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that is a pescatarian

 

Scott & Peggy Hall <sptkjhall wrote: What do you call

someone who eats no poultry, beef, pork, or lamb, but

eats fish and seafood? Is that still vegetarian?

 

Thanks,

Peggy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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No it is a pesictarian(hope I spelled that right)

Judy

-

Scott & Peggy Hall

Sunday, January 21, 2007 12:16 PM

New to group

 

 

What do you call someone who eats no poultry, beef, pork, or lamb, but

eats fish and seafood? Is that still vegetarian?

 

Thanks,

Peggy

 

 

 

 

 

 

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pescetarian. is that still vegetarian? that's highly debatable. to me,

no, it's not. :)

 

chandelle'

 

On 1/21/07, Scott & Peggy Hall <sptkjhall wrote:

>

> What do you call someone who eats no poultry, beef, pork, or lamb, but

> eats fish and seafood? Is that still vegetarian?

>

> Thanks,

> Peggy

>

>

>

> For more information about vegetarianism, please visit the VRG website at

> http://www.vrg.org and for materials especially useful for families go to

> http://www.vrg.org/family.This is a discussion list and is not intended to

> provide personal medical advice. Medical advice should be obtained from a

> qualified health professional.

>

> edical advice. Medical advice should be obtained from a qualified health

> professional.

>

>

>

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Pescatarian. Vegetarians eat no meat products. I think in Europe they're

considered real vegetarians.

 

 

 

Scott & Peggy Hall <sptkjhall wrote:

What do you call someone who eats no poultry, beef, pork, or lamb, but

eats fish and seafood? Is that still vegetarian?

 

Thanks,

Peggy

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kadee Sedtal

 

Build a man a fire and he'll stay warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll

stay warm the rest of his life.

 

" THERE ARE FOUR LIGHTS!!! " -Captain Picard, Next Generation, " Chain of Command

part 2 "

 

Check out my new , Classical 2 at

http://launch.classical2/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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no that's not a vegetarian. A vegetarian doesn't eat any animals. A person who

eats fish is called a pescetarian.

Renee

 

 

 

 

Scott & Peggy Hall <sptkjhall

 

Sunday, January 21, 2007 1:16:01 PM

New to group

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What do you call someone who eats no poultry, beef, pork, or lamb,

but

 

eats fish and seafood? Is that still vegetarian?

 

 

 

Thanks,

 

Peggy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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In a message dated 1/22/07 12:07:38 PM, maggiemacg writes:

 

 

> and suggest that we try it when she's say, twelve or thirteen and

> mostly done growing taller,

>

 

Did you know that vegetarian children tend to be taller than their carnivorus

peers?

 

:) Welcome, Maggie.

 

Pam

in CH, NC

 

 

 

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Pescatarian.

Cindi

 

Scott & Peggy Hall <sptkjhall wrote:

What do you call someone who eats no poultry, beef, pork, or lamb, but

eats fish and seafood? Is that still vegetarian?

 

Thanks,

Peggy

 

 

 

 

 

.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Hi Maggie, welcome to the group. :) Has your husband tried the meat

alternatives? My husband is wild about those. As for your daughter- go online

and memorize or write down all the statistics you can find about the health

benefits of being vegetarian. Show them to him, and tell him you want your

daughter to have that longer life, better health, and greater awareness of what

goes on around her. She certainly doesn't need meat to grow! I have a 2 year-old

little piglet who is proof of that. And I posted a video the other day of my 3

year-old daughter saying her state capitals. :) It's on YouTube, called " Leah

State Capitals. " Oh geez, I checked on it the other day and it's been viewed

well over 2000 times and favorited three times! Wow.

It all comes down to what's healthy and what's not. If your husband is

overweight you can easily play the " I want you to be with me longer " card.

That's how I get my husband to not start smoking again. " I'm needy, Jeff! What

am I going to do when I'm 50 and you die? I'll have to go live with the kids. "

That sort of thing. Make it about you, because in my experience most men do not

do things solely for their own health... like my husband. He's in Mississippi

right now for two weeks and I bet a dollar he eats very little other than ramen

noodles and Skittles. And for your daughter, she's got a lot to gain from a veg

diet. She's young and that good eating can make a lot of difference in her

future health. I was overweight and a zit factory before I became a vegetarian.

