meatless diet, World Vegetarian day also kicks off Vegetarian Awareness Month.

For the uninitiated, vegetarianism is a dietary choice where an individual abstains from eating fish, meat and chicken for ethical, environmental, health and religious reasons.

The fringe nutritional movement that skulked on the margins of menus and culinary practices in the 1960s has now been catapulted into mainstream fame and has found a newfound appetite in large parts thanks to social media.

If the terms 'Veganuary' and 'MeatFreeMondays' havent been drizzled over your dinner table tte--ttes, then its definitely been tossed around your newsfeed as hashtags.

So, is the buzz around vegetarianism all that its cracked up to be?

Those whove already made the switch to the plant-based diet will vouch for its virtues. The list of scientific studies and research extolling a vegetarian lifestyles value pile up higher than Instagram-worthy multi-stacked burgers.

For starters, the less red meat on your plate, the greener the planet the livestock industry emits around 15 per cent of climate change-causing greenhouse gases (methane, carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide) and spearheads the felling of rainforests by cattle ranchers in South America to turn land into grazing pastures. Those expensive steak dinners do cost the Earth.

But surely you need poultry and fish to fuel your fitness goals and meet your protein requirements, yes?

A resounding no, from some of the worlds top athletes featured on the Netflix documentary The Game Changers, busts that myth. The likes of MMA fighter James Wilks credit their record-cinching stamina and peak performance bodies to a protein-rich vegan diet mined from legumes, tofu and oatmeal.

Hear us out before you think vegan and flee. All vegans are vegetarian but not all vegetarians are vegans. That means you dont have to cut out dairy and all animal-sourced products such as honey from your diet. So, those cheeseboards and Manuka honey-topped milkshakes can stay put. Unless youre lactose-intolerant, of course.

- -

Vegetarianism, in fact, goes one step further and also includes egg-eaters under its umbrella. The correct terminology for vegetarians who eat eggs are ovo-vegetarians or the more colloquial eggetarian. But its a topic that falls foul of strict vegetarians.

Whichever version of vegetarianism appeals to you, or even if youre a staunch carnivore ambivalent about the power of produce, theres nutritional merit to straying down the vegetarian path on occasion.

Great way to fight heart disease and diabetes

The US-based Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics states that vegetarians are at a lower risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, certain types of cancer, and obesity.

If these reasons arent the carrot on a stick that sway you towards a flexitarian diet a watered-down vegetarian diet thats primarily plant-based but includes fish and meat on occasion then these three scrummy vegetarian recipes should do the trick.

Packed with complex flavours, these dishes are flag-bearers for vegetarian cuisines versatility and creative range. Cooking techniques bound outside of salad bowls and there isnt an iceberg lettuce in sight in the ingredients. But theres plenty of crunch and zing, nevertheless.

Recipes:

Nargesi

This Iranian breakfast staple from Executive Chef Mansour Memarian would do Popeye proud. Loaded with garlicky spinach, its traditionally topped with a fried egg, making it resemble the bright yellow narcissus flower called Nargesi in Farsi. But this vegetarian version featuring an addition of potatoes lets you skip the sunny-side up. If youd still like some protein, add poached quail eggs as a garnish.

Preparation time: 10 minutes

Cooking time: 20 30 minutes

Vegetable oil (for frying)

1. Melt 50gm of butter in a pan, add potato cubes, garlic slices and fresh thyme and cook all sides of potatoes in a low flame.

2. Heat the pan and saut spinach with remaining butter, season with salt and pepper.

3. Slice potatoes in thin sizes, fry them in hot, slightly bubbling vegetable oil. Drain.

4. Place all items in a plate, serve and enjoy!

Recipe courtesy: Palazzo Versace, Dubai

Tortang Talong

Youd be hard-pressed to find purely vegetarian dishes in Filipino cuisine since it relies heavily on seafood and meat for flavouring but the Tortang Talong, a fried aubergine pancake comes close enough, but with eggs. For the average Filipino, doing away with the mandatory egg wash strips the iconic comfort food of its authenticity. The aubergine is the star, but its the egg that works hard to enhance the aubergines earthy chewiness and smokey flavour, lending it a satisfying crunch. Executive Chef John Buenaventura, however, has tailored the recipe to suit strict vegetarians by replacing the egg wash with flour equally crunchy, equally delicious.

Preparation time: 20 minutes

Method

1. Wash the aubergines and score it with a fork multiple times to allow steam to escape while grilling. Let the stalk remain.

2. Grill the aubergine until soft and skin is almost black. Let the eggplant cool until you can peel the skin off. Set aside.

3. In a bowl mix flour and salt.

4. On a flat surface, place the whole aubergine and flatten using a fork.

5. Dust the flattened eggplant with the flour and salt mix and ensure it is coated completely.

6. Heat cooking oil to medium heat in a frying pan. Then fry the coated aubergines for approximately 3 to 4 minutes on each side.

