Hardships of being vegan in Russia

in #ocd-resteem7 years ago

Hello guys :)


I’m a girl from Russia, living in city called Rostov-on-Don. 28 years old, I have a husband and a 3-months-old baby.

I’ve been vegetarian for over 6.5 years now. My vegetarianism is veganish. It means I rarely eat dairy or egg products, striving to be vegan. Because I believe that veganism is the most logical and ethically-sound way to eat (and live). But in a country like Russia it can be hard.

In this post I want to share my experiences being a veganish vegetarian in Russia (mostly I’m gonna complain, for now.

So here are my struggles.

PRODUCTS :


So. any time I want to cook some vegan recipe from American youtube, I get stuck with the ingredients: most of them you won’t find here.

Spinach and other greens? They’re available for a few weeks in the summer, or in some special expensive shops for a high price. The only greens easily available year round are: dill, parsley, green onions, coriander leafs (yuk). And what about those super healthy greens like dark leafy greens packed with calcium? Have never seen here… So getting enough calcium on Cronometer is a bit tricky. Any suggestions?

Then, TOFU. I fell in love with it long before becoming vegetarian. I was living in Korea, and it was sold in every supermarket, and also marketed on spot (we could taste it with cool sauces in the supermarket). It was cheap, available, and delicious. Tofu in Russia… You can only find it in special health food / vegetarian shops. Most of these shops are in the city center, and if you don’t work or live downtown, you have to find time to go to such special shops. Pretty inconvenient. Secondly, the taste… it’s so much inferior to what I was getting in Korea, and the only appropriate tofu brand I can get in my hometown is also kinda expensive… So I eat it very sparingly, cannot fully indulge as much as I want. Hence, all the foreign recipes for tofu are also a rare thing for me.
Mayonnaise… Just this summer it was available in 4 shops in my neighbourhood, and then in the Fall it disappeared all of the sudden. So frustrating! All at once from all the shops! I don’t know why, maybe there was low demand. And again, now to get vegan mayo, I have to go far to the city center to special shops. (By the way, it’s not called “vegan mayo” here, it’s “the mayo for Christian Lent” so I guess I’ll see it in the next Lent, in the spring, but just for a few weeks ;

Eating in Winter. Most of tasty vegetables disappear till June. From December. All that’s left are: cabbage, onions, carrots, potatoes, beetroot, parsnip. Enjoy the variety. Oh, and some frozen vegetables are life-savers: broccoli, green beans. Canned veggies like corn, green peas, eggplant also help. I know, beans are there, we can survive. But by April I literally cry for vegetables. =)

Vegan sausages, salami, milk. Delicious, but pretty expensive compared to animal-derived counterparts. And also available only in special shops. They are our special treats on occasion) Thank God I found a recipe of a very easy-to-make and CHEAP oat milk. My husband says that if it wasn’t for that oat milk, he would be buying cow’s milk every day..))

Vegan cheeses. Just 2 brands (of course only in special shops). One brand is disgusting taste, second is more-or-less decent, but expensive as F… Still can’t be compared to real cheese (and that’s not to blame veganism, but the technologies that aren’t yet implemented in our country. Cow cheese has a long tradition, centuries to develop all the kinds, and vegan cheese is a new thing, needs some more time).

I think I’ve found a pretty nice cheap-n-easy Mac-n-Cheese recipe, which is a happy thing for me. But I wish I had some egg substitute – something savory which would be as easy to throw into pan and cook as real eggs (tofu would work if it was available, once again, uufff…). Sometimes my husband hints me that he’d like some eggs. It’s sad, and I really want to find some appropriate substitution taste-wise and easiness-wise. Please help.
And it also makes me frustrated, how cheap hen’s egg are here. Cheaper than my 200-grams pack of tofu :( It breaks my heart thinking of how much suffering there is in that cheapness :(( When in fact growing soya and making tofu must be 100 times easier and cheaper than growing and torturing chickens!

And finally, full absence of vegan sweets, cakes, muffins, desserts, milky chocolate stops me from being 100% vegan right there. In fact, in all these 6.5 years my nearly 10 attempts to go fully vegan were hindered by this. And it all started with milk chocolate… If you tell me to cook my own sweets – I can’t bear another hour of cooking in the kitchen, that’s too much for me, and now also having a newborn. And it was mostly psychologically difficult to say “no” to sweets or chocolate offered at work or friends/relatives’ house just because there was some dried milk powder in them (and no substitutes sold anywhere). But I don’t buy this stuff very often.

That’s all about my frustration with veganism food-wise. More about psychological stuff in next posts)
But STILL, I believe in veganism, I believe it’s the future (if humankind continues developing). These difficulties described in the post don’t mean Veganism is inherently difficult. It means that the society, norms and traditions, the existing system make it that way. When we get enough vegans/veganish people ready to sacrifice some convenience of the early stage of a social movement, the system will respond by offering more vegan products. For that matter, I think we’re 10-15 years behind places like the US. But we’ll get there. And meanwhile, we live vegan as much as we can, being creative and inventive, trying to stay positive and see the light.

