Search blog.co.uk

  • Always look on the bright side of life...

    Email from SHAC rec'd today:

    H Partners dumps all HLS (LSR) shares After Raymond James decided that £7 million shares in HLS blood money were notfor them, or their subsidary Eagle Assset Management, H Partners also made aquick escape from the campaign against HLS and sold all £11.2 million LSRshares in mid July. The sale was confirmed this week by Win Animal Rights in the USA. H Partners ManagementLSR Shares: 459,539Value: $12,454,000 H Partners CapitalLSR Shares: 368,933Value: $9,998,000 Combined asset of $22,452,000 / £11,258,085.54 ALL GONE! Thanks to all supporters and campaigners, including the campaigners that diddemos in the US and London. Right now the percentage of their institutional investments is listed at 8.63%.Once the H Partners shares come off it will reduce to about 4 - 4.5% so notmany shares are being held by institutions and companies. Barclays is the next big shareholder... Get angry, keep focused, we will not stop until HLS are gone too! For all theanimals that have been tortured and killed by HLS. SHAC and the global animalright movement will NEVER let you alone.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Awesome like a hotdog (veg*n of course!)

    First day of work was okay. Im hoping it will get busier in time, etc!

    Just signed up to do an online dress making course. So fed up of the crap thats around now. Plus i'm fed up of importing clothing from the states (Pin Up Girl Clothing is just way way way too nice!!)
    Anyways...off to bed now...nighty night! xx.

  • David Camerons office....

    Email from David Cameron's office regarding animal testing....

    Dear Laura,

    I am replying on behalf of David Cameron to thank you for your e-mail.

    We believe that any form of animal experimentation should be purely within the context of the necessity for advancement in medical scienceand all-round health. The Conservative Party's long-term vision is for agradual phasing out of animal testing. However, at this point in time itwould be wrong of us to assume we could abolish animal testing outrightwithout potentially damaging consequences. We applaud the work of organisations such as the Dr. Hawden Trust,Europeans for Medical Progress and others, for their advancements inalternative methods of research. However, despite this progress, we arestill not yet at a stage where, in specific instances, these methods areas reliable as experimenting with real animals. The fact that less than10 per cent of medical research involves experimenting on animals isperhaps testament to this; where the use of animals is avoidable, theyare not used.

    Please be assured that Conservatives are committed to the 3 'R's of"Refinement, Reduction and Replacement" and understand that thereduction and refinement have to come before the eventual replacement.

    Yours sincerely, Lara Moreno
    PerezOffice of the Leader of the Opposition
    House of Commons
    London
    SW1A 0AA

  • Its official...I need to get out more!

    Woohoo! Last day of work...start new job tomorrow...cant wait! Hopefully I wont be sooo bored that I have to read newspapers online...although...another fab article! Will defo buy the book

    Use your noodle: The real Chinese diet is so healthy it could solve the West's obesity crisis

    Chinese food has a bad reputation in the UK. The rice-heavy meals and fatty meat dishes are thought to lead straight to obesity and heart disease. But properly prepared, says Chinese food expert Lorraine Clissold, the very opposite is true: the Chinese way of eating is healthy and fulfilling, fights illness and prolongs life. She also insists, in her book Why the Chinese Don't Count Calories, that a real Chinese diet won't make you fat, and that the rising levels of obesity observable in China are in fact caused by sugary, overprocessed Western food. Here are some of her Chinese dietary secrets – and the verdict of two Western nutrition experts, Patrick Holford and Ian Marber.

    1. Stop counting calories

    The Chinese don't have a word for "calories". They view food as nourishment, not potential weight gain. A 1990 survey found that Chinese people consumed 30 per cent more calories than Americans, but were not necessarily more active. Clissold says their secret is avoiding the empty calories of sugary, nutrient-free foods.

    Holford says: "The latest research into weight loss shows that calorie-controlled, low-fat diets are less effective than low glycemic load diets, which is exactly what a traditional Chinese diet is."

