But burger? Sure, burgers are often beef, but there have always been other kinds. "Chicken burger", "crab burger", so why not "veggie burger".
The EU likes making regulations, to the point that they are killing their own industry
Example: https://www.ruegenwalder.de/website/produkte/vegan/2491/imag...
Vegan cheese packaging:
https://verbund.edeka/verbund/presse/eigenmarken-portal/my-v...
https://www.verbraucherzentrale-bremen.de/sites/default/file...
Plus, usually dedicated/labelled sections and optical separation in the supermarket:
https://www.deutschlandistvegan.de/wp-content/uploads/2015/0...
https://preview.redd.it/k%C3%B6nnen-wir-das-vegane-angebot-v...
1. even this will be illegal
2. why not: there are countless of vegetarian Burger types, one of them is one in the style of crispy chicken burgers - without meat
"Veggie burger" as a term has been in common usage by the public long before any of the other words that convey the same thing.
In Europe people tend to be the first kind and see the government as tool for protecting them from the second kind.
The revolution is unlikely.
"What food are" actually refer to what people use that word for and not necessarily what is the strict scientific definition. I’m sure most knows what’s a "plant burger", although I concede the current law is confusing as you can call an egg or diary many based patty as such.
They might just not have consistent political opinions?
Clearly though, these should be sold as "Sparkling vegetable patty"
Things like this bring the very useful tool of regulations into disrepute.
I think they should just label things more explicitly like this - accelerate veganism 100x when people in the supermarkets have to choose between “pressed soybeans” and “mammary gland secretions”.
Meanwhile, back in 1755:
> MILK. n.s. [meelc, Saxon; melck, Dutch.]
> 2. Emulsion made by contusion of seeds.
> Pistachoes, so they be good and not musty, joined with almonds in almond milk, or made into a milk of themselves, like unto almond milk, are an excellent nourisher.
Unfortunately, this "article" provides zero actual information. No actual text of what was voted on. No context for when or where "veggie burger" is supposedly banned.
So great, can't find out if there might be nuance to this issue, can't find out any arguments, can't even find the actual words which were voted on. Oh, actually looks like this was a vote for an amendment? No actual law has been voted on yet.
That has not stopped anyone here from makings broad and sweeping generalizations, as usual.
I'd encourage new vegetarians to try embracing vegetarian staples from places like India, where culinary traditions have a lengthy proven history of supporting healthy and satisfying vegetarianism.
But I'd also say, some veggie burgers really are great. They taste good, they're satisfying, and nobody is deceived when they read "veggie burger" on the menu. This regulation is nonsense. It's just telling vegetarians that their linguistic tradition around their diets -- part of their cultural heritage -- is now banned in the EU.
I’d try more if you have recommendations. I think I hit all the major players though.
Edit: I noticed you were downvoted and just want to advocate for you. I don’t know why people have such reactions to reasonable discussions :/ If you’re reading this I want you to know I appreciate your comment and I hope you aren’t discouraged from sharing in the future.
I think the idea just bothers me, “vegetables aren’t good enough, what you really want is fake meat.”
The marketing and availability impact behavior.
So many delicious dishes from world regions where being a vegetarian is the norm.
Honestly, this feels like a smoke and mirrors done ahead of Mercosur agreement enrollment which may put European farmers especially the smaller ones on lost position facing competition from South America.
I've found it very annoying for years when a veggie food shop calls it's products "veggie chicken nuggets" and the like.
Not only is it annoying that they use meat product names to market veggie products, but more importantly it also obscures the actual ingredients of the product.
One of my favorite of such thing is that there seem to be a rule dictating that if you have something called strawberry juice, it has to have strawberries in them. Once I got to the store and the name on one kind of bottle was "Strawberry inspired taste", which made me laugh quite badly.
It would be nice to focus on solving more existential problems of which there are enough.
I tilt against the windmills of the “vegetarian omelette”.
https://duckduckgo.com/?t=lm&q=yes+minister+euro+sausage&ia=...
Let the verbal gymnastics commence. Or maybe places should start naming veggie burgers after the EU governance in satire?
Sure, you can't call a veggie patty a beef patty, but how does the meat industry own the word burger?
/s