Guest guest Posted April 21, 2007 Report Share Posted April 21, 2007 I don't think that processed soy/wheat products are a bad thing. Many of these substitutes can be made, but these ones already made, are easy to makes meals with the shorter time for preparation and provide the chewy texture that many enjoy. They provide lots of variety to meals and you don't make a whole meal of them. Many times you are adding them to a dish with many other things in it like a stir fry, casserole, shiskabobs, soup, chili's, pizza, etc....... so it is not like you are eating a huge concentration of it and only that. Wheat gluten, is great meat substitute and very easy to make, if you choose to. You can buy it, in a can also already in chunks or slices. On my dad's side of the family, I am a 3rd generation vegetarian, and raising a 4th generation of lacto- ova vegetarians and we are all healthy, with no side effects of eating soy products or drinking soy milk. We have been eating the meat substitutes all of my life and most of my fathers life. There is a ton of misconceptions about soy. It is really a very good legume and very versitile to make many wonderful things. Processed things often mean, just mixed together ingredients, like in a recipe and maybe baked or cooked and ground up or formed in shapes. That isn't a bad thing. A healthy vegetarian diet is a good thing to raise our children with and teach our children why it is. The next generation will be so much better off than those raised on meat would be. We have tons of variety in our diet and love it. I am constantly amazed at the meat eater friends of ours, that have such limited things that they include in their diet of good healthy veggies and fruit. Raise your children with your convictions. They love having set parameters to live within and will really wonder why they can eat meat and yet you don't. Too wishy washy and confusing to children, IMHO. If you feel it is unhealthy to eat meat, why in the world would you feed it to your children. We do feel it is very unhealthy and our children are great at teaching others, who are curious about their vegetarian diet. Except for us and some families from India, we are the only vegetarians in our city, as far as I have met. It doesn't bothe me or our children at all. It is just our way of life. Not a debatable issue in our home, whether it will be served or whether any meat or would ever eat it. It just repulses us way to much to even consider it. Judy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 21, 2007 Report Share Posted April 21, 2007 .. Except for us and some families from India, we are the only vegetarians in our city, as far as I have met. We drive about a hour to church and we have a nice group of vegetarians in our church family. We have wonderful vegetarian potlucks. Next week, is another one of those yummy potlucks. We love them. It doesn't bothe me or our children at all to be the only vegetarians in our local city. It is just our way of life. Not a debatable issue in our home, whether meat will be served or whether it any of us would ever eat it. It just repulses us way to much to even consider it. Judy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 22, 2007 Report Share Posted April 22, 2007 Oh yes, Judy, have every intention of raising our son vegetarian. Its not just a health issue for us, its a moral issue. And you are right, I don't just sit down and eat a bowl of soy crumbles! I'm working on having my son eat a little less processed soy, but I am less worried about it for us. I'm sure its much healtheir than eating meat, anyway. Ilse Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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