    Marber says: "There is one calorie in a Diet Coke, and 340 calories in an avocado. Which one is actually good for you? It's a no-brainer. The avocado supplies you with monounsaturated fats and omega-6, which actually help increase metabolic rate."

    2. Think of vegetables as dishes

    Rather than an uninspiring accompaniment to meat or fish, the Chinese treat vegetables as meals in their own right, rather than add-ons, as in the West.

    Marber says: "I'm a great believer in combining protein and carbohydrate. There aren't many complex carbohydrates in vegetables, but they should count as a dish. If the majority of your meal is vegetables, and you add some protein, you'll always have a perfect meal."

    Holford says: "Vegetables should make up half of what's on your plate in any given meal, so this fits perfectly with the Chinese diet."

    3. Fill up on staple foods

    Without rice, which is low in fat and high in nutrients and fibre, claims Clissold, it is impossible to eat until you are full. Low-carb diets promise to burn fat, but Clissold says that replacing carbs with food that is higher in fat and lower in nutrients is not a long-term answer to weight loss.

    Marber says: "I don't agree. That Chinese person shovelling rice down is slightly pudgy because they eat too much rice. But from a financial point of view it's very useful, because Atkins-style diets are very expensive."

    4. Eat until you are full

    The Chinese eat until they are full, and then stop. Westerners often take a feast-and-famine approach to eating that is ridden with guilt – purging during the week and binging over the weekend, or skipping lunch to make room for cake, The Chinese tend to eat three good meals every day.

    Holford says: "Provided that a meal has a high intake of fibre-rich vegetables and a balance of protein and carbohydrate, which a typical Chinese meal would, then you should eat until you are full. But the combination of high sugar, refined carbs (the white stuff) and high fat allows for more food to be eaten in a short space of time before the body's 'appestat' kicks in and tells you to stop."

    Marber says: "What does 'full' mean? I think so much of that message is lost in the conspicuous consumption of the Western world. But be careful: it takes a while for the brain to recognise CCK, the hormone released when you are full, so you're actually full quite a lot earlier than you realise."

    5. Take liquid food

    Soup, or a soup-based dish, is present at every Chinese meal, often in the form of a watery porridge, zhou. Western diets can be very dry, and nutritionists compensate by urging us to drink more water, which the Chinese would never do with a meal. Instead, they make a nourishing liquid food part of the meal. And it's a great way of using up leftovers.

    Holford says: "Thirst is often confused with hunger. Also, drinking does tend to fill you up. So soups help you control your appetite."

    Marber says: "I'm a great believer in soups before food. Miso soup, for instance, or anything fermented – these are probiotics, which help release nutrients from the food you are about to eat."

    6. Bring yin and yang into your kitchen

    A good Chinese diet balances yin (wet and moist) and yang (dry and crisp) ingredients. Yin foods cool the body down, while yang foods – meat, spicy dishes, wine, coffee – heat it up. The sharing, multi-dish approach to eating in China means most meals contain yin and yang in equilibrium.

    Marber says: "You should have complex carbs, a protein and a grain together for many different reasons, one of which is the experience of eating. The typical English bastardisation of Chinese food, chicken and cashew nuts, is a good example: you've got the softness of the chicken, the crunch of the nut and the satisfying rice."

    Holford says: "Most protein foods are seen as yang, carbohydrates as yin. The combination of these two helps stabilise blood sugar, which is the key to good energy and minimising weight gain."

    7. Raw power? not necessarily

    Chinese people don't eat raw salad. While raw food has a higher concentration of vitamins than cooked food, Clissold says the research ignores that lightly cooking food makes its nutrients easier for the body to take on. This way, it can conserve energy for other tasks. The stomach is unable to digest too much raw food; this can lead to bloating and weight gain.

    Holford says: "The rawer the better. In almost all cases, raw food has more nutrients, though lightly cooking some vegetables can make those nutrients more bio-available."

    Marber says: "I don't hold with this one. Eating a big salad with lots of different raw vegetables in it is very satisfying, and I can't believe your average Brit is going to blanch salad."

