Had a vegetarian mate stay over for a couple of weeks over the summer. As that made just three of us, it was a lot easier to go veggie for the fortnight. Not a problem, some great and untried recipes from the Indian cookbook, cauliflower cheese to die for, amazing pizzas, if I do say so myself. Didn't miss meat at all, in fact put on weight due to the bread and cheese. I get vegetarianism, although I've no immediate plans to change permanently. I don't really get veganism- it seems a bit obsessive, but à chacun, son gout, ****oo as Yogi Bear used to say in the French version. It seems to me all species are meant to live together taking what they need from nature and from each other, whether it be meat, fish, fruit or veg. What we do try to avoid is factory raised chickens and intensively reared pork and cattle, although it's hard to be sure that even free-range beasties have been treated with due respect. There is a price difference and 25-35 years ago, I couldn't have afforded to feed my family on free range stuff. It's a bit cheaper now, I think. We don't eat veal and can't help feeling disgust when we venture darn sarf and see that the entire economy of large regions is founded on paté de fois gras. that really is disgusting
and is not simply a question of taste, but a genuine ethical one. (In my unerring opinion, of course. Don't want to be sanctimonious about this.)