Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..
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@JC said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@nzzp said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@JC said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@MajorRage said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
I'm kind of interested to give it a go, but really want some real feedback from real well-balanced people.
Then why the hell are you asking the Fern?
Just checking that the Fern isn't some sort of unethical, third world social experiment that's got out of control and left the creators behind as it evolves in a hive of scum and villany....
You say that like it’s a bad thing...
you're clearly projecting.
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Like many, I guess I have gone away from building most meals around meat and have avoided rubbish meat for a long time. I see no point in eating rapidly produced rubbery chicken or cheap mince for the sake of it. As for processed meat products (frozen patties type stuff)? That’s just foul.
However I have always had an iron deficiency and can tell very quickly if a red meat boost is required. Doesn’t take much but a steak or braise a couple of times a week is needed.
Generally though I don’t even think about whether my meal is going to have meat. I just make something tasty. -
@JC said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@MajorRage said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
I'm kind of interested to give it a go, but really want some real feedback from real well-balanced people.
Then why the hell are you asking the Fern?
Because virtual signalling I’m right your wrong people don’t last here.
At least, on the threads not about craft beer.
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@MajorRage said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@nzzp never said I was serious about carbon emissions and frankly, until the US and China change drastically, it’ll never go into my thought process.
yep. Partially carbon, partially health. Too much saturated fat isn't that great for you; eating more fruit and vegetable isn't a bad thing at all.
What it does mean is we're tending to eat better meat, but less of it. This is where I see plant based meat tackling the meat supply - not at the top end, but at the commodity end. If you get 'mince' that's similar enough in taste, and cheaper than shitty supermarket mince, why wouldnt' ya? Like anything though, the market will decide if it likes it, and how successful it all is.
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@nzzp said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@MajorRage said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@nzzp never said I was serious about carbon emissions and frankly, until the US and China change drastically, it’ll never go into my thought process.
yep. Partially carbon, partially health. Too much saturated fat isn't that great for you; eating more fruit and vegetable isn't a bad thing at all.
What it does mean is we're tending to eat better meat, but less of it. This is where I see plant based meat tackling the meat supply - not at the top end, but at the commodity end. If you get 'mince' that's similar enough in taste, and cheaper than shitty supermarket mince, why wouldnt' ya? Like anything though, the market will decide if it likes it, and how successful it all is.
Virtual signalling governments will interfere in the market if they think it makes them look good.
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@Kirwan said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@nzzp said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@MajorRage said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@nzzp never said I was serious about carbon emissions and frankly, until the US and China change drastically, it’ll never go into my thought process.
yep. Partially carbon, partially health. Too much saturated fat isn't that great for you; eating more fruit and vegetable isn't a bad thing at all.
What it does mean is we're tending to eat better meat, but less of it. This is where I see plant based meat tackling the meat supply - not at the top end, but at the commodity end. If you get 'mince' that's similar enough in taste, and cheaper than shitty supermarket mince, why wouldnt' ya? Like anything though, the market will decide if it likes it, and how successful it all is.
Virtual signalling governments will interfere in the market if they think it makes them look good.
yep, but I don't think it lasts. There's also political cost to that - remember incandescent lightbulbs and low flow showerheads?
I'm a massive fan of clearly regulated markets. Assuming (let's not argue here about it) that it's carbon the government wants reduced, put a price on it that reflects the cost. Or a cap/trade scheme. Accountants are great at figuring out and scheduling asset replacement to minimise total costs (including carbon). It's the shitty 'oh, suddenly waste levy is $150 a ton' type shock taxes that absolutely get my goat.
A lot of people have no idea how hard it is to actually run a profitable business. It's like golf, rugby and pole dancing - looks easy until you actually try to do it yourself...
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@nzzp said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
A lot of people have no idea how hard it is to actually run a profitable business. It's like golf, rugby and pole dancing - looks easy until you actually try to do it yourself...
Ain't that the truth. Like your average Labour and Greens MP for starters. They all think owners are part of a wider conspiracy to screw the working man and keep them down. Of course there are some bad bosses, but for most it is a symbiotic relationship and everybody benefits
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@taniwharugby said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@canefan I'm in a networking/business owners group on FB, and man, some of these people that have started businesses are destined to fail!
They have no idea!!
I don't know what the stats are on small business failure in NZ. I would agree it is probably quite high. It's like inventions, one thing to come up with an idea, another thing entirely to turn it into reality
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@canefan I think many of them get money form the bank, start spending, then ask people how to do stuff, rather than finding out what they need to do before spending money...the banks probably should be making sure these people have business plans, or even the slightest idea of how much stuff will cost.
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@MajorRage said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
Look, it's all the rage, we have a thread about a meatless BK burger, we have a thread about eating meat in Austin, and a dedicated thread to BBQ'ing ... so lets get one going.
Firstly, asking for a friend.
Secondly - so has anybody done it?
