On 24th April do take a moment to commemorate the death of millions of animals who are poisoned, burned, scalded and suffer painful tortures in a fraudulent science which serves only the vast vested interests.
April 24th is World Day for Animals in Laboratories (WDAIL). Every year on the 24th April worldwide attention is drawn to commemorate the suffering and abuse of animals used in research laboratories, agricultural facilities and the development of arms and other weapons.
Vivisection literally means the 'cutting up' of living animals, but has now become more generally used as the term for all experiments on living animals (in vivo) as many animal experiments, such as toxicity tests, will not involve surgical procedures. The use and killing of animals in experimental laboratories and for teaching purposes involves enormous cruelty, untold suffering, pain and death.
It is estimated that the vivisection industry kills over 250 million animals annually. Vivisection is experimentation on living animals (many of these are threatened or endangered species). Millions of creatures ranging from primates, fish, octopi, birds, mice, rats, horses, dogs, cats, pigs and reptiles are subjected to terror, pain, deprivation and eventually the taking of their lives by scientists often concerned only with the continuance of their research grants and the entrenchment of outdated, flawed research methods.
The animal experimentation lobby spends millions annually to convince the public that all medical advances are directly due to animal experimentation. However, the list of disasters unleashed on the public after testing on animals, is legendary including asbestos, benzene, thalidomide and tobacco, which proved to have no ill-effect on the research animals. Conversely, many beneficial drugs were held back because they proved deadly to the animals, including penicillin, digitalis, streptomycin, aspirin, cyclosporine and ibuprofen. There are countless non-animal alternatives available, that are both more accurate and do not involve the suffering of living creatures.
Friday, April 23, 2010
Thursday, October 15, 2009
How does eating meat affect climate change ?
Blog Action Day '09 - Climate Change
Blog Action Day is an annual event that unites the world's bloggers in posting about the same issue on the same day on their own blogs with the aim of sparking discussion around an issue of global importance. Blog Action Day 2009 will be the largest-ever social change event on the web. One day. One issue. Thousands of voices.
How does eating meat affect climate change ?
Greenhouse Gases
According to the United Nations raising animals for food generates more greenhouse gases than all the cars and trucks in the world combined
Energy
Raising animals for food requires almost one-third of all fossil fuels used in South Africa. Producing a single hamburger uses enough fossil fuel to drive a small car 32 kilometres and enough water for 17 showers.
Pollution
In addition to the pollution generated by fossil fuel consumption, animals raised for food produce 80 million tonnes of excrement each year. This excrement, swimming with parasites, antibiotics and pesticides, befouls our air, pollutes our water and destroys our topsoil.
Land
Twenty times more land is required to feed a meat-eater than to
feed a vegan (pure vegetarian).
Water
Raising animals for food consumes more than half of all the water used in the world. It takes 11,365 litres of water to produce half a kilogram of meat but only 272 litres to produce a pound of wheat.
Deforestation
Rain forests are being destroyed at a rate of 323,748 square
kilometres per year to create space to raise animals for food. For every fast-food burger, 5 square metres of rain forest land must be razed.
Animals
You can’t be concerned about the environment without caring
and blood, have complex social and psychological lives and feel
pain, just as we do. More than 55 billion land-based animals are killed each year globally by the meat industry, and they’re raised and killed in ways that would horrify any compassionate person.
This figure does not include the billions of animals torn from the sea.
You Can Help Stop Global Warming! Go Vegan!
The most powerful step that we can take as individuals
to avert global warming is to stop eating meat, eggs, and
dairy products.
Download the pamphlet : "Think you can be a meat eating environmentalist"
Peta "Meat's Not Green" Campaign
Blog Action Day is an annual event that unites the world's bloggers in posting about the same issue on the same day on their own blogs with the aim of sparking discussion around an issue of global importance. Blog Action Day 2009 will be the largest-ever social change event on the web. One day. One issue. Thousands of voices.
How does eating meat affect climate change ?
Greenhouse Gases
According to the United Nations raising animals for food generates more greenhouse gases than all the cars and trucks in the world combined
Energy
Raising animals for food requires almost one-third of all fossil fuels used in South Africa. Producing a single hamburger uses enough fossil fuel to drive a small car 32 kilometres and enough water for 17 showers.
