Saturday, January 31, 2009

Vegan Bean Chili Dinner :: Chili Rellenos Appetizer :: Collard Wraps Lunch :: A Vegan Weekend of Eats!

Spicy dinner last night! I was sweating. The man ate his with pickled jalapenos, so it's all a matter of taste :)

About 2 cups pinto and black beans. I soaked them all day yesterday and over night. I drained and rinsed them well. Then I cooked them about an hour and a half, until they were soft with 1 tsp each curry, paprika, cumin, salt, sage, and oregano and 1/2 tsp cayenne. (HOT!!!), 3 smashed cloves of garlic and half an onion, quartered.
















I added water and let it cook until the beans were almost dry.















Then added more water and some chopped celery and tomatoes.















I cooked that for about 4 more hours, stirring it a lot so it didn't stick and I kept adding water as it cooked down. Juicy is good.

One hour before dinner I added about a cup of finely chopped tomatoes, one finely chopped onion and about half a cup of chopped fresh parsley and some cubed seitan.



Done.















I served it with Irish Soda Bread and Seed cheese. Also a big salad. The chili was REALLY spicy. Next time I will not use as much cayenne, woo.


We also made these cute little chili rellenos from small sweet peppers.















I cut the end off of two, removed the membrane from the inside. The other two I split on one side and removed the membrane and seeds. The second way was easier but the first way would hold up better under adverse conditions. I filled them with seed cheese and dehydrated them for about 4 hours at 115F.


The boy stayed the night at his grandparents last night so we slept in, then juiced all morning. I made a green smoothie for the man. The around three, we had collard green wraps.















Contains red bell, zuke, cuke, red lettuce, green onion, seed cheese and lentil sprouts. MMM messy!

Reprinted from This Vegan Life

"Humans lack both the physical characteristics of carnivores and the instinct that drives them to kill animals and devour their raw carcasses. Ask yourself: When you see dead animals on the side of the road, are you tempted to stop for a snack? Does the sight of a dead bird make you salivate? Do you daydream about killing cows with your bare hands and eating them raw? If you answered "no" to all of these questions, congratulations—you're a normal human herbivore—like it or not. Humans were simply not designed to eat meat."

Even if you aren't a vegetarian...

Simply by eating more vegetables and filling up on them, on a daily basis, non-vegetarians may have smaller slabs of meat on their plates, which helps the environment, conserves resources, and reduces animal suffering and exploitation.

From Animal Writings

Friday, January 30, 2009

Vegan Taco Night at the In-Laws and Proposing Massive Changes and Vegan Chili Beans RECIPE

I really am the luckiest vegan in the whole world.

I have a wonderful man who eats whatever I cook*, and I have his father and his fathers wife (Dil and Mil for our purposes here) who are totally freakin new age and open to all kinds of ideas and who fill me with ideas for wonderful things to do and wonderful things to think! I have a beautiful red headed step child who is brilliant and just keeps getting smarter every day!

How much better could life be?
I'm googling the lyrics for happiest girl in the whole USA, for peet's sake!

Mil is trying to convince me to make flax crackers and try to market them at the health foods store in town. I think it's a good idea. but there will be much planning and I will probably just over think it and never really get anything done, like I usually do.

Last night we went over to the Dil and Mil's place, the man and Dil had a conference call and we had dinner over there. RAW VEGAN TACOS!!! Well, it wasn't all raw but quite a bit of it was.

There were nori wrappers, thinly sliced sweet potatos and some organic corn tortillas for shells and, OH, MY! So much stuff to put in them all! There was shredded turnip, julliened cukes and zukes, kim chi, sauerkraut made from beets, salsa, onion, shredded kale, mint, cabbage, cilantro, and Sheesh, there was a bunch of good food there.
I stuffed myself and then she brought out the chocolate! Dark chocolate with almonds and cranberries inside. And I even had an apple turnover, although fruit should never be eaten cooked, I figured, what is a tsp of apple pie filling going to mean in the over all scheme, anyway? I ate it with soaked raisins and figs on top. Crispy filo dough filled with spiced apples and covered in soaked dried fruit. It was yum.