    8. Use food to keep fit

    Chinese medicine prescribes various foods as medical treatments: chillies to promote digestion and dispel cold; garlic to counteract toxins. The ultimate purpose is to ensure all the organs are working correctly to allow energy, or chi, to circulate smoothly around the body.

    Holford says: "Two thousand years ago, Hippocrates said, 'Let food be your medicine.' But we in the West forgot. Peasant communities tend to have more respect for the cycle of food and how it supports life."

    9. Drink green tea

    Green tea eliminates toxins, aids digestion and allays hunger. Scientists have found that it also fights free radicals, which cause cancer and heart disease.

    Marber says: "I'm a great believer in green and herbal teas. Green tea is an important antioxidant, but it will only help you lose weight if you drink 40 cups a day. I'm also a great believer in a skinny latte once in a while – or every morning, in my case."

    Holford says: "Traditionally, when the Chinese want another cup of tea, they'll keep the same leaves and add water to the pot. That's like only using one teabag a day – which means much less caffeine."

    10. Take restorative exercise

    Try regular, gentle exercise such as tai chi. A sweaty workout might shed fat, but it is stressful for your body. Energetic, aerobic workouts are yang – they heat us up – while breathing exercises are yin.

    holford says: "Exercise after a meal promotes an active metabolism and helps control appetite. Although no one has worked out how to measure chi, the vital energy that these exercises promote, it's a real thing that can easily be experienced. Many trials now show benefits to energy levels and immunity from these chi-generating exercises."

    Marber says: "Tai chi gives you a sense of balance, calm and peacefulness. Sweating it out at the gym is the precise opposite, but I can't help it – I'm vain, shallow and modern. I think we've got a really messed-up view of how the body should look, and that it's how we look, rather than how we feel, that matters."

    'Why the Chinese Don't Count Calories'

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    I must admit salads bore the hell out of me...unless I put some cooked mushrooms and garlic in there!
    I tend to pick at food all day long, get bored by certain foods (for ex. I'm not liking breaded items as much anymore, I rarely eat fake pastery anymore either). I would say I have an 'odd' relationship with food, I think i'm a controlling sort of person. I tend to think about food throughout the day, I will choose at least three dinners that I might cook for dinner, the night before it will take me ages to sort out my lunch and most days I will skip breakfast, or toast some bread at work with a small amount of apricot jam...then think perhaps I shouldn't eat until dinner.
    I think alot of westerners are odd about their food though, in my opinion.
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------

    Woohoo, brought the book from play...hopefully that will get to me soon :P

    Will take my pack of green tea to my new job tomorrow...help keep hunger at bay!

  • Something different...

    A bit of inspiration from SleepyGreen's blog. I was intriged by her blog, so I decided to look up on the net about 'Froggles'.....it seems pretty darn interesting! I nicked this from the independant....big time lol.

    Last week Laura Cousins chose to make some soap. She had all the ingredients: the drain cleaner, essential oil and rain water. "But I didn't have the sugar thermometers I needed, or a stainless steel pan, or a pair of rubber gloves."

    Cousins is part of the new "froogle" movement, which began in America. "Froogles" are environmentally-motivated types who use the internet to help them cut their consumerism back to basics. The trend grew out of waste-reducing internet groups like "Freecycle", where goods are exchanged for free. Then in December 2004, New Yorker Judith Levine realised she had spent over $1,000 in the run-up to Christmas and resolved to tap the ATM for nothing but necessities for the next 12 months.

    In her book about her fritter-free year, Not Buying It, Levine challenged her country's consumer culture. "In New York, only a day after the towers fell," she writes, "Mayor Rudolph Giuliani counselled his trembling constituents to 'show you're not afraid. Go to restaurants. Go shopping.' When the world's people asked how they could help, he said, 'Come here and spend money.' Shopping became a patriotic duty. Buy that flat screen TV, our leaders commanded, or the terrorists have won."