Pollution
In addition to the pollution generated by fossil fuel consumption, animals raised for food produce 80 million tonnes of excrement each year. This excrement, swimming with parasites, antibiotics and pesticides, befouls our air, pollutes our water and destroys our topsoil.
Land
Twenty times more land is required to feed a meat-eater than to
feed a vegan (pure vegetarian).
Water
Raising animals for food consumes more than half of all the water used in the world. It takes 11,365 litres of water to produce half a kilogram of meat but only 272 litres to produce a pound of wheat.
Deforestation
Rain forests are being destroyed at a rate of 323,748 square
kilometres per year to create space to raise animals for food. For every fast-food burger, 5 square metres of rain forest land must be razed.
Animals
You can’t be concerned about the environment without caring
and blood, have complex social and psychological lives and feel
pain, just as we do. More than 55 billion land-based animals are killed each year globally by the meat industry, and they’re raised and killed in ways that would horrify any compassionate person.
This figure does not include the billions of animals torn from the sea.
You Can Help Stop Global Warming! Go Vegan!
The most powerful step that we can take as individuals
to avert global warming is to stop eating meat, eggs, and
dairy products.
Download the pamphlet : "Think you can be a meat eating environmentalist"
Peta "Meat's Not Green" Campaign
Labels:
Blog Action Day,
climate change,
environment,
veganmofo 2009
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Tomato and Green Bean Curry
This is one of my favourite curries and it's my own original recipe that I've worked on over the years. It's not difficult to make and requires some preparation time. The roast potatoes may sound evil and a little over the top but try them this way - it's really worth it.
Ingredients :
800 grams green beans (tips removed and sliced down the middle lengthways and then chopped in half)
6 medium potatoes
6 large tomatoes skins removed and diced (*)
2 tablespoons freshly ground ginger
As much fresh green or red chillies you want (The hotter the better - but if you don't have fresh chillies - dried red chillies will do)
2 teaspoons of black mustard seeds
2 teaspoons of cumins seeds
1 teaspoon of tumeric
2 teaspoons of curry powder (or more if you like)
2 teaspoons of chilli powder
If you have coriander powder and garam masala that would be good about 1 teaspoon of each.
Fresh lemon juice and paprika for the potatoes.
A small handfull of fesh coriader leaves for garnish.
Vegetable oil for cooking
OK now for the potatoes ...
The super evil way is to peel and cut in quarters, steam until soft and then roast in oven on a medium-to-high heat until crispy. 5 minutes before the potatoes are done remove from the oven pour fresh lemon juice and paprika over them.
Preparation:
Use a wok or a deep skillet dish that have lids so they can be covered.
Turn the plate onto medium heat and heat up enough oil (maybe 2 or 3 Tablespoons)
When the oil is nice and hot add the seeds (cumin and mustard)
When the seeds start popping put in the other spices including the ginger and chillies.
Stir quickly for about 30 seconds and then add in the green beans and stir them around so they're well coated.
Do that for about 2 minutes and then add the tomatoes.
You can raise the heat until the tomatoes are cooking nicely and starting to break up then add enough water to cover everything without making everything float.
Then cover and simmer like that for 20 minutes or so until the green beans are nice and soft and the tomatoes have turned into a nice sauce or gravy.
Cover your wok if you can.
The when the beans are soft and there's a nice sauce add the potatoes and leave for 5 or 10 minutes !!
Serve on a bed of steamed basamati rice.
(*) Do you know how to peel tomatoes the easy way ?
OK it's really easy. Make crosses over the top and botton just slicing the skin slightly.
Then soak in boiling water for 10 minutes or so then add to cold water and the skins starting peeling off by themselves.Peel off the skins remove hard bit at the top and dice the tomatoes into
small pieces.
