Zelandakh, on 2015-September-29, 06:37, said:
It is perhaps worth pointing out that BK was typically using animal fat at that time so anything described as a veggie meal is a complete contradiction.
I am not surprised. But, in addition to what gwnn wrote, I think it makes a big difference to many hindus in the USA whether they eat meat or whether they eat fries where only a chemist knows that they that are cooked in fat that contains animal fat. It is a bit like "Don't ask, don't tell.".
In India you will see that restaurants like Subway have two counters: one for veg and one for "non-veg". I think that over there "veg" really means "veg". When an Indian comes to the US, he will have to adapt. If he wants to have lunch with his colleagues (and, as far as I understand Hinduism, that is considered to be a good idea), he will have to eat at American sandwich restaurants. Is there anything that is truly vegetarian at these places? I imagine that some of the chips sold at Subway also contain some animal fat. If you go to a pizza place, they won't have a separate oven for vegetarian pizzas. The fat from the pepperoni or tuna from the previous pizza will be at the bottom of your "vegetarian" pizza.
During Summer, we would often go to a park and grill. Of course, we would prepare vegetarian dishes as well as "non-veg". We made it a point to clean the grill, grill the vegetarian stuff first and then grill the meat. Our Indian friends were truly grateful for that. Given that most of them were chemical engineers, they would be able to calculate how clean the grill was and, as a consequence, how much animal product would still be on the "vegetarian" food. They would also be able to apply the second law of Thermodynamics and know that no matter how long we would clean, there would always be some animal stuff on the vegetarian food (and that there probably were some beef molecules on it anyway since it had been prepared in our kitchen).
But they were not thinking in terms of milligrams or micromoles. They were thinking in the spirit of vegetarianism (my spell checker says that that is a word).
BK delivered to the wishes of these customers (who I am sure on a rational level were aware that they would be eating some animal molecules), McD did not.
Rik
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