• themeatbridge
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    4252 months ago

    Really, the disqualification is probably better publicity than winning the award itself. If someone told me some vegan cheese won a “Good Food” award, I would assume it was related to eco- and social-consciousness. Learning that it was so delicious that the dairy industry schemed to take away the award tells me they’re afraid of the competition.

    • When Seiko beat the Swiss at their own mechanical watch accuracy competitions, they decided to cancel the long running prestigious competition entirely instead of make a better watch.

      Capitalism breeds innovation!

        • @KISSmyOSFeddit@lemmy.world
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          272 months ago

          That’s partly because “Scotch” is a protected label. You can only call a Whisky Scotch if it was distilled with a certain technique, from certain grains, by certain companies, and matured in certain casks for a certain amount of time. All of it is regulated.

          Japanese whisky doesn’t have these limitations. They can just do whatever makes it taste good.

          • Captain Aggravated
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            132 months ago

            Scotch whisky must be made in Scotland. Similar story with bourbon, bourbon must be made in the United States. In many places you can follow the same recipes and processes as those products, but you may not label them with those terms.

              • Captain Aggravated
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                82 months ago

                Yes, and being distilled and aged in Scotland are both rules in that rule book. Again, same for bourbon, not all American whiskies are eligible to be labeled as bourbon.

              • @BakerBagel@midwest.social
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                22 months ago

                I’m an American, and we just don’t really buy into the whole “you must be from this region to be called this item”. All sparkling wine is champagne, all peaty whiskey is scotch, and all rice liqur is sake.

            • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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              32 months ago

              You can make whiskey, though. According to the EU, if you have a product distilled from grain mash and stored, at full undiluted strength, in wood casks for at least three years, you can call it whiskey. You can produce a Single Malt Whiskey, or a Rye Whiskey, anywhere you want and in fact some German Korn would qualify as whiskey as it’s aged long enough.

              Side note: Whisky wasn’t always aged. Originally it pretty much resembled Korn (though German noses have some rather strict standards when it comes to fusel alcohols that Whisky and Vodka producers don’t tend to have), then the UK prohibition came along and distillers had no choice but to let the stuff age in its casks while they fought the legislation, then they were allowed to sell the aged stuff, aged much longer than was previously common, and the rest is history.

      • @Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        To be fair, a crystal clock is just going to be more accurate than a movement based watch. Even the biggest watch fanboys admit that a $30 Seiko Casio outperforms the majority of mechanicals on raw accuracy.

        • @KISSmyOSFeddit@lemmy.world
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          142 months ago

          Seiko makes mechanical watches that cost under $100 and are just as precise and long-lasting as a Swiss watch.
          You’re probably thinking of Casio.

        • @WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          So… The existing market leader chose to flip the table instead of admitting that their position was weaker and lower value.

          Yep, that sure sounds like the pursuit of capital instead of… innovation, quality, or any of the other attributes capitalism attempts to associate itself with.

          • @Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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            The Neuchâtel Observatory is a publicly funded institution that certifies movements with high accuracy as chronometers. Not a private body, or a marketing tool used by a watchmaker. The same ‘competition’ is done by other observatories, all giving their own rating of a timepiece’s accuracy against a reference chronometer kept at the observatory.

            A quick search could have brought you that information_ Quartz movements beat the pants off mechanical movements, and they’re far cheaper to make, allowing the non-rich to have a decent watch with good battery life and serious accuracy. Cheap and normal mechanical watches regularly drift and lose a few seconds time over days and weeks - quartz drifts between 1-110 seconds over a year.

            • @__Lost__@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              52 months ago

              They aren’t talking about quartz watches though. Seiko makes mechanical watches that were being compared to swiss mechanical watches costing way more.

        • @yuri@pawb.social
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          32 months ago

          So funnily enough, the very first movement they submitted to the contest in 1963 was a quartz, and it placed tenth overall. They went with mechanical movements for subsequent competitions, and didn’t actually start placing high again until 1966 when they placed ninth overall. In ‘67 they did even better, placing fourth, but then the contest was canceled for good the next year.

    • BlackbeardM
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      462 months ago

      Indeed, and while they might have been initially furious at the snub, this is going to wind up being VERY good for business. Now they have an incredible story to tell, complete with mystery and intrigue that consumers love. Their marketing department must be salivating right now.

    • gradyp
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      442 months ago

      Right, first thing I thought when I read this is “where can I get some of that ‘cheese’”

      • themeatbridge
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        192 months ago

        Yeah, well, you can’t. It’s only available to restaurants, and isn’t ready for retail. That’s one of the stupid reasons they can’t have their stupid award. Stupid sexy cheesish.