Ingredients :
800 grams green beans (tips removed and sliced down the middle lengthways and then chopped in half)
6 medium potatoes
6 large tomatoes skins removed and diced (*)
2 tablespoons freshly ground ginger
As much fresh green or red chillies you want (The hotter the better - but if you don't have fresh chillies - dried red chillies will do)
2 teaspoons of black mustard seeds
2 teaspoons of cumins seeds
1 teaspoon of tumeric
2 teaspoons of curry powder (or more if you like)
2 teaspoons of chilli powder
If you have coriander powder and garam masala that would be good about 1 teaspoon of each.
Fresh lemon juice and paprika for the potatoes.
A small handfull of fesh coriader leaves for garnish.
Vegetable oil for cooking
OK now for the potatoes ...
The super evil way is to peel and cut in quarters, steam until soft and then roast in oven on a medium-to-high heat until crispy. 5 minutes before the potatoes are done remove from the oven pour fresh lemon juice and paprika over them.
Preparation:
Use a wok or a deep skillet dish that have lids so they can be covered.
Turn the plate onto medium heat and heat up enough oil (maybe 2 or 3 Tablespoons)
When the oil is nice and hot add the seeds (cumin and mustard)
When the seeds start popping put in the other spices including the ginger and chillies.
Stir quickly for about 30 seconds and then add in the green beans and stir them around so they're well coated.
Do that for about 2 minutes and then add the tomatoes.
You can raise the heat until the tomatoes are cooking nicely and starting to break up then add enough water to cover everything without making everything float.
Then cover and simmer like that for 20 minutes or so until the green beans are nice and soft and the tomatoes have turned into a nice sauce or gravy.
Cover your wok if you can.
The when the beans are soft and there's a nice sauce add the potatoes and leave for 5 or 10 minutes !!
Serve on a bed of steamed basamati rice.
(*) Do you know how to peel tomatoes the easy way ?
OK it's really easy. Make crosses over the top and botton just slicing the skin slightly.
Then soak in boiling water for 10 minutes or so then add to cold water and the skins starting peeling off by themselves.Peel off the skins remove hard bit at the top and dice the tomatoes into
small pieces.
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Veganlicious Hot Chocolate of Doom!
This is a recipe that I found on this blog : Vegan Chicks Rock.
1 Cup soy milk, rice milk, almond milk, etc.
1 Tablespoon cocoa powder
1 teaspoon sugar or agave nectar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
In a small pot add the soy milk and turn the heat to medium. Add the cocoa powder, sugar and vanilla. Whisk everything together until the cocoa has completely dissolved. This might take a minute or two. You shouldn't have any little pieces of cocoa floating around in your soy milk anymore. Keep whisking every minute or so for about 10, or until everything is almost boiling. If your hot chocolate starts to boil, turn the heat down, that's too hot!
Pour into your favorite mug and add soy cream or sugar if you want. I usually add soy cream to mine to make it a bit creamier. I don't like things that are to sweet, so I don't add any more sugar but you may want to.
See how easy it is to make your own hot chocolate? And it tastes even better than any mix you could buy as well.
1 Cup soy milk, rice milk, almond milk, etc.
1 Tablespoon cocoa powder
1 teaspoon sugar or agave nectar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
In a small pot add the soy milk and turn the heat to medium. Add the cocoa powder, sugar and vanilla. Whisk everything together until the cocoa has completely dissolved. This might take a minute or two. You shouldn't have any little pieces of cocoa floating around in your soy milk anymore. Keep whisking every minute or so for about 10, or until everything is almost boiling. If your hot chocolate starts to boil, turn the heat down, that's too hot!
Pour into your favorite mug and add soy cream or sugar if you want. I usually add soy cream to mine to make it a bit creamier. I don't like things that are to sweet, so I don't add any more sugar but you may want to.
See how easy it is to make your own hot chocolate? And it tastes even better than any mix you could buy as well.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Butter bean burgers
This recipe has been taken from the Animal Rights Africa Newsletter which can be found HERE.
Ingredients:
1 onion, chopped finely
1 red or green pepper, chopped finely
1 carrot, grated
4 oz. (100g) breadcrumbs
1 tin butter beans
Ground cumin
Ground coriander
Chilli powder
Soya flour
Method:
Fry onion, carrot and pepper for 5 minutes. Place them in a bowl and add the breadcrumbs, one teaspoon each of cumin, coriander and chilli. Add a little salt and pepper and one tablespoon soya flour. Mash the butter beans and add them. Mix well. Form the mixture into four thick burgers and coat them with flour. Fry the burgers for 20 minutes and serve with vegetables.
