Any Vegans out there with advice on starting out?
hopedangling
Posts: 56
I've been going vegan for a while, at first I jumped in but it felt too restrictive. So after reading a few books, I just started adding veggies and eating 'less' meat. I feel great. But thought some other vegans could help motivate me!! Please feel free to friend me!!
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I'm not a strict vegan, but we eat mostly vegan meals in my house. One cookbook that I love is Isa Does it. It has fantastic meals for a family. I usually add protein (tofu, seitan, tempeh) since her food is a bit carb heavy and I'm trying to cut carbs too.0
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I have been vegan since Jan 1st. I didn't transition...but alot of people that I know started with Meatless Mondays and then added on additional meatless days until they were totally vegan.0
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By the way...what about it seems restrictive to you?
I never liked dairy products so that part was easy for me...giving up eggs and seafood is another story. LOL.0 -
The advice i would give includes:
Seek out the high quality produce that will keep your body running optimally. "Vegan" can be Coca-cola and Corn Chips, but the best foods are the whole natural foods, especially fruits and vegetables.
Try a new recipe every week. You won't always like 'em, but some you will. You will soon develop a list of great goto meals that you like, and the know how to prepare them. Then, you will never feel restricted by lack of food choices.
Join one of the vegan groups on this site. They are typically a lot more supportive than the general site.0 -
oooh! I just discovered her- Isa -( peabean26) yesterday! I downloaded a free kindle book and am looking forward to more of her books!!0
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Joined Rael!! Thank you!!0
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Thanks Browns 1908!! What I find restrictive is I LOVE MILK EGGS AND CHEESE. And my boyfriend is Celiac - we live together...so finding foods we both thrive on is hard. Making separate meals is fine with us. I'm in Colorado so vegan is pretty accepted at just about any restaurant - so eating out is easy. I guess its cooking and finding good alternatives at home that is hard, or what I find restrictive. It's snacks and ingredients in some things I find hard to stay vegan with - I'm a big time carb lover - where my BF would have a salad, I'd order a burger. So - its just modifying everything right now and ADDING veg and not eating red meat is what I am doing so far. I started in January too - gave up - and got back on - it just feels better when there is no meat in my diet. For both health and EARTH/ANIMAL reasons!0
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Thanks Rocbola!! I'm with you on the healthy end of Vegan! I'm trying to have more protein in my diet via veg and complex carbs - little or no starches just for now, and i love TEMPEH and Quinoa actually...I like your recipe idea! Once a week is a good start!0
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I've been probably 80-90% plant based since the beginning of the year, and during a couple month stretch last spring.
I think you are taking a good approach. Focus on adding in, and not so much taking out.
If I really focus on eating the things I know I should (fruit, greens, seeds, raw and cooked veggies, legumes) then really there isn't too much space left for the unhealthy stuff.
I remember Dr. Furhman's advice in Eat to Live when I get overwhelmed...simplify, simplify. Fruit for breakfast, massive salad with beans for lunch, then more cooked and raw veggies for dinner with a potato/grains/starch.0 -
I have been vegan for about five years now. Previously I was a vegetarian for about 10 years. Prior to that I followed the Atkins diet and was a complete carnivore. Here is how I transitioned: I read Skinny ***** which turned me vegetarian in about 30 minutes. I still ate eggs, fish and milk products because I couldn't give up the cheese either. Finally, I read another book called Eating Animals and that's what made it possible for me to let go. I wish I hadn't waited so long to read either of these two books but the last one in particular. I know I will never go back. Right now I'm trying for more of a 80/10/10 lifestyle with less and less cooked foods in my life. This is just a new thing this week but it's something I've been leaning towards to some time. Enjoy your journey wherever it takes you, just to continue to be the healthiest person you know how to be. I commend your efforts to become vegan, to me it is a more spiritual way to eat. God bless.0
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I'm a Vegan (for ethical reasons). I've actually been one for around 15 years and before that a Veggie. Feel free to add me but just to say after a while you'll find that Vegan food in a lot of ways is less restrictive and the variety will amaze you. Just because you are eating a Vegan diet does not mean it's healthier. There are many vegans eating very unhealthy diets as there are many omnivores eating healthy ones0
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Lmans77 - awesome!!! Thank you! Yes, I'm finding that too, that I don't have room nor want unhealthy stuff, I eat about every 3 hours - whether its a handful of almonds or my lunch so its been pretty great. I did this years ago and my body loved it. I like the 'simplify' rule!!0
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Thanks Perrin! This has been a long time coming for me as well. The cheese is so hard! And my mom raises her own chickens who live in a happy healthy loving environment so for now those are the only eggs I eat. I have always loved almond milk and soymilk and ricemilk so that is okay too. and some vegan cheese is awesome -but I'm with you -the less cooked the better. Thanks for the kind words and encouragement!!0
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Thanks fatdoob! Yes, I have my attention on health. Some people say vegan/veg and think they are healthy -and you are right - carnivores too! I have a client who teaches/owns a cross fit gym and is all Paleo. She is super fit and healthy - but I can't do all that meat. My body really does love it when I eat 'fresh' raw foods and plant proteins. Friend request sent!0
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I'm not recommending it as I don't know enough about it but just found a site which gives vegan meal plans. You have to pay though -,www.getmealplans.com0
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I've been vegan for about a year now and I weaned myself into it over the course of a few weeks (doesn't seem like long, but I was already not eating much dairy or meat so it wasn't so bad). I definitely recommend continuing what you're doing now which is to cut things out of your diet slowly and add more fresh fruits and veggies, get yourself used to it, and also do some reading and research on the best ways to make sure you're still getting all of your necessary nutrients.
