Catholicism is world-wide, and has no special dietary requirements except to abstain from meat on Fridays, in many countries currently, this requirement is reduced to giving something up on Fridays outside of Lent, not necessarily meat.
Roman Catholics may not eat meat during a day of fast (Ash Wednesday, the Fridays of Lent, etc.) Otherwise, Catholics have no dietary restrictions.
The current post-Vatican II regulation is that Catholics must not eat for one hour before receiving Holy Communion. Traditional Catholics do not eat for three hours.
fridays
Catholics have no prohibitions on what they can eat.
on fridays catholics are not allowed to eat meat by:snakeman
Yes, with the exception of Ash Wednesday when meat may not be eaten.
Yes, Catholics can eat chicken and pork during Lent except on Ash Wednesday and all Fridays during Lent when Catholics should abstain from eating meat.
Yes, Catholics traditionally abstain from eating meat on Fridays as a religious practice, and often choose to eat fish instead.
Roman Catholic AnswerYes.
Any.
Catholics eat fish on fridays during lent as a sacrifice because Jesus went 40 days in the desert without food.
Outside of the most Holy Eucharist, Catholics live in every culture on the planet earth, and they eat whatever their culture reserves for special holidays.