There is "meat".There is no meat in a vegan pie.
If you've nothing constructive to add to a debate...why bother?
There is "meat".There is no meat in a vegan pie.
How does making a fake pie, with that long list of ingredients, reduce emissions?
There is "meat".
If you've nothing constructive to add to a debate...why bother?
It's hard work if you go onto vegan/animal/environment sites to try and explain farming to these people. The second you so much as question their often bizarre beliefs you can literally feel them foaming at the mouth, rolling on the floor chewing the carpet, then they are vomiting torrents of abuse at you.That's the thing with farmers, they don't have a clue about how campaigning works. Instead of constantly slagging off Animal Rebellion etc, folks on here should take a minute to think about why they are wiping the floor, PR wise, with livestock ag.
There is "meat".
If you've nothing constructive to add to a debate...why bot
He needs to look up the definition of meat in the Cambridge dictionaryMeat imo is beef, lamb, chicken, pork etc. If a vegan pie does not contain any of these ingredients then it is not a meat pie. What it contains is something that has been artificially made to look and perhaps taste like meat.
Well.Meat imo is beef, lamb, chicken, pork etc. If a vegan pie does not contain any of these ingredients then it is not a meat pie. What it contains is something that has been artificially made to look and perhaps taste like meat.
I don't need to look up anything in relation to what I've written. Thank you for your concern.He needs to look up the definition of meat in the Cambridge dictionary
Well.
You stick to marketing your meat.
And perhaps others could make a good return flogging ingredients for "meat" to the veggies.
Pedantic idiot.
Yes, always have since we were married, although not health or environmental reasons, purely for variety.Leading on then, tonight's question:
Do any of you lot consciously have meat free days? I'm not talking getting in late and throwing a tin of beans or poached eggs on some toast because of time constraints, are you making meat free changes to your diet on health criteria?
Leading on then, tonight's question:
Do any of you lot consciously have meat free days? I'm not talking getting in late and throwing a tin of beans or poached eggs on some toast because of time constraints, are you making meat free changes to your diet on health criteria?
Yes, always have since we were married, although not health or environmental reasons, purely for variety.
noLeading on then, tonight's question:
Do any of you lot consciously have meat free days? I'm not talking getting in late and throwing a tin of beans or poached eggs on some toast because of time constraints, are you making meat free changes to your diet on health criteria?
You need some new cookbooksYes, always have since we were married, although not health or environmental reasons, purely for variety.
He does like a mushroom recipe now and then.I'm reading that in so many ways .
That’s what the wife said, or something close to it.You need some new cookbooks
If you don’t want to eat meat then that is a personal choice, just eat vegetables, why make them look like something that you choose not to eat in the first place? I suppose it could be down to a lack of meat protein reducing brain power resulting in the warped thinking than many vegans have.
Fair enough for the seller, but why do the vegan and vegetarian brigade try and make a product look like something they are opposed to eating.Because you can't make any money out of flogging a bag of chopped broccoli. Take veg, process them and put them into a pie or sausage and hey presto you can charge £2 a pack.
Fair enough for the seller, but why do the vegan and vegetarian brigade try and make a product look like something they are opposed to eating.