    • @Linnce@lemmy.world
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      92 months ago

      I could have never known this award even existed if not for this news. I don’t care at all for cheese and now I’m curious to try it.

  • @MagicShel@programming.dev
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    1202 months ago

    I’m closer to a carnivore than a vegan, but if something is good, it’s good. I’m not going to hate on something delicious because I feel threatened by someone else’s life choices.

    Don’t worry, farmers; if I start eating vegan cheese I promise I’ll make up for it in beef consumption.

    • DumbAceDragon
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      542 months ago

      A lot of vegan “alternatives” are actually really good when you know what you’re doing with them. I will take tofu or mushrooms over meat any day tbh. Problem is some people don’t know that and will just prepare tofu like it’s meat, and then wonder why their tofu tastes like shit.

      • @polle@feddit.de
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        122 months ago

        I tried tofu multiple times in different meals as a alternative for meat, but sadly all were disappointing. Do you have recipes that you can recommend? I am eager to find one.

        • @Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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          162 months ago

          Stir fry

          A lot of times I think the problem is trying to substitute the protein in a dish with tofu or something vegan. It’s always going to be compared to the meat version. Should just try to find recipes that were tofu based to begin with, like mapo tofu.

          • @Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            32 months ago

            I love meat, but some do the best dishes my partner and I have ever made are vegan, and fried tofu is a staple.

            We have friends who are vegan or have very strange allergies and have to cook for a mixed crowd

            Banger meals, seriously

          • @polle@feddit.de
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            12 months ago

            I tried different recipes, but most of them were underwhelming, like the meal would be kinda the same without.

            Stir fry how? Which type of tofu, pressed? And probably dipped in cornstarch?

            • @Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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              42 months ago

              Tofu doesn’t really bring taste, just texture so that’s kinda to be expected. That’s why I typically get firm or extra firm. I like those textures over softer ones.

              I’m not sure what you mean by pressed as all tofu is pressed. That’s how tofu is made. I’ve never tried dipping it in cornstarch so IDK how that would turn out. I don’t typically do anything other than cut it up and cook it.

              As for how to stir fry; I suggest looking that up. You mostly just use whatever veg and protein you want and add some stir fry sauce at the end. I haven’t really found one I prefer. I don’t do stir fry all that often. I really should since it’s super simple.

              • @Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                32 months ago

                Extra firm+fried in oil has never NOT been a hit for me! Generally sesame or strangely peanut butter has killed it among my non-veg friends, trying to make a dish for both non-veg and vegan friends.

              • “Pressed” tofu usually refers to firm or extra firm tofu that is then put under much higher pressure to expel not only more water but also most of the air, and has a completely different texture.

                Usually using something like this

      • @Jarix@lemmy.world
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        52 months ago

        That’s a really dumb argument. Sorry but literally every food is really good when you know what you are doing with it.

        It is not even a question of quality… some of the tastiest food is terrible quality used with great effect.

        That doesn’t even take into account personal preference, which is majorly just familiarity.

        The awards world is filled with awards that would never be given if there wasnt a story to go with it. This vegan cheese is an example of this as well.

        Problem is some people don’t know that and will just prepare tofu like it’s meat, and then wonder why their tofu tastes like shit.

        You arent even wrong about this, but you could say the exact same thing about damned near anything that has more than a single opinion on.

        Like literally exchange in what i quoted tofu to a burger patty and instead of “like its meat” change it to some aspect of the experience. Whether its what temperature to cook it or how thin or thick it is.

        Same exact argument based on different peoples familiarity. Many people dont have just dont care that much and also some people are really bad at cooking.

        To sum up my point, you are making a statement that is so broad it is useless

    • oce 🐆
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      382 months ago

      Would you consider reducing according to carbon footprint?

      • @Kit
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        92 months ago

        I live mostly on beer, so I’m doing my part.

    • The Pantser
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      292 months ago

      Might want to switch to other animals, beef is questionable ATM.

      • @SoupBrick@pawb.social
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        132 months ago

        Has it been confirmed that Bird Flu is transferable via beef? Legit question, I just haven’t seen any news about that recently.