7. Transfer to a serving plate and enjoy.

Recipe courtesy: Hilton Abu Dhabi Yas Island

Samosa Doughnut

In Michelin-star celebrity Chef Vineet Bhatias modern take on the quintessential Indian appetizer, the teatime hit sheds its triangular pastry casing for a circular doughnut-shaped one. The traditional potato-based filling welcomes into its fold a range of healthy vegetables, such as carrots and broccoli.

Preparation time: 30 minutes

Cooking time: 20 minutes

tsp carom seeds (ajwain)

For Punjabi chickpeas masala (chole)

1 tbsp fresh ginger, chopped

1 tsp green chilli, chopped

300g canned chickpeas, drained and rinsed

1 tbsp channa masala powder

2 tbsp red onion, chopped

1 tbsp coriander, chopped

1 tbsp green cardamom pods

1 tbsp coarsely chopped fresh ginger

1 green chilli, roughly chopped

tsp ground dried ginger (sauth)

1. Mix refined flour with salt and carom seeds.

2. Add in warm ghee and water and knead to make a semi-hard dough.

1. Heat oil in a pan and splutter cumin seeds, then saut garlic and ginger until it sweats.

2. Add powdered spices and chopped vegetables except potato to it and cook it for a while. Then mix it with the boiled potato and season it.

3. Cool it down and transfer to a piping bag.

1. Roll the dough into thin sheets of 1 cm. Then cut the sheets in squares measuring 8cm all the sides. Pipe out stuffing into the centre leaving a little space on the sides of the sheet to enclose it.

2. Roll halfway (like a cigar) and make 3 to 4 vertical slits on the dough leaving the edges.

3. Now, close both ends by applying water on the edges to get them to stick and fold it to make a round shape.

4. Deep fry the doughnut until nicely golden brown crisp, drain on kitchen paper.

Punjabi chickpea masala (chole)

1. Heat the oil in a deep pan and add the cumin seeds.

2. When they crackle add the garlic and sweat until soft. Add the chopped onions and cook until lightly golden, then add the ginger and green chilli and saut for a minute.

3. Stir in the chopped tomato, cook for a minute longer and add the red chilli powder, turmeric, cumin and coriander.

4. Cook over medium heat till the oil separates from the side of the pan, then stir in the tomato puree and add 50ml water.

5. Add the chickpeas and cook until they are coated in the masala. Add the channa masala, chopped red onion and some salt. Then remove from the heat and leave to cool. Finally, stir in the chopped coriander.

1. Place all the ingredients except the chaat masala and ground ginger in a saucepan and add 750ml of water.

2. Bring to water to a boil and cook spices for 30 minutes or until reduced by half, stirring frequently.

3. Strain immediately through a fine sieve to remove all the whole spices, then stir in the chaat masala and ginger. Leave to cool.

4. If you are not using the chutney straight away, it will keep in the fridge for a month.

Spoon the warm chickpeas masala into the centre of the plate and place the doughnut on top. Drizzle with the tamarind chutney and sweetened yoghurt. Sprinkle the gram flour vermicelli (sev), pomegranate seeds and chopped coriander leaves.

Recipe courtesy: Indego by Vineet, Grosvenor House Dubai

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World Vegetarian day: Why are top athletes turning to greens, to stay healthy and fit? - Gulf News

Burger King’s Impossible Whopper Is the First Step on the Road to State-Enforced Vegetarianism – Washington Examiner

Burger Kings new Impossible Whopper worries me.

Why? Ill get to that, but first, some explanation. For those who have yet to be assaulted by the hype campaign, an Impossible Whopper is a hamburger with a meatless patty, relentlessly advertised as tasting every bit as toothsome as a garden-variety beef burger.

How do they do it? Burger King isnt telling, but Impossible Foods, the company that supplies the Impossible Whopper, is. The key to making Impossible meat is producing a substance called heme in a laboratory. Were told that heme is naturally occurring and is what makes meat taste like meat. But it is found in plants too and just needs to be isolated.

Heres how the Impossible people describe their process: We started by extracting heme from the root nodules of soybean plants, but we knew there was a better way. So we took the DNA from these soy plants and inserted it into a genetically engineered yeast.

This, one might imagine, could pose a conundrum for woke foodies. On the one hand, they have a way around meat and the industrialized slaughter it entails without having to accept the interminable tedium of eating kale, sprouts, and quinoa. But on the other hand, were talking about taking genes from soy plants and splicing them into genetically modified yeast. GMO, OMG!

Who would have thought something as mundane as a fast-food hamburger could encapsulate a generations cognitive dissonance? In the Impossible Whopper, we see the clash of two irreconcilable impulses: the devoted belief in anything labeled science and the enduring suspicion that science is a mysterious menace.

Burger Kings advertising has been telling us that the Impossible Whopper tastes just like a Whopper. And so, in the spirit of empirical science and discovery, I ventured to a Burger King this week to test the claim.

