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Originally posted by wantsome
Seriously I'm here to pick a fight. My grandmother won't agrue with me anymore over it. How is fish now considerd meat? Is it becasue they don't have legs?
Convince a person fish aint meat and they might as well believe the earth is flat.
Originally posted by curious7
Originally posted by wantsome
Seriously I'm here to pick a fight. My grandmother won't agrue with me anymore over it. How is fish now considerd meat? Is it becasue they don't have legs?
Convince a person fish aint meat and they might as well believe the earth is flat.
I've been asking vegans and vegetarions that very same question for years.
Weird for sure.
Definition: Occasionally used to describe those who abstain from eating all meat and animal flesh with the exception of fish. Although the word is not commonly used and a pescatarian is not technically a vegetarian, more and more people are adopting this kind of diet, usually for health reasons or as a stepping stone to a fully vegetarian diet. Pescetarians often believe that moderate consumption of fish or fish oils, which are high in Omega-3 fatty acids, is necessary for optimum health, although vegetarian alternatives, such as flax seed oil, are available.
As a generic culinary and butchery term of art, "meat" refers to the muscular flesh of a mammal. This is the definition most commonly applied by governments in meat product regulation and food labeling, and in religious rites and rituals. Edible birds and fish/seafood are not "meat" under this application but are treated separately from mammals. Likewise, amphibians and reptiles, not to mention the "meat" of edible insects, arachnids, and so on.
Religious rites and rituals regarding food also tend to apply this distinction, classifying the birds of the air and the fish of the sea separately from land-bound mammals. Sea-bound mammals are often treated as fish under religious laws. Following is stated in the Code of Canon Law of the Catholic Church.
Can. 1250 The penitential days and times in the universal Church are every Friday of the whole year and the season of Lent.
Can. 1251 Abstinence from meat, or from some other food as determined by the Episcopal Conference, is to be observed on all Fridays, unless a solemnity should fall on a Friday. Abstinence and fasting are to be observed on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.
Why is Fish Not Considered Meat When Abstaining from Meat During Lent?
The answer is in the translation of the Cannon Law. The Catholic Church’s official language is Latin. In the Cannon it states that we must abstain from “carne”. If you have ever been to a Mexican restaurant you know that a Carne Asada is steak. In Latin the word “Carne” refers to a warm-blooded animal that walks the Earth. Fish does not meet either requirement.
Originally posted by caladonea
reply to post by wantsome
Fish - is an aquatic animal (a water animal)
Meat - is food from animals that reside on land
Originally posted by jaynkeel
Originally posted by caladonea
reply to post by wantsome
Fish - is an aquatic animal (a water animal)
Meat - is food from animals that reside on land
So by that theory does that put mermaids on the menu?
Originally posted by caladonea
reply to post by wantsome
Fish - is an aquatic animal (a water animal)
Meat - is food from animals that reside on land
Originally posted by caladonea
reply to post by wantsome
Fish - is an aquatic animal (a water animal)
Meat - is food from animals that reside on land
Originally posted by caladonea
reply to post by wantsome
Fish - is an aquatic animal (a water animal)
Meat - is food from animals that reside on land
Originally posted by fiftyfifty
Then what would you class the flesh of a whale as?
Originally posted by purplemer
if you get meat from animals what do you get from fish..
Originally posted by ANOK
Originally posted by purplemer
if you get meat from animals what do you get from fish..
Err...Fish?
Meat from mammals, poultry from birds, seafood from seafood, fish from fish.
Originally posted by purplemer
Originally posted by caladonea
reply to post by wantsome
Fish - is an aquatic animal (a water animal)
Meat - is food from animals that reside on land
if you get meat from animals what do you get from fish..
Originally posted by gimme_some_truth
Oh, come on. You are talking semantics. Meat is meat and meat is the muscle of the animal.... You are eating muscle whether it come from fish, bird or cow.
Call it anything you want. You are eating muscle.... No matter the animal.
Arguing over what you call that muscle, is rather pointless....