    Levine questioned if freedom could really be bought at the cash register. She'd heard of the International "Buy Nothing Day", but decided to take things 364 days further. In December 2005, a group of 50 San Franciscans made an identical pledge for 2006. Calling themselves "The Compact", this assortment of teachers, engineers, executives and other professionals vowed "to go beyond recycling in trying to counteract the negative global environmental and socio-economic impacts of US consumer culture, to resist global corporatism, and to support local businesses, farms, etc - a step, we hope, inherits the revolutionary impulse of the Mayflower Compact; to reduce clutter and waste in our homes; to simplify our lives".

    Their resolution permitted the purchase of food, health and safety items and underwear. Other items could be acquired second hand. Nine months on the group is still hanging in there.

    Inspired by the secular Lents of Levine and The Compact, Cousins decided she'd commit to her own 12 months of "froogalism". As we sit down for coffee in her cosy suburban home, the 39-year old drum-circle facilitator explains that she inherited a strong reduce, re-use and recycle philosophy from her parents. "They grew up during the war, and were used to a degree of deprivation. Then they moved out to California in the 1950s and I was born there in the 1960s. They never threw anything away, so green issues had always been there for me.

    Cousins gets her clothes from charity shops and jokes that she'd have to move if her local Age Concern closed. I ask about underwear. She giggles. "I haven't needed any new yet, though I admit I wouldn't buy any second-hand. But my five-year-old son's wearing second-hand pants. A friend's son grew very quickly and she passed them on."

    Cousins' husband, David, admits that he hasn't gone for the project 100 per cent. He keeps tropical fish, which need new things. And Cousins herself has cheated a little already. When she needed some camomile teabags she asked her brother if he had any. He didn't but went out and bought some for her, in exchange for a lift in her car. "That's not really the way it's meant to work," she says.

    .................it does go on from there...article is http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/froogles-the-new-challenge-to-rampant-consumerism-418795.html

  • Who would've thought it?

    ...i'm not as up to date as what I should be!!

    L'Oreal brought The Body Shop....

    L'Oreal is one the biggest users of animals for cosmetic and toiletry purposes in the world.

    I checked Benefits website (as I used to love their make up) and this is what they have written:

    Q, Does Benefit Cosmetics test on animals?
    A, No...Benefit does not test our products on animals. We love our furry friends and think the 'no makeup' look suits them best!

    Q, Does Benefit use ingredients tested on Animals?
    A, It is impossible to use only ingrediants that have never been tested on animals at some point in the past, In conformity with European rules, test on ingrediants are not done on animals when other methods exist to ensure the safety of those ingredients.

    Okay. Anyone want to enlighten me as to what the hell that really means? Lush has (not to my knowledge!) tested ingredients on animals...I checked out their website, which has a bit more info:

    Lush's Policy

    Lush are firmly committed to a policy which not only precludes testing its products and ingredients on animals, or engaging with third-party suppliers to do so on their behalf, but we will also not buy any ingredient from any supplier that tests any of its materials on any animals for any purpose. This policy is unique in its field and is pioneering a new way to stop animal tests for cosmetics.

    Lush runs its own Supplier Specific Boycott Policy. There are clear benefits to this policy, which is different and distinct from the Fixed Cut-off Date policy employed by the Humane Cosmetics Standard (Leaping Bunny logo).

    Can the ingredients Lush use be tested for other purposes, but still used in cosmetics?

    While some other policies only preclude the use of ingredients tested on animals for use in cosmetics, the Lush policy means the company will not do business with any supplier that is engaged in any animal testing for any purpose, be it cosmetics, food, agrochemicals, pharmaceuticals, etc.

    All of Lush’s suppliers have to sign a statement saying that they adhere to this policy, and the statements are resent to suppliers on an annual basis and reiterated and signed for with each purchase order for ingredients. In addition, the entire supply chain is audited by an independent consultant to ensure that suppliers are in compliance with the policy.

  • To buy or not to buy?