I found myself at a sticky linoleum table with two burgers on a tray. I started with a bite of the regular Whopper. If there was any beef in the bite, I wouldnt know, overwhelmed as I was by the flavors of bun, mayo, lettuce, mayo, pickle, mayo, ketchup, mayo, mayo, tomato, and mayo.

It was immediately clear to me why it was possible to have a meatless Whopper that tastes like a Whopper the beef is buried under a pile of salad gloppy with mayo. A bite of the Impossible Whopper proved the point.

But what about the meat substitute? How did it taste in isolation? Again, first I tried the actual Whopper, clearing away the salad to get a bite of plain burger patty. It had that tired, desiccated, cardboardy quality that is the hallmark of fast-food beef. And indeed, the Impossible Whopper patty succeeded in matching the regular one, low bar that that may be.

But on second bite, it was clear that the meatless meat was a product of the laboratory. The texture was dense and slightly spongy, not unlike tofu that has been dried and compressed. And the faux-meat flavor gave way to a curious chemical aftertaste. Nice try, Impossible Foods, but the meatless patty is to beef as a baked brisket drenched in Liquid Smoke is to actual wood-smoked BBQ.

And so I neednt let the Impossible Whopper worry me.

Why was I concerned in the first place? Because if synthetic meat succeeds at approximating the real thing, it wont be long before it isnt just an option but the only option. Why tolerate the abattoir when soybeans can be sacrificed rather than cows? Once meat-substitute is widely used, one day we will wake up to discover that activists have convinced regulators to outlaw the consumption of actual animal flesh.

Rib-eye steak, say hello to the plastic straw.

But not yet. Not yet because Impossible meat isnt quite good enough. It isnt exactly nasty, but it isnt nearly the sort of plausible substitute needed to provide cover for a campaign to impose government-enforced vegetarianism.

Still, watch out, because the synthetic stuff is bound to get better. Its not impossible.

Eric Felten is the James Beard Award-winning author of How's Your Drink?

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Burger King's Impossible Whopper Is the First Step on the Road to State-Enforced Vegetarianism - Washington Examiner

A new poetry collection about a Cambridge women unjustly hanged as a witch, and new National Endowment for the Humanities grants for local writers -…

Verses of the accused

In Cambridge in 1650, a woman was wrongly accused and hanged for bewitching her friends child to death. Shortly after her hanging, it came to light that the child froze to death because his nurse left him in the cold woods during a lovers tryst. Such are the facts that drive Cambridge poet Denise Bergmans taut and propulsive book-length poem The Shape of the Keyhole (Black Lawrence). The poem unfolds over seven days, from the accusation to the farce of the trial to the public hanging and the too-late truth. Nightmare and silence are powerful forces on the scene, and Bergmans examinations of the different wavelengths of fear of the woman accused, her accusers, her husband, the assorted members of the town, butcher, baker, preacher, farmer, blacksmith is deeply perceptive: Fear like smokehouse fire fills her loins. Its as physically raw as it is psychologically astute: grape-purple eyelids / lips too cracked / to cry. She uses slant echoing words get repeated, altered, reformed giving the feeling of trying to make sense of something thats happening too fast. Her demons / have outgrown their skins. There is something of Edgar Lee Masterss Spoon River Anthology here, and the powerful act of giving voice to those beyond the grave. Bergman will read and discuss the book at a virtual event on Wednesday, January 6, at 7 pm through Porter Square Books. Visit portersquarebooks.com for more information and to register.

Grants for humanities

The National Endowment for the Humanities has awarded $32 million in grants to humanities projects, with over $3.1 million going to individuals and organizations in New England. In Massachusetts, projects funded range from Melissa Muellers book on Homers reception in the work of Sappho ($60k); to Traci Parkers book on Black love as an expression of Black freedom movement ideology ($60k); to Benjamin Leemings translation into English of a collection of Nahuatl-language Christian sermons from the 1540s ($60k); to Elizabeth Fosters book on West African political and religious conflicts ($55k); to Kerry Sonias book about ancient Israel childbirth practices ($60k); to Annette Lienaus book on Arabic as a transregional language; to Owen Stanwoods book on failed French settlements in 16th century Florida ($50k); to Olivia Weissers book on sex and disease in 17th- and 18th century London ($60k), among others. In Maine, Ann Kibbies book on medical treatment of pregnant woman in Britain in the 18th and 19th centuries was funded ($40k). For a full list, visit neh.gov.

Night shift novel

Ellen Cooneys wise and warm latest novel, One Night Two Souls Went Walking (Coffee House) follows an unnamed 36-year-old chaplain on the night shift at a hospital. It is a book about soul, the thing that doesnt have words, the realest thing in all of us that we struggle to name, but that comes flickering, shining, blazing to life. Cooney, a native of Massachusetts who now lives in midcoast Maine, asks the big questions as her narrator sits bedside to people in the deepest crux moments of their lives. What to say when there are no words? Her narrator has doubts, feels lonely in her family, sometimes her brain turns traitor and floods her with gruesome, tragic moments from her work; in other words, she is human, which makes it easier for the people she tends to, and us, to trust her. This is a quiet book, steady, gentle, present, one that grapples with the matter-of-fact here and now, and wades, with bravery and wonder, into the mysteries that make us human.

