A couple of weeks ago, I was making dinner. Yes, I know. You’re riveted. Actually, it was a pretty exciting situation for my family because with life so busy lately, one of the many balls I’ve dropped has been the one called Home Cooked Meals.
So there I was, feeling pretty smug about the fact I’d defrosted a lamb rack and was going to roast it with some potatoes. Frozen peas were my final key ingredient. Julie Masterchef watch your back.
But when I took the rack out of the packaging and went to put it in the baking tray, it was just…so…. tiny. It broke my heart, thinking about the size of those little ribs. And then I got teary. Who cries while they’re trying to make dinner, seriously WHO DOES THAT?
“I can’t do this,” I announced dramatically before fleeing the kitchen. Someone else finished cooking the lamb that night and I ate scrambled eggs.
My career in vegetarianism has been very patchy and characterised by inconsistency and gross hypocrisy. It began as soon as I learned what veal was, around age 12. The thought of eating a little milk-fed calf turned my stomach and killed my appetite. Bye-by schnitzel. This was followed swiftly by lamb and things progressed from there until by 17, I wasn’t eating any red meat at all. I maintained this position for a decade and for many of those years, I didn’t eat chicken either.
One day, after 10 years of no red meant, I had a mouthful of lasagna at a friend’s house and the damn burst. Over the next few months, I scurried back up the food chain until I was once again eating most meat except veal. I’ve never eaten things like duck or rabbit or deer because I relate to those animals in a way I don’t relate to chickens – perhaps because many of them were storybook characters. Bambi anyone?
Top Comments
THANK you for your observation that meat eaters tend to get all het-up and defensive in the presence of vegetarians. i'm vego and it bothers me badly!
Ive worked in hospo for about 7 years now and the amount of people I get saying "whats vegetarian?" and I go through a lengthy drawl about a pad thai and a vego 'option' only to have them ask for something full of meat or bacon!
I also hear "Im a vego, but i eat bacon" or "im a vego but i have chicken" countless times. Either you are or you arn't.
I respect the reasons why people do it, but then there are the people who are fully into animal rights and wont even have milk or honey.
Personally I think theres a a lot of "Vego" people out there who are doing it for the trendy factor. Its a shame really, because if your'e not doing it for the right reasons your body becomes sensitized by whatever it is you're cutting out and many times you cant go back. Its the same with Soy milk. Bloody, bloody soy products!