        • @oxjox@lemmy.ml
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          2 months ago

          Remnants of bird flu have been found in bovine milk and recently sampled in 20% of milk in grocery stores. So far, it’s been determined to just be “genetic material” - not live or infectious. Milk is pasteurized in the US so it’s reasonably safe to keep drinking. I don’t believe this would impact beef consumption, certainly not cooked beef.
          Beth Mole at Ars Technica has been covering it https://arstechnica.com/author/beth/
          The CDC is reporting at least one dairy worker has been infected https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2024/p0401-avian-flu.html

        • @towerful@programming.dev
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          82 months ago

          Imagine the crisis that a public health bulletin stating “red meat should be cooked thoroughly” would cause. Heh heh heh

          • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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            32 months ago

            “Consuming raw or undercooked meats, poultry, seafood, shellfish or eggs may increase your risk of foodborne illness" has been the standard disclaimer since 2016, but nobody’s thrown a fit, even though there’s a big difference between a rare steak and rare burger (the interior of the ground beef has been exposed, the interior of the steak has not).

        • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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          62 months ago

          I haven’t heard anything about it, only that it’s been detected in milk and pasteurization kills it. Cooking should kill it if it’s in meat anyway. At least to medium, preferably to full doneness.

        • ConfusedPossum
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          I think only prions can spread through meat

          Edit: I’m obviously wrong, salmonella exists. Also a quick Google search says viruses can also be transferred through meat

    • Cyborganism
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      182 months ago

      Same. I had some green Thai curry “duck” at a vegan restaurant once and it was the bomb!

    • @Kit
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      92 months ago

      I’m also a meat eater but Impossible burgers hold a special place in my heart. If I’m craving a whopper I’ll always go for the Impossible whopper instead - it’s just so much more satisfying.

      Similarly, the meat quality at my local Chinese spots is questionable so I always get tofu instead.

      I’m down to only eating meat half of days, and only for dinner, vs eating meat with every meal every day. My wallet and waistline have thanked me.

    • @VonCesaw@lemmy.world
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      82 months ago

      from personal experience, veggie burgers make excellent topping-condiments to regular burgers

      they have all the flavors a burger wants

      • @MagicShel@programming.dev
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        52 months ago

        I like this suggestion. Plus it still ultimately reduces beef consumption because maybe I only eat one of these doubles instead of two burgers.

    • @Dkarma@lemmy.world
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      32 months ago

      Every time I eat vegan cheese my mouth says this ain’t quite right. But the taste is usually fine.

  • fatalicus
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    842 months ago

    Let me see if I get this right: they get disqualified for containing an ingredient that hasn’t been certified as edible (kokum butter) and is usually used in cosmetics, and there is no evidence of Big Cheese being the reason for the disqualification, other than the owner of the company saying it.

    But it is still Big Cheese’ fault?

    • @Xatolos@reddthat.com
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      512 months ago

      It’s even worse than that. The makers aren’t even sure what was in their product to begin with.

      Zahn says the kokum butter shouldn’t be an issue anyway: The company has since replaced it with cocoa butter, which does have GRAS certification. Initially, he told the Post the cocoa butter version was what he submitted for the awards, but after this story was published he said he determined that it was in fact the kokum butter version. (According to Weiner, Climax submitted an ingredient list that included kokum.)

      So it might have been labeled with having kokum butter, it might not. Who knows? Seems to depends what answer is needed at the time.

      Also,

      Climax, it turns out, wasn’t just a finalist — it was set to win the award, a fact that all parties are asked to keep confidential until the official ceremony in Portland, Ore., but was revealed in an email the foundation sent to Climax in January.

      If I’m reading this correctly, out of all the contestants, only they knew they won. Makes it a further stretch that it was a dairy company that “out” them as they wouldn’t have known that the vegan cheese won.

      My guess for the change about GRAS was it most likely was assumed everyone would only submit GRAS items, and since someone broke that non-spoken rule then they had to make it a clarified rule. It is something you’d just assume everyone made sure their food was most or less FDA approved (which is a logical assumption).

      The Washington Post article is much clearer about this whole issue (which is linked to in this badly written Boingbonk article.)

    • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.worldOP
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      92 months ago

      Here are more details (and more context is in the article):

      "Someone had tipped off the foundation on something that disqualified Climax, Good Food Foundation Executive Director Sarah Weiner told the Washington Post. The complaint potentially arose from Climax’s use of the ingredient kokum butter, which has not been designated as GRAS (generally regarded as safe) by the Food and Drug Administration. However, Zahn told the Washington Post that the company has replaced the ingredient with cocoa butter, which was the version he said he submitted for the awards (although Weiner contests this).