Coming Out

Black-and-White Thinking: The Burden of a Binary Brain in a Complex World by Kevin Dutton (FSG)

My Grandmothers Braid by Alina Bronsky, translated from the German by Tim Mohr (Europa)

I Just Wanted To Save My Family by Stphan Plissier, translated from the French by Adriana Hunter (Other Press)

Pick of the Week

Abby Velasco at Trident Booksellers on Newbury Street in Boston recommends Tender Is the Flesh by Agustina Bazterrica, translated from the Spanish by Sarah Moses (Scribner): I expected the message to be heavy-handedly, Dont eat meat. It is bad. Well, this book pleasantly shattered my expectations. This is set in a world where a virus has diseased all animal flesh, and to fill the demand for meat, humans have resorted to consuming each other. Rather than a promotion for vegetarianism, I read this novel as gruesome commentary on justified, insane selfishness in society. Really, how far are we willing to go to get what we want? Not need. Want.

Nina MacLaughlin is the author of Wake, Siren. She can be reached at nmaclaughlin@gmail.com.

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A new poetry collection about a Cambridge women unjustly hanged as a witch, and new National Endowment for the Humanities grants for local writers -...

World Vegetarian Day 2020 HD Images and Wallpapers for Free Download Online: WhatsApp Stickers, Facebook Messages and GIF Greetings to Send to the Veg…

World Vegetarian Day 2020:The occasion of World Vegetarian Day is celebrated around the globe annually. The international day is observed on October 1, which also marks the beginning of the Vegetarian Awareness Month, which ends on November 1, with World Vegan Day. The World Vegetarian Day aims to promote vegetarianism lifestyle and its health benefits. People share across a lot of informative messages through pictures and wallpapers to mark the celebrations on this day. If you are searching for the top trending World Vegetarian Day 2020 images and wallpapers for free download online, then you have arrived at the right destination.

Also Read | #HappyChildrensDay Wishes and Images Trend on Twitter: Trending Topics, Viral Videos & Funny Memes of The Day

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Individuals can share these latest World Vegetarian Day 2020 HD images and wallpapers through picture messages as well. If you want to share it as a text message, you can copy the text and send it via SMSes and text messages as well. If you like to be more creative, then you can download these HD wishes and messages, and convert them into beautiful videos as well. With you can share your World Vegetarian Day 2020 videos on Instagram Reels, Roposso, and Chingari mobile apps as well.

Also Read | World Vegetarian Day 2020: These Memes and Jokes Are As Common As Paneer But too Funny to Be Missed Today

If you are looking for the most-popular World Vegetarian Day 2020 images and wallpapers, then look no further as you arrived at the right place. We, at LatestLY, bring you some of the most amazing and popular 2020 World Vegetarian Day pictures and wallpapers, which you will love to share with your friends, family, relatives, etc. on this special day.

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To download the World Vegetarian Day 2020 WhatsApp stickers, android phone users will have to visit the Play Store app or click HERE.

The first observation of World Vegetarian Day took place in 1977. It is observed by all the vegetarians across the planet. There are events, seminars, workshops, and parades too, where people educate and promote the benefits of vegetarian practises. The observance of World Vegetarian Day aims to educate people about how beneficial being a vegetarian can be. This Vegetarian Awareness Month is also popularly called as Reverence for Life month.

We at LatestLY, wish you all a very Happy World Vegetarian Day 2020. We hope you would love to share these popular World Vegetarian Day 2020 images and wallpapers, on this international day.

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OPINION: Flexitarian choices give the best of both worlds – CollingwoodToday.ca

This week the authors of the 52 Weeks Climate Action Challenge are again encouraging you to think about what you're eating

This regular column on tips to live more sustainably comes from the52 Weeks Climate Action Challenge. The challenge was created by Laurel Hood and Sherri Jackson. Hood is a retired Collingwood Collegiate Institute teacher, and Jackson is a writer and speaker, and ran as the Green Partys candidate for the area in the last federal election. Both are climate activists.

*****

I know you eagerly invested some time last week into researching vegetarian meals you might want to spring on your family. If you have picky or unadventurous eaters (or if its you), you may have to diplomatically broach this subject. The good news is, there are lots more options out there than simply veggie sticks and hummus. Not knocking hummus. But, you get what I mean.

You may recently have heard the term flexitarian.I personally like it, because it doesnt lump you into a category of any kind. You can eat whatever you want, but, you eat with a conscious understanding of what youre eating, where it came from, and its effect on the environment.

