Is this simply a ‘fad’ or a ‘craze’ or is there real substance and facts behind following this type of diet. Many restaurants now offer both vegetarian and vegan options on their menus. Not so long ago the only option would have been a salad, but now much more imaginative dishes are on offer. There are also now dedicated vegetarian and vegan restaurants. I am personally far from convinced, though I do accept that we probably eat too much red meat.
A major concern of those who follow this diet is the overuse of antibiotics and hormones in livestock. America is widely reported as the main culprit in this practice, and we have all heard about washing chickens in chlorine, thankfully banned by the EU. However, many times I read that this is a perfectly harmless treatment, it would certainly put me off my favourite chicken piri piri.
What do vegetarians eat?
According to the Vegetarian Society, vegetarians are people who do not eat the products or by-products of animal slaughter. Vegetarians do not consume: meat, such as beef, pork, and game poultry, such as chicken, turkey, duck fish and shellfish, insects and other types of animal protein stock or fats that derive from animal slaughter.
Some vegetarians have told me they won’t eat anything ‘with a face’. However, many vegetarians do consume by-products that do not involve the slaughter of animals. These include: eggs dairy products, such as milk, cheese, yogurt and honey.
There is a ‘but’
The Harvard Medical School reported that According to the American Dietetic Association, "appropriately planned vegetarian diets, including total vegetarian or vegan diets, are healthful, nutritionally adequate, and may provide health benefits in the prevention and treatment of certain diseases."
"Appropriately planned" is the operative term. Unless you follow recommended guidelines on nutrition, fat consumption, and weight control, becoming a vegetarian won't necessarily be good for you.
It looks as if being a vegetarian is not a simple diet, it needs quite a lot of knowledge of food and what the body needs. What about vegans, they go even further, they are vegetarian ‘extremists’. Veganism is a stricter form of vegetarianism. Vegans avoid consuming or using any animal products or by-products. The Vegan Society define veganism as “a way of living, which seeks to exclude, as far as is possible and practicable, all forms of exploitation of and cruelty to animals for food, clothing, or any other purpose.”
Here's How Meat-Eating Made Us Human
Time Magazine recently published a report ‘Sorry Vegans: Here's How Meat-Eating Made Us Human‘, “Vegans are absolutely right when they say that a plant-based diet can be healthy, varied and exceedingly satisfying, and that—not for nothing—it spares animals from the serial torments of being part of the human food chain. All good so far. But there’s veganism and then there’s Veganism—the upper case, ideological veganism, the kind that goes beyond diet and lifestyle wisdom to a sort of counterfactual crusade. For this crowd, it has become an article of faith that not only is meat-eating bad for humans, but that it’s always been bad for humans—that we were never meant to eat animal products at all, and that our teeth, facial structure and digestive systems are proof of that”.
Many scientists say we are carnivores
A recent new study in Nature Magazine (Nature is a highly respected British weekly scientific journal) makes clear, not only did processing and eating meat come naturally to humans, it’s entirely possible that without an early diet that included generous amounts of animal protein, we wouldn’t even have become human—at least not the modern, verbal, intelligent humans we are. You can read the research here
It’s a matter of conscience rather than health
It becomes clear to me that there is no definite answer to the question, ‘is being a vegetarian good for you’. Its more a question of conscience and concern for animals and the way they are treated. I have little doubt that if I spent a couple of hours in an Abattoir (a polite word for a slaughterhouse) I might well not eat meat again. That wouldn’t stop me eating fish. Jeremy Clarkson (love him or hate hm) in his Amazon programme Clarkson’s Farm, genuinely fell in love with his herd of sheep. When three of them were sent to the abattoir, he seemed genuinely upset. But as he said, he still had lamb for lunch.
Resident in Portugal for 50 years, publishing and writing about Portugal since 1977. Privileged to have seen, firsthand, Portugal progress from a dictatorship (1974) into a stable democracy.
Hello and thanks for this wonderful news site!!
i have been a vegetarian since my 9 birthday and i am now 71. I am fit and have no health concerns. I have never found it a problem being vegetairan. I love to cook and have read over the years countless cookbooks and online blog of which there are hundreds....so if anyone wants to be a vegetarian it is easy to be well informed. I am a vegetarian because I find it gross to eat animals. But I am also a Demeter farmer and believe that it is important to have a well balanced, organic agricultural system which includes animals which are well treated without harmful antibiotics and have a good life living in pastures and are humanely treated and humanely slaugthered. Every creature has a right to live well. And for health reason one need
not give up meat but just each less of it and what you each should be locally & humanely raised!!"! Thankfully there are more and more people realizing this with the growing awareness that it is time to be the CHANGE!!!
By aasta from Lisbon on 13 Oct 2021, 19:28
I agree with you it's more about concern for animals than good health. I say this as a vegetarian since childhood. No one should feel guilty for eating animals or animal by-products. This fad has been around a while. Certain not-so-nice people in history were vegetarians. It won't change the world for the better, especially because it is quite simply cheaper to eat meat.
By D from Other on 14 Oct 2021, 02:32
Stay healthy, eat a vegan!
By Fred Doe from Algarve on 14 Oct 2021, 08:10
"I'm not a vegetarian because I like animals, I'm a vegetarian because I hate plants." -- A. Whitney Brown
Seriously though, I am vegetarian and my partner is (mostly) vegan, and I cannot understand why people find it difficult to understand. Most meat-eaters only eat very specific animals, and the rest they find "disgusting". Surely it's not a huge leap of the imagination to see how some people might find them all disgusting?
By Edward van Kuik from Porto on 14 Oct 2021, 09:04
great article, although i must say that you have not mentioned the impact of how factory farming effects our planet, the farms that are pouring off the waste and effluents into rivers and soakaways , the over grazing reducing parts into overgrazed stubble, leaving no natural growth of tree and shrubs and therefore insects, the veganism has 3 parts. our own bodies and the chemicals used ,the suffering of the animals, even if humanly kept are ultimately killed and the impact of the planet. I have been vegan most of my life and have a well balanced plant based diet. I also practice intermittent fasting and rarely get sick, although the old joke how do you know someone is vegan.....because they tell you! it is a bit true as i think its an important message. then again don't get me started on vaccinations!!!!!
By si from Porto on 14 Oct 2021, 09:09
Hi! Great article!
When I was still an aspiring athlete in my youth I was a vegetarian, for years. It was really great for the body's performance. And you absolutely never feel bloated or have indigestion and such. Its light to eat and you feel lighter for it. Never mind staying lighter.
I try to eat conciously now and try not to mind myself when I endulge.
All the points raised here in the comments about the benefits to you, to the planet and to the animals involved are both rational and compassionate. I fully laud them and hope myself to be better in this regard.
I wonder though about one thing. Surely it cannot be cheaper with meat than with veggies.... !?!!? It has to have something to do with politics and subsidies, if thats the case, no!? I mean veggies just basically need sun and water (I know I simplify), but animals need so much more of all kinds of expensive inputs. What would a burger cost without meat industry subsidies?
By Kris from Lisbon on 14 Oct 2021, 11:59
Biggest analysis to date reveals huge footprint of livestock - it provides just 18% of calories but takes up 83% of farmland. Going vegan is the single biggest thing you can do to help the environment. Also killing sentient beings is immoral. PS hitler was not a vegetarian, he occasionally shunned meat for health reasons.
By Angela Roberts from Other on 17 Oct 2021, 12:45