Feel free to add me if you like, my diary is open and I'm always happy to share recipes. I second the Isa Does It suggestion - we cook out of that literally almost every night! Her blog, theppk.com, has some great recipes as well. I also really love ohsheglows.com, another vegan blog and she has a new cookbook out which I haven't had a chance to play with too much yet but it looks great!0 -
Everyone in my family is a vegan except me..I can't even cook meat in the house..iv lived with this long enough. Veg ain't all that bad. Besides it makes eating non vegan things occasionally much more delightful0
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If you're a big meat and dairy eater, start by just cutting down here and there and finding alternative recipes, such as beans and green lentils instead of mince in chilli/spaghetti bolognese. Almond/coconut milk is yummy. There are plenty of dairy alternative yoghurts and cheese etc, most supermarkets will have their own range of these. Buy lots of fruit and veg, and do your research on reaching your macros. I'm pretty lazy with my macros so I wouldn't recommend looking to my diary for inspiration haha but it's something I know I need to look at and you should, too.
Good luck, add me if you like :flowerforyou:0 -
Thanks RJDunn!! I have come across that website too Love it. I think having fun creating meals and trying new things will get me through. I will subscribe to those blogs, they sound great! Just mentally, knowing I'm not going cold turkey has helped tremendously! Friend request being sent!!0
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I transitioned to a "mostly vegan" diet in July 2013 (have been a lacto-ovo veggie since 2000) when I had a cancer scare. I cook vegan meals at home, and I am another CHEESE FIEND. My husband and I recently figured out that we each used to average a pound of cheese each week. That's almost 2,000 calories a week from cheese alone!
I would highly, highly recommend you acquaint yourself with these two whole foods versions of "cheese." They are both easy and quick to make, just toss the ingredients in a blender and go!
Parmesan- made out of walnuts and nutritional yeast (amazing for pizza, put it right on top of the sauce and it turns into creamy deliciousness, great as lasagna/pasta topping, any casserole, even sadwiches/salads):
http://www.thisrawsomeveganlife.com/2011/10/walnut-parmesan-cheese.html
Ricotta- made out of soaked cashews (delicious in lasagna, I love to add half a sweet potato to this recipe to up the quantity without adding a ton of calories):
http://kblog.lunchboxbunch.com/2010/06/vegan-chive-ricotta-nut-cheese-spread.html
The two websites that those recipes are on are two of my favorite vegan cooking sites. I would never have continued with this way of eating if it hadn't been relatively easy and delicious. Good luck!0 -
Just saw this and thought I would chime in as I've been trying the vegan thing for a little while ;-)
For me with any eating plan/lifestyle change, it's all psychology. As soon as I convince myself I can't have something, I want it more than anything! So after months of deliberation, I watched Forks Over Knives for some inspiration and then I decided that I would cut down my meat and dairy. CUT DOWN...not eliminate. After a few days, I realised that I hadn't had any meat or dairy at all without trying all that hard. Once I bought some Almond Milk everything seemed so much easier when I could have a cup of tea!
It's been a few weeks now and I've not had any meat. I wasn't a big meat eater to begin with anyway. I have had dairy a couple of times in the form of home baking that has been passed around the office, and I'm okay with that.
My main motivations for trying this out have been 60% health and 40% ethical. I am an animal lover and the whole mass farming industry really upsets me, like most people I've always managed to ignore it. But knowing that I'm not contributing to that quite so much makes me feel good! That being said, I still think it's okay for humans to eat meat. I believe that we are designed to eat mostly plants with just a little bit of meat thrown in...you only have to look at our primate cousins who haven't lost their natural diet insincts to figure it out. So I still plan on eating meat and eggs, but only if they come from happpy animals who lived a good life on a nice, local farm. Or if I attend a family meal and don't want to explain why I'm not eating meat to my very much 'meat and two veg' family. Or if I really get a craving as denying cravings leads to disaster if my track record is anything to go by!
So yes, my advice is don't go at it too hard at first...or tell yourself that you can't have anything. Enjoy!0
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