      The Good Food Awards also didn’t require GRAS certification for all ingredients back when contestants submitted their products — rather, the foundation added this to the rules later on. Zahn claims the Good Food Foundation never reached out to Climax to inform the company of the new requirement, although Weiner told the Washington Post it attempted to. SFGATE could not reach the Good Food Foundation for comment in time for publication.

      “It would have been very easy for them to reach out to us and tell us about the new requirements,” Zahn told SFGATE. “… The thing that’s upsetting to me is that they were kind of unprofessional by changing the rules a week before the event.”"

      https://www.sfgate.com/food/article/berkeley-vegan-cheese-good-food-awards-19431532.php

    • @refutablewife@reddthat.com
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      22 months ago

      There are innumerable horror stories from cottage vendors bumping up against the money and strict gatekeeping of the nationally established conglomerates. This was in the US, but I know Canada also has, new, laws on the books to specifically prevent plant based cheeses from referring to their product as “cheese,” despite being the exact same process and a final product that you wouldn’t know side by side to the dairy version.

      I’m not a vegan, but this is the just same ole regulatory capture bullshit that we’re seeing w ev cars, good imported rum, net neutrality and everything else

  • @Hugin@lemmy.world
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    582 months ago

    It was disqualified for having an ingredient that was not GRAS(generally regarded as safe). Even GRAS is a pretty low bar for food safety.

      • @Tja@programming.dev
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        22 months ago

        I mean, asbestos is dangerous if broken down and inhaled, so as long as you just eat it and you don’t choke on it…

        • @derpgon@programming.dev
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          32 months ago

          Ground chests are also probably not okay to inhale, but here we are eating them whole. Why not dip some of that 'bestos in guac? Should solve all issues tbh.

    • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.worldOP
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      42 months ago

      Here are more details (and more context is in the article):

      "Someone had tipped off the foundation on something that disqualified Climax, Good Food Foundation Executive Director Sarah Weiner told the Washington Post. The complaint potentially arose from Climax’s use of the ingredient kokum butter, which has not been designated as GRAS (generally regarded as safe) by the Food and Drug Administration. However, Zahn told the Washington Post that the company has replaced the ingredient with cocoa butter, which was the version he said he submitted for the awards (although Weiner contests this).

      The Good Food Awards also didn’t require GRAS certification for all ingredients back when contestants submitted their products — rather, the foundation added this to the rules later on. Zahn claims the Good Food Foundation never reached out to Climax to inform the company of the new requirement, although Weiner told the Washington Post it attempted to. SFGATE could not reach the Good Food Foundation for comment in time for publication.

      “It would have been very easy for them to reach out to us and tell us about the new requirements,” Zahn told SFGATE. “… The thing that’s upsetting to me is that they were kind of unprofessional by changing the rules a week before the event.”"

      https://www.sfgate.com/food/article/berkeley-vegan-cheese-good-food-awards-19431532.php

    • @anon987@lemmy.world
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      22 months ago

      Not true. It’s considered safe by WebMD, and it’s been studied as a food for a long time. It is chemically similar to cocoa butter.

      So it’s been approved by more reputable organizations than the FDA.

      • @PrettyFlyForAFatGuy@feddit.uk
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        a lot of cheeses use calf rennet.

        Also cheese in general is a by product of the meat industry. You can’t have a lactating cow without keeping it perpetually pregnant, Where do you think those calves go?

        I promise you it ain’t a nice meadow where they get to live out the rest of their “natural” lives frolicking

        And then when the milk eventually dries up the dairy cow gets deadded too… FUN!

        edit: if you’re going to downvote me at least reply stating why you think i’m wrong

          • @nichtsowichtig@feddit.de
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            32 months ago

            no, they just foribly impregnate cows every single year of their life, take away their calves the second they are born to take the milk from their overloaded udders until they collapse or stop being comercially viable. Then they are killed. Just like their male children a few weeks after being born.

            The milk industry is arguably more cruel than the meat industry. We should reject both

          • Schadrach
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            22 months ago

            I mean, they do make cheeses with embedded bit of meat, but that’s usually pig (specifically bacon).

            • ThrowawayOnLemmy
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              Oh what if you added bacon to pepper jack. Little bits of peppers in cheese is freaking delicious. Add bacon to it and it’s like a slice of jalapeno poppers lol

              • @TotalFat@lemmy.world
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                I made a jalapeno poppers soup that was really good recently. I’ll post the recipe if I find it again, or just Google “jalapeno poppers soup.”

