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Comparison of selected vegetarian and semi-vegetarian diets (view template) Plants Dairy Eggs Seafood Poultry All other animals Vegetarianism Lacto-ovo vegetarianism
Macrobiotic diet: a plant-based diet that may include occasional fish or other seafood. [27] Cereals, especially brown rice, are the staples of the macrobiotic diet, supplemented by small amounts of vegetables and occasionally fish. Some advocates of the macrobiotic diet promote a vegetarian (or nearly vegan) approach as the ideal. [28]
Semi-vegetarian diets, like the Mediterranean Diet or the DASH Diet, which that limit red meat and allow for some white meat, fish, dairy and eggs. Pesco-vegetarian diet, where you avoid meat, but ...
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Semi-vegetarian diets, like the Mediterranean Diet or the DASH Diet (that limit red meat and allow for some white meat, fish, dairy and eggs) Pesco-vegetarian diet (one where you avoid any meat ...
The vegan diet, the strictest of the plant-based diets, excludes all animal-based foods. So, it’s one way to jump into plant-based eating with both feet! However, giving up foods like meat and ...
Semi-vegetarianism: A predominantly vegetarian diet, in which meat is occasionally consumed. This includes "flexitarian", reducetarian and demitarian diets [ 145 ] Sometimes semi-vegetarian and flexitarian diets are defined as distinct from one another, where the former is defined as abstaining from red meat while the latter simply entails only ...
Pollotarianism is the practice of adhering to a diet that incorporates poultry as the only source of meat in an otherwise vegetarian diet. [1] [2]While pollo specifically means chicken in both Spanish and in Italian (with pollame meaning poultry in general in Italian), pollotarians are known to incorporate different forms of poultry, like duck and turkey in their diet. [3]