Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't you just eat vegan for a week?
The point of a vacation is to have fun, and not being able to have ice cream, seafood, grilled meats, etc. is no fun.
Sorbet is awesome, you can grill tons of veggies as well as some fruits, and you can grill tofu. Surely you can't be so stupid as to think vegan people don't have fun on vacations.
Apologies, I should have ended my post with "to me." Doing without those food is no fun TO ME. Therefore I would never "just eat vegan for a week." Also tofu is just wretched.
I'm not the PP, but if I said "vacation isn't fun to me without alcohol" most people would stay that is disordered. If you cannot enjoy a vacation without ice cream, seafood, and grilled meat, that sounds like a you issue that you should maybe work on, rather than a pronouncement about what is and is not fun for other people.
I'm not a fan of tofu myself, but it's absolutely ridiculous to suggest that there are no fun foods that don't involve animal products. Are you honestly sitting here saying that you do not enjoy ANY food that doesn't contain animal products? None? Zero?
Don't be ridiculous. Part of the fun of going to a beach is getting fresh seafood. Don't act like that is disordered anymore than expecting to eat BBQ when in Memphis or KC or TX....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Going vegan” doesn’t require anyone to eat a single thing they don’t find appealing or morally acceptable. I would expect that the vegan family has a plan for making meals work already and it won’t require changes to OPs diet but you people who cannot imagine meals without meat or dairy must be the most boring cooks in the world.
To me, boring cooking is restricting the ingredients I can use.
+100
It's about what you do with. Restrictions are the mother of creativity.
You can be unrestricted but have the same boring food all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't you just eat vegan for a week?
The point of a vacation is to have fun, and not being able to have ice cream, seafood, grilled meats, etc. is no fun.
Sorbet is awesome, you can grill tons of veggies as well as some fruits, and you can grill tofu. Surely you can't be so stupid as to think vegan people don't have fun on vacations.
Apologies, I should have ended my post with "to me." Doing without those food is no fun TO ME. Therefore I would never "just eat vegan for a week." Also tofu is just wretched.
I'm not the PP, but if I said "vacation isn't fun to me without alcohol" most people would stay that is disordered. If you cannot enjoy a vacation without ice cream, seafood, and grilled meat, that sounds like a you issue that you should maybe work on, rather than a pronouncement about what is and is not fun for other people.
I'm not a fan of tofu myself, but it's absolutely ridiculous to suggest that there are no fun foods that don't involve animal products. Are you honestly sitting here saying that you do not enjoy ANY food that doesn't contain animal products? None? Zero?
Anonymous wrote:This sounds miserable
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Going vegan” doesn’t require anyone to eat a single thing they don’t find appealing or morally acceptable. I would expect that the vegan family has a plan for making meals work already and it won’t require changes to OPs diet but you people who cannot imagine meals without meat or dairy must be the most boring cooks in the world.
To me, boring cooking is restricting the ingredients I can use.
+100
It's about what you do with. Restrictions are the mother of creativity.
You can be unrestricted but have the same boring food all the time.
That's fine, but these are artificial restrictions that have nothing to do with a non-vegan. How about I tell vegans they can't cook with any green vegetables? Will that really spark your creativity, or will it just piss you off?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Going vegan” doesn’t require anyone to eat a single thing they don’t find appealing or morally acceptable. I would expect that the vegan family has a plan for making meals work already and it won’t require changes to OPs diet but you people who cannot imagine meals without meat or dairy must be the most boring cooks in the world.
To me, boring cooking is restricting the ingredients I can use.
+100
It's about what you do with. Restrictions are the mother of creativity.
You can be unrestricted but have the same boring food all the time.
That's fine, but these are artificial restrictions that have nothing to do with a non-vegan. How about I tell vegans they can't cook with any green vegetables? Will that really spark your creativity, or will it just piss you off?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Going vegan” doesn’t require anyone to eat a single thing they don’t find appealing or morally acceptable. I would expect that the vegan family has a plan for making meals work already and it won’t require changes to OPs diet but you people who cannot imagine meals without meat or dairy must be the most boring cooks in the world.
To me, boring cooking is restricting the ingredients I can use.
+100
It's about what you do with. Restrictions are the mother of creativity.
You can be unrestricted but have the same boring food all the time.
No, and I'd love to hear an update. My advice is to just talk to the other family and come up with a plan together. The burden to figure this out isn't your's OP; it's both families.Anonymous wrote:Has OP ever come back?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Going vegan” doesn’t require anyone to eat a single thing they don’t find appealing or morally acceptable. I would expect that the vegan family has a plan for making meals work already and it won’t require changes to OPs diet but you people who cannot imagine meals without meat or dairy must be the most boring cooks in the world.
To me, boring cooking is restricting the ingredients I can use.
+100
Anonymous wrote:My family is not vegan. How should we handle the meals? Is it okay (not rude) to eat with just my family for some meals? Should we find places to accommodate both families? Can I assume that vegans can find something on the menu to eat at any restaurant? Maybe I am overthinking this.
Anonymous wrote:My brother and his family are long time vegans and they always bring their own food. We went on vacation with them and it worked fine. They made their food and we made ours. It all went out on the same table and we all shared. There were crossover things like salad, beans, pasta, fruit, etc. We do the same thing for the holidays.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Going vegan” doesn’t require anyone to eat a single thing they don’t find appealing or morally acceptable. I would expect that the vegan family has a plan for making meals work already and it won’t require changes to OPs diet but you people who cannot imagine meals without meat or dairy must be the most boring cooks in the world.
To me, boring cooking is restricting the ingredients I can use.