                Found it: Pressure cooker jalapeno popper chicken chili

                I did the bacon in the oven then I made country potatoes in the bacon grease. I didn’t add the corn, beans, and potatoes until it was done cooking so they wouldn’t turn to mush. Probably some other minor tweaks here and there, but it seems like a very flexible and forgiving recipe. So feel free to put your own spin on it!

            • Most cheeses don’t use natural rennet anymore. About 70% of worldwide cheese production uses artificial “vegetarian” rennet. And you can easily look up those who still use rennet harvested from calfs so you can avoid them.

  • @TacticsConsort@yiffit.net
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    492 months ago

    Holy shit, there’s a decent vegan cheese? I like my meat but I understand that the current status quo isn’t sustainable, and cheese is the number two thing the vegan industry has been struggling with making a good substitute for (number one being bacon.)

      • @Ithral
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        282 months ago

        The best kind next to feta

      • @TacticsConsort@yiffit.net
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        142 months ago

        Blue cheese is a bit strong for most people, I can respect that, I’m one of those people. The trick is knowing what to pair with blue cheese to help balance it out a bit.

        You want my recommendation for how to enjoy some store-bought blue cheese? Try it on a burger, with some sliced avocado instead of lettuce. The meat and the dense fruit balance out the blue beautifully, you get all the nice taste of a blue cheese without feeling like your mouth got nuked from orbit by smelly cheese.

          • @PapaStevesy@midwest.social
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            132 months ago

            Avocado’s a silly thing to try to sell blue cheese to a blue cheese hater with anyway, it’s almost completely flavorless. What you want is a bright, tart fruit, like a strawberry or an apricot. The sugar and tang of the fruit kind of countersthe funkiness and complements the creaminess of the cheese. Could be fresh fruit or in a jam/compote or whatever. Throw that shit on a cracker and enjoy the ride! Or continue to hate it, lol, that’s also acceptable.

        • @Jarix@lemmy.world
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          22 months ago

          It being strong is not the only reason it is disliked. Usually its the taste that people dont like

    • @meleecrits@lemmy.world
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      92 months ago

      Yeah. I’m a vegetarian and the only things preventing me from being full vegan are cheese and ice cream. Once I can tackle those addictions, I’ll be very happy going full vegan.

      • @Nimrod@lemm.ee
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        182 months ago

        I get the cheese argument, but the dairy-free ice cream these days is wild. Oatly, and a few others have some incredible offerings.

      • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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        52 months ago

        I just wish the US government would shift subsidies from meat and dairy to alternatives. The modern stuff is very good, it just costs like twice as much! Last time I went grocery shopping, the oat milk was almost the same price as the cow milk, so I bought two gallons, because it also keeps much longer than cow milk.

        • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.worldOP
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          12 months ago

          Yeah something about the economics doesn’t make sense, especially comparing the price of, say, dry beans, to a box of plant-based burger patties.

      • zeekaran
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        22 months ago

        My local store had five different brands of mint chip vegan ice cream. I’ve still only tried two and I think they’re great.

      • @howrar@lemmy.ca
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        22 months ago

        I’ve had vegan ice cream before that was so much better than any ice cream I’ve had before but I don’t remember which brand it was and I’m so mad about it. It had this really nice chewy bouncy texture. So good vegan ice cream exists. Now if only I can find it again.

    • Deconceptualist
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      72 months ago

      Holy shit, there’s a decent vegan cheese?

      Yeah, try the Follow Your Heart brand. I think the name is pretty cheesy (pun intended) and it usually costs more than common brands like Daiya, but it tastes significantly better and melts more like actual cheese.

    • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.worldOP
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      72 months ago

      If you skip the mass produced stuff, there are plenty of great naturally fermented plant-based cheeses. But in my experience it always feels like something is missing, which probably has to do with dairy’s addictiveness. How do you compete with drugs?

    • @BakerBagel@midwest.social
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      22 months ago

      Shredded cheese substitutes aren’t bad, especially if you plan on just melting it anyway. I’m not sure i would be willing to use vegan cheese on a cheese and cracker plate, but plenty of the stuff out there is suitable for melting on top of a sandwich, or in potatoes.

    • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.worldOP
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      202 months ago

      There was a time when the “definition” of marriage was a union between only one amab and afab person. Definitions change.

      • @Wogi@lemmy.world
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        292 months ago

        Bro, come on man. I don’t give a fuck what you call cheese but likening dairy to sexual preference discrimination is a bit much.

        • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.worldOP
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          102 months ago

          The lgbtq+ communities and vegans are both seeking justice in their own areas of concern, so it’s most definitely not extreme to compare the two.

