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Write About Meatless Monday on Patch

Do you skip the meat on Mondays? Contribute on Patch with recipes, tips, tricks and veggie-friendly restaurants.

 

Are you joining Meatless Monday, the worldwide trend to avoid eating meat once a week to improve health and fight obesity?

Or maybe you are a full-time vegetarian or vegan who wants to help Meatless Monday followers find recipes or restaurants where they can skip the meat once a week?

Either way, we want you! Patch is looking for Meatless Monday bloggers to share stories, tips, tricks, recipes and other ideas about making the start of the week healthier for you and your family.

If you want to start blogging on Patch, just go to our Local Voices and click the "Post on Patch" button. You are free to post as often as you wish, and you own the rights to all of your own content.

Meatless Monday History

During World War I, Herbert Hoover, then head of the U.S. Food Administration, campaigned for families to limit consumption of scarce items—including meat—so there’d be enough for the troops.

A Saturday Evening Post article in 1929 reported on the movement: “Americans began to look seriously into the question of what and how much they were eating. Lots of people discovered for the first time that they could eat less and feel no worse—frequently for the better.”

The campaign returned during World War II when Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Missouri native Harry S Truman rationed meat, but Americans haven’t seen much of Meatless Monday until 2003. Sid Lerner, an advertising professional who helped develop the “Squeeze the Charmin” campaign for Charmin toilet paper, revived the idea almost eight years ago as a public health campaign.

“Using President Roosevelt and the rationing of meat during World War II as inspiration, we dusted it off, using alliteration as our guide,” Lerner said in a 2010 interview with Good Magazine. “Monday is the day where we pick ourselves up after a weekend of indulgence and head for the gym. It's all about incremental changes, cutting back a little here, a little there.”

But why go meatless? Health, for you and the planet, advocates say. Red and processed meats are associated with colon cancerheart diseasetype 2 diabetes and obesity. Switching to a plant-based diet also reduces a meal’s carbon footprintminimizes water usage and reduces fossil fuel dependence.

If you haven’t heard of Meatless Mondays, don’t worry. The idea “hasn’t quite picked up in St. Louis yet,” according to Sauce Magazine, a local culinary magazine that runs a Meatless Monday column.

“Meatless Mondays is a movement that’s building across the country, one built not around a hatred of meat or a stance against the way animals are treated but rather a love for vegetables—and the health benefits that come along with them,” writes Sauce Magazine in each column.

Related Topics: Local Voices
Do you want to contribute on Patch? Tell us in the comments.

Rob McLean

2:43 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012

I went vegetarian for several months this year. It was an interesting experiment. I intended to do a year without meat, but realized I like cheeseburgers way too much. WAY TOO MUCH....

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