Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter to me what you eat and why. The reasons why may be interesting and may provide some insight into you as a person (your moral values, your culture, your religion, etc). But what steams me are people who misidentify themselves as being vegetarian (or vegan or gluten free or what have you) and that leads you into making all sorts of changes to the meal you'll be serving ony to find out that they really aren't truly vegetarian. And then you find that they do eat fish or can tolerate chicken broth or will eat gluten if it is in a dessert, etc. etc. So please clarify! I want my guests to enjoy themselves and have suitable food, but I don't want my troubles to be in vain!
That is the one time I get upset as well. If you're not used to cooking vegetarian, it can be difficult to adjust to make sure everything served to that person is truly vegetarian. Saying that you also eat fish/chicken makes it infinitely easier.
Just ask them. Really, it's not that hard. Or go out to eat, which is even easier.
I'm a vegetarian, and I hate going out to eat, unless it's to Woodlands.
Woodlands is great. I love that place.
Speaking of, I put on 10 pounds when I spent a couple of months in India, the vegetarian food was SO AMAZING. It was a real revelation to be in a place where the default was veg. I was in heaven.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter to me what you eat and why. The reasons why may be interesting and may provide some insight into you as a person (your moral values, your culture, your religion, etc). But what steams me are people who misidentify themselves as being vegetarian (or vegan or gluten free or what have you) and that leads you into making all sorts of changes to the meal you'll be serving ony to find out that they really aren't truly vegetarian. And then you find that they do eat fish or can tolerate chicken broth or will eat gluten if it is in a dessert, etc. etc. So please clarify! I want my guests to enjoy themselves and have suitable food, but I don't want my troubles to be in vain!
That is the one time I get upset as well. If you're not used to cooking vegetarian, it can be difficult to adjust to make sure everything served to that person is truly vegetarian. Saying that you also eat fish/chicken makes it infinitely easier.
Just ask them. Really, it's not that hard. Or go out to eat, which is even easier.
I'm a vegetarian, and I hate going out to eat, unless it's to Woodlands.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter to me what you eat and why. The reasons why may be interesting and may provide some insight into you as a person (your moral values, your culture, your religion, etc). But what steams me are people who misidentify themselves as being vegetarian (or vegan or gluten free or what have you) and that leads you into making all sorts of changes to the meal you'll be serving ony to find out that they really aren't truly vegetarian. And then you find that they do eat fish or can tolerate chicken broth or will eat gluten if it is in a dessert, etc. etc. So please clarify! I want my guests to enjoy themselves and have suitable food, but I don't want my troubles to be in vain!
If I am coming to your house, and you serve me no fish, I will be happier than if I have to eat fish. I will eat the fish if there is nothing else for me to eat.
If you put chicken broth in your stew, I would rather you not. If I know there is chicken broth, I won't eat the stew. If I can pretend it's not in there, and I am hungry, than I might eat the stew.
Honestly, it's not that complicated. If you have a friend who's vegetarian and coming over for dinner, just ask them: does that mean you eat eggs and cheese, does it mean you eat fish.
Sorry that how I eat causes you this much consternation. I've lived a lot of places where I can't speak the language and have to do my best with what I can figure out; been to a lot of people's homes for dinner where the last thing I wanted to do was cause more trouble. I've developed a diet for myself that works for me.
And I call myself a vegetarian, because I do not feel like explaining to every goddamn person I meet how I developed the precise diet I have, and if you feed me all vegetarian food I will be most happy.
Good for describing yourself. Of course you know your rules don't apply to all vegetarians.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter to me what you eat and why. The reasons why may be interesting and may provide some insight into you as a person (your moral values, your culture, your religion, etc). But what steams me are people who misidentify themselves as being vegetarian (or vegan or gluten free or what have you) and that leads you into making all sorts of changes to the meal you'll be serving ony to find out that they really aren't truly vegetarian. And then you find that they do eat fish or can tolerate chicken broth or will eat gluten if it is in a dessert, etc. etc. So please clarify! I want my guests to enjoy themselves and have suitable food, but I don't want my troubles to be in vain!
That is the one time I get upset as well. If you're not used to cooking vegetarian, it can be difficult to adjust to make sure everything served to that person is truly vegetarian. Saying that you also eat fish/chicken makes it infinitely easier.