A few months later I was a great weight and had very clear skin. It's a

lifestyle full of benefits!!!! :) Good luck with converting them, I think it's

possible.

 

" maggiemacg " <maggiemacg wrote:

Hi

 

I'm new to the group. I'm Maggie, 50 (tomorrow)!, and mom to a

wonderful 9yo girl with moderate to severe autism.

 

I'm a new vegetarian too. I stopped eating meat once the Christmas

stuff was gone and right now, I can't imagine eating it ever again; I'm

the only one in the family though, so I still have to prepare it for my

husband and daughter.

 

I would like my daughter to not eat meat, but DH thinks that children

need meat to be healthy. I know he's wrong, but you can't change his

mind once it's made up, so I'm thinking maybe I'll need to compromise

and suggest that we try it when she's say, twelve or thirteen and

mostly done growing taller, or only eat meat away from home, or

something like that.

 

Right now, I'm ove-lacto, but I'm thinking I may move more towards

veganism as time goes on.

 

Any advice welcome, especially with regard to husband and daughter.

My husband is overweight, so a well planned vegetarian diet would be

very good for him, if he could be persuaded.

 

Maggie

San Ramon CA

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kadee Sedtal

 

Build a man a fire and he'll stay warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll

stay warm the rest of his life.

 

" THERE ARE FOUR LIGHTS!!! " -Captain Picard, Next Generation, " Chain of Command

part 2 "

 

Check out my new , Classical 2 at

http://launch.classical2/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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it is a very common belief that one needs meat to be healthy (but it isn't true)

Try looking up what a child needs in protein and plug it into fitday.com (all

veggie food) and I think your husband will see that it is much more healthy to

eat a vegetarian diet. Just make sure that they get fruits, veggies, beans, nut

butters, and whole grains mostly (not so much sugar and processed foods.)

 

my son is autistic and I avoid gluten and casein and it has drastically aided

his progress.

-

maggiemacg

Monday, January 22, 2007 8:40 AM

New to group

 

 

Hi

 

I'm new to the group. I'm Maggie, 50 (tomorrow)!, and mom to a

wonderful 9yo girl with moderate to severe autism.

 

I'm a new vegetarian too. I stopped eating meat once the Christmas

stuff was gone and right now, I can't imagine eating it ever again; I'm

the only one in the family though, so I still have to prepare it for my

husband and daughter.

 

I would like my daughter to not eat meat, but DH thinks that children

need meat to be healthy. I know he's wrong, but you can't change his

mind once it's made up, so I'm thinking maybe I'll need to compromise

and suggest that we try it when she's say, twelve or thirteen and

mostly done growing taller, or only eat meat away from home, or

something like that.

 

Right now, I'm ove-lacto, but I'm thinking I may move more towards

veganism as time goes on.

 

Any advice welcome, especially with regard to husband and daughter.

My husband is overweight, so a well planned vegetarian diet would be

very good for him, if he could be persuaded.

 

Maggie

San Ramon CA

 

 

 

 

 

 

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No - they would be called a pescatarian.

 

, " Scott & Peggy Hall "

<sptkjhall wrote:

>

> What do you call someone who eats no poultry, beef, pork, or lamb,

but

> eats fish and seafood? Is that still vegetarian?

>

> Thanks,

> Peggy

>

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Actually, its not debatable at all. It is NOT vegetarian.

 

 

, earthmother <earthmother213

wrote:

>

> pescetarian. is that still vegetarian? that's highly debatable.

to me,

> no, it's not. :)

>

> chandelle'

>

> On 1/21/07, Scott & Peggy Hall <sptkjhall wrote:

> >

> > What do you call someone who eats no poultry, beef, pork, or

lamb, but

> > eats fish and seafood? Is that still vegetarian?

> >

> > Thanks,

> > Peggy

> >

> >

> >

> > For more information about vegetarianism, please visit the VRG

website at

> > http://www.vrg.org and for materials especially useful for

families go to

> > http://www.vrg.org/family.This is a discussion list and is not

intended to

> > provide personal medical advice. Medical advice should be

obtained from a

> > qualified health professional.