I wish I had brought my camera. I love visiting with them. So does the boy. You know, it's his grandparents... :) :) :)

We did the weekly shopping yesterday, too. I let the boy help, sending him to get 7 kiwis, 3 cukes, put the kale in the bag, etc. He helped write the numbers on the twisties for the bags of seeds and nuts and helped grind the peanut butter for his daily lunch sandwich. We also got him some goldfish crackers, he loves them soo much. I really think it's important for children to be part of the shopping experience and also help out with some chores in the house. At his age he can help out a lot, really. I already have him take his dishes to the kitch when he's done eating.
I need to remember to ask him to help with putting his clean clothes away and I also need to remember to have him make up his own bed in the morning when he gets dressed.

I served him some salad the other day and he ate it which is good progress.
I talked to his dad about him eating with us one night a week. His dad said, "you better make pasta that night". No. That's totally missing the point.
We already have dinner together every night, but he gets a special dinner made just for him. What other kid, barring severe allergics, get a special meal made every night? Ask any kid in his class and I bet you, barring severe allergies, that the child eats dinner with the parents. Eats what they eat. Cries over having to finish his lima beans, but finishes them anyway.

I proposed it to the boy this morning and he didn't seem thrilled about it but he didn't fall out crying either.

It's hard to change a life-long habit but it's even harder to have diabetes, heart disease and cancer. The boy will not survive unless we get some veges in him.

Maybe tonight. I am making chili with beans. I know, I know.














About 2 cups pinto and black beans. I soaked them all day yesterday and over night so they would sprout. Sprouting makes then about a million times easier to digest. Then I cooked them about an hour and a half, until they were soft.
1 tsp each curry, paprika, cumin, salt, cayenne, sage, and oregano.
3 smashed cloves of garlic and half an onion, quartered.

I will leave these on the stove all day until dinner time and serve them with a salad and some homemade bread.


Footnotes
*he's lost 25lbs since I moved in, I must be doing something either very right or very wrong.

Behold the Power of Juice!















Celery, ginger, garlic and red bell pepper.




Thursday, January 29, 2009

Hail Seitan (say TAN) part 3a

Part 3, here, with recipe. It works good. No oil is the secret, i guess. I could see this making a roast


Ok! It cooked up well in the broth, I got 8 good sized meaty cutlets! I poured a tsp of olive oil in a cast iron pan, heated it up nice and hot and put the cutlets, sliced down the center to make
thinner slices.














Why does that shot glass keep showing up in photos? It's for vinegar, I swear it. I haven't had an alcoholic drink since new year's eve. And that is something for me. I was (is) a BIG boozehound.

Then I browned them up. They started to smell like donuts. I guess fried flour is fried flour, after all :)













mmm. salty donutss....





























They made a damn good sandwich, though.
On home made bread dressed with seed cheese and veges










I was too busy eating to take more photos




On a completely unrelated note, the boy ate salad last night. He came home and said "I'm hungry" I said, "you are eating some salad tonight. Go sit at the table. I gave him a plate with about 6 pieces of cut up red lettuce and some HV ranch dressing (not vegan. baby steps)

He ate it. He said it was yucky but he ate it. YAY!

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Are you convinced to become a vegan yet?

if not, you may want to read the following article. Reprinted without permission from Daily Camera. emphasis added by me

Switching to a vegan diet

By Pam LeBlanc, Cox Newspapers

AUSTIN, Texas -- We have seen the enemy, and it's laden with fat, cholesterol and calories.

Nutrition researcher Dr. Neal Barnard says by picking the right foods, we can fend off cravings. Even better, he says a low-fat, plant-based diet can lower cholesterol levels and make our bodies more disease-proof.

