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A kinder meal for Yom Kippur - celebrating

Got meat guilt? Toying with veganism? If you can't face going vegan, reductionism may be the answer

September 13, 2018 10:43
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ByVictoria Prever, Victoria Prever

3 min read

Many of us will be celebrating the Jewish holidays with communal meals which will probably include plenty of meat or dairy. Kenden Alfond, creator of plant-based Jewish food blog, Jewish Food Hero, argues that now, especially around Yom Kippur, is a good time to think of the effects of what we’re eating on ourselves and our environment.

“One way to look at this holiday is as an experience for your body. Being kind to your body before, during and after the fast is incredibly important. It can also be kinder to your body to reduce your meat and dairy consumption before and after the Yom Kippur fast.”

She explains the benefits of eating a more plant-based diet: “It can stabilize your mood and energy levels throughout the day, and a plant based diet may also help prevent or improve many common health problems like diabetes, heart disease, obesity, acne, intestinal diseases, depression, fatigue, liver disease, kidney disease and high blood pressure.” And that’s before the well-publicised effects of meat farming on the environment.

However, going cold turkey — or rather no turkey — may not be for everyone. “Most don’t want their Yom Kippur pre-fast dinner or break-the-fast meal to be entirely vegan or vegetarian” says Alfond “because it doesn’t feel right.”