> >

> > edical advice. Medical advice should be obtained from a

qualified health

> > professional.

> >

> >

> >

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  • 4 months later...
Guest guest

---Hi, I am new too, been here about a week. There are some real cool

things to read about here and some pretty good recipes too. I am

enjoying it so far, and I am glad you are here.

 

 

In , " thebooklass " <farmlass

wrote:

>

> Hello,

> My name is Lori

> I live in West Texas.......actually I am a new transplant to here,

but

> love it.

> I have two teenage sons, almost 17 and 19, three cats, and a special

> needs pup.

> I am a vegetarian wannabe. I used to be vegetarian years and years

> ago, but quit because eating in the military chow hall way back then

> made it hard. I have made several attempts since then, but it never

stuck.

> I am the only vegetarian (wannabe) in the family right now. I have

the

> added challenge that I do not eat wheat, nor does my oldest son. It

> makes us ill.

> My DH will cook the meat sometimes, and that is a new development

that

> I think will help me a lot.

> Let's see.......oh, yes, I return to college this fall at the tender

> age of 45, and I do NOT want to be overweight, trying to make it

from

> class to class. Also, health issues worry me........as in, I don't

> want to develop any new ones due to weight.

> I look forward to learning. Lori

>

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Guest guest

Welcome, Lori! Great that you are trying again to be vegetarian ;)

I do know what it's like to be an on-again, off-again veggie, because

I went through that ages and ages ago - when I was your age, I guess.

But knowing 'the ropes' really helps, you know, since once you've done

it, as you have, you don't really forget how to eat. Your task now is to

do it in a healthy way and to lose weight at the same tame - and the

two go together really really well, since it's 'junk food' that helps to

put on the pounds! We'll help all we can, so sing out if you need to

know anything at all, okay?

 

Great that your dh is cooking the me*t - that helps a whole bunch, I

would think - AND, before I forget, congrats at going back to your

studies. Time to get in shape, eh? Good for you. Brain activity burns

off calories too (or so they told me LOL).

 

My cat sends restrained feline greetings to your three, and my two

beagles heartfelt arroooooos to your pup. (One of my beagles went

suddenly totally blind from SARD a year ago. She thinks it's normal.)

 

Best, Pat (Co-Owner with Cindi of Vegetarian Slimming)

 

 

----

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Bean Vegan: http://beanvegan.blogspot.com

Vegan World Cuisine: http://www.care2.com/c2cvegworld

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  • 1 month later...
Guest guest

Hi, welcome to the group. :) Congratulations on your new little one! I don't

have any recommendations as far as books or sites, but I would definitely

suggest finding other like-minded people- internet groups like this one or local

groups, just whoever you can find, and spend time talking to them. It was

really, really tough being vegetarian with two children before I discovered

internet groups, but now that I know there are others out there it's much easier

for us. :)

 

vegton <vegton wrote: Hello all,

 

I am a vegetarian and so is my husband. We're pregnant with our first

child and if anyone has any good websites or books they can recommend

on how to raise a child in a non-vegetarian friendly world I would

appreciate it! I know how hard it is for my husband and I so I can't

imagine what it's like for a child. :)

 

Tonia

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kadee Sedtal

 

" When you die, if you get a choice between going to regular heaven or pie

heaven, choose pie heaven. It might be a trick, but if it's not, mmmmmmmm, boy. "

-Jack Handey

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest guest

These were recommended to me when we were making the switch to being vegan

(coming up on a year in a few months) from being vegetarian (only

ovo-vegetarian, since our son had/has a dairy allergy - it's not like I'm

going to test it out to see if he still has reactions).

 

" Raising Vegan Children in a Non-vegan world " Erin Pavlina (her website

has it 50% off for minor defects)

" Raising Vegetarian Children " by Joanne Stepniak

" Becoming Vegetarian " by Davis and Melina (has more recent info/charts)

 

Missie

 

 

On 7/11/07, vegton <vegton wrote:

>

> Hello all,

>

> I am a vegetarian and so is my husband. We're pregnant with our first

> child and if anyone has any good websites or books they can recommend

> on how to raise a child in a non-vegetarian friendly world I would

> appreciate it! I know how hard it is for my husband and I so I can't

> imagine what it's like for a child. :)

>

> Tonia

>

>

>

 

 

 

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Guest guest

I'll recommend a book not to get, is Your Vegetarian Pregnancy. I had hoped that

it had menus and such in it, which there are only a handful, but it's mainly

about stories from other mom's and their experiences from family members and

friends about their veggie pregnancy. Not a whole lot of actual advice in there.

