This is what I don’t understand about vegans. Unlimited international access to traditional recipes and exotic vegetables. New combinations of flavors and techniques available everywhere.
So you recreate the hotdog? I mean how do you even measure success? Perfection would still be a hotdog!
Hold on now. You could still fuck yourself up if you ate like 30 of them mofuckers a day. Especially if you coated them with cornbread batter and deep fried them.
This is what I don’t understand about people who eat food. Unlimited international access to traditional recipes and exotic vegetables, meat and other ingredients. New combinations of flavors and techniques available everywhere.
So you create the hotdog? I mean how do you even measure success? Perfection would still be a hotdog!
I didn’t become vegan because i didn’t like the taste or the experience. I did because I could no longer handle contributing to animal cruelty every time i need to feed myself (or clothes, or so many other things). It’s a moral decision, not a culinary adventure.
Prior to becoming vegan i said the same thing you are saying in this post. I’m gonna tell you the same thing i would tell my younger self: go fuck yourself, i’ll be vegan however i want. Why the fuck are you judging how i’m doing so? What the absolute shit does it matter whether you “understand” why i eat what i eat? I do eat a lot of those cuisines, but i do also eat vegan meat replacements, because sometimes i just feel like a burger, and vegan food science has been getting better and better over the last few decades.
Plus, all of those traditional recipes and exotic veggies are available to you too. You can eat them even if you’re not vegan. Hell, you can even add meat to them if you want. Many of them are made traditionally both with and without meat. But no, you pick a hot dog too?
I personally like vegan meat replacements because I just miss meat.
Some people also want to fit in, and not abstain from a tradition because of dietary preference. Meat is a pretty big part of culture, at least here in the U.S., with burgers, Thanksgiving turkey, Christmas ham, July 4th hotdogs, etc.
Additionally, the same arguement could be applied in the other direction. Some traditional meats from various places on earth are spiders, scorpions, Greenland shark, puffin, guinea pig, horse, and seal meat. These aren’t popular in the U.S., for instance, for various reasons. Most notably for this thread is that these, with some exceptions, would be hard to scale, especially for the demand of them here.
While I would like to try more exotic foods, they’re not that easy to come across.
This is what I don’t understand about vegans. Unlimited international access to traditional recipes and exotic vegetables. New combinations of flavors and techniques available everywhere.
So you recreate the hotdog? I mean how do you even measure success? Perfection would still be a hotdog!
Its simple: I liked hot dogs before I became a vegan. I still like them, but now I can eat them without harming the environment, animals and my body.
Hold on now. You could still fuck yourself up if you ate like 30 of them mofuckers a day. Especially if you coated them with cornbread batter and deep fried them.
This is what I don’t understand about people who eat food. Unlimited international access to traditional recipes and exotic vegetables, meat and other ingredients. New combinations of flavors and techniques available everywhere.
So you create the hotdog? I mean how do you even measure success? Perfection would still be a hotdog!
I didn’t become vegan because i didn’t like the taste or the experience. I did because I could no longer handle contributing to animal cruelty every time i need to feed myself (or clothes, or so many other things). It’s a moral decision, not a culinary adventure.
Prior to becoming vegan i said the same thing you are saying in this post. I’m gonna tell you the same thing i would tell my younger self: go fuck yourself, i’ll be vegan however i want. Why the fuck are you judging how i’m doing so? What the absolute shit does it matter whether you “understand” why i eat what i eat? I do eat a lot of those cuisines, but i do also eat vegan meat replacements, because sometimes i just feel like a burger, and vegan food science has been getting better and better over the last few decades.
Plus, all of those traditional recipes and exotic veggies are available to you too. You can eat them even if you’re not vegan. Hell, you can even add meat to them if you want. Many of them are made traditionally both with and without meat. But no, you pick a hot dog too?
This is art! So much this!!
Thank you for expressing something I always wanted to, but did not have the words to do so.
Hot dogs are easy, even vegans like convenience.
The desire to gobble glizzies transcends dietary practice.
Not vegan, but pescetarian, so vaguely similar.
I personally like vegan meat replacements because I just miss meat. Some people also want to fit in, and not abstain from a tradition because of dietary preference. Meat is a pretty big part of culture, at least here in the U.S., with burgers, Thanksgiving turkey, Christmas ham, July 4th hotdogs, etc.
Additionally, the same arguement could be applied in the other direction. Some traditional meats from various places on earth are spiders, scorpions, Greenland shark, puffin, guinea pig, horse, and seal meat. These aren’t popular in the U.S., for instance, for various reasons. Most notably for this thread is that these, with some exceptions, would be hard to scale, especially for the demand of them here.
While I would like to try more exotic foods, they’re not that easy to come across.
Am vegan. Did not like hot dog. Do not like vegan hot dog.
By the way, miso paste is a remarkable umami ingredient, and Vegetable Kingdom has some great plants-are-actually-delicious recipes.