(I was encouraged to write such posts by my husband @clixmoney , after complaining for the 100th time about how sad I get living in a non vegan world, especially in Russia. He said Steemit community is very supportive and I’ll feel better and get some good tips. Hope for that. Please comment as much as you can and care for :) )

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Sorry to hear about how limited you feel in Russia. I am pretty grateful to be a vegan in Canada. I would suggest getting creative and perhaps making your own recipes based on American styles, but with a Russian touch :) You can then share with other vegans in Russia who may feel the same pain. Peace & love :)

yeaaah, I would be totally happy in Canada! :)))
Yes, being creative is all we've got here...) But things will gradually change, I'm sure

This was very eye-opening for me, especially how you have to struggle just to get fresh fruits and veggies!

I may be able to help with your vegan scrambled eggs problem, I recently discovered a recipe on Minimalist Baker's website that uses chickpeas instead of tofu. As you said you can get canned foods, I'm sure this recipe will work for you! Here is the link: https://minimalistbaker.com/fluffy-chickpea-scramble-30-minutes/ - I hope this helps! 🌱

Thank you for sharing and keep us updated!

thank you so much for this link! Canned chickpeas are not there yet (only green peas and kidney beans), but I will try this recipe boiling chickpeas myself)
I also tried omlette from chickpea flower, but there is a little of weird taste, do you have any suggestions to make it taste better?
And still there is calcium problem with the absence of dark leafy greens. Would just beans, tahini, cabbage be enough...?

I think you may have found yourself a business idea 💡

yeah, so many business ideas could be based on what is missing here...))) but I'm not sure about demand here yet

WOW a very different culture, I thank you for your story.
Much love from the USA ..

I knew it would be interesting)

Hi... isn't it hard to be vegan when you were just starting?

I was starting in Korea... There it was much easier than in Russia. After 2 years I went back from Korea to my hometown.

wow... i'm still thinking of going vegan but it's hard to start it here in the philippines because they cook good here haha

oh, that's awesome, that you wanna try it!
I think you can easily make delicious vegan versions of Philippines meat dishes with things like soya meat (also know as TVP - Texturized Vegetable Protein), I heard it's available in Asia. It's very cheap, you can buy in bulk and keep at home for a long time. You know, I would bet that deliciousness of your favourite dishes are mostly due to spices, sauces, dressings, etc... Which are already plant-based, you know ;))

"torturing chikens" caught my attention...lol....Are there any verifiable statistics that shows that vegetarians live longer or live healthier lifestyles. Cheers!

Yes, I've found a few studies on that topic, you can check out these links :

Also there's a good Youtube channel - Mic. the Vegan, there you can see a lot of videos explaining studies in an easy way. Also there is NutritionFacts.org channel with tons of scientific studies explained, on various topics, including benefits of plant-based diets.

@steemitbaby , I can imagine this must be difficult, perhaps one way if making sure you always have fresh herbs is to freeze them. Chop them very small, place them in ice cube trays, fill the tray with olive oil or any other oil that you like and then put it in the freezer. When you need herbs for cooking or a salad you take out a cube. When things are tricky we have to get creative on how to preserve some things we would always like to have . Best of luck and many blessings.

yes, I already use ice cubes for a lot of things, for example for freezing coconut milk which is expensive and I don't use everyday, or for soya yoghurt, which is again expensive and I use for some recipes))

Freezing herbs in oil for salad - that's something new! But I don't eat salads much in winter (i don't have vegetables for that). And a bigger problem with greens is that I lack dark leafy greens which are not found here, and that are rich sources of calcium and iron :(

Iron I think I get enough, as my hemoglobin blood test during pregnancy were perfect!) but for calcium I'm still a bit worried

an excellent calcium supplement is "cell salts"or sometimes called "tissue salts". it is a mineral, non addictive and easily absorbed by the body. Its also natural. have a look on the internet where you can read up about them, they are amazing!

wow, I've never heard of it, I'll look it up, thanks! it's cool that it's natural and well absorbed)
but it would be really great to find some 'food' source of calcium, you know, so that it doesn't appear that we need to supplemetn a lot for veganism, how it looks to others, you know what I mean :)

I come from Poland so I understand how it is when fresh vegetables and fruits are available only a few months (or shorter) a year. For me, the solution is freezing vegetables and fruit in the season.

recently I was listening to That Vegan Couple's podcast about the HappyCow application, and they said that Warsaw is on of the top cities in the world with the concentration of vegan restaurants! so Poland is lucky now))

Yes, freezing is a good idea, this summer I froze tomatoes and paprika, but some veggies are not suitable for that, like cucumbers, eggplants, zuckini, cauliflower.

Hi there!!!! :) I was just looking for Russians on steemit! hehehehe and - found your post here! ;) since it is past its payout... i'll send you a tip!

@tipu send tip please :)

I'd like to read more by you!! I'm sorry that it's so hard to find so many vegan products in Russia. When we were there in 2016... our friends laughed at us when we asked about organic food there hehehehe they said Organic??? Everything is organic here! LOL (but now I hear there is talk of bending the rules for Monsanto in Russia... so maybe not so organic anymore :(

Curious - do you post on Steemit and also Golos??? I was telling my friends about Steemit and just until today - I didn't even know that there was any Russian version of Steemit named Golos!!!!!!

I'll follow you now to see more of what you write :)

hi, thank you for support and tip, so sweet)!
no, I don't post on Golos, just Steemit!

Organic food is soooo out of my reach here) At least I'm happy to have SOME vegan food! Organic? nobody uses this word here))

i know!!!!! LOLOL that's why they all laughed.... "everything is soooooooooooo organic for you here" hahahahahahaha

they like to make jokes! ;)

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