beltic caldy wrote:Just watched Food Inc again - really really potent film and again can't recommend highly enough : )
Chederer bro - sorry, I repeated some of what you said - will defo give Fed Up a look.
Seems being vegan may be more expensive (relatively - more expensive than meat-eating) in the US - can any of our stateside friends share their experiences?
let me be clear on that - it's more expensive to be vegan in the UK than it is to be a meat-eater....but i get the sense that the difference is greater in the US....or is this a false impression?
I haven't ever figured it out, mainly because I right now I don't make the food choices for myself. I would guess that in the US it would not be significantly higher, unless you shopped at a "better" grocery store to get more variety in healthy food options. One interesting fact I've seen somewhere is that in the US, the average percentage of income spent on food is around 20-25%, which is the lowest percentage EVER! Typically people have always spent around 33% of their income on food.
I second your recommendation of Food Inc. Another great book is the Omnivore's Dilemma. In fact, I would go so far as to say this is an even more interesting book and quite an easy read.
I've always thought about trying to go almost all vegetarian (I don't think I could ever go completely. I just love meat and milk
too much), but not much I can do right now on $16,000 a year
This would also require me to learn to cook, which is ok because I like doing it, but would require me to have more time than I do right now.