Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Japan is easy! There are a lot of soy and tofu products, plus endless ramen which can be vegan if you ask for soy based broth. Japan also has veggie sushi and tempura. If you eat eggs and dairy, you truly have nothing to worry about in Japan. Google Translate is great for communicating with servers or translating supermarket labels.
Guarantee you ate a ton of dashi and didn’t know it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Japan is easy! There are a lot of soy and tofu products, plus endless ramen which can be vegan if you ask for soy based broth. Japan also has veggie sushi and tempura. If you eat eggs and dairy, you truly have nothing to worry about in Japan. Google Translate is great for communicating with servers or translating supermarket labels.
Eh, Asia has a different definition of vegetarian. They think fish is OK. They also think vegetarian means no meat but in liquid form or as a by-product (like stock) is OK.
Anonymous wrote:I’m pretty much a vegetarian and have never had an issue. Fish is pretty easy everywhere I’ve gone.
Anonymous wrote:Japan is easy! There are a lot of soy and tofu products, plus endless ramen which can be vegan if you ask for soy based broth. Japan also has veggie sushi and tempura. If you eat eggs and dairy, you truly have nothing to worry about in Japan. Google Translate is great for communicating with servers or translating supermarket labels.
Anonymous wrote:Japan is easy! There are a lot of soy and tofu products, plus endless ramen which can be vegan if you ask for soy based broth. Japan also has veggie sushi and tempura. If you eat eggs and dairy, you truly have nothing to worry about in Japan. Google Translate is great for communicating with servers or translating supermarket labels.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Japan - unless fish isn't ok.
Tons of rice, noodle, veg options
How is eating fish being vegetarian?
I ate at a Japanese restaurant and told the waiter I couldn’t eat meat ( vegetarian), I was offered crab stick sushi, they told me it’s not meat nor real crab so I ate it, it turned out to be made of fish. It’s best to stick to cucumber/avocado roll and vegetable tempura, also tofu (without fish flake).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Japan - unless fish isn't ok.
Tons of rice, noodle, veg options
How is eating fish being vegetarian?
Anonymous wrote:The only place I've consistently heard of issues is Western China, from a friend who.lived there. She said there were degrees of meat so someone might understand you don't eat beef or pork but still serve chicken.
Anonymous wrote:Taiwan since it has a lot of Buddhists. Also UK, it surprised us to have curry on UK flight, also we ate India fast food restaurant when we visited London. We are vegetarian family of 3 except DH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Japan - unless fish isn't ok.
Tons of rice, noodle, veg options
It's hard in Japan if you don't speak Japanese (or read Japanese) - if you can find someone to help you navigate a menu, that's good; but otherwise you end up just sort of ordering the same thing over and over because you feel reasonably ok that you aren't accidentally ordering meat
That was my experience, anyway - if you go to restaurants with English menus I assume it'd be much easier! Def worth trying, though - Japan is a great place to visit.
I've eaten extremely well in Middle Eastern countries
I know you said not India, but as a vegetarian it was truly heaven traveling in India. I ate so so so many good things.