Very true. Gelatin is made from animal bones and connective tissues, thus making it NOT at all vegetarian. For the same reason, you shouldn't eat marshmallows, Hostess cupcakes, and a huge variety of other items.
However, you'll be happy to know that there are versions of most of those products which are gelatin free. Any organic food store, or even maybe even the organic section of a medium to large grocery store should sell gelatin-free toaster pastries, almost the same as pop-tarts. Sometimes they'll even be less expensive depending on where you are. As for stuff like gelatin-free "marshmallows," that's a little harder to find. I recommend veganstore.com as a resource.
Good luck.
2007-10-12 06:04:58
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answer #1
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answered by emily_brown18 6
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Gelatin is made from animal parts, tendons and bones are processed to remove the collagen in them. These collagen is used to make up gelatin. So it is considered an animal product, thus not vegan, and may or may not be vegetarian. Some vegetarians drink milk and eat cheese, so some are okay with gelatin. You can buy toaster pastries without gelatin in them. They are also organic. Whole Foods or Henry's (if you're in So-Cal) carry them, so does CostCo in So-Cal. The company name is: Nature's Path
http://www.worldpantry.com/cgi-bin/ncommerce3/CategoryDisplay?cgmenbr=179660&cgrfnbr=185791
CostCo sells a multipack.
2007-10-12 06:10:12
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answer #2
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answered by practical thinking 5
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There are some types of animal flesh, skin, bone etc. in food that you can't visibly see... but the meat is still there.
Gelatin is made up of animal bones and tendons... Think of it as being like a hot dog, made up of several types of animal parts, but you can't really see which ones.
The gelatin is in the frosting, so the Pop Tarts that do not have frosting are vegetarian.
:)
2007-10-12 05:44:17
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answer #3
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answered by Squirtle 6
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My wife loves Watermelon Slices, the gummi candy. Every once in a while we find some without gelatin, then we splurge on them. (I eat chocolate, so no worries here.) Gelatin is made from cows, mostly, in our country.
By the way, lipids are just fats. Walnuts have lipids, as do olives.
2007-10-12 06:34:20
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answer #4
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answered by micahcf 3
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complete ingredients consists of vegetarian gelatin. you additionally could make a vegetarian Jello with agar agar and fruit juice. 'Vegetarian' potential no longer eating animals or slaughter bi-products. i think of you're doing a solid factor by using reducing out maximum meat and being attentive to slaughter biproducts. yet as long as you're eating fish (an animal) you're actually not vegetarian. i understand some human beings might evaluate this a nitpicky element, yet people who say their veg and consume meat make it confusing for those persons who're vegetarian and flow to human beings's properties or eating places the place they are under the effect that fish are vegetarian nutrition. i understand this is an prolonged clarification yet i desire to expalin why this is a controversy.
2016-12-18 05:38:35
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't know about anymore... but what they use to make gelatin is the hooves of some animals... that's why anything with gelatin is not vegetarian.
2007-10-12 05:43:39
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answer #6
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answered by pumpkinseed 2
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Gelatin is an animal by-product. I think that vegetarians can eat gelatin, but not vegans.
2007-10-12 06:04:16
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answer #7
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answered by Never Been Kissed 2
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Gelatin is not vegetarian because it comes from dead animals.
2007-10-12 08:50:46
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answer #8
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answered by mockingbird 7
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Gelatin is a product that comes from boiling the leftover parts of slaughtered meat animals. That's why it's not vegetarian.
2007-10-12 06:09:24
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answer #9
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answered by Love #me#, Hate #me# 6
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Gelatin is made from animals.
2007-10-12 05:46:37
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answer #10
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answered by Erin B 5
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