Being a vegetarian is quite reasonable - don't eat dead animals. Being a dedicated vegan is rather more difficult. A vegan will avoid any animal products: eggs, milk, cheese, leather, jelly, and so on. You will need to carefully go through every label of items you buy - searching for anything that contains animal products. Personally, unless you relish the challenge, I would stick at being a vegetarian.
A vegan vegetarian, or vegan for short, does not eat any animal product. This includes meat, dairy, eggs, fish, honey, or any foods that contain those products in their recipes.
A vegetarian dish will contain no meat. A vegan dish will contain no animal products (meat, eggs, dairy, honey, etc.). A celiac-appropriate dish will contain no wheat or gluten products.
Eggs and honey are not vegan but are vegetarian. Vegetarian- not mean. Vegan- not from an animal. Fish is not vegan.
Beeswax is considered a vegetarian product. Vegetarian products contain no animal flesh, there's no dead animal in beeswax. Milk and eggs also fall under this category. However, beeswax is NOT vegan.
Many are either vegan or vegetarian.
She is a vegan, which is a subset of vegetarian.
He is a STRICT vegetarian, i.e. a vegan
Yes, it is vegetarian but not vegan.
They are vegetarian, but not vegan.
Vegetarian products do not contain meat. More extreme vegetarians will also not consume eggs or dairy, but that is considered vegan. Many products will list themselves on the packaging or in the store as being vegetarian or vegan. If unsure, reading the ingredients label will always guarentee that you known if a product contains meat or not.
The majority of raw foodists are vegan.
shes a vegetarian as i heard not vegan yet