    Dont you just hate it when you know that you've acted like a jerk? Hmm...Im the type of person that takes things to heart so when I feel someones getting on my case about something I tend to lash out.

    Anyway...

    What is going on with these poxy clothes shops?! Not only are things expensive (well...they always have been I guess...but now i'm more reluctant to fork out my hard earned cash), but the clothes are so boring, tacky and lame.

    (I'm not getting on my moral high ground here, I promise!) Also you just dont really know where these clothes have been made, if the people who made the clothes are being exploitated, their working conditions, etc, etc. I guess you could say that about anything thats been made and sold in high street shops :??:

    I think i'm really going to start making a concious effort to find out about the clothes shops that I do shop in. Its going to be hard...but well...I thought turning vegetarian back last year would be hard!

    Its either that or start making and designing my own clothes....hmmm....could be interesting?!

    I haven't done anything more to the website, just trying to get a basic ideas together plus the boyfriend needs to read up on the new web program he's going to be using :D

  • In other news....

    ......I have found myself a job! Hurrah! Assistant buyer...! I start next tuesday and cant wait. Rewind about a month ago...the hairdressing thing would be not a good idea, I want to start saving to move out in October after me and the boyfriend come back from our hols (We're going to Zante for a week...finally). So being an apprentice hairdresser with shite pay is not an option really.

    Going out to celebrate with BB, K and B tonight. Cant wait! I haven't seen these guys for ages, and I miss them sooooo sooooo much. Note to self, make more time for lovely precious friends!

    Well, i've almost sorted out the front page of the website...super lol. Its taking longer than what I thought it would to be honest. I'm defo looking forward to designing and maintaining the site (thank god the boyfriend is a super graphic designer!)

    Well, roll on the weekend, lets hope for lots of sunshine!
    xxx

  • News on Animal Testing...lifted from msn news

    Animal testing 'likely to rise'Animal testing 'likely to rise'

    pa.press.net
    The number of monkeys and other non-human primates used in animal experiments is expected to rise as new sophisticated therapies are developed for complex diseases.

    Scientists made the prediction as the Home Office released new figures showing a 6% rise in the number of scientific procedures involving animals between 2006 and 2007.

    The total number of procedures carried out in the UK last year was just over 3.2 million. It was the sixth year in a row that the figure had increased, mainly due to the growing use of genetically-modified rodents and fish.

    Around 4,000 procedures involved non-human primates, a fall of 6% on 2006. But experts warned that progress in stem cell research and the development of new antibody-based treatments was likely to put pressure on scientists to conduct more primate experiments in the future.

    One reason was that animals more closely related to humans than the traditional lab rat or mouse are needed when investigating ways to tackle complex neurodegenerative and autoimmune diseases.

    However the scientists made it clear there were no immediate prospects of using great apes, humankind's closest animal relatives, for such procedures. Experiments on chimpanzees and other great apes are currently banned in the UK.

    Dr Judy MacArthur Clark, the Home Office's Chief Inspector of Animal Procedures, said there could be no shift in the direction of great apes without a major public and political debate.

    "It will not come out of the blue," she said at a news conference in London. "This is not something that's going to be snuck in, there would be big public and political debate around it before any decisions are taken."

    At present there are no facilities for great ape experiments in the UK and no available animals.

    The new figures were announced in the latest reports on animal testing statistics from the Home Office's Animals (Scientific Procedures) Inspectorate.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------

    Madness....

  • Another amusing article...this time from the Independant!

    How our vegan diet made us ill

    http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-wellbeing/healthy-living/how-our-vegan-diet-made-us-ill-848322.html

    Holly Paige thought her family's food regime would boost their health – but stick-thin legs and rotten teeth made her think again

    By Natasha Mann
    Tuesday, 17 June 2008

    RICHARD LAPPAS

    One morning over breakfast, Holly Paige looked at her daughter and realised things weren't right. Lizzie should have been flourishing. Instead, her cheeks were pinched, she was small for her age, and although she had skinny arms and legs, her belly was big and swollen. When Lizzie smiled, Paige suddenly noticed her upper front teeth were pitted with holes.