It encourages mostly plant-based proteins, but doesnt exclude animal products. Its more of a lifestyle than a diet, and here are the basics:

Flexitarian is basically what were suggesting, with sliding scales of animal products in your diet. If you are planning to go vegetarian/vegan or you already are, then youre already ahead of us!

Using the recipes and the groceries you bought last week, this week youre making a vegetarian mealthat you can share (or not) with your family.

As weve said before, if youve substituted meat for an all Doritos diet, vegetarianism isnt making you healthier. But, if youre eating balanced meals, and ensuring you're getting your daily intake of vitamins and nutrients, vegetarianism can provide many health benefits like improved heart health, reduced cancer risk, prevention of Type 2 diabetes, lower blood pressure, decreased asthma symptoms, weight loss, slowing the aging process and improved bone health.

Often I hear from people that going vegetarian was their childs initiative, and they just followed along. Our kids are recognizing things that we havent that sometimes you have to change things up if you want anything to change!

If, on the other hand, your kids have built-in kale detectors, you can try some of these tips.

In your research last week, you will have more than likely discovered that vegetarian options can be easy, filling, and delicious. It doesnt have to be a hardship to choose a vegetarian/vegan option. It can be a highlight.

Eat vegan or vegetarian because you have discovered some great vegan or vegetarian meals, and youll get the added bonus of improved health, and saving the planet. Wow! All in one veggie chili. Imagine!

*****

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OPINION: Flexitarian choices give the best of both worlds - CollingwoodToday.ca

Celebrities rooting for Veganuary in UK to combat new rise in meat sales – The Guardian

A host of musicians, actors and sports stars have joined up with businesses and environmental groups in what they hope will be a successful push to get more people to ditch meat, fish and dairy in the new year.

Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace, Sir Paul McCartney, Ricky Gervais, Lily Cole and Alan Cumming have all signed a letter calling for people to change their diet for Veganuary next month. We cannot tackle climate change while we farm and eat animals on an industrial scale, the open letter written by the Veganuary association says.

Other signatories include Chris Packham, the environmental campaigner and TV presenter, Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr, cricketer Jason Gillespie, businesswoman Deborah Meaden and comedians John Bishop, Sara Pascoe and Jon Richardson.

Packham said there was a clear link between the climate crisis, large-scale meat-eating and coronavirus. This virus leapt from animals into us as Sars, Ebola and HIV did all because we were abusing the natural environment and the animals that live there, he told the Observer. So nature has taught us a very harsh and cold lesson. If we dont start understanding that we are all connected implicitly to nature, and that what we eat impacts on nature, were in deep trouble. Thats why the environmental aspect of veganism or vegetarianism or anyone changing their diet has come to the forefront.

Veganuarys organisers hope to persuade 500,000 people to try veganism in January. Some 350,000 took part last year.

Global meat sales had begun to decline in 2019, after rising from around 71 million tonnes a year in 1961 to 340 million tonnes in 2018, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. In the UK, sales of beef, lamb and pork dropped by up to 4% last Christmas, and supermarkets cater for rising numbers of flexitarians those who cut back on meat.

However, lockdown has fuelled a boom in meat consumption. According to researcher Kantar, sales of turkeys were up 36% on last year, and sales of red meat and poultry grew by more than 10% each month until September.

The Veganuary letter sets out the environmental arguments against meat. Animal agriculture is responsible for an estimated 14.5% of all human-generated greenhouse gas emissions, it says. In recent years, more than 80% of deforestation in Brazil was to graze farmed animals, and still more forests are destroyed to grow crops to feed animals on farms around the world. Deforestation is serious for lots of reasons. It pushes wild species to extinction. It displaces indigenous peoples. It drives climate change. And it brings us in ever closer contact with wild animals and any viruses they may harbour, raising the risk of another pandemic.

Packham said there was evidence that soya produced in felled Brazilian rainforest had been used to feed chickens sold in UK supermarkets and fast-food outlets: If you put that chicken in your mouth, youre connecting yourself very directly with deforestation in South America.

But ethical eating was difficult even for vegans, he added. Palm oil has led to the deforestation of Indonesia and Malaysia, and its in biscuits, shampoo its frankly everywhere. We each of us consume 8kg to 9kg every year.

He said the solution was not for the whole population to turn vegan. The people I call ultra-vegans just want to stop all meat consumption overnight. But that would be no good for meat farmers. It would be no good for our landscapes, where low-intensity, good-quality animal husbandry and livestock farming are actually good for biodiversity. What we need is a transition where we eat less meat and pay more for it so we can put the profit in the farmers pocket.

Toni Vernelli of Veganuary said that while 2020 had brought hardship and heartbreak, it had also brought an opportunity to change and build a better future.

Our united message is one of hope, but we must all act now.

This article was amended on 20 December 2020 because changes made during the editing process led an earlier version to say that Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth wrote the letter. Those organisations were among the letters signatories, however, the letter itself was written by the Veganuary association.