"Changing our diet is more powerful than most of us have imagined," says Barnard, who favors a vegan diet. "If we do it in the right way, we can reach our goal of knocking off weight, getting our cholesterol down, really getting healthy and living again."

The 52-year-old founder of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, which promotes preventive medicine and good nutrition, has written seven books, including "Turn Off the Fat Genes" and "Breaking the Food Seduction: The Hidden Reasons Behind Food Cravings."

Barnard, who lives in Washington, D.C., says he is frustrated by doctors today who find it easier to write a prescription for cholesterol-lowering drugs than to tell a patient to change his or her diet, even though studies show that a vegan diet can halt -- and even reverse -- diabetes and heart disease.

"There's always a role for medical care, but the most powerful tool for good health is the food we put on our plate every day."

According to Barnard, that food should come from just four food groups -- vegetables, fruits, legumes and whole grains. It should omit dairy and meat.

His advice for breaking cravings? Space meals evenly throughout the day. Change your schedule -- so you're out taking a walk instead of lurking near the refrigerator when cravings hit, for example. Keep healthy snacks on hand. Remember that alcohol dissolves willpower. Get proper exercise and rest.

And be smart about the foods that you do eat. Certain foods -- chocolate, for example -- have mild opiate effects that can become addictive. Resist them by choosing instead foods such as oatmeal and beans that hold your blood sugar steady during the day and reduce hunger for hours.

"We don't have to have our kids be part of a generation that's headed to be the most unhealthy generation we've ever had," he says. "We don't have to have husbands, wives or parents resign themselves to illness."

What does Dr. Barnard eat?

Q: Can the typical American stick to a plant-based diet long term? Is life worth living if it doesn't include cheeseburgers?

Dr. Neal Barnard: People can do it and they will do it. Frankly, we have no choice. Two-thirds of us are overweight; one-third of the adult population is obese. If you're overweight and facing the risk of heart attack, are your kids following suit? Do you really want to feed them foods that will give them prostate cancer, colon cancer and diabetes? We treat this as if it's some kind of joke. It's not.

Q: Can we really reverse heart disease through this diet?

A: Yes, according to studies, and results start to show in only a month or two. The same is true for diabetes. "It's absolutely astounding. We've had to ratchet back medications (for some people)."

Q: How long does it take to retrain our taste buds when we switch to a plant-based diet?

A: Two or three weeks, Barnard says. "You feel better, you lose weight, have more energy. When a person goes on a vegan diet and later on they try to have some meat or chicken, it's disgusting to them."

Q: What if we just eat a little meat and cheese? Moderation is good, isn't it?

A: "Not really. Moderation only applies for healthy things. If a mother says, 'All things in moderation,' she doesn't mean a little cocaine or a few cigarettes are OK. To the extent you're adding meat or cheese, you're adding cholesterol and the problems it causes. The bigger problem is it rekindles the taste for having it again."

Q: I thought fish was good for me. Why shouldn't I eat it?

A: "Fish have omega-3 fatty acids, but they have a similar amount of saturated fat, and that raises cholesterol. Plus, fish are the most contaminated food we eat. Mercury from the ocean floor concentrates in them."

Q: Why should I get 40 grams of fiber a day?

A: "Fiber is what fills us up in a healthy way. You can get filled up by a big hunk of meat or cheese, but the healthy way to do it is with fiber. It makes you less hungry all morning long and less likely to fall prey to the doughnut tray. It keeps your digestive tract clean and carries toxins away; it keeps people regular. And it's in food naturally."

Q: Why not just skip breakfast?

A: "People who eat breakfast are less tempted by other foods later in the day. Their blood sugars stay more even. If you skip breakfast and get to lunch and are extra hungry, you're more likely to overdo it and eat things you will regret."

Q: Can I get enough protein in a plant-based diet?

A: "Yes. There is plenty of protein in beans, grains, vegetables and fruits. Add to that a multivitamin that will cover you for B12 and you are set."