          • @Wogi@lemmy.world
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            82 months ago

            It’s extreme. The fact that you can’t see that it is undermines your entire argument. You’re not doing yourself any favors by saying that vegan cheese is as oppressed as gay people have been. No one’s being dragged behind a truck because they presented vegan cheese as a dairy product. No one’s shouting slurs at you.

            You alienate people who might otherwise have agreed with you.

            As an example, look at the other end of the spectrum using exactly the same, ridiculous logic. Selling vegan cheese is legal. Selling people was also once legal.

            You really believe in veganism and that’s great. I’m happy for you. But punch in your weight class my dude. Some people think vegan blue cheese is better, but it lost a competition for not technically being cheese. Some people think chili has beans, but since 1967 beans have been strictly forbidden from ICS cookoffs but the people’s choice competitions strictly require them. There are reasonable parallels to be drawn there.

            There is no reasonable parallel between vegan cheese in a cheese cookoff, and actual hatred of LGBTQ+ people

            • You’re straw manning their argument. They aren’t comparing the oppression of LGBTQIA+ folk to the oppression of cheese. The comparison is to the oppression of animals - who most definitely are being dragged behind the truck.

              You can, and probably would, make the argument that animals don’t deserve the same level of moral consideration as LGBTQIA+ humans, but the vegan argument is that non-human animals experience pain and suffering and deserve the same right to life and non-exploitation for the same reason that any human (LGBTQIA+ or not) does.

      • And I suppose it is up to the organizers of a contest over cheese to define the parameters of what constitutes cheese. But milk seems like a reasonable starting point. It is, after all, a dairy product.

        • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.worldOP
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          82 months ago

          Plant-based cheeses are allowed in their competition. They technically got disqualified because one of the ingredients is some type of fat that currently doesn’t have GRAS (generally recognized as safe) status. Except they only made it an issue after the plant-based cheese had won.

          The whole resistance to reinterpreting culinary language is just nothing but anti-competitiveness.

          • @Leate_Wonceslace@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 months ago

            That actually strikes me as a extremely reasonable justification for disqualifying it. The fact that they only noticed after it won is also not particularly suspicious.

            Edit: how many alt accounts are down voting me for saying that you shouldn’t be allowed to enter in a food with potentially unsafe ingredients?

            • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.worldOP
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              12 months ago

              I’ll just copy and paste the same thing I replied with, above:

              Here are more details (and more context is in the article):

              "Someone had tipped off the foundation on something that disqualified Climax, Good Food Foundation Executive Director Sarah Weiner told the Washington Post. The complaint potentially arose from Climax’s use of the ingredient kokum butter, which has not been designated as GRAS (generally regarded as safe) by the Food and Drug Administration. However, Zahn told the Washington Post that the company has replaced the ingredient with cocoa butter, which was the version he said he submitted for the awards (although Weiner contests this).

              The Good Food Awards also didn’t require GRAS certification for all ingredients back when contestants submitted their products — rather, the foundation added this to the rules later on. Zahn claims the Good Food Foundation never reached out to Climax to inform the company of the new requirement, although Weiner told the Washington Post it attempted to. SFGATE could not reach the Good Food Foundation for comment in time for publication.

              “It would have been very easy for them to reach out to us and tell us about the new requirements,” Zahn told SFGATE. “… The thing that’s upsetting to me is that they were kind of unprofessional by changing the rules a week before the event.”"

              https://www.sfgate.com/food/article/berkeley-vegan-cheese-good-food-awards-19431532.php

          • @ImFresh3x@sh.itjust.works
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            2 months ago

            Maybe they didn’t make it an issue until after because it was under their radar? Once it became the center of attention they might have thought safety of the winner was important? The vast majority of the comments in this thread don’t even seem to know why it was disqualified.

            This whole thread strikes me as odd.

            • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.worldOP
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              2 months ago

              Here are more details (and more context is in the article):

              "Someone had tipped off the foundation on something that disqualified Climax, Good Food Foundation Executive Director Sarah Weiner told the Washington Post. The complaint potentially arose from Climax’s use of the ingredient kokum butter, which has not been designated as GRAS (generally regarded as safe) by the Food and Drug Administration. However, Zahn told the Washington Post that the company has replaced the ingredient with cocoa butter, which was the version he said he submitted for the awards (although Weiner contests this).