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Celebrities rooting for Veganuary in UK to combat new rise in meat sales - The Guardian

What other cultures can teach us about forgiveness – BBC News

Does putting the needs of the group first leave the forgiver dissatisfied? What about their emotional needs?

The question is whether emotional forgiveness follows decisional forgiveness in collectivistic people, says Toussaint. Something called cognitive dissonance might interfere. In short, its difficult for people to say one thing and believe another our brains struggle to allow two contradictory thoughts to exist and it creates additional psychological stress. As a result, if we say we believe something, that belief tends to materialise.

To decide you will forgive and then withhold it emotionally for most individuals would be very disconcerting, says Toussaint. Sometimes, especially when acts of forgiveness are made public, they draw us emotionally in line with those commitments.

This reasoning is one reason why vegetarianism and veganism can become an entire life philosophy for some people, and not just a diet. They believe the reasons for their diet are important and it permeates elsewhere such as in the clothes they buy and charities they support. Likewise, for someone who arrives at a cold, calculated reason to forgive, it is likely that the emotional satisfaction will follow suit. Perhaps then, if you want to benefit from being more forgiving, you can start by deciding to forgive even if you are not yet emotionally invested.

How do you say I forgive you?

Language plays an important part in our interpretation of emotions. Its very common for feelings to manifest in different ways depending on the language you speak. The people of Tahiti, for example, have no word for sadness, writes Lisa Feldman Barrett, a neuroscientist at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts, and author of How Emotions Are Made.

When Tahitians are in a situation that a Westerner would describe as sad, they feel ill, troubled, fatigued or unenthusiastic, all of which are covered by their broader term pe'ape'a, which means worries, she writes. Sadness is not one of their worries, instead their language is more specific and sophisticated. So, when a Westerner might say they feel sad, a Tahitian might say they feel physically sick, and due to cognitive dissonance, a physical sensation follows.

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What other cultures can teach us about forgiveness - BBC News

My Diet Doesn’t Have a Catch-All Name, But It’s the Healthiest I’ve Ever Felt – Organic Authority

After years of trying all sorts of different "healthy" diets, from low-cal to low-carb to vegetarian to vegan to paleo, I've finally found the diet that works for me. While my diet has no catch-all name, it's the best and healthiest I've ever felt in my life. Getting here, however, was a journey of broken "rules" and failed regimens that ultimately taught me that perhaps the safest and gentlest way to define your diet is to stop trying to.

Its not a rare story, but it is mine: I have always struggled with my weight.

I came from a household where we ate quickly, and food was always copious. While my mother eschewed processed sugars and candy, and snacks were always either fresh fruit or crudits, there was always more than enough pasta to go around. I wasn't a particularly active child, and I loved food, often eating beyond the point of fullness. Comparing my body to that of my skinny sister was something that I did frequently by the time I was ten or eleven, but I didnt have the tools or the self-awareness to realize that portion control was probably the best way forward.

Instead, when I was thirteen, I started a long chain of fad diets that I didnt understand. I would drink my fathers Slim Fast shakes for breakfast or use websites in an attempt to count calories. I would eat meal replacement bars or emulate my sister's eating habits. By fourteen, I had tried both Atkins and Weight Watchers; with the latter, I started to see my still-adolescent body shrink.

For years, I had decided what to put in my body solely based on what tasted good. It wasnt until I was fifteen and my boarding school roommate sent me a Michael Pollan article about steer farming in America that I began to think about the morality behind my food. I quickly became a vegetarian, which, at boarding school, meant I ate a lot of pasta and bagels. But I also frequented the salad bar and began a life-long love affair with vegetables. I liked the sense of fullness they gave me: a fullness that made me feel revitalized instead of sluggish. But I must admit, now, that I also liked the fact that putting a name on my diet made it easy for me to refuse food, to hide behind the name of something that was morally driven rather than inspired by vanity.

Theres nothing wrong with trying a new eating regimen for whatever reason or even being gung-ho about it, as so many vegetarians and vegans are. But when we define ourselves by what we eat, things get complicated.

Theres a little bit of a slippery slope, explains Elise Museles,certified eating psychology & nutrition expert. Because on the one hand, we dont want to discourage people from being curious. Where you get into trouble is when you think that you have to stick to these super-rigid rules, and they were defined by somebody else, not by you.

In doing exactly this, Museles explains, I was refusing to listen to what my body needed.

You become disconnected from your body and you become more concerned with the rules instead of how you actually feel.

This was certainly true for me. Weight was pouring off me, but I couldnt get enough sleep, and my usually thick curly hair thinned. It wasnt until moving to France that I would reject this unhealthy diet but my journey towards healthy eating was far from over.

Food is nourishment, yes, but its also social, something that contributed to my abandonment of my vegetarian diet at the age of sixteen. While studying abroad, I was housed in a homestay with three other girls and an elderly French host. On our first night, she served everyone ham-and-cheese-stuffed cordon bleu, looking at me and saying, "Don't worry, I have something special for you!"

