I make most meals from whole food ingredients, but I don’t use coconut oil (saturated fat) and don’t add salt. We use vegan cheese sometimes but it’s not necessary. |
Actually it covered both. Old recipes have both. Medieval cooking had a ton of "meat" recipes because of the strict religious calendar you had tons of fasting days, particularly in Lent, where meat wasn't allowed. Now there were some funky definitions of what "meat" actually was back then but also a lot of imitation meat recipes. Using "meat" and "milk" on alternatives goes well back to the medieval period and people getting ruffled over it look silly. https://www.foodunfolded.com/article/the-origin-of-meat-alternatives |
Mincemeat traditionally is meat. Meatballs are meat. You are making veggie balls or bean balls. |
Labeling matters. Fake meat is not meat and should be labeled accordingly. |
Right. If it's not from a cow, it's not meat. Chicken and pork are not meat. |
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I’d do a lot of grain bowls that the family could customize to add extra protein of their choice. We do a great one with peanut sauce and tempeh or salmon that is always a crowd pleaser.
Moosewood cookbook lentil walnut burgers are really good and freeze well so you can reheat individual servings. You could do those with other burger or grilled meat sandwiches for the rest of the family. |
Do you have a recipe for the grain bowl? |
The point is that it isn't meat. |
How old is your degree? Do you acknowledge recent literature showing the downsides? |
10 years old and there are so few downsides in recent literature, mostly “hard to eat out”, “lack of social acceptance”, “must supplement with B12” - easy enough to address. Benefits greatly outweigh risks. |
For her age I would be focused on protein and calcium for strong bones. I would also want to teach her about complete nutrition and eat actual food, not just processed stuff labeled vegan. |
Veganism is NOT a fad diet, many of us have been vegan or vegetarian for decades. I will say it's a tough life. We have to center vacations and family/friend meals around what I can eat. It would be so much easier if I had a broader diet, but it's not a choice for me, I mentally cannot eat meat, |
OP, I am a registered dietitian and this would concern me. Eleven years old is too young to be making this decision. There are a lot of things that you/ she need to seriously consider for her long term health, if you allow her to go forward with this. She is at a critical growing age and missing important nutrients at this stage (e.g. calcium) can have life long- consequences. If she were my daughter, I'd tell her that she can do this when she's 18 and in charge of her own life. But I would not aid and abet this now. |
The interior of a nut was called the "meat" of the nut, so mincemeat could be chopped nuts (mixed with dried fruit typically). |
Yes, those things all have protein, but most of them don't have healthy fats. Nuts do (walnuts are high in omegas, which is good). This is why I said I would worry about fats, and would be very deliberate about making sure she's getting enough of those. Like saute stuff in olive oil instead of just eating it raw or baking it. Add walnuts and certain seeds to food regularly. I would also be a little conscious about overdoing soy. Soy is an estrogen imitator. If you're eating it in normal whole food quantities, like edamame, it's not going to be a problem. But if you're eating a lot of soy-based products to hit your protein targets, like soy milk and supplements or protein bars or whatever, it might be an issue -- particularly for a girl. I would also revisit the idea about eggs from ethical farms or neighbors. I bet you can find someone that doesn't cull the male chicks. My niece has a "farm" like that, but she's not local. Some vegans will also make an exception for bi-vavles like oysters -- they are really really beneficial to the environment, and they don't have a central nervous system. To me, they don't seem that different than eating a carrot, really. |