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Food orders for work related events are to be vegan and vegetarian only

945 replies

ValerieVomit · 01/03/2024 12:58

We all received an email at work to say that when we order catering in future for work related events we can only order vegetarian and vegan food. The management team has imposed this. It's to reduce our carbon footprint. I don't think that this means there is to be no carnivorous food available for the rest of the organisation but our department won't allow us to order any.

Reasonable or not?

OP posts:
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19
Bjorkdidit · 01/03/2024 17:07

NoMoreFalafelsForYou · 01/03/2024 16:51

Why do people only seem bothered about UPF when it's vegan food?
You don't often see people complaining when a buffet is full of ham sandwiches, sausage rolls, pasties, etc.

Exactly. Both a vegetarian/vegan or omnivore buffet could be delicious, varied healthy food or beige processed UPF crap.

Far too many buffets are dominated by processed pork five ways, so it's refreshing any time some offers something different and I don't understand why so many people come up with endless reasons why they couldn't possibly eat or enjoy vegetarian/vegan food as if it's automatically going to be some special weirdy food that's only attractive and edible to vegans and vegetarians, when in reality, most of it will just be normal food that most people enjoy.

caringcarer · 01/03/2024 17:08

Allthegoodnamesarechosen · 01/03/2024 13:16

‘ A “significant” amount of food had to be thrown away at a Cambridge City Council event after people opted against eating the vegan choices.
The Remembrance civic event was used as a pilot by the city council of its plan to offer more plant-based food options.
Half of the food offered was plant-based, but a report to the environment and community scrutiny committee on January 19 said most of it had to be thrown away.’

I suppose if it become all vegan, people will only have the choice to eat or not eat…..

Or take their own food, which is what I'd do.

gannett · 01/03/2024 17:08

caringcarer · 01/03/2024 17:02

I'd just buy myself a Cornish pasty or a Ham sandwich or something and take with me because I'm picky about my food. I don't like food with mayonnaise, mustard, salad cream or any other mush on it. I find a lot of vegetarian sandwiches always assume everyone likes this mush all over their sandwich. I don't like salad leaves, tomatoes or hard eggs either. I don't like onions or spinach so wouldn't eat their quiche or crisps either. I suppose I might eat some fresh fruit. I think it's rather dictatorial tbh. I'm not a vegetarian or a vegan and won't be forced into it. There would be a huge backlash if only meat eaters were catered for and vegetarians or vegans were left out.

One meal without meat is not "forcing" you into vegetarianism. Good god the absurd theatrics.

Citrusandginger · 01/03/2024 17:08

Geebray · 01/03/2024 13:04

Well presumably you are only allowed foodstuffs grown in the UK? To reduce your carbon footprint?

You can't say "no meat cos carbon" and then allow avocadoes, pineapples, oranges, olive oil, peppers, etc...

That would be my concern. I eat a lot of vegan and veggie food, but I'd be very cautious of suggesting that the options served at a beige buffet are likely to be be a) environmentally friendly or b) healthy.

pickledandpuzzled · 01/03/2024 17:08

NeverDropYourMooncup · 01/03/2024 16:29

All of those contain gluten as default, including the crisps, unless specifically gluten free alternatives are purchased.

Again, they are ok for bumping up the calories/carbs for the people who need them.

I’m suggesting salads, roast vegetables, tofu whatever as the core foods, with extras on the side for those who can eat them.

I have a GF and a low carb colleague and when they bring their own it’s nothing the rest of us couldn’t also be eating. Yet all that’s ever offered is sandwich and cake based with a salad garbish.

ChurchOfSeitan · 01/03/2024 17:09

Xtraincome · 01/03/2024 16:54

Agree with PPs that vegetarian overall is better. Vegan is processed and can, but doesn't always, carry a high carbon footprint.

I would prefer a meat choice as I love it though but wouldn't care too much as it's free plus, I don't actually have to eat it and can bring in my own meat based stuff.

Most work-related buffets/food occasions are sub-par at best. Even if they fully catered to every diet, religion and allergy requirement people would still complain 😆

Why do you think vegan automatically = processed? There are a lot of naturally vegan foods/meals out there. Likewise there is a shit tonne of ultra processed meat and vegetarian food.

NoMoreFalafelsForYou · 01/03/2024 17:10

@Kdtym10
This reminds me of the idiots who post pictures of steak on vegan IG pages lol

People like that just make me laugh 😁
I'm on a few vegan pages and you always get someone going "eww, poo, urgh give me a nice steak!"
Er, crack on, eat one then?! No one's stopping you lol 🙄😂
Or "but wot about my bacon?!!"

caringcarer · 01/03/2024 17:10

JudgeJ · 01/03/2024 13:29

That's what I would be doing, were I being bullied like this at work, the smellier the better too!

I'd take my own too. I'd not be coerced into becoming a vegetarian or a vegan to suit my employers.

Zanatdy · 01/03/2024 17:10

No problem with that, we can’t order any food so I’d be happy with veggie or vegan to be honest

ginasevern · 01/03/2024 17:11

It's free food at a time when people are queuing for food banks.

Nobody is going to die because they can't eat meat for one day.

How often are these events anyway that they will impact your health or sense of justice in the whole scheme of things?

zingally · 01/03/2024 17:11

TBH, I wouldn't care.

It won't kill a meat eater to be veggie for one meal once in a blue moon. And it's more inclusive of everyone.
And I say this as very committed meat eater myself!