She returned to the kitchen and emerged holding a baked whole fish.

Aghast at the prospect of explaining the difference between vegetarianism and pescatarianism to my elderly host, I made an exception. Afterwards, I felt so guilty that I Googled meat production in France, discovering to my pleasure and surprise vastly different standards than those I knew back home. In rural France, which was far from veggie-friendly in 2004, this was a welcome relief.

Soon, I started integrating not just fish but meat into my diet. By the time I enrolled at the University of Toronto, I was an omnivore once more.

At university, I began to teach myself to cook, a skill my mother possessed but never passed down. I made meals to share and also went out to restaurants with friends. But as I embraced the social aspect of dining, I also gradually put on thirty pounds over the course of my freshman year.

This doesnt surprise Museles. While she notes that "socializing and connecting with other human beings" is, itself, "a form of nourishment," it's all about finding equilibrium.

"If I'm going to end up eating something that isn't as healthy as I would make at home, I'm OK with that, because I would like to be connected to other people," she says.

But I wasnt quite there yet. While I enjoyed sharing foods with my friends, I hadn't reached a balance that made me feel both physically and emotionally sated. Over the next decade, I found that my eating vacillated widely depending on whether I was alone or in a group. With others, I would eat omnivorously and with gusto, often punishing myself for it later by cutting calories... or cutting out food groups entirely. I attempted all sorts of things to get my eating back on track: Weight Watchers, Whole30, and more.I would tell people that I was taking some time away from booze, or grains, or gluten, or meat, or dairy, only to change my mind weeks or months later.I never felt satisfied, and food, despite having become my job, was a source of profound stress and anxiety for me.

For Museles, the rulemaking I subjected myself to is not uncommon.

Women have a tendency to vilify entire food groups, she says, citing carbohydrates or gluten or fat as examples. This tendency to restrict based on what works for someone else's body often inspires cravings, especially if that food group is one your bodyreally needs.

Often a binge will follow a cycle of restrictive eating," she says.It creates this loop that makes us feel bad about ourselves, when the truth is that it's really our body doing its job.

In 2015, I came down with a bout of bronchitis that I could not shake for six months. After two rounds of antibiotics, chest x-rays, and more, my doctor put me on a cortisol inhaler. Knowing that a constant intake of steroids couldn't be good long-term, I explored an anti-inflammatory diet, using the principles of Whole30 and GAPS to cut vast swaths of foods from my diet. From there, I slowly reintegrated them, all the while focusing on how I felt: were my lungs inflamed? Was I coughing? How was my breathing? It was the first time in my life that I examined so closely how individual foods made me feel, and in doing so, I finally stumbled upon the diet that has cleared up my skin, helped me shed unwanted pounds easily, improved my mood, and kept me full. And it has no name.

I had learned back in high school that I do well on a diet mostly made of plants, and that remains true to this day. I love to feel full, and every day, I consume multiple servings of leafy greens, orange veggies, and crucifers, as well as quite a bit of seasonal fruit.

I do believe strongly in the moral and environmental ramifications of eating plant-based. The only non-vegan foods I keep at home are small, sustainable fish (pickled anchovies are a favorite, as are canned sardines) and free range eggs sourced from local farmers. I also know that I need a decent amount of fat to feel full: tahini and avocado are my favorite sources.

I know that dairy and alcohol make me break out, and most carbs make me hangry and cranky. I avoid these foods most of the time, and frankly, I don't miss them. I've never had much of a sweet tooth, and when a craving arises, I truly, honestly do feel better with a piece of seasonal or frozen fruit.

This is how I eat when I'm at home, and it's no hardship. I look forward to hearty meal salads of beans and kale and chili-spiced tahini dressing. But also live in Paris, where I work as a restaurant critic. And you can bet I'm not asking Alain Ducasse to make me a kale salad.

"Food should work with your life; it shouldn't define your life," says Museles. "It should enhance it.

I love eating out with friends, exploring new restaurants and flavors. White flour might make me cranky, but depriving myself of a truly exquisite Saint-Honor makes me even crankier.

But even when deviating from my base diet, I make choices that make me feel good.I prefer skipping breakfast and eating my first meal at lunchtime, and when I indulge in a croissant in the morning (as my countrymen are wont to do), I find it makes me hangry two hours later. So instead, I save my croissant consumption for the 4pm goter or snack.I've noticed that while I tolerate meat fine, I rarely get excited about it. I probably eat meat once a month, if that, and only when a particularly enticing option presents itself on a menu (90 percent of the time, this is tacos al pastor or nduja). At restaurants, I usually eschew dessert, because eating sweets late at night gives me a stomach ache.

It took me 33 years to know that about myself. And I'm still learning.

There is no one word to define the diet I follow, which I suppose bridges the gap between flexitarian and pegan. But I don't need a name for it. All I know is its the best Ive ever felt in my whole life.

