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Sunday 25 February 2018

The Dog's Dinner - Part 2

Chinese New Year and the Year of the Dog got me thinking about vegetarian dog food. Was there such a thing? Did dogs like it? Were the dogs vegetarian by choice or not?

My own spaniel loves some raw veggie treats; cucumber, carrots, peppers, brocolli and cauliflower are all his favourites. I have never thought to turn him vegetarian, I haven't even imposed my own choices upon my family.

When I did some research it turns out that a vegetarian diet is possible for a dog and they can survive on both home-cooked vegetables with added protein such as quinoa, rice, potatoes, lentils, soybeans etc as well as some commercial brands of vegetarian dog food. They need certain nutrients such as taurine which is not always found in vegetarian dog food so some research is necessary. Also a check-up and advice from the vet is a good idea.

It should be noted that the Guinness Book of World Records tells the story of Bramble, a 27 year old border-collie who lived to be 27 years old on a vegan diet of rice, lentils and organic vegetables.

Some would say it isn't natural for a dog to be vegetarian. By nature they are omnivores, meaning they get nutrition from both meat and plants. Having said that, some would question whether any form of dog food is actually natural. The other thing to consider is what animal parts actually go in to prepared dog food? If we knew, would we really want to feed it to them?

There are some vegetarian treats available, other than the actual vegetables I have mentioned above.

I did hear about one vegetarian family who would only feed their dog raw meat. They turned up at a vegetarian hotel in the Lake District and asked if the dog's meat could be kept in the fridge overnight? You can imagine the response!

Sunday 18 February 2018

The Dog's Dinner

Chinese New Year 2018 - the year of the Dog. We celebrated with an M&S £10 dine-in meal for 2. Choose 2 mains and 2 sides it said. Well, out of the 15 mains, there was ONE vegetarian option. Luckily I like aubergine and it was a good dish cooked in garlic, ginger and chilli Sichuan sauce with rice. But really? Fourteen dishes containing fish or meat? One vegetarian? Shame on you M&S. The sides had better odds; out of eleven, four were vegetarian. 


Luckily I had also stocked up on Tsingtao Beer. "Ganbei" (cheers/bottoms up).

Sunday 11 February 2018

Veg Pledge

Such an exciting week ahead. First there's Shrove Tuesday with pancakes galore, then Valentines Day with the prospect of Chocolate goodies, all finished off with Chinese New Year on Friday and a plateful of oriental delights. The only blot on the landscape is Ash Wednesday when we should give something up for Lent.


Over the years I've tried cutting out all the bad things; pop and sweets and crisps and buns.Oh, and chocolate. I've had a couple of successful years but mostly I have succumbed at some point during Lent.

I'm beginning to think there's a conspiracy to convert me from Vegetarianism to Veganism. In the last 10 days I have received four emails relating to vegan products:-

John Lewis - Vegan beauty ranges
The Botanist - All new vegan menu
Apple News - Secrets every vegan already knows
Tesco- our favourite vegan recipes to inspire your menu at home

I had better give something up because it would seem Big Brother is definitely watching.



Sunday 4 February 2018

Voting Vegetarian

6th February this week marks the 100 year anniversary of men and women over the age of 30 being eligible, for the first time, to vote.

This has relevance, for me, from several angles. Firstly, as a woman, I am indebted to the suffragettes who paved the way and fought for freedom and equality for women.

Secondly, I am from Leeds and one of the staunch freedom fighters and associate of Emmeline Pankhurst was Leonora Cohen, also from Leeds. She was known as "The Tower Suffragette" who threw a crow bar at the case surrounding the Crown Jewels in an attack on the establishment. She fought for equality for women throughout her life and in 1928 all women over 21 were given the right to vote.

Thirdly, Leonora Cohen was a vegetarian from the age of 5. Whether this was a conscious decision or whether it was because meat was hard to come by, we don't know. She even used food as a weapon during her stay at His Majesty's Pleasure in 1913 and went on hunger strike, depriving herself not only of food but water too. After that she and her husband moved to Harrogate and opened a Vegetarian Boarding House. During the meat rationing of 1917/1918 the Government used prominent figures such as Leonora to spread propaganda for meat-less meals.

Even in the 1970s, with a resurgence of feminism, she was interviewed about her years of activism as a freedom fighter. Coincidentally this was the hippy-age decade when whole food shops increased, meat and dairy consumption were low and people ate more wholegrains and vegetables. It is interesting to note that the increased use of freezers brought women a different kind of freedom at this time with frozen food shops opening and working women cooking food in batches and freezing to save time. 

Many papers have been written posing the question of vegetarianism being linked to militant and feminist behaviours. It is believed that vegetarianism and the women's movement are complimentary ways of creating an ideal world.

It may also be worth noting that this valiant vegetarian lived to be 105 years old.