    "I was absolutely horrified," recalls Paige.

    At the time, Paige was feeding them what she thought was the most nutritious diet possible. They had been raw vegans for three years, and ate plenty of fruit, vegetables, nuts, seeds, grains, soya and pulses, but no meat, fish or dairy. According to the raw-food doctrine, Lizzie and Bertie, then three and four-and-a-half, should have been brimming with good health. But Paige's mothering instinct was on the alert.

    "I knew something was wrong, but I couldn't put a finger on it," says Paige, 45. "They were two sizes behind in clothes. Of course, children come in all different shapes and sizes, but their growth seemed to be slowing further. I have two older children so I had their development to measure Lizzie and Bertie's against."

    There were other oddities: "I remember going to the supermarket and buying butter for my older children. Lizzie, who had never had butter in her life, would grab the packet and gnaw into it," says Paige. "It was really disconcerting. I would be thinking, 'What is going on? Here is this purely fed child – why would she need to do this?' I was so brainwashed into thinking dairy products are bad for you."

    When she took Lizzie and Bertie to her health visitor, she didn't seem too concerned. "She said they were in the low percentile, but thought they were OK," says Paige. "Yet I knew the children weren't growing. I could sense that there was something wrong. It felt wrong."

    Finally, Paige stumbled across the answer in an old vitamin book. Although she has no medical confirmation, she believes the family had symptoms of vitamin D- and protein-deficiency. "I felt like such an idiot. I got the information from a book I'd had sitting around on my shelf for 20 years."

    The discovery brought a swift end to her experience of veganism. In Totnes, where she lives, Paige knows many other raw vegans who have a nature-loving lifestyle. But despite taking a daily supplement that included vitamin D and B12, she and the children were suffering. Today, the family still mainly has a raw diet, but Paigeincludes butter, cheese, eggs and occasionally fish. "I had let malnutrition in through the back door in the name of health," says Paige. "It was ridiculous."

    There is a significant difference between being vegan (and eating cooked foods) and raw vegan. Vegans benefit from fortified cereals, baked goods and a wider variety of grains and pulses; what's more, cooking aids the absorption of some micronutrients. But Lisa Miles, from the British Nutrition Foundation, says: "The most dramatic change to the diet is being vegan rather than the raw element, because you are cutting out two huge food groups. This affects vitamin D and protein."

    Last week, strict diets for children were questioned after a 12-year-old vegan girl was admitted to a Scottish hospital with rickets. Her spine was said to resemble that of an 80-year-old woman.

    Rickets is a degenerative bone condition that can lead to curvature of the spine and bone fractures. It is caused by a lack of vitamin D, usually found in oily fish, eggs, butter and made by our bodies from sunshine – although in the UK the sun is only strong enough to do this between April and September. It's a disease you might more commonly associate with the Dickensian character, Tiny Tim.

    Many dieticians believe it is possible to bring up a healthy vegan child. "You can do it, but you do have to make sure you know what you are doing, especially in regards to weight," says Jackie Lowdon from the British Dietician Association. "As with any self-restricting diet, you need to get proper professional advice."

    The Vegan Society, unsurprisingly, claim that the diet is suitable for all stages of life, and have an army of strapping, healthy adults brought up as vegans from birth who are happy to talk to the media. They also publish a book with dietary advice on feeding vegan children, written by dietician Sandra Hood. A spokeswoman, however, says they would not recommend a raw vegan diet for children.

    Nigel Denby, a dietician and author of Nutrition for Dummies, says: "It can be hard enough bringing a child up to eat healthily, but with a vegan diet you are really making a difficult job for yourself. It is absolutely not something that should be tried without support from a dietician."

    Several factors, says Denby, make a vegan diet for small children more difficult. With a restricted range of foods, if children turn their nose up at one particular food, you could be stuck for choice. "With smaller appetites and portion sizes, children under five have higher nutrient requirements than adults. Therefore, every mealtime has to be an opportunity to feed them high-nutrient-based foods."