              The Good Food Awards also didn’t require GRAS certification for all ingredients back when contestants submitted their products — rather, the foundation added this to the rules later on. Zahn claims the Good Food Foundation never reached out to Climax to inform the company of the new requirement, although Weiner told the Washington Post it attempted to. SFGATE could not reach the Good Food Foundation for comment in time for publication.

              “It would have been very easy for them to reach out to us and tell us about the new requirements,” Zahn told SFGATE. “… The thing that’s upsetting to me is that they were kind of unprofessional by changing the rules a week before the event.”"

              https://www.sfgate.com/food/article/berkeley-vegan-cheese-good-food-awards-19431532.php

      • @FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        If we can define plant products as milk then we could also define cows as plants. It would make vegan chili contests more interesting.

    • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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      112 months ago

      So I don’t necessarily agree in general, it depends on how you define milk… If you curdle a liquid and it becomes cheese like, it’s probably cheese? Unless milk can only come from mammals/animals.

      • I would, in fact, definite milk as only coming from a mammal. Coconut milk or soy milk or nut milk or whatever else may superficially resemble milk but they’re pretty fundamentally not the same sort of substance as milk.

          • @accideath@lemmy.world
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            32 months ago

            Just because it’s called the same, doesn’t mean it generally is. In Germany we have something called “Scheuermilch”, which literally translates into “abrasion milk”. The only property it shares with milk or even plant-milk is its colour. It’s a cleaning product. You could of course define milk more broadly as “white liquid”…

            Fun fact on the side: almond milk & co. are not allowed to be called milk on the packaging in germany. They’re usually called something along the lines of “almond drink”. Reason being because it might confuse the buyer. Scheuermilch is still allowed to be called Scheuermilch though and coconut milk is still coconut milk. So according to our government, apparently, milk can be any white liquid unless it’s a plant based substitute for cow milk. Then it’s something entirely different.

            • @GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca
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              12 months ago

              So it’s arbitrary except for the whitish color. So who do you think is pushing for the name changes, because we’ve been doing this for 1200 years now. I expect someone doesn’t want to have to put dairy or cow on their labels. Goat milk, after all, is still unquestionably milk and is still called goat milk.

  • @Rob@lemmy.world
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    372 months ago

    The dairy and meat lobbies are something else. It’s like smoking in the fifties.

    It’s well established that there are serious health concerns when you consume animal produce (not to mention environmental and animal welfare ones), yet the industry keeps pushing back on plant-based alternatives.

    • @howrar@lemmy.ca
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      32 months ago

      I’ve heard of potential health issues from red meat consumption, but all animal products? That’s a first for me. Do you have any sources to share on this?

      • @Rob@lemmy.world
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        22 months ago

        Try watching the documentary “You are what you eat” on Netflix, it’s a good intro that covers the health risks of other animal products as well.

        • @howrar@lemmy.ca
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          22 months ago

          I don’t get much time to watch videos these days so I’m not going through the Netflix series. Though it looks like it’s based off this paper, and that I can look through.

          They studied 22 pairs of twins, intervened by changing their diets so that one gets a vegan diet and the other an omnivore diet, then measured a bunch of stuff via blood and stool samples. I don’t see mention of how they correct for multiple hypotheses, but I’ll just give them the benefit of the doubt here.

          They found statistical significance in two places

          • LDL-C: Participants all start out in a healthy range, and they stay in a healthy range. So while the vegans improved on this measure, it also tells us that omnivores are perfectly healthy as well.
          • Fasting insulin levels: Same as LDL-C. Start off healthy, ended up healthy. We see the vegans having lower fasting insulin, but we don’t know if that’s a good thing or not when they’re already starting at 12.7 μIU/mL.

          So basically, the conclusion from the paper is that vegan and omnivore diets are both perfectly healthy, but you might gain slight benefits from going vegan.

          • @Rob@lemmy.world
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            22 months ago

            Thanks for looking that up. I’m no dietician or medical expert myself, so I have to go by the more easily digestible media. That does run the risk of being more sensationalised.

            One thing I did take away from the Netflix series was that both the omnivore diet and vegan one were designed to be well-balanced. Everything in moderation works well, I suppose.

      • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.worldOP
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        12 months ago

        Technically it can’t be all animal products, since honey is about 98% sugar, and despite the hate campaign currently hitting carbs, sugar is not quite as harmful (in and of itself) as it’s made out to be.

        But if we’re referring to all animal products in the sense of meat, dairy, and eggs - those three foods have nutritional properties that are all very similar and they do have some overlap in terms of health issues.