104c · 01/03/2024 17:11

Perfectly reasonable for your workplace to say this providing
a) They are the ones paying for it and no staff have to pay for these meals eg. staff can still order a pepperoni pizza as a group and pay themselves, and everyone can still bring meat in their own packed lunch
B) all non-vegi diets are catered for properly and not just given plain salad. for someone that can't eat gluten, soya OR dairy, meat is one of the only safe and filling foods and removing that too would be a pain in the arse
C) it's not too regular ie. You don't get catered lunches every day as part of your work due to working lunches, travelling, conferences etc where it would then have a significant overall impact on your diet
D) it's optional to eat the food and you can cater for yourself if there's nothing you want (which should always be an option at work lunches anyway).

muggart · 01/03/2024 17:12

Can't stand this moralising from corporations.

I wish they would just admit it's about cost cutting and get over themselves.

Also, if they really want to be inclusive are they catering for allergies and intolerances?

OdinsHorse · 01/03/2024 17:12

gannett · 01/03/2024 17:07

No, this is just bollocks though.

Why are you more concerned about people's hypocrisy than about the environment itself?

Social change is a process. It's comprised of small steps. All activists know this. This is how progress has happened in every area throughout history. It's about human behaviours changing a little at a time, not a wholesale instant transformation of the way we live. And yes, this means that not everything is 100% coherent at any given time, which is why activism is a long game.

When you put your head over the parapet, people will aim.

If you're claiming you're doing something, then you need to be doing it.

Personally? I recycle, buy local, use public transport, and volunteer locally, try and buy locally where I can, however I have a car, and go on holidays - but again I'm not shouting about saving the rain forest - thats the difference.

Its lies and fake

Vod · 01/03/2024 17:13

caringcarer · 01/03/2024 17:08

Or take their own food, which is what I'd do.

Exactly! It's not a question of people eat omnivorous catering or people eat veggie catering and the veggie catering means lower carbon footprint. Because there's a third option, which is some people bringing their own and the catering choices thus leading to more food waste.

DilemmaDelilah · 01/03/2024 17:13

I think it's reasonable, however I usually find it difficult enough to find something to eat when catering for meat eaters as well as the food always seems to be unnecessarily complicated so I would probably end up bringing my own..... which might well be vegetarian.

I'm a fairly fussy eater, very happy with cheddar cheese and pickle/tomato/chutney sandwiches or a frittata.. but very unhappy with brie/goats cheese/egg/spinach/basil/aubergine/hummus/rocket/olives/chilli etc. (and yes I know frittata is egg, but it's nice egg not mushed up with mayonnaise or hard boiled!)

Aydel · 01/03/2024 17:14

It’s more inclusive not less. Everyone can eat vegetables. Not everyone can eat meat or certain types of meat. My daughter’s school was vegetarian to be more inclusive of different faiths, and veggie/vegan lifestyles.

QuestionableMouse · 01/03/2024 17:16

gannett · 01/03/2024 17:02

Good for you! Not sarcastic and I applaud that. I certainly don't think going meat-free is a cure-all and yes, it comes with its own problems. I'm not even a vegan myself.

However I've noticed that whenever there's a bit of encouragement to take a baby step towards something ethical, we see a lot of nitpicking outrage that it isn't wholly, completely ethical. As if no one should bother taking a small step they think will make the world a fraction better if they're not prepared to take a giant leap and ensure every aspect of their lives is 100% morally pure. I don't understand people who are more outraged by "hypocrisy" than the fact that the planet is burning in the first place.

I really don't like this idea that being veggie/vegan is somehow more ethical than eating meat it. Vegan and veggie foods can do plenty of harm to the environment and to people too - mono cropping, highly processed stuff, air/sea miles, slavery used to farm the crops. There's probably more that I just can't think of too!

Ideally everyone would eat locally where possible and stop the spurious divide between "ethical veggie food" and "bad meat eaters".

Soreteatowel · 01/03/2024 17:16

Inspired idea. Vastly reduce the admin around the events, likely reduce cost, maybe help the environment.

Presumably for most people involved it's one meal once in a while.

QuestionableMouse · 01/03/2024 17:17

Aydel · 01/03/2024 17:14

It’s more inclusive not less. Everyone can eat vegetables. Not everyone can eat meat or certain types of meat. My daughter’s school was vegetarian to be more inclusive of different faiths, and veggie/vegan lifestyles.

This isn't always true - it depends how they're prepared. I've been caught out with stuff that had wheat in which wasn't apparent!

Fairyliz · 01/03/2024 17:17

Geebray · 01/03/2024 13:04

Well presumably you are only allowed foodstuffs grown in the UK? To reduce your carbon footprint?

You can't say "no meat cos carbon" and then allow avocadoes, pineapples, oranges, olive oil, peppers, etc...

Yes and that’s going to be difficult in the winter.
Why do you think they are doing it op to save money or something else?

caringcarer · 01/03/2024 17:19

ChurchOfSeitan · 01/03/2024 13:33

Which is weird because in my experience it is always the vegetarian/vegan options that get eaten first often leaving the vegetarian/vegans with nothing to eat 😂

Depends where you work. At my previous schools the meat options always went first.

cakewench · 01/03/2024 17:20

I mean, if it's actual vegetables and not vegan cheez and processed non dairy spread on bread, I'd be quite happy.

Vod · 01/03/2024 17:20

An aside, but that's a brilliant username @ChurchOfSeitan!

Remeniss · 01/03/2024 17:20

Came for the comments and did not disappoint 🤣🤣

comparing carbon footprint of chickpeas to meat/dairy products 😂😂😂😂😂

refusing to attend work training because a falafel is more processed than a sausage roll 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

high protein nutrient dense diet is better served by scotch eggs and chicken dippers than salad and eggs 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

virtue signalling by banning mini chicken kievs 😂😂🤣🤣😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

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