Als Veganer nicht-vegane Kuchen am Geburtstag?

Hallo, ich habe morgen Geburtstag und bin Veganer. Meine Eltern meinen, ich muss auch nicht-vegane Kuchen anbieten und sonst würde man den Geburtstag absagen. Eigentlich will ich gerne meinen Geburtstag feiern aber auch wiederum nicht, wenn dafür Tiere leiden müssen.

Wie würdet ihr handeln?

(3 votes)
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Nelanus
11 months ago

I’m a learned meat man. How many animals have I carried over the Jordan alone in the teaching period? 2000?

Lamb, cattle, sheep, calves, pigs, piglets, chickens, etc…
No animal escaped my blades.

Let’s say a vegan would invite me to celebrate. He knows I’m definitely not a vegan. I know he’s one.
Finally, I have to expect that there is vegan food, just as he should expect that there are no-veganes. It’s his house, you can’t even make demands.

In short: I have to live in a vegan house with vegan settings, insofar as I look wild.

mloeffler
11 months ago

Your celebration, your rules.

Of course, if I were a guest, I would expect you to shape your celebration so that I feel comfortable.

On the other hand, no guest can feel comfortable at a celebration where the host does not feel comfortable. Therefore, you should not be unfaithful to your principles without forgetting the good of your guests.

What I always find shame when traditional recipes are modified so that enjoyment remains on the track. Maybe you have super delicious vegan cake recipes that taste better than old-fashioned cakes. Unfortunately, I haven’t seen anything like that yet.

I would therefore go another way and simply offer things that are always vegan anyway. It doesn’t always have to be cake.

Have fun and a nice celebration.

Honeysuckle18
11 months ago

It’s DEIN birthday – that should respect your parents!

You don’t have to tie everyone to the nose that the cakes are without animals – then just look if the guests notice…;)

If someone has allergies, this is likely to be known to you – otherwise no one has died if he had no animal in the coffee!

If your parents disregarded your desire, I would really let the celebration burst in your place – where is the respect for you?

Tip:

  • “Kalter Hund” – with vegan butter cookies, without baking, and megalecker…;)

I wish you – whatever – a great day!

Justme937
11 months ago

Hi.

can I totally understand from you I also taste my vegan cakes very well and your guests I don’t care if now egg is in or not so just offer to me that I am very sure nobody will say something

SpookyBatwing
11 months ago

I’d only offer vegan cakes.

Bodhgaya
11 months ago

So I offer my guests, whether birthday or not, just vegans. And that has never been a problem.

You don’t even have to tell people. Imagine you’re going to a birthday & there’s spaghetti with tomato sauce. No one would say that it is vegan.

Besides, you wouldn’t be a real vegan if you did. Because veganism means more like just eating or not eating. Veganism is not about supporting animal exploitation if avoidable. And that’s exactly what you do if you don’t want vegan food.

adianthum
11 months ago

I’d bake vegan and just don’t tell people.

And if they’re milking because there’s no whipped cream, then you’re saying you forgot to buy it because you don’t buy anything like that.

Nordseefan
11 months ago

Do you have to? No, you don’t. Your celebration, your rules. What you need is to count on stupid comments because there are only vegan cakes.

spelman
11 months ago

As a (everything) guest I do not ask if the cake is possibly vegan. I have no problem eating vegetables. For me the only question would be: does the cake taste? And if you can offer a delicious vegan variant: just go!

I was also on a feast where the hostess told me that the cake “of course” was sugar-free. I could only enjoy this very condition, and I didn’t want a second piece. Other guests also did.

lsp07
11 months ago

You can also only offer vegan things, (unfortunately) it is all left to yourself whether you want to cause/support animal suffering. Because you don’t want to, you don’t have to

NeptunesChild
11 months ago

Hi.

I’m also vegan and I can understand. I would only offer vegan cake that can also taste very tasty and the guests can also eat even if there are no vegans.

0000hi
11 months ago

My daughter also feeds vegan and decides what she offers on her birthday.

SkR1997
11 months ago

There are so tasty vegan cakes and sweet particles – no one realizes that this is vegan.

Your birthday should take into account your wishes!

iq1000
11 months ago

You seem to be deeply anchored in ideology.

There’s no animal. Celebrate your birthday and learn flexibility. Also think about the other guests, especially those who still enjoy food and not self-cateration.

Nachtkindchen
11 months ago

I’m not-vegan, but I find the condition under all the cleanse. What are you doing?

Most people don’t even know if the cake is vegan or not.

I think I’d celebrate birthday and offer a non-vegan alternative. Just for tolerance reasons, because not everyone is vegan.

lsp07
11 months ago
Reply to  Nachtkindchen

But non-Vegans also eat vegan stuff, so you have to, I think, don’t offer-veganes

Aylamanolo
11 months ago
Reply to  lsp07

but vegans want to have vegan stuff at parties they are invited to.

toterbiber
11 months ago
Reply to  lsp07

Everyone can serve what he wants. If some people find the party shit, it’s like that. Then you can think about whether you really need these friends or whether you want to offer more next time so that everyone is happy.

lsp07
11 months ago

Have you read and understood my comment?

Honeysuckle18
11 months ago

Many vegans bring – from themselves – “vegan stuff” which is then fed away from the non-vegans, as if no morning…;)

toterbiber
11 months ago

Well, it can happen to you just as well that someone on a celebration only offers different soups, and if you don’t like soups you’ve had a bad luck. I think you just have to live with what’s going on or going home. :

Nachtkindchen
11 months ago

For example, I don’t like the taste of soy milk. Probably I’d just bring myself something so that the hostess doesn’t have to take into consideration. Otherwise, I would offer an alternative. I don’t know…

Aylamanolo
11 months ago

I’d probably not eat when I was invited. I used to be at a party where there were vegan stuff. I thought it was so inconvenient that I was “traumatized.”

Honeysuckle18
11 months ago
Reply to  Aylamanolo

You poor!

Aylamanolo
11 months ago
Reply to  Honeysuckle18

I also found. Especially the vegan Tzaziki and the vegan Gyros were disgusting.

mloeffler
11 months ago
Reply to  Aylamanolo

Is that what you just set up Vegan = Unedible, not a fake correlation that you falsified?

Inconspicuous food, people who otherwise live from classic mixed food will also get it. Of the 98% of Germans who do not eat vegan according to their own specifications, there are Absolutely sees considerably more people who make inedible dishes than among the 2% vegans.

Imagine the hostess of the party with the inedible stuff would have had green eyes. Would you conclude that people with green eyes cannot cook? And never go back to a party where the host has green eyes?

Just as a start to think

Honeysuckle18
11 months ago
Reply to  mloeffler

Thank you!

Honeysuckle18
11 months ago

What else happened?

DerCactus
11 months ago

Such a nonsense. One offers what one can represent.

toterbiber
11 months ago

Just like I don’t have to offer vegan food when a vegan visits me, you don’t have to offer vegan food. Of course you can do this as a nice gesture, but you can decide as a host yourself what you’re up to people.

Devoid8
11 months ago

vegan is the smallest common denominator. What most people can eat. It’s kosher and halal. Why would you have to offer an animal pancake?