| Indian Cooking and Cuisine - From Domino's Pizza to Hyderabad Biryani. Where and What to eat in India. |
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#1 |
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: oakland
Posts: 11
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Vegan travelling to India
Does anyone have tips on travelling vegan ? South Indian cuisine is obviously more friendly than North Indian, but is there anything that i can be on the lookout for?
thanks, -hit |
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#2 |
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laid traps for troubadours
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if by Vegan you mean no dairy, you are in for a rough ride. Dairy is all over many of the most common dishes. If you can suffer the dairy, you will have absolutely no problems staying free of meat and eggs.
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#3 |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: india
Posts: 16
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Organic vegan food
Can you tell me someplace in Kerala that serves only organic vegan food?Does it really cost a lot?
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#4 |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: maryland, usa
Posts: 52
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chai with soy milk - anyone??
anyone ever made vegan chai - with soy milk?
my husband is vegan and i'd like to try and make some yummy chai for him. does anyone who may have made this have any tips? thanks julie ![]() |
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#5 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Seattle, USA
Posts: 98
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I have tried it a couple of times for my lactose intolerant friends:
The best soy milk that I tried was Silk Soy plain flavored in the refrigerated sections as it is creamier than the other types and I added it after boiling my chai with ginger/cardamom completely. Dont boil soy milk, it doesnt taste that great in my opinion. So add as your final flavor. I have tried it with Rice milk, almond milk and oat milk with varied results. I didnt like the tast of almond milk in my tea and oat/rice came in second after soy. |
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#6 |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Derby City USA
Posts: 25
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WestSoy is also a good soy brand and what I usually use. Silk can be a little chalky / residuey. WestSoy also mixes better (my opinion at least). I think it is better if you dilate the chai a little more with water and use less soy milk than you would regular millk.
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#7 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: toronto
Posts: 4
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Vegan travelling to India
Hey everyone!
I'm new to the forum I am travelling to India in a month and I've never actually had Indian food before, I'm very excited but also nervous because I am a vegan. Can anyone recomend specific things that would be on restaurant menus they know for sure have no meat or animal byproducts in them (no butter or milk). Are there many vegans in India? - Thanks a ton! |
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#8 |
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One in a billion member.
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Amsterdam
Posts: 996
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Welcome to IM. Keeping dairy products completely out your platter will be slightly issuesome. There is butter or ghee in large quantities in most every food in Indian hotel, resto, dhaba.
But 'no meat' will be very easy to get.
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I need your clothes, your boots and your motorcycle. |
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#9 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: toronto
Posts: 4
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...oh no
well milk and butter will definatly be a problem. Will there at least be salads and soups on the menu?
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#10 |
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Maha Guru Member
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Land that shakes and bakes.
Posts: 4,230
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Salads are a big issue in India. Hope you have your typhoid A..
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#11 |
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Up in the hills with my head in the clouds...
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: India/UK
Posts: 1,019
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You can buy fruit, vegetables and salad in the shops and markets.
If you prepare it yourself (and wash it in bottled water) you will be able to guarantee that is does not contain anything you don't eat. If someone prepares it for you it will contain butter, milk, ghee, egg or animal fat.
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#12 |
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Account Closed by User's Request
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: the Netherlands
Posts: 6,012
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As with every scenario....India can provide, though the restrictions of a vegan diet dictate, that even In India the land of vegetarianism; you'll have to work hard at maintaining your diet. Which is probably the same anywhere, in your home patch, wherever in the world, the ingredients of a vegan diet can be sourced simply by local knowledge.
On a trip through India I would expect a similar reaction to a Vegan diet, the fundementals are there but don't expect a wealth of vegan orientated restaurants!! To keep the topic afloat, does Parsi cuisine come roughly affiliated with Veganism ??? |
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#13 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: toronto
Posts: 4
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salads are a problem
will the salad be bad even at nicer restaurants?
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#14 | |
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Oilfield Trash!
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Aberdeen
Posts: 700
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Quote:
I don't want to be alarmist about salads, if you KNOW it's been well washed (in clean water) or it's peeled (eg cucumber) then it should be ok, but uncooked food is something you need to be careful with in India Nuts are very plentiful and there are some yummy breads and peelable fruits like bananas, but if you are very strict about animal produce you will find your choices limited.
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#15 |
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10 year Visa okee dokee
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Swannanoa NC usa
Posts: 1,082
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Washing salads yourself in bottled water isn't good enough. It has to be soaked in a solution that contains bleach or iodine.
Unfortunately, you will have a pretty big problem in India if you are depending on eating salads. It's the one thing I totally eliminate from my diet while I'm there. Way too dangerous, even in a first class hotel restaurant--though I have gambled and been OK, while it should be better, there is no guarantee. Your food requirements might make your trip very difficult. It would be a shame to have to be thinking about how you can eat all day when there are other things that would be great to be seeing & doing. I don't know if you can live on fruit you can peel & vegetables you wash & cook yourself. Most of the nutritional food will be prepared with oils & dairy you can't eat. Ironic since India has the BEST & biggest variety of vegetarian food in the world (in my opinion) Maybe South Indian food is more amenable to vegan style? If they don't use ghee. They do use alot of regular nut oils. Perhaps there is a vegan IMer who can be more optimistic about this issue. ![]() |
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