Q: But I'm an athlete. . .

A: "Racehorses and bulls get their protein from plants, and we can, too. Meat gives you protein, but also a huge chunk of saturated fat and cholesterol." Still feel like you need extra protein? Add more soy protein (tofu) or beans. "You definitely don't need meat or eggs."

Q: Why change my diet when I can just take a cholesterol-lowering drug?

A: "A cholesterol-lowering drug will lower cholesterol, but it doesn't do anything for your thighs, your cancer risk or diabetes." And, for some, it has side effects, including muscle pain. "In those few cases where diet change is not enough, drugs should be used as an alternative or complementary treatment."

Seven tips for healthy eating

Dr. Neal Barnard says by eating the right foods we can resist unhealthy food habits:

Plan breakfast to block cravings and snacking later in the day. Think oatmeal (regular, not instant) and cantaloupe, not white toast.

Choose foods -- such as sweet potatoes, green vegetables, lentils and peas -- that hold blood sugar steady for hours.

Boost your appetite-taming hormone leptin by eating a low-fat diet, not over-restricting calorie intake and exercising.

Break craving cycles, whether they are daily, monthly or yearly, caused by hormones, winter darkness or a hectic schedule.

Get plenty of rest and exercise.

Enlist support from friends, family and co-workers.

Remember the other benefits of a plant-based diet: cutting cancer risk, losing weight, decreasing blood pressure, getting more energy, living longer, developing new tastes, etc.


Still not convinced?

Hail Seitan! Part 3. Cutlets FAT FREE Cooked Vegan Recipe! Wheat Meat

Working from a recipe that I found here.

I used
1 cup gluten flour
1 tsp salt
1 tsp garlic powder
2 tsp paprika (optional. I added it for color, mostly. It adds a little bit of a mild spicy flavor)
3/4 cup water

Mix dry ingredients and add water. Stir until a nice lump forms.















It don't take long. Let it set a minute or two then knead it for a minute or two. Let it set again while you heat about 4 cups of broth or water in a large sauce pan.*

When the broth or water is simmering cut the dough into eight equal pieces and form into round patties or "cutlets"















Four of the eight cutlets, before forming.


A patty, or cutlet.












They shrink up when you let them set. I put them in the hot water as soon as possible and they swell once they get in there, so use a BIG sauce pan and at least 4 cups of broth or water.

Gently drop each one at a time into the water and simmer with a lid on for 1 hour 15 minutes.

















I will update with photos of the finished product later!!


Footnotes:
*I made broth this time from frozen vegetable juice pulp. I heated it in water then strained it and added a tsp of salt.

Raw Cashew Cream SWEET Vegan DESSERT RECIPE!


About a cup of cashews, soaked
1 tsp (or more) of sugar
1/4 tsp (or less) vanilla extract (not raw and optional)

Add enough filtered water to blend into a smooth, creamy consistency. Chill.
Add sugar and vanil to your taste, really. It's probably quite good without it.

I put it on blueberries and called it BREAKFAST

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

COOKED VEGAN Quick lunch! Thai Food! :OR: What to do with the left over spaghetti and peanut butter

Spring is coming...















The lawn furniture tells me so.



Ingredients RULE!~!!















Pour
















Mix















Bake


I made bread again today.












I juiced all morning. Using my blender. My "new" juicer came today but the condition was not as represented and it was packed so horribly that there was a crack in the... oh, nevermind. I might blog about it later. I just feel like tearing my hair out. Good news is, It Was Cheep. It's not like I'm out 500 bucks. Dammit.














Speaking of hair, this is a RARE shot of me with my hair down. I weighed 156 this morning. That's 61 lbs so far.


Then for lunch I made a lime peanut sauce and poured it over cold noodles.
Lime juice














Peanut butter














Ginger
















Oregano















You can tell it's oregano because of the clear label I made. Yup. There will be no confusing this one with the one like it that has basil in it. Nope.