    Care must be taken with certain nutrients. "Haem iron, found in meat, is easier for the body to absorb," explains Denby. "Non-haem iron, which is just as good, is found in leafy vegetables and fortified cereals, but you have to eat a greater amount to get the same amount of iron."

    Paige now believes that her children were craving dairy products. "It was confusing because for the first year I felt good, calm and content, and had plenty of energy. The children didn't have childhood sicknesses. But something seemed to be missing. We were always picking between meals, always obsessed by food."

    Paige believes long-term breastfeeding helped sustain Lizzie and Bertie, but the toll of veganism on her own health was dramatic: "It was the third year when my body started disintegrating, frighteningly fast. I was getting thin, losing muscle and I was going to bed at half nine." She would also have "mad" binges, and eat nothing but rice cakes and butter.

    The last straw came when Paige's eldest son Bruce came to stay. He asked her to buy chicken, and Paige ended up eating half of it. After that, she couldn't stop. "I just went wild. Typically, in a day I would eat half a chicken, two litres of milk, half a pound of cheese and three eggs. I just had to do it. It went on for weeks. The children were having lots of boiled eggs and cheese."

    Paige, who now runs an online magazine and raw food shop, says her biggest lesson is never to be too restrictive again. "For a lot of people, there is something about these various nutrients in the animal form that we can assimilate. I don't know why, but experience shows a lot of us can't get enough protein on a vegan diet."

    Now when Paige looks at her two youngest, now seven and eight she is certain they are thriving. "There was a moment when I was worried damage had been done for life," she says. "Now, I'm confident they are doing well. Even though they eat as much fruit and dried fruit as before, their teeth haven't had one bit more decay."

    And nowadays, it's their growth that's the big talking point. "The first thing anyone says when they visit is: 'My, haven't they grown?'"

    --------------------------------------------------------------------

    Amazing right? I'd say that the parents needed to have a good ol' read up on a stack of RAW vegan literature. Idiots. The paper pisses me off too, because in the title it states 'Vegan Diet' ......not 'RAW Vegan Diet'.

    But, then again, there are many families out there that have raw vegan diets and are perfectly healthy.

    Right...I'm off to lunch, moan off over :))

  • Vegan stuff!

    I haven't written for a while. I've been a tad busy...what with buying too much stuff from SSOV (I know, I know...but all their stuff is sooo good quality!) and cooking loads of vegan meals from scratch, and deciding to start a vegan website, blogging needed to be pushed to the back for a while!

    So, Vegan lasagna anyone? It was amaaazing! I could only do about five layers as the dish was not big enough. I blitzed some cashew nuts in a blender and added them to the fake cheese sauce I brought, and added a dash of garlic too. Okay, I didn't cook the tomato sauce from scratch but brought that in a jar. Lots and lots of tofu! The three of us ate all of it (I thought I could save some for lunch). I'm glad my boyf likes my vegan cooking :DD

    Had a shot of wheatgrass juice (yum!) which made me feel like I had boundless energy!

    Brought some stuffed vine leaves on saturday too...when my boyfriend and I were out in Greece I could've survived on then all day long!

    So yes...vegan website...Ooo..scary thought! Should be doing a quick write up tonight for the first page, and see where we go from there really. The boyf is fab at designing, so we're thinking about t-shirts and stickers (to start of with!) vegan recipes, reviews of vegan restaurants, general vegan knowledge, info page for people who want to get together for potlucks, meets, etc, etc! *giggles excitedly*

    BBQ soon...cant wait for that either! I will be making my famous vegan pizza, normal pizza...which isn't so famous, vegan burgers and sausages from scratch, maybe vegan lasagna (as it was bloody great) lots of pasta, maybe vegan sushi and of course all the normal stuff at BBQ's. Its going to be hella good!

Next page »

Widgets

Footer

The content of this website belongs to a private person, blog.co.uk is not responsible for the content of this website.