        The biggest thing they have in common is being a package deal with high amounts of saturated fat and cholesterol. Heart disease is generally the industrialized world’s number one killer, and all three animal foods initiate the onset and progress the state of heart disease.

        Then there are issues that are less settled, like to what degree do these foods cause various cancers?

        And then this one is even more in need of further study, but there might be a link between these foods and autoimmune disorders.

        https://www.pcrm.org/news/health-nutrition/meat-bad-you-and-environment

        https://www.pcrm.org/good-nutrition/nutrition-information/processed-meat

        https://www.pcrm.org/good-nutrition/nutrition-information/health-concerns-about-dairy

        https://www.pcrm.org/good-nutrition/nutrition-information/health-concerns-with-eggs

        • @howrar@lemmy.ca
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          12 months ago

          I’m aware that there’s evidence of saturated fats having undesirable effects on your health. But plenty of meats are low in saturated fats (e.g. skinless chicken breast, or fish).

          • @MilitantVegan@lemmy.worldOP
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            12 months ago

            Relatively low if you compare it only to other meats or animal products. So while you can choose animal products that might progress these chronic metabolic diseases slower, you are still advancing them. But there are lots of factors that complicate things. For example the health impacts of animal products also depend on how you cook them, and what you eat them with. Cured meats are unanimously considered one of the worst things you can consume, right up there with smoking. Steamed fish would probably be about the least harmful (except that fish have some of the highest levels of bioaccumulated toxins and heavy metals). Actually, bugs are likely the least harmful, for those who are comfortable with that. Eating a source of fiber mitigates some of the harm from animal products as shown in this video:

            https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=C08mqjMuwyY

            Further complicating things is that single nutrients often behave differently depending on context. For example antioxidants other than some of the essential vitamins have never been shown to produce their purported effects outside of laboratory conditions, and some supplemented sources of antioxidants have even been shown to be a little harmful. But when we test the whole foods that contain those antioxidants, we get data like how increasing leafy green consumption has been correlated with a longer life expectancy.

            And it’s similar for saturated fats and animal products. In the most established science on the matter you’ll see they don’t just talk about saturated fat alone - the science appears to show a relationship between the ratio of saturated and unsaturated fats consumed, particularly polyunsaturated fats. This book describes that science quite well-

            https://www.redpenreviews.org/reviews/eat-drink-and-be-healthy/

            But going back to that nutrients vs whole foods, there might be more than just the fats at play. This piece by Colin Campbell is a bit of a manifesto against nutritional reductionism, and suggests that the animal proteins themselves might play more of a role than we had thought:

            https://nutritionstudies.org/is-saturated-fat-really-that-bad/

            When you put whole diets to the test, what starts to become most consistent is how the most whole-plant-dominant diets by far achieve the most remarkable results. It’s apparent in the Adventist Health Studies, the Esselstyn Heart Disease Reversal diet, as well as Dean Ornishes full lifestyle intervention program. The latter two claim they can reverse heart disease, which is a controversial claim. More study is needed to prove whether that’s true or false, but regardless it’s still apparent that these fully plant-based dietary interventions do more than any others to restore people to good health.

            And it’s a thing where science and personal experience match. If you check out the online whole-food plant-based support communities, you see people routinely report almost miraculous changes to their health and wellbeing in a matter of weeks or even days. It’s the kind of thing that once you experience it fully enough, you don’t want to go back.

            https://adventisthealthstudy.org/studies/AHS-2/findings-lifestyle-diet-disease

            https://my.clevelandclinic.org/departments/wellness/integrative/esselstyn-program

            https://www.ornish.com/

    • @chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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      132 months ago

      Since it was actually disqualified for being made from an ingredient that’s not approved for human consumption by the FDA you might not want to buy it.

      It was disqualified before the announcement was made. Dairy farmers didn’t even know it was going to win.

      • @roguetrick@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        That’s not true. There’s no reason to believe kokum requires GRAS affirmation since it’s been historically and widely consumed on the Indian subcontinent. That means it’s grandfathered in as GRAS by default even if it’s not included in their lists.

        The FDA not yet giving it GRAS affirmation is not the same as it not being approved for human consumption. Specifically, the FDA did not raise any concerns to a GRAS notice that it has already received for kokum butter as a cocoa butter substitute.

        A substance used in food prior to January 1, 1958, may be generally recognized as safe through experience based on its common use in food when that use occurred exclusively or primarily outside of the United States if the information about the experience establishes that the substance is safe under the conditions of its intended use within the meaning of section 201(u) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act