Whizzzzz!!!














No, I haven't been drinking. That shot glass was for measuring vinegar. I SWEAR!!!

Pour sauce over cold noodles and pretend you are in a fancy Thai restaurant. mmmmmm.

The Money Shot

Sprouted
















I don't know if you can see them but my Calendula has SPROUTED!!!!!!!















Holy Germination, Bat Man!!! I have been checking them every day, talking to them, encouraging them to grow and they did!

I love the miracle of seeds.

BRRRRR!!!


25 degrees Fahrenheit. I will make a real update when my fingers thaw out

Monday, January 26, 2009

Home Made Vegan Cheese Ravioli

even though the pasta machine was a fail, the ravioli was a win.


Before cooking














These are filled with seed cheese
I put them in a large pot of boiling water. They need enough room to all float on top.

First they will sink and then they will float. It takes about 5 minutes

I put them in a bowl and spooned raw marinara over them to heat the marinara















Yummers! The cheese-y goodness was almost too much to take!

The money shot















The long shot
















Dessert was baked yams with vegan butter...














Win!!

The man says he wants to try the machine. I want him to, too. I really want that thing to work. It has a bagel attachment.

Pasta Machine Noodle Maker FAIL

It started out like any other day. We went to the Goodwill and found this wacky pasta making machine. Fun, fun! $10 for a new kitchen toy. So, we bought it. It has no instruction manual or recipes so we did what we do and looked on line. The man found this groovy and hilarious 1994 vid on youtube.
It promises to familiarize you with your unit, inside and out, but it only talks about the machine.

Here is the machine and some flour and some pulp from JUICING. I figured it would be a nice vege pasta with a little taste of ginger. mmmm.














I was going to make lasagna noodles and maybe make a lasagna.

I put flour, pulp and oil in the machine, thinking, who needs to measure. Too wet, add water, to dry add more flour, right. Well that's what it said in the video.














The truth is, this machine does NOT work!! I set it to extrude and it would not grab the dough and push it through the slot. Poorly designed, not my fault.
















I ask you, does THAT ^ look ANYTHING like Lasagna Noodles? No. It looks like biscuit dough shoved through a slot

I took the dough out (NOT easy) and tossed the doughy machine parts in the sink. I've made pasta before, without a machine.

I have a rolling pin and a board :)















Sliced into 1-1.5" strips















And into the dehydrator they go.















I really don't expect them to be good. We shall see.

Then rolled out some more















And used this tool to make some seed cheese ravioli!















About a tsp in each one.















I will put them in boiling water for a minute and serve them with fresh raw marinara and a HUGE salad!

Maybe next time I will use a recipe...

If you think it's humane to eat eggs...

Before you eat another egg, watch this video about a chain grocery store on the east coast.

Wegman's Cruelty

They are certified humane, don't forget.

Found Camera

But not having update yet.

Need juice, bad.

It was a long weekend and I feel as though I missed posting a day or two but I did not.

Thanks to Art and the Man, without both of who's help I would have been searching for the missing camera still...

Must. Juice. Soon.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

PetitionSpot

Sunday Morning

I can't find my camera. It's in the house. Somewhere.

Today The boy is at a friends house and we will be doing some cleaning and I will be juicing.

So far, celery, cucumber, ginger, lemon and savoy cabbage. Twice. I'm going to go do some more.

Wish me find my camera, will ya?

It snowed this morning just a dusting. The Klamath webcam shows it.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Saturday afternoon. Here are some things I did Friday



Started an herb garden














oregano, basil, chives, something else i can't remember right now, and calendula


I made chocolate banana ice pops
















Dried some banana slices
















I dried some soaked walnuts to freeze for later

















I made some chocolate banana cookies

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The Philosophy of Animal Rights by Tom Regan


The other animals humans eat, use in science, hunt, trap, and exploit in a variety of ways, have a life of their own that is of importance to them apart from their utility to us. They are not only in the world, they are aware of it. What happens to them matters to them. Each has a life that fares better or worse for the one whose life it is.

