Guest guest Posted December 25, 2007 Report Share Posted December 25, 2007 Awesome thankyou!!!!! These replies have been so very helpful!!!!!! warmly, Cathy , " ~ PT ~ " <patchouli_troll wrote: > > It is my opinion that you should always tell the host of the gathering of your dietary > differences; it is just the polite thing to do. Imagine if you were the host of a party, and a > guest was allergic to something and didn't tell you. You would perhaps feel badly if you > had not made some arrangements for there to be something they could eat. However, it is > also best never to demand the host to make you something special. Assure them you are > only telling them so they will understand why you are bringing along a few veggie dishes > to share, if they don't mind. If they would rather make something for you instead, then > graciously accept. > > ~ PT ~ > > One kind word can warm three winter months. > ~ Japanese proverb > ~~~*~~~*~~~> > , " chinamomwsj " <chinamomwsj@> wrote: > > > > Since I am a new Vegetarian most my friends and family arent aware. I > > am wondering what is the best approach when invited for dinner since > > the host would be unaware of my vegetarian status. > > > > Do you mention that you are vegetarian and thus perhaps put a burden > > on the host to have a veggie alternative???? *OR* do you remain > > silent then politely refuse the meat main dish????????? > > > > -trying to avoid a faux paus :-O > > Cathy > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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