rachel--hi--i did a fair post a while back--if you search vegetarian you can read the post--hope it helps--any quaetions just ask and we will try and help
Mmm.Well , my 15 yr old daughter is a vegi and she lost 11lb due to not being able to find anything that she really wanted to eat.
To be fair,she is a fussy moo at the best of times,and can be very difficult when we eat out in the U.K.
By the end of the week she was eating just crisps.The main problem is that food like cheese etc in the supermarket,is not labeled with the Vegetarian symbol,so cheese was off the menu too,in case it contained rennet !
Going backout in March and taking a ...
Mmm.Well , my 15 yr old daughter is a vegi and she lost 11lb due to not being able to find anything that she really wanted to eat.
To be fair,she is a fussy moo at the best of times,and can be very difficult when we eat out in the U.K.
By the end of the week she was eating just crisps.The main problem is that food like cheese etc in the supermarket,is not labeled with the Vegetarian symbol,so cheese was off the menu too,in case it contained rennet !
Going backout in March and taking a suitcase full of pasta n sauce and supernoodles for her lol
I guess the problem does indeed relate to the level of 'vegetarianism'--many folks are not really true veggies--but choose to not eat certain animal based products--
chips were cooked in olive oil there is a hugh difference in taste, plus its cheap in that area, soups must have been out in case they had chichen stock, there are loads of salads and you can get pizzas so you shoulne starve, if worried about cheese ask for it with out.
Went to Bansko with my wife last season. She's vegetarian. Struggled at times, to be honest. The idea of vegetarianism doesn't really seem understood, let alone catered for.
Most meals featured barbecued sausage meat in our hotel. Pizza is readily available amongst the snack bars, but couldn't say what it's like from a veggie point of view. Best meal for her was breakfast: bread, cheese, pancakes, doughnuts and omlettes, (if that's ok with you), Glasgow salad (chips) on the slopes for ...
Went to Bansko with my wife last season. She's vegetarian. Struggled at times, to be honest. The idea of vegetarianism doesn't really seem understood, let alone catered for.
Most meals featured barbecued sausage meat in our hotel. Pizza is readily available amongst the snack bars, but couldn't say what it's like from a veggie point of view. Best meal for her was breakfast: bread, cheese, pancakes, doughnuts and omlettes, (if that's ok with you), Glasgow salad (chips) on the slopes for lunch, nuts and chocolate we took with us for energy in the afternoon, and vegetable side dishes as mains in the evening.
We're going back this year, so it can't have been so bad! Suggest you take stuff with you to accompany bread. Marmite, perhaps?
I'm not that strict a veggie but do recall a moment last year as I was eating something that had looked perfectly safe and realising it was not. There was always something just about suitable most nights in the hotel but it was mostly potato or salad and cheese.Don't envy a strict veggie in these circumstances