this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2023
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I hate to be this guy. And I apologize. However they are likely referring to the dairy that traditionally comes in mashed potatoes.
You're 100% right but these should be called vegan if thats the case
That's a synonym for plant-based.
Vegan is a loaded term for a lot of people. They recoil in horror at the thought of something being "vegan". But "plant-based" isn't anywhere near as vile, for those people.
Like seriously it's quite vile how they treat the vegans before processing them into mashed potatoes that's why I prefer plant based products over vegan products
Actually no "Plant-based" is a meaningless phrase that doesn't actually denote whether a food product contains animal products or not
Not sure if I agree it's meaningless. In most cases it does mean what it implies, even if it doesn't have regulatory backing.
In the UK we've got all sorts of labels like 5 a day, the red tractor to imply it's of a certain standard and from a domestic farm or even the vegan label. They're all basically meaningless labels rather than something that's based on the actual product, but they still tend to track with what they're saying they are in most cases.
Don't take everything at face value, but also don't waste your time worrying that everyone is lying to you barefaced
Whether or not it's a meaningless phrase, it seems in the article you provided they're still at least correlating the terms "plant-based" and "vegan", if not equating them.
It literally says vegan right on the package….
How can you tell?
That pixel over there
Exactly. This is mashed potatoes made without (cow) butter.
And (cow) milk.
How has several people forgotten that in these comments?
Same probably goes for this one I found at my local supermarket: https://i.imgur.com/aMDLCM2.jpg
I maintain that no reasonable person should ever call a product with sour cream in it "guacamole", but I presume that's the ingredient they're trying to identify is definitely not included.
My wife buys plant based falafels made with sweet potato or beetroot, as if chickpeas were meat 🤷
Techniclly Plant Based could still include non-plant ingredients tho, or it would just be plant...
Sure but shouldn’t they say something along those lines. This is just silliness of you ask me.
Dairy free would be a nice way of saying it that gets straight to the point. My gf is lactose intolerant and wow does it ever make shopping difficult. There’s dairy in fucking everything! There was dairy in the goddamn meatballs I bought last week. WTF
Was it like whey protein in the meatballs? Wtf would dairy be used for in meatballs.....
cheese
Maybe they shouldn't buy cheesy meatballs if they don't want dairy in it...
Yup that was exactly it.
IIRC "dairy free" can still have lactose in it in the US just as an FYI
Well thats even more fucked up. It’s kind of sad that it seems believable to me too
Whereas "non-dairy" can still be cow milk derived as long as the lactose has been removed
Yeah it's crazy annoying and stupid smh
But remember, calling plant based products "milk" would be too confusing for the poor consumers! /s
I think plan based is the product line. So anything in that product line won't have animal products in it and is safe for vegans.
If only. Plant-based, in practice as a label (based off my experiences as a American vegan) just means exactly that. It's mostly plant. I got some plant-based burgers one time and was disgusted when I found out egg was used as the binder. Advertising is evil.
They do. They say it's plant based. Are you not paying attention?
Thing is, this seems silly until you actually try to eat a vegan diet. One time I bought pickles, thinking it's literally cucumbers, vinegar and spices, there's no way this couldn't be vegan.
Nope, it came with honey. And it tasted like dogshit, so I don't know why they put it in there, but they sure did.