VeganMeal

What Do Vegans Eat?

The simplest way to describe a vegan diet is that it includes everything—except any food that comes from animals. If it comes from a plant, you can eat it. That includes all vegetables, all fruits, all grains, all legumes, and all nuts.

Peanut butter and jelly? Yes, if the bread is vegan. Baked sweet potato with brown sugar? Yep. A glass of wine or beer? Absolutely. Vegan pasta with marinara sauce? Ditto, but don’t add the Parmesan. I could go on and on, but you can see that it’s more than just salads and raw vegetables. And yes, you should eat plenty of those as well.

What should you eliminate? Meat from any animal; fish is also off limits. Fat from any animal. Anything cooked in or containing animal fats. Those biscuits you love? They’re made with lard, which comes from beef. The butter that goes on those biscuits? Nope, it comes from milk. Your favorite cake? No, it’s made with eggs. How about Jell-O; certainly Jell-O has to be okay! Not that either. It contains gelatin which comes from an animal. You can still eat those deep-fried foods as long as the oil is all vegetable.

The animal sourcing can extend to supplements as well. Gelcaps and capsules are made from animal or fish gelatin, although there are good vegan choices today. But don’t skip the supplements; they’re important because one nutrient that’s not easily accessible from plants is vitamin B12.

Just as there are vegan supplements, there are vegan versions of almost any food you can think of: eggs, milk, cheese, bread, burgers, even steak. I don’t know how good they taste, but they exist.

Seems pretty straightforward, doesn’t it? I’ll tell you how people can get it wrong on Saturday. Don’t forget to catch the documentary “What the Health” so you can follow along my review of the movie next week.

What are you prepared to do today?

Dr. Chet