You're better off going to www.veggiebaby.com or something along those lines for

information.

 

Jackie K.

Proud Mom to Tatiana 04-26-04

 

 

 

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Guest guest

I have referenced http://vegfamily.com/ - and non veg but great info on

children is www.kidshealth.org by dupont children's hospital (my cousin writes

for them so I had to give them a plug).

 

I had a vegan pregnancy (10 lb 5 oz baby) and my 5 year old has been

raised vegan. His preschool teacher kept a " special snack " provided by me, in

her desk for birthdays & times that the other kids had special non vegan treats.

That worked very well. One of his classmates has even insisted that he needs

to drink soymilk like Ian,. In his preschool class there was even another

vegetartian ( & this in rural Lancaster County, PA, who would have thought?) So

far, it has been easier for him than I would have thought.

 

Congrats on your pregnancy. There is a wealth of knowledge and

experience in this group. We will be here if you have any other questions or

concerns.

 

Beth

 

vegton <vegton wrote:

Hello all,

 

I am a vegetarian and so is my husband. We're pregnant with our first

child and if anyone has any good websites or books they can recommend

on how to raise a child in a non-vegetarian friendly world I would

appreciate it! I know how hard it is for my husband and I so I can't

imagine what it's like for a child. :)

 

Tonia

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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  • 6 months later...

I saw a recipe that was highly recommended for a vegan Mac &   " cheese " on the

vegweb site.  I didn't try it out, but lots of great reviews.

Good luck, I'd be more help, but, after 10 years of being a vegan myself I'm

still just gettin' it figure out for my 17 month old.

 

stacey

 

 

 

 

Stephani Falcone <stephanifalcone

 

Thu, 17 Jan 2008 8:51 pm

new to group

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hi! I am new to the group. I have two beautiful vegetarian kids, 2 ½ and 9

months. We are slowly kicking the dairy out of our lives, but my daughter

still holds on to her desire for mac and cheese! I buy organic, but I know

that it’s not enough. I need some advice on what to feed her. I feel like

she eats so much soy because she won’t try new things. My 9 month old is

slowly starting to eat foods and I am being careful not to make the same

mistakes I made with the first. He eats only organic vegan foods and I try

to make sure it’s mostly raw.

 

Thanks in advance for the advice! I will also look over old posts to see

what everyone has written.

 

Stephani

 

 

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There¹s also an interesting recipe for vegan mac and cheese in the latest

issue of VegNews. They have a new ³veganize this² column, where a standard

non-vegan recipe is veganized.

 

 

On 1/18/08 12:42 PM, " insanepup " <insanepup wrote:

 

>

>

>

>

> I saw a recipe that was highly recommended for a vegan Mac &   " cheese " on the

> vegweb site.  I didn't try it out, but lots of great reviews.

> Good luck, I'd be more help, but, after 10 years of being a vegan myself I'm

> still just gettin' it figure out for my 17 month old.

>

> stacey

>

>

> Stephani Falcone <stephanifalcone

> <stephanifalcone%40comcast.net> >

> <%40>

> Thu, 17 Jan 2008 8:51 pm

> new to group

>

> Hi! I am new to the group. I have two beautiful vegetarian kids, 2 1Ž2 and 9

> months. We are slowly kicking the dairy out of our lives, but my daughter

> still holds on to her desire for mac and cheese! I buy organic, but I know

> that it¹s not enough. I need some advice on what to feed her. I feel like

> she eats so much soy because she won¹t try new things. My 9 month old is

> slowly starting to eat foods and I am being careful not to make the same

> mistakes I made with the first. He eats only organic vegan foods and I try

> to make sure it¹s mostly raw.

>

> Thanks in advance for the advice! I will also look over old posts to see

> what everyone has written.