That life includes a variety of biological, individual, and social needs. The satisfaction of these needs is a source of pleasure, their frustration or abuse, a source of pain. In these fundamental ways, the nonhuman animals in labs and on farms, for example, are the same as human beings. And so it is that the ethics of our dealings with them, and with one another, must acknowledge the same fundamental moral principles.

At its deepest level, human ethics is based on the independent value of the individual: The moral worth of any one human being is not to be measured by how useful that person is in advancing the interest of other human beings. To treat human beings in ways that do not honor their independent value is to violate that most basic of human rights: the right of each person to be treated with respect.

The philosophy of animal rights demands only that logic be respected. For any argument that plausibly explains the independent value of human beings implies that other animals have this same value, and have it equally. And any argument that plausibly explains the right of humans to be treated with respect, also implies that these other animals have this same right, and have it equally, too.

It is true, therefore, that women do not exist to serve men, blacks to serve whites, the poor to serve the rich, or the weak to serve the strong. The philosophy of animal rights not only accepts these truths, it insists upon and justifies them.

But this philosophy goes further. By insisting upon and justifying the independent value and rights of other animals, it gives scientifically informed and morally impartial reasons for denying that these animals exist to serve us.

Once this truth is acknowledged, it is easy to understand why the philosophy of animal rights is uncompromising in its response to each and every injustice other animals are made to suffer.

It is not larger, cleaner cages that justice demands in the case of animals used in science, for example, but empty cages: not "traditional" animal agriculture, but a complete end to all commerce in the flesh of dead animals; not "more humane" hunting and trapping, but the total eradication of these barbarous practices.

For when an injustice is absolute, one must oppose it absolutely. It was not "reformed" slavery that justice demanded, not "reformed" child labor, not "reformed" subjugation of women. In each of these cases, abolition was the only moral answer. Merely to reform injustice is to prolong injustice.

The philosophy of animal rights demands this same answer - abolition - in response to the unjust exploitation of other animals. It is not the details of unjust exploitation that must be changed. It is the unjust exploitation itself that must be ended, whether on the farm, in the lab, or among the wild, for example. The philosophy of animal rights asks for nothing more, but neither will it be satisfied with anything less.

Haiku Disclaimer

This works for me now
Find your own path and never
Take advice from fools

Insprirational Vegan Quotes

1. Animals that live in the wild kill other animals in order to eat. If I also lived in the wild would it still be inhumane to kill an animal to eat?? What about if I raised chickens in my backyard and cultivated their eggs for my breakfast omelet, is this inhumane?
A: Because animal flesh and products are not needed for human nutrition killing and eating them is inhumane in any circumstances. No kind of slavery is humane no matter how well the slave is treated. You can't respect someone and then exploit her for her eggs/milk/honey.

2. Do animal rights moralists take into consideration the domestication of animals i.e. history of farming, farming as the back bone to the establishment of the first civilizations. There’s not much literature about the reasons animals have become a central part of human life?
A: History is no excuse to continue to exploit non humans. Animals are not needed for human nutrition. That is a myth perpetuated by industries which make money exploiting non human animals.

3. Is domestication against animals rights? If so, does that make having a dog or cat or horse inhumane?
A: At this time there are a lot of domesticated animals that need tending. Most domesticated animals are just that. They would not exist as we know them if not for domestication. Breeding animals for pets or for food is unnecessary and inhumane. Adopt animals, have them spayed or neutered. Give them a comfortable home where they can live out their lives without being exploited. With time the numbers of "non-food" and "food" animals will go down and eventually there will be no more domesticated food animals or pets.

