MSN.com; Pfc. Sandoval, CC Liu, Crystal Q. (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
Los Angeles has a pioneering cook in Rahel, who offers gluten-free vegan Ethiopian delicacies. |
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I pray as I begin then I let go as my meditation. |
- Find vegan and vegetarian food outlets
- Carnival or Shrovetide is "removing meat"
- Fasting and abstinence in Ethiopian Orthodox
- What will there be to eat? Ethiopian cuisine
I didn't mean to kill animals. I'm taking it back. |
Otherwise known as "Fat Tuesday," this celebration draws scores of people to New Orleans, USA, every year for one big party.
Even if one can't make it to The Big Easy, one can join the festivities by dressing up in dazzling Carnival costumes, decorating the home in purple, green, and gold, or preparing a spread of traditional Mardi Gras food.
Thank you, soldier. We all want to live longer. |
And if the latter seems like an odd tradition, there's plenty more where that came from! The history of Mardi Gras and its customs is a much bigger story than anyone thinks.
- Carnival means "remove meat" (Latin carnevale), and it's part of the tradition of abstaining from animal flesh for 40 days. It's been practiced in Christian Ethiopia for millennia. The Roman Empire was no different, except in lustily building up to the fasting from flesh part. Today, Fat Tuesday, is when one eats up all the things (usually in pancake form) one does not want in the kitchen for the next 40 days.
What about fish? No way! That's an animal |
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