>

> Stephani

>

>

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Ok, I make a great mac and cheese- but the secret is, it's pretty much junk

food! Vegan outreach can send you a booklet on why vegan? and such and there

recipes are out of this world1

-

insanepup<insanepup

< >

Friday, January 18, 2008 12:42 PM

Re: new to group

 

 

I saw a recipe that was highly recommended for a vegan Mac & " cheese " on the

vegweb site. I didn't try it out, but lots of great reviews.

Good luck, I'd be more help, but, after 10 years of being a vegan myself I'm

still just gettin' it figure out for my 17 month old.

 

stacey

 

Stephani Falcone

<stephanifalcone<stephanifalcone%40comcast.net>>

<%40>

Thu, 17 Jan 2008 8:51 pm

new to group

 

Hi! I am new to the group. I have two beautiful vegetarian kids, 2 ½ and 9

months. We are slowly kicking the dairy out of our lives, but my daughter

still holds on to her desire for mac and cheese! I buy organic, but I know

that it’s not enough. I need some advice on what to feed her. I feel like

she eats so much soy because she won’t try new things. My 9 month old is

slowly starting to eat foods and I am being careful not to make the same

mistakes I made with the first. He eats only organic vegan foods and I try

to make sure it’s mostly raw.

 

Thanks in advance for the advice! I will also look over old posts to see

what everyone has written.

 

Stephani

 

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we use vegan mac and cheese in a box by roads end (my kids prefer the " shells "

one). we get it at vegan essentials.com. my kids love it and it is soo easy.

also, there is no soy. my children also eat so much soy, they don't need more of

it.

 

.................i guess this makes me a junk vegetarian but homeschooling

almost 5 kids does not leave alot of time for gourmet meals every night and this

with some fresh veggies and fruit is quite satisfying! ;-)

 

heather

 

 

 

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  • 6 months later...

I cant recommend enough coleen patrick-godreau's podcast on veganism

" food for thought " . listen to greening your life 9/7/08 and you'll get

some ideas for those collard greens! Amy

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Welcome, Jill, and congratulations on your baby, and on your returning to

the vegan diet! I am not really great with greens. I would just steam them and

eat with a sprinkle of salt. Not very exciting, but tasty. You can also pile

them on a baked potato, maybe mix them with some small white beans. Add them

to soups and stews. I recently bought a book called Greens, Glorious Greens

that has some good ideas, but I haven't tried many of them yet.

 

Just keep eating those healthy fruits and veggies, and drinking lots of

water! Marilyn

 

 

 

**************Looking for a car that's sporty, fun and fits in your budget?

Read reviews on AOL Autos.

(http://autos.aol.com/cars-BMW-128-2008/expert-review?ncid=aolaut00050000000017

)

 

 

 

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Congrats for the return. :)

 

As for the greens...I like to add them to my tofu scramble, I chop and

add them to pasta sauce (or you can make something like pasta e

fagioli and they go well in there) soups.

 

I also like them steamed, with a dash of balsamic vinegar and bacos

(or you could do liquid smoke for flavor).

 

I much prefer swiss chard, but I'm growing 4 different kinds of it,

but I have a huge bag of frozen collards (I like them but they never

last in the fridge, so they are frozen, and pre-chopped). :) I like

the chard because it can be also eaten raw, stems included (use like

celery, smaller ones are less stringy), or cooked in things.

 

Other than those, I tend to look online at either vegweb.com or vegan-food.com

 

Missie

 

On Sun, Aug 10, 2008 at 9:48 AM, <sahmomof8 wrote:

> Welcome, Jill, and congratulations on your baby, and on your returning to

> the vegan diet! I am not really great with greens. I would just steam them

> and

> eat with a sprinkle of salt. Not very exciting, but tasty. You can also pile

> them on a baked potato, maybe mix them with some small white beans. Add them

> to soups and stews. I recently bought a book called Greens, Glorious Greens

> that has some good ideas, but I haven't tried many of them yet.

>

> Just keep eating those healthy fruits and veggies, and drinking lots of

> water! Marilyn

>

> **************Looking for a car that's sporty, fun and fits in your budget?

> Read reviews on AOL Autos.

>

(http://autos.aol.com/cars-BMW-128-2008/expert-review?ncid=aolaut00050000000017

> )

>

>

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