Ethical veganism results in a profound revolution within the individual; a complete rejection of the paradigm of oppression and violence that she has been taught from childhood to accept as the natural order. It changes her life and the lives of those with whom she shares this vision of nonviolence. Ethical veganism is anything but passive; on the contrary, it is the active refusal to cooperate with injustice. ~Gary L. Francione

Merely by ceasing to eat meat

Merely by practicing restraint
We have the power to end a painful industry

We do not have to bear arms to end this evil
We do not have to contribute money
We do not have to sit in jail or go to
meetings or demonstrations or
engage in acts of civil disobedience
Most often, the act of repairing the world,
of healing mortal wounds,
is left to heroes and tzaddikim (holy people)
Saints and people of unusual discipline
But here is an action every mortal can
perform--surely it is not too difficult! ~Roberta Kalechofsky of Jews for Animal Rights

The ten commandments of Mother Earth


1. Thou shall love and honor the Earth for it blesses thy life and governs thy survival.
2. Thou shall keep each day sacred to the Earth and celebrate the turning of its seasons.
3. Thou shall not hold thyself above other living things nor drive them to extinction.
4. Thou shall give thanks for thy food, to the creatures and plants that nourish thee.
5. Thou shall educate thy offspring for multitudes of people are a blessing unto the Earth when we live in harmony.
6. Thou shall not kill, nor waste Earth's riches upon weapons of war.
7. Thou shall not pursue profit at the Earth's expense but strive to restore its damaged majesty.
8. Thou shall not hide from thyself or others the consequences of thy actions upon the Earth.
9. Thou shall not steal from future generations by impoverishing or poisoning the Earth.
10. Thou shall consume material goods in moderation so all may share the Earth's bounty. ~Ernest Callenbach

"This is what passes for "food" in America today: A collection of nutritionally-obliterated, hormonally-enhanced, chemically-adulterated shapes of refined whatever, all hyped up to make them seem like real food when in fact they're just agricultural byproducts devoid of any real nutrition." ~Mike Adams


"I like not eating animals. Animals are our friends and we shouldn't eat them. Animals need us to take care of them and save them. My mom cooks us vegetables and pretend hamburgers and hotdogs and chicken nuggets and they are healthy for you and taste good! I told all my friends 'you should NOT eat animals!' I hit my friend Levi because he was eating a ham sandwich and wouldn't stop. Then mom said that Levi is an animal too and we have to be nice to all animals even if they eat other animals. I said sorry to Levi, but I wish he would not eat animals anymore. I also like not eating animals because my mom says it helps the earth, like recycling." ~Jacob, 6 yrs old


You see, in life, lots of people know what to do, but few people actually do what they know. Knowing is not enough! You must take action.~Anthony Robbins

It only takes a spark
~Daniel Andreas San Diego

Some people are still going to want to eat meat. We do agree though that vegetarianism is a healthier diet.
~David Stroud (of the American Meat Institute)

For that which befalls the sons of men befalls beasts ;

even one thing befall them: as the one dies, so dies the other. They have all one breath; so that a man has no preeminence above a beast: for all is vanity. All go to one place; all are of the dust, and all turn to dust again. Who knows that the spirit of man goes upward, and the spirit of the beast goes downward to the earth? ~Ecclesiastes iii., 19, 20, 21.

There is no such thing as cruelty free slaughter or humane killing.
No slave is happy no matter what the owner tells you.
Go Vegan NOW!
Do it for the cows that have their babies taken away again and again for milk production.
Do it for the chickens who are de-beaked for egg production.
Do it for the pigs who have to nurse their babies on concrete floors.
Do it for the millions of humans who don't know any better.
Do it for the planet.
Do it for your health.

Do it because there is NO SUCH THING as humane slaughter.~
Judith Barnes

Auschwitz begins whenever someone looks at a slaughterhouse and thinks: they're only animals.

