I'm not religious so I eat whatever I like on Good Friday, much to my friends disgust.
Do you eat meat on Good Friday?
I'm not religious so I eat whatever I like on Good Friday, much to my friends disgust.
Do you eat meat on Good Friday?
Yes I deliberately do because it annoys me that everyone I know ( who never attend church) eats fish on Good Friday like it means anything to them
Haha, my sister says the same thing.
I try to, although we eat fish most Fridays. Today, not sure though as we will be travelling, and I am fussy where I eat fish from.
I don't eat meat ever but I do like to point out that fish is actually also meat - it is the flesh of an animal.
Nai, I think it's red meat that shouldn't be eaten on Good Friday, not just meat in general.
I'm not religious, but I don't eat red meat on Good Friday, out of respect for those who are religious. It doesn't mean anything to me, but it does for them, so this is my way of saying I respect their beliefs.
Sorry, I should have put red meat in my title. Can someone change it?
No.
I am not Christian. We have eaten the same meal every Good Friday since I was born, because my mum was Catholic.
I am not Chrisitian. Doesn't mean it hasn't become a tradition in my family, regardless of its religious roots for many.
No, I don't.
Yes, we eat red meat. I didn't for years, as a kid and teenager (because mum was head cook!), even though we are not religious, although my mum claims we're Anglican, but we have never gone to church or followed any other kind of religious things. Now that I am in charge of cooking most of the food in the house, we eat what ever we feel like.
If I were in the presence of someone who follows a religion which requires some sort of special thing (like eating fish on Good Friday) I woudl likely do it, considering it wasn't offensive to me in any way. It's usually a simple thing to do and makes everyone happy!
I eat what ever I please, to my parents disgust.
I remember the story from school, but not well enough to explain it very well. Jesus turned one loaf of bread & one fish into enough to feed hundreds. I think this is why it is fish.
I always thought it was fish only, no chicken or pork either.
We always grew up eating fish & prawns Good Friday. I don't have an issue with it either way. My kids have never been fish/seafood eaters though, so it depends for us. I try to eat fish though.
My parents owned a takeaway shop for 10 years & Good Friday was our biggest day for burgers. Not fish or veggie burgers. Beef burgers.
e eat whatever we feel like. I grew up with fish on Fridays. Mum was raised a Catholic so still clung to some of the traditions.
I have been told off for it. Was eating a venison burger from a food van(who must have had no issue with serving red meat on Good Friday). The people telling me off were not the type to live by Christian ideals in their every day life. I found it so hypocritical.
There is a lot more to eating fish than Good Friday. In Elizabethian Times many laws were passed to do with eating fish. More to do with raising money for the navy than religion.
I have eaten red meat in the past, DS birthday falls around Easter and if we have his party on food Friday then we cater for all types of meat eaters.
But, some years, like today, I use it as an excuse to splurge on some really nice fish and shellfish.
We did have twiggy omelettes for brekky tho
Ps, it's amazing how many people will tell you they must only eat fish for dinner on Good Friday, but are happy to start the day with bacon and eggs.
I pulled a few of my older relatives up for this 2 years ago when they tried to tell me DS shouldn't have been eating sausages on GF night.
I don't normally, just because it's an awesome excuse to pig out on seafood! I did yesterday though.. I'm not religious so it makes no difference to me.
I never used to until I met DH and it was a big thing to do in his family. Even though it's probably a traditional Catholic thing to do (Dh's family are Methodist) I think it's still adopted by most Christian religions in some form as a throwback to fasting rituals during Lent. And is the case with most religious practices, it's been bastardised to the point where no one really knows why certain things are *done*, they just are.
So we do it every year, if for no other reason than it's the only time we can get guaranteed fresh seafood out here.
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