MelanieC
<font color=blue>BL II - Blue Team<br><font color=
- Joined
- Sep 28, 1999
- Messages
- 11,928
I've been a vegetarian now for over 5 months. I've also made great strides for ridding egg/dairy out of my diet. At home and most restaurants I've been pretty sucessful. I still have a ways to go though, especially since I'm undecided how I'm going to handle my upcoming Disney trip. There are some things at Disney that I'm having a hard time saying I'm not going to eat..........and I fear having so little choice on what to eat since I don't have my fall back things to eat that I enjoy at home that making eating vegan easy. Eating vegetarian is easy!! Eating Vegan outside your home takes more thought.
There are definately those that eat vegetarian and eat unhealthy. I think most younger kids, teenagers and probably college age kids would fall into this category. Then again think about how most kids, teens and college kids eat when not vegetarians. It's really no different. Americans in those age brackets and really most Americans overall eat really bad. Take a look at the grocery carts of those around you at the grocery store. They are full of processed foods, with boxes of cream of this, helper that, etc. Very little fruits, veggies or whole grains.
Even before going vegetarian, I ate better than the average person. I try to eat as clean as possible. I eat (now and then) about 85-90% organic foods and when I decide to use a recipe the only way I pay attention to it is if it doesn't include things like sugar, artificial sugars, processed foods, etc. I use recipes that use whole foods. I don't eat fake meats, but I do eat organic veggie burgers once in a while and am hoping that soon I can find an easy to make recipe using whole foods. The veggie burgers I do use, are organic and contain ingredients you can recognize and I strive for ones that have the fewest ingredient lists. It is possible to eat extremely healthy and yummy while being vegetarian. I like to use beans, nuts, whole grains and high protein veggies like broccoli and others as my main sorce of protein. You'd be surprised how fast your protein adds up if you eat those items.
Find veggies and whole grains that you love and build your meals out of that.
Some of my favorite vegan books are
The Kind Diet, Vegan Yum Yum, Eat Drink & be Vegan, and 1000 Vegan recipes.
Take your families favorite recipes and re-think them. Think about how you can lose the meat and still make them yummy. Veggie tacos with black beans are great, avocado's make so many things yummy. Most things can be made vegetarian. Use things like mushrooms, beans, hummus, avocados, nuts, diced veggies, brown rice and other grains to take the place of meats. Take it one meal at a time and you'll be surprised at how easy it is. An example of taking something you like that has cheese in it and making it little healthier and vegan is by using hummus instead of cheese in a quasadilla. This is so tasty dipped in some homeade salsa -yummy! I make 2-3 batches of homemade hummus a week. It's my spread of choice.
Good luck to you and your family.
There are definately those that eat vegetarian and eat unhealthy. I think most younger kids, teenagers and probably college age kids would fall into this category. Then again think about how most kids, teens and college kids eat when not vegetarians. It's really no different. Americans in those age brackets and really most Americans overall eat really bad. Take a look at the grocery carts of those around you at the grocery store. They are full of processed foods, with boxes of cream of this, helper that, etc. Very little fruits, veggies or whole grains.
Even before going vegetarian, I ate better than the average person. I try to eat as clean as possible. I eat (now and then) about 85-90% organic foods and when I decide to use a recipe the only way I pay attention to it is if it doesn't include things like sugar, artificial sugars, processed foods, etc. I use recipes that use whole foods. I don't eat fake meats, but I do eat organic veggie burgers once in a while and am hoping that soon I can find an easy to make recipe using whole foods. The veggie burgers I do use, are organic and contain ingredients you can recognize and I strive for ones that have the fewest ingredient lists. It is possible to eat extremely healthy and yummy while being vegetarian. I like to use beans, nuts, whole grains and high protein veggies like broccoli and others as my main sorce of protein. You'd be surprised how fast your protein adds up if you eat those items.
Find veggies and whole grains that you love and build your meals out of that.
Some of my favorite vegan books are
The Kind Diet, Vegan Yum Yum, Eat Drink & be Vegan, and 1000 Vegan recipes.
Take your families favorite recipes and re-think them. Think about how you can lose the meat and still make them yummy. Veggie tacos with black beans are great, avocado's make so many things yummy. Most things can be made vegetarian. Use things like mushrooms, beans, hummus, avocados, nuts, diced veggies, brown rice and other grains to take the place of meats. Take it one meal at a time and you'll be surprised at how easy it is. An example of taking something you like that has cheese in it and making it little healthier and vegan is by using hummus instead of cheese in a quasadilla. This is so tasty dipped in some homeade salsa -yummy! I make 2-3 batches of homemade hummus a week. It's my spread of choice.
Good luck to you and your family.