~Theodor Adorno

If only I could so live and so serve the world that after me there should never again be birds in cages.
~Isak Dinesen (pen name of Karen Blixen), author (1885-1962)

How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.
~Anne Frank

If "rights" exist at all— and both feeling and usage indubitably prove that they do exist —they cannot be consistency awarded to men and denied to animals, since the same sense of justice and compassion apply in both cases.
~Henry Salt, 1892

You ask people why they have deer heads on the wall. They always say, Because it's such a beautiful animal. There you go. I think my mother's attractive, but I have photographs of her.
~Ellen DeGeneres

A man can live and be healthy without killing animals for food; therefore, if he eats meat, he participates in taking animal life merely for the sake of his appetite. And to act so is immoral.
~Leo Tolstoy

Raw foods create living bodies, and cooked foods create dying bodies
~Sabrina Aird, Grass Root co-owner

You say it’s my personal choice, it’s not a personal choice when you’re ruining my planet and you’re eating my friends
~ Dave Warwak

The animals of the world exist for their own reasons. They were not made for humans any more than black people were made for whites, or women created for men.
~ Alice Walker

Thou Shalt Not Kill
~ The Christian Bible

If the world were merely seductive, that would be easy; if the world were merely challenging, that would be no problem. But I wake up each morning torn between a desire to save the world and a desire to savor the world. This makes it very hard to plan the day.
~E. B. White

Don’t want to ruin the oceans? Go vegan.
Don’t like the environmental problems of the soy industry? Go vegan.
Don’t like monoculture? Go vegan.
Don’t like the environmental problems of the petroleum industry? Go vegan.
Don’t like greenhouse gas emission? Go vegan.
Don’t like animal exploitation and cruelty? Go vegan.
Want environmental sustainability? Go vegan.
Want to feed the hungry? Go vegan.
Want to save water? Go vegan.
Want to cut air and water pollution? Go vegan.
Want to slow global warming? Go vegan.
Want to reduce the risk of heart attacks, strokes, diabetes, obesity, and cancer? Go vegan.
There is no absolutely single personal change that the average person can make that has a better impact on the environment than going vegan.
~Dan Cudahy

Honey is not vegan. It is an animal product, it came from the inside of an animal that produced it, not for you to sweeten your tea, but for a baby bee to live and grow on. Using honey or products made with beeswax are not on the vegan menu.

What is it that should trace the insuperable line? ...The question is not, Can they reason? nor Can they talk? but, Can they suffer?

~Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)

Can you really ask what reason Pythagoras had for abstaining from flesh? For my part I rather wonder both by what accident and in what state of soul or mind the first man did so, touched his mouth to gore and brought his lips to the flesh of a dead creature, he who set forth tables of dead, stale bodies and ventured to call food and nourishment the parts that had a little before bellowed and cried, moved and lived.

How could his eyes endure the slaughter when throats were slit and hides flayed and limbs torn from limb? How could his nose endure the stench? How was it that the pollution did not turn away his taste, which made contact with the sores of others and sucked juices and serums from mortal wounds?

It is certainly not lions and wolves that we eat out of self-defense; on the contrary, we ignore these and slaughter harmless,tame creatures without stings or teeth to harm us, creatures that, I swear, Nature appears to have produced for the sake of their beauty and grace.

But nothing abashed us, not the flower-like like tinting of the flesh, not the persuasiveness of the harmonious voice, not the cleanliness of their habits or the unusual intelligence that may be found in the poor wretches.

No, for the sake of a little flesh we deprive them of sun, of light, of the duration of life to which they are entitled by birth and being.~Plutarch

I abhor vivisection. It should at least be curbed. Better, it should be abolished. I know of no achievement through vivisection, no scientific discovery, that could not have been obtained without such barbarism and cruelty. The whole thing is evil.~Charles Mayo (founder of the Mayo Clinic)

Truly man is the king of beasts, for his brutality exceeds them. We live by the death of others. We are burial places.~Leonardo Da Vinci

DO NOT BREED OR BUY WHILE SHELTER PETS DIE!