Thanksgiving Is Actually the Perfect Opportunity for a Vegetarian Meal
Photo by Priscilla Du Preez/Unsplash
There were several years of my life, mostly in college, in which I refused to eat any animal products. Meat was certainly off limits, but so was dairy, eggs, even honey. I went fully vegan, luckily falling short of the weird raw food diet craze that had teenagers surviving almost entirely off of bunches of bananas.
Even my more mainstream veganism, though, caused some in my circle concern about how I was possibly eating enough protein, how I could find acceptable food to eat while I was traveling, how I could even go to dinner at a friend’s house if they didn’t follow my same strict food rules. Admittedly, these were valid concerns: It sometimes was difficult to find food while I was away from home, and it certainly did kill the mood when I revealed my dietary preferences at a summertime BBQ.
But I soon noticed that there was one event that spurred more indignance at my diet choices than any other: Thanksgiving. How could I possibly give up animal products on Thanksgiving? I guess it’s one thing to refuse a hamburger in February or forgo shrimp cocktail in June, but the idea of me turning down turkey on Thanksgiving was, to many people around me, utterly incomprehensible.
This is a sentiment I’ve never truly understood. If there’s one holiday that’s famous for its subpar meat, it has to be Thanksgiving. Turkey is almost universally understood as bland, dry and ultimately, boring. It’s chicken’s more unfortunate-tasting cousin. According to FinanceBuzz, a full 50% of the whole bird turkeys we eat in the U.S. are consumed on Thanksgiving Day alone; that means that for the rest of the year, we’re not eating much of the alternative poultry option, probably because it’s just not that good.
To me (and to many others out there), the best part of Thanksgiving isn’t about the turkey at all—it’s about the sides, most if not all of which are conspicuously meat-free. In fact, most of them can easily be made vegan. Stuffing, cranberry sauce, mac and cheese, roasted vegetables: these are the foods that have most of us excited to spend time with our families and friends over the dinner table.