Serves 2-4
Sunday, October 4, 2009
Tofu "Paneer" Korma
The biggest challenge for some vegetarians to take the final step towards veganism is the addiction to cheese and for those that love indian food the thought of giving up paneer is terrifying.
I thought that I'd veganize this popular indian dish and see if it could convince some of the die-hard paneer junkies.
This was my first attempt and I think this may turn out to be a favourite for of you out there.
- 400g Block of firm tofu (grilled until slightly browned and cubed)
- 1 medium Onion (finely diced)
- 1/2 stick Cinnamon
- 1/2 cup of raw Cashews
- 1/2 cup of raw Cashews
- 3 Cloves
- 6 Green Cardamoms
- 1 Bay Leaf
- 1 tspn Black Cumin Seeds (may subsitute with normal cumin )
- 2 tspn Ginger Paste
- 1 tspn Garlic Paste
- 1 tspn Chilli Powder
- 1 tspn Coriander Powder
- 2 tspn Cumin Powder
- 1/4 tbsp Turmeric Powder
- 400 g tin of cocounut milk
- 2 Green Chillies Sliced
- Fresh coriander (Cilantro) Chopped - for garnish
- Vegetable Oil
- Salt to Taste
(Sorry for my poor photographic skills)
Method:
1. Brown the cashews lightly in a dry frying pan, then chop coarsely and then set aside.
2. Sautee onions in oil, add cinnamon, cardamom, bay leaf and the black cumin seeds and fry till fragrant.
2. Sautee onions in oil, add cinnamon, cardamom, bay leaf and the black cumin seeds and fry till fragrant.
3. Add the ginger and garlic pastes and stir fry. Then add the cubed tofu
4. Sprinkle in the chilli, coariander, cumin and turmeric powders and mix well.
5. Add the cashews.
5. Add the cashews.
6. Add coconut milk and cook over low heat.
7. Once the gravy has thickened considerably, add the salt and remove from heat.
7. Once the gravy has thickened considerably, add the salt and remove from heat.
8. Garnish with sliced green chilies and cilantro. You may throw in some slivered almonds for added effect.
PS: Add the salt last as the yogurt tends to curdle into lumps when salt is added while cooking.
If you like a little more "heat" then add some ground fresh green chillies shortly after adding the coconut milk. I added 5 or 6 and it added the extra bite to the dish.
Saturday, October 3, 2009
Chocolate Chocolate Chip Muffins
Not everybody has the time or confidence to bake from scratch. Personally I prefer to prepare everything from scrath rather than buying ready made products.
Orgran is brand of vegan products from Australia that are widely available in South Africa. I always see them in the health food stores and have been curious to find out if they were any good or not.
I bought a pack of Orgran Chocolate Muffin mix and wanted to see how ready-made muffins compared to the those made from scratch.
The only other ingredients that you need are water and some vegetable oil. I wanted a bit of extra decadence so I decided to add in some chocolate chips.
5 - 10 minutes to prepare and 25 minutes of baking and I had a batch of a dozen vegan chocolate chocolate chip muffins.
The conclusion : Very good as far as out-of-the-box baking goes and well worth it for those that don't have the time or confidence to try making their own muffins from scratch.
Orgran is brand of vegan products from Australia that are widely available in South Africa. I always see them in the health food stores and have been curious to find out if they were any good or not.
I bought a pack of Orgran Chocolate Muffin mix and wanted to see how ready-made muffins compared to the those made from scratch.
The only other ingredients that you need are water and some vegetable oil. I wanted a bit of extra decadence so I decided to add in some chocolate chips.
5 - 10 minutes to prepare and 25 minutes of baking and I had a batch of a dozen vegan chocolate chocolate chip muffins.
The conclusion : Very good as far as out-of-the-box baking goes and well worth it for those that don't have the time or confidence to try making their own muffins from scratch.
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