Just ask them. Really, it's not that hard. Or go out to eat, which is even easier.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter to me what you eat and why. The reasons why may be interesting and may provide some insight into you as a person (your moral values, your culture, your religion, etc). But what steams me are people who misidentify themselves as being vegetarian (or vegan or gluten free or what have you) and that leads you into making all sorts of changes to the meal you'll be serving ony to find out that they really aren't truly vegetarian. And then you find that they do eat fish or can tolerate chicken broth or will eat gluten if it is in a dessert, etc. etc. So please clarify! I want my guests to enjoy themselves and have suitable food, but I don't want my troubles to be in vain!
If I am coming to your house, and you serve me no fish, I will be happier than if I have to eat fish. I will eat the fish if there is nothing else for me to eat.
If you put chicken broth in your stew, I would rather you not. If I know there is chicken broth, I won't eat the stew. If I can pretend it's not in there, and I am hungry, than I might eat the stew.
Honestly, it's not that complicated. If you have a friend who's vegetarian and coming over for dinner, just ask them: does that mean you eat eggs and cheese, does it mean you eat fish.
Sorry that how I eat causes you this much consternation. I've lived a lot of places where I can't speak the language and have to do my best with what I can figure out; been to a lot of people's homes for dinner where the last thing I wanted to do was cause more trouble. I've developed a diet for myself that works for me.
And I call myself a vegetarian, because I do not feel like explaining to every goddamn person I meet how I developed the precise diet I have, and if you feed me all vegetarian food I will be most happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter to me what you eat and why. The reasons why may be interesting and may provide some insight into you as a person (your moral values, your culture, your religion, etc). But what steams me are people who misidentify themselves as being vegetarian (or vegan or gluten free or what have you) and that leads you into making all sorts of changes to the meal you'll be serving ony to find out that they really aren't truly vegetarian. And then you find that they do eat fish or can tolerate chicken broth or will eat gluten if it is in a dessert, etc. etc. So please clarify! I want my guests to enjoy themselves and have suitable food, but I don't want my troubles to be in vain!
That is the one time I get upset as well. If you're not used to cooking vegetarian, it can be difficult to adjust to make sure everything served to that person is truly vegetarian. Saying that you also eat fish/chicken makes it infinitely easier.
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter to me what you eat and why. The reasons why may be interesting and may provide some insight into you as a person (your moral values, your culture, your religion, etc). But what steams me are people who misidentify themselves as being vegetarian (or vegan or gluten free or what have you) and that leads you into making all sorts of changes to the meal you'll be serving ony to find out that they really aren't truly vegetarian. And then you find that they do eat fish or can tolerate chicken broth or will eat gluten if it is in a dessert, etc. etc. So please clarify! I want my guests to enjoy themselves and have suitable food, but I don't want my troubles to be in vain!
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter to me what you eat and why. The reasons why may be interesting and may provide some insight into you as a person (your moral values, your culture, your religion, etc). But what steams me are people who misidentify themselves as being vegetarian (or vegan or gluten free or what have you) and that leads you into making all sorts of changes to the meal you'll be serving ony to find out that they really aren't truly vegetarian. And then you find that they do eat fish or can tolerate chicken broth or will eat gluten if it is in a dessert, etc. etc. So please clarify! I want my guests to enjoy themselves and have suitable food, but I don't want my troubles to be in vain!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People, is this really a burning issue of our time. Who cares what you call yourself, really?
One of the reasons why vegetarians get offered fish at meals is because people incorrectly think that vegetarians eat fish, when they don't. And if someone calls themselves vegetarian and then eats meat, it perpetuates the idea that vegetarians eat meat, when they don't.
Most people do not believe that vegetarians are meat eaters. And most people who encounter a meat-eating "vegetarian" would not assume that other/all vegetarians would eat meat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People, is this really a burning issue of our time. Who cares what you call yourself, really?
One of the reasons why vegetarians get offered fish at meals is because people incorrectly think that vegetarians eat fish, when they don't. And if someone calls themselves vegetarian and then eats meat, it perpetuates the idea that vegetarians eat meat, when they don't.