Related on Organic AuthorityGuide to Non-Toxic Cookware to Keep Chemicals Out of Your FoodIs It Time to Bring Animal Fats Back Into Your Kitchen?9 Pegan Recipes to Embrace This Paleo-Vegan Hybrid Diet

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My Diet Doesn't Have a Catch-All Name, But It's the Healthiest I've Ever Felt - Organic Authority

Ethics and Religion Talk – Dietary Restrictions – The Rapidian

Linda Knieriemen, Senior Pastor at First Presbyterian Church in Holland, responds:

Wine was a staple beverage in the ancient world. Jesus consumed wine, in fact at the wedding of Cana turned water into wine! If Christians want to live like Jesus, they should enjoy their Cabernets and Chardonnays! But there are also warnings about excess consumption of alcoholic beverages in the pages of the Bible, so thoughtful consideration is prudent and has been plentiful.

In the PC(USA) there are no dietary restrictions, neither is alcohol prohibited. My congregation opens its doors to 12-step recovery group meetings for the community so the life altering effects of alcohol addiction are an omnipresent reality. Out of respect for those who choose to not consume alcohol we maintain an alcohol-free building. Similarly, out of respect for potential addictiveness, the Presbyterian Church requires that if a congregation serves wine for the Sacrament of Communion that we always provide the option of a non-fermented grapejuice. My congregation has long kept it simple by only serving Welchs grape juice. (Welchs is not specified, but it tastes the best of all the option!)

Dr. Welch, by the way was a physician, dentist and Methodist minister in New Jersey in the At the time, Methodists were strongly opposed to the consumption of alcohol which made the use of wine for communion problematic. Dr. Welch experimented and using the then new technique of pasteurization succeeded 1869 to preserve the juice of the grape without its fermenting. It wasnt until the rise of the temperance movement more than 20 years later that the beverage took off both for residential and church use.

Id summarize our position on alcohol this way:

Dr Sahibzada, the Director of Islamic Center and Imam of the Mosque of Grand Rapids, responds:

God is Creator of all things. Therefore, he also guides about the discipline of life. Food requirements are also regulated by God Himself in His words. Two terms are used in Islam for lawful and unlawful (halal & haram) food.

Muslims will eat only permitted lawful food and will not eat or drink anything that is considered unlawful. Lawful foodrequires that Gods name is invoked at the time an animal is killed. Lamb, beef, goat, and chicken arelawfulas long as they are killed by a believer invoking name of God.

Following are some items which are unlawful and forbidden to be consumed:

Intoxicants, carrion, blood, pork, animal dedicated to other than God, prohibited methods of slaughtering: an animal whose meat is lawful must be slaughtered applying Islamic methodology by invoking name of God.

Fred Stella, the Pracharak (Outreach Minister) for the West Michigan Hindu Temple, responds:

There are no absolute hard and fast rules on diet in most of Hinduism. As with many religions, there is a spectrum of observance, and individuals may place themselves anywhere within it. The only thing that is pretty much universal is refraining from eating beef. Ive never met a practicing Hindu who does. But consumption of fish, fowl, goat and lamb is not unpopular. Vegetarianism is considered the ideal, but many do not meet that high standard. There are some denominations where a plant-based diet is required for membership, but for the most part personal choice is honored.

There are also those who follow an Ayurvedic diet, which encourages the intake of certain foods and avoidance of others depending on ones constitution and body type. Ayurveda is the ancient science of healing within Hindu Dharma.

Father Kevin Niehoff, O.P., a Dominican priest who serves as Adjutant Judicial Vicar, Diocese of Grand Rapids, responds:

In the Roman Catholic Church, the only dietary restriction is abstinence from meat during the liturgical season of Lent. The action of not eating meat on Fridays in Lent is a spiritual discipline. From the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, the norms concerning abstinence from meat are binding upon members of the Latin Catholic Church from age 14 onwards (www.usccb.org).

My response:

Judaism is known for its complicated dietary laws known as kashrut, based on verses from the first five books of the Bible. To be kosher, poultry or meat must be killed by kosher slaughter, severing the carotid artery with a slicing motion with a very sharp knife. The meat must then be soaked and salted to remove the blood. Dairy products and meat products may not be cooked or eaten together, or even prepared using the same utensils. Products which are neither dairy nor meat are called parve, and can be eaten with either dairy or meat. Parve products include fish, eggs, fruits, vegetables, and grains. Many types of processed foods have a symbol on the label indicated that it contains no forbidden ingredients. In very traditional communities, open containers of grape juice and wine products may only be touched by Jews and bread must be prepared by Jews only. There are no other prohibitions on alcohol.

This column answers questions of Ethics and Religion by submitting them to a multi-faith panel of spiritual leaders in the Grand Rapids area. Wed love to hear about the ordinary ethical questions that come up in the course of your day as well as any questions of religion that youve wondered about. Tell us how you resolved an ethical dilemma and see how members of the Ethics and Religion Talk panel would have handled the same situation. Please send your questions to [emailprotected].

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