• Writes
  • Talks
  • Blogs
  • Recommends
  • Responds
Menu

Rona.

Street Address
Orlando, Florida
Phone Number
Freelance writer, editor and TV personality

Your Custom Text Here

Rona.

  • Writes
  • Talks
  • Blogs
  • Recommends
  • Responds

Dear Chef, You Know Beans About What's Truly Vegetarian

September 15, 2014
Taverna-Opa-Orlando-Hummus.jpg

Today's text from my friend Wendy was about Shake Shack. Shake Shack lies! she says. The gourmet-burger chain's vegetarian burger isn't really vegetarian. Wendy sleuths out seemingly meat-free meals all over Orlando. She calls or visits to ask probing questions. Often, the answers lead her to denounce the restaurant as not serving proper vegetarian meals.

I balk, even cringe, when Wendy confronts staffers, but she has a point. At Shake Shack, for instance, she cites two crimes against her diet. First, Shake Shack grills its 'Shroom burger on the same grill as its beef versions. That means residue from the beef will probably make its way, albeit microscopically, into the mouths of those who choose the portobello-based sandwich. Second, the cheese filling is made with meunster and cheddar. At least one was curdled or thickened using rennet which, as it turns out, is a cheese-producing agent that begins with the stomach of a baby calf.

Until now, I've shrugged off Wendy's diligence as passion. None of my other vegetarian friends has ever mentioned either violation, so the issue has seemed insignificant. Most, though, are into the meat-free eating for health or weight reasons and they even eat a chicken stew or pastrami sandwich on rare occasions. Think: flexitarian. Wendy's reasoning is more about animal rights.

Suddenly I thought about kosher products. At many deli counters, signs say something along the lines of "Kosher meats when sliced become unkosher." In other words, take that nice Hebrew National salami and have a quarter-pound turned into nice slim pieces on the same machine that first produced a half-pound of similarly handled ham, or even Boar's Head salami, and the kosher version is tainted. Of course consumers should be warned! Kosher is kosher.

If kosher is kosher, vegetarian is vegetarian.

Wendy has a point.

So here are the questions: Is the vegetarian tainting different than the kosher tainting? Should chefs be careful to not choose cheeses made with rennet for dishes billed as vegetarian? (I am aware that most restaurateurs no nothing about rennet. Should vegetarian groups make an effort to educate them?) Is it OK or taboo to use the same grill for vegetarian and meat-type products? Is it OK, but only if a sign is posted that the vegetarian item will become nonvegetarian when cooked? What obligation does the chef have to make a vegetarian item truly, Wendy-worthy vegetarian? Most restaurants nowadays have a meat-free item, so there's no question about offering something that is loosely vegetarian.

Let's start a discussion about how far chefs should go.

Eat enthusiastically, with meat or without,

Rona

www.ronarecommends.com

In Food, Orlando Tags boar's head, hebrew national, kosher, nonvegetarian, rennet, salami, shake shack, sliced meats, unkosher, vegan, vegetarian
← Sisters in Crime Writers Blog Hop. What Is Your Writing Process?Six New Flavors: 2014 Epcot Food & Wine Festival →

Categories

 Food

 Travel

 Life

Get Rona's posts sent directly to your inbox:

Thank you!
Archives by Tags
  • Orlando freelance writer 62
  • Rona Gindin 47
  • Rona recommends 38
  • Orlando travel writer 36
  • Orlando food writer 35
  • Orlando restaurant writer 33
  • Orlando food blogger 30
  • orlando 27
  • Orlando dining 21
  • Orlando restaurants 21
  • Freelance writer 19
  • Orlando 17
  • Disney World 15
  • Orlando honestly 14
  • Orlando restaurant critic 14
  • disney world 14
  • Orlando travel blogger 11
  • Trustworthy Orlando 11
  • Orlando dining writer 10
  • restaurant 8
  • Florida 7
  • Soco 7
  • Disney Springs 6
  • DoveCote 6
  • Magical Dining Month 6
  • Wine Bar George 6
  • Winter Park 6
  • vegetarian 6
  • Luma on Park 5
  • Orlando food blog 5
  • Orlando food events 5
  • Orlando restaurant blogger 5
  • Orlando travel 5
  • Rona Recommends 5
  • mills 50 5
  • steak 5
  • 1921 by Norman Van Aken 4
  • 2015 4
  • Alfond Inn 4
  • China 4
  • Epcot Food & Wine Festival 4
  • Field to Feast 4
  • Freelance food writer 4
  • Freelance travel writer 4
  • Luke's Kitchen and Bar 4
  • Most trustworthy Orlando freelance writer 4
  • Orlando travel journalist 4
  • Orlando trustworthy 4
  • Ravello 4
  • Swine and Sons 4
Archives by Year
  • 2022 2
  • 2021 3
  • 2020 10
  • 2019 16
  • 2018 14
  • 2017 27
  • 2016 31
  • 2015 59
  • 2014 48
  • 2013 18
  • 2012 6
  • 2011 10
  • 2010 9

 Rona Recommends:

See Rona's picks this month.

© Copyright 2024 Rona Gindin

| website by mary maslow design
↥ to Top ↥

instagram twitter facebook