Yeah had a friend that went full vegan a couple of years back. He died pretty soon after though.....
.....to me anyway
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I love meat and couldn't imagine a life without it.
I'm more than happy to eat vegetarian meals (we have meat free Mondays, and I actually prefer a vegetarian breakfast), but I could never turn.
I have started eating a lot more fish recently.
Veganism looks frankly ridiculous
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@taniwharugby said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
I am not going Vegan or Vegetarian, but I am making a conscious effort to eat less meat.
TR Jnr has been watching Game Changers on Netflix where it talks about plant based diets.
Some of the stuff in it and the benefits seem amazing, but I probably need to watch properly as I've only been catching bits of it.
There was on experiment they did with 3 NFL players who had a meat meal one night and then vege meal the next, and after each they measured their erections (number, duration, firmness) during their sleep.
In each of them they all had longer, firmer and more frequent ones after the vege meal.
Not sure if there have been other studies like this, but in this case, small sample size, so would need to have bigger studies I guess.
A lot of the stuff in game changers was exaggerated and lacking in context , for example he was crowing about the fact that gladiators were called barley eaters and took this as an example of a vegan diet being used by elite athletes back in that era. It turns out they were not much more than disposable slaves and given the cheapest food available which was barley . The ufc fighter that beat Conor McGregor isn’t actually a vegetarian and they never included the fact he got hammered in the rematch .
There’s two podcasts on Rogan about it , one from a guy debunking a lot of stuff in it and then that same guy debating the host of game changers .
The guy behind game changers argued his case well but it was pretty obvious he had a point he wanted to prove and created a narrative around ignoring studies and evidence that didn’t help him .
Also James Cameron put the money up for game changers, he’s the epitome of a preachy Hollywood piston wristed gibbon . He’s been living in Wairarapa for a while and thrashwanking in the media about NZ farming is harming the planet and we should all move to plant based diets .I’m sure there’s plenty of benefits to cutting some meat from your diet and ethically there are too but that doco is on a par with Vaxxed I reckon .
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@jegga yeah as I said, I only caught bits and pieces of it, so not watched close enough to look into the science they claimed...
TR Jnr did talk about going on a plant based diet, but then proceeded to have home made burgers, Mrs TR said he needed to think about what he was going to eat and offer alternatives if he cut out meat, he decided it was too much hard work
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@taniwharugby said in Going Vegetarian / Vegan ..:
@jegga yeah as I said, I only caught bits and pieces of it, so not watched close enough to look into the science they claimed...
TR Jnr did talk about going on a plant based diet, but then proceeded to have home made burgers, Mrs TR said he needed to think about what he was going to eat and offer alternatives if he cut out meat, he decided it was too much hard work
Gold. One of the guys my son worked with decided to go vegan after watching game changers, he lasted about a week. It’s a lot of work , especially when you’re doing a physical job .
I stopped eating chicken a while back, after seeing what goes on in factory farms and all the hormones in the food it put me off .
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I think the biggest challenge with going Vegetarian/Vegan is that animals basically take plants that we either cannot eat or have difficulty digesting, and turn them into nutrient rich and easily digestible food.
We've evolved to eat meat as well as other foods so cutting them out suddenly is fraught with danger.
My brothers missus is a vegan and she can be hard work to do anything with - it's a real pain having to find places for her to eat, to the point that it'd be easier if she just packed her own lunch. Also, she's had to do a shit ton of research into what foods to eat to try and replace what you get from meat - it's no easy task and IMO not really doable on a long term basis.
For me and my family we have no plans to cut out meat. One thing we've done is we try to avoid the heavily processed meats that @Crucial talks about. Some of those sausages you can get from supermarkets are barely meat anyway! My wife has also struggled with Iron deficiencies in the past so red meat is a pretty key part of our diet.
I'm a strong believer in a balanced diet. A lot of people have terrible diets and instead of just eating everything in moderation they suddenly jump to some completely unsustainable diet like Carnivore or Vegan which inevitably leads to health problems down the track.
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The shit that annoys my is when vegos and vegans attribute their feeling healthier to removing animal products from their diet when in fact they have really only started eating well when they took this up. Of course you are going to notice a difference going from cheap and nasty food to a diet of fresh vegetables!
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If we are going to diverge into examples of hypocrisy what about those that proclaim that they won't consume dairy products because of the 'harm' to the environment and switch to almond, or worse still, cashew milk.
I ask them if they have ever considered how a cashew grows. Basically one cashew nut comes from one fruit. It takes a tree load of fruits to produce a about 8kg of nuts only unless you farm them really intensively and irrigate above the natural environment. Even then you are looking at around 200kg per hectare per year. Nowhere near comparable to dairy protein output.
Same with almonds. Massive tracts of California given over to almond growing with water being sucked from far away and the need to continually pump in bees that can't survive naturally in such a non-diverse ecology.
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@No-Quarter we buy the bulk of our meat from a butcher now, proper cuts and better quality