'I feel like it is not my body anymore': Devastated vegetarian ate meat for the first time in her life - after Nando's served her chicken by mistake Roshni Barot ordered grilled halloumi cheese pitta at Nando's restaurant She ate most of her chicken pitta without realising what it was She was so distraught she tried to make herself sick when she got home
griffdaddy wrote: » What's the point of being a vegetarian and eating in Nando's? Surely you shouldn't support a massive chicken restaurant chain in anyway if you're so staunch in your believes
Lia_lia wrote: » This is the first thing I thought
Shenshen wrote: » Ok, the one excuse for her reacting so badly to having eaten meat would be that she is in fact Hindu. So her being vegetarian isn't just a choice of diet, it's a matter of faith.
Gillo wrote: » Surely one bite in, she'd have thought it tasted pretty weird?
psinno wrote: » You can not really know that one way or the other. It could be a personal choice that her family made. Some Hindus eat meat and others do not.
Paddy Cow wrote: » I've never been to Nando's so hope someone else can clear this up for me but if they grill all the chicken there, wouldn't it be warm in the pitta? or do they let it go cold before using it? Maybe her total over-reaction is because she actually like the chicken and now feels guilty.
Femme_Fatale wrote: » Well vegetarians ARE one of its enemy groups so a story about an extremely neurotic vegetarian = win-win.
IzzyWizzy wrote: » Yeah, but halloumi is also warm. Anyway, she's an idiot. If she was that bothered about animal welfare, she wouldn't go anywhere near Nando's.
Paddy Cow wrote: » I had never heard of halloumi before today so didn't know that. I just don't understand how someone can eat nearly a whole sandwich before noticing it wasn't what they ordered. Does halloumi taste like chicken? Have the same texture? People said she put a sauce on it so probably didn't notice it straight away but that would mean she had to look at the sandwich and I know she was chatting to her friend but even subconsciously I look at the food I am eating and would notice if something was amiss. The only time I really wouldn't notice was if I was drunk, which I'm assuming she wasn't.
Daqster wrote: » Seriousily, can we have it added to the charter that slagging off the DM. just for the sake of it, is at least an infractionable offence.
Shenshen wrote: » Same as some Muslims will drink alcohol, and some Catholics will eat meat of Fridays. That doesn't change the fact that not doing these things are a matter of religious faith for some people
All of our actions, including our choice of food, have Karmic consequences. By involving oneself in the cycle of inflicting injury, pain and death, even indirectly by eating other creatures, one must in the future experience in equal measure the suffering caused.
Artful_Badger wrote: » What gets me is she says crap like "there's no compensation for those 28 years" as if its all worthless now she accidentally ate half a chicken sandwich. There is no way in hell either that someone who regularly eats in places like Nando's and doesnt check their food goes 28 years without eating any meat.
the_syco wrote: » So a veggie thinks chicken tastes like cheese? Interesting!
CSF wrote: » I think people are being a little insensitive towards the situation. I'm a little confused as to why she was eating in Nandos myself, but nonetheless if she has legitimate moral issues with the idea of eating another creature, I don't think we have too much leverage to mock her just because they aren't ours. When it comes to food prep, I don't think 'basic human error' is a legitimate excuse either. We wouldn't accept 'basic human error' when it comes to most other carelessness in food preparation. If this was an allergy we were dealing with I don't think people would be so blazé about it. With that said, it isn't an allergy, and it isn't as serious as feeding somebody something they're allergic to, I'm just making the point that there is f*ckall room for human error in food prep. People can get very sick as a result. I've no idea what the correct remedy is for such a mishap, but it definitely isn't a free meal. I know for me anyway, that if a restaurant was to make a bags of my order in a way that had legitimate consequences for me, the last thing I would want to do is have another meal there.