I looked at the ingredients, and I can't see any trace of Vegetarian. False advertising, Beef Burgers contain Beef (Sometimes Horse), Chicken Burgers contain Chicken, I think it is about time that Vegetarian Burgers must contain Vegetarian.
Latest comments (18)
robm612
2 Feb 17#18
In what way is it bad for you?
"Systematic review, meta-analysis and regression of randomised controlled trials reporting an association between an intake of circa 25 g soya protein per day and blood cholesterol"
The inclusion of modest amounts soya protein (ca. 25 g) into the diet of adults with normal or mild hypercholesterolaemia resulted in small, highly significant reductions in total and LDL cholesterol, equivalent to ca. 6% LDL reduction. This practically achievable intake, particularly when combined with other dietary measures, can make a useful contribution to blood cholesterol management.
Basically soya protein reduces cholesterol, so i would be interested to hear what makes you think its bad for you.
NikLP
2 Feb 17#17
My best mate's funeral tomorrow. He swore by these. I bought some once. We nearly had a fight. They're ****ing awful; like partially reconstituted cardboard with bits in. They're not a "juicy lucy" style burger either! No "filling" just cheese (allegedly) mixed in with the ... stuff. :neutral_face:
ohdearohdear
2 Feb 171#14
These are so bad. Usually i really like veggie burgers but these are really bad :disappointed:
Superscrimper to ohdearohdear
2 Feb 17#16
totally agree.
tomj777
1 Feb 172#11
We've had a vegetarian friend staying with us recently (and will continue for a while).
Mainly for the simplicity of cooking, we are now an inadvertent vegetarian household.
Surprisingly, we are quite enjoying the change in diet.
However, we've discovered three unpalatable products for lazy days... These, some god-awful sausages and the worst of them all, burgers with some (can't recall, maybe) BBQ sauce. All of which were part of the Linda McCartney brand.
I know it's subjective and if I'm honest, our guest was okay with the sausages (we were not). We'd bought 2 boxes of each - the remainder went to, oh, I'm ashamed to say, landfill.
Superscrimper to tomj777
2 Feb 17#15
I agree, these are horrible. l threw them in the bin too.
DennisG
2 Feb 17#13
That is something I hear quite often about these - definitely the meat substitute item that has the most meat-eating fans in my experience
zx636r
1 Feb 172#1
Rehydrated Textured Soya Protein (64%)...... hmmmm, taaaaaasty.
dijital to zx636r
2 Feb 17#12
Lol you loser, I'm a meat eater and these burgers are frikkin' delicious.
bytemaster
1 Feb 173#10
I looked at the ingredients, and I can't see any trace of Vegetarian. False advertising, Beef Burgers contain Beef (Sometimes Horse), Chicken Burgers contain Chicken, I think it is about time that Vegetarian Burgers must contain Vegetarian.
LizzyUK
1 Feb 17#9
They are mainly soya so yep very bad for you.
Donnellios
1 Feb 17#7
They are good but sooooooooooooo bad for you.
JoanWilder to Donnellios
1 Feb 17#8
I thought they were healthy? Are they worse than beef burgers?
dereklogan7
1 Feb 17#6
I'm no veggy but I'm going to get some and see what they're like. :smiley:
DWWM
1 Feb 17#5
Also on offer for £1 at Morrison's.
aninginaneana
1 Feb 171#4
These are great. Thanks (just bought some today in Tesco, typical!).
Opening post
Ingredients
Rehydrated Textured Soya Protein (64%), Rapeseed Oil, Onion (8%), Mozzarella Cheese (Milk) (8%), Seasoning (Yeast Extract, Malted Barley Extract, Onion Powder, Flavouring, Salt, Garlic Powder), Stabiliser: Methyl Cellulose, Chickpea Flour, Flavouring (Yeast Extract, Salt, Sunflower Oil, Acid: Citric Acid), Garlic Purée, Malted Barley Extract, Onion Powder
Top comments
Latest comments (18)
"Systematic review, meta-analysis and regression of randomised controlled trials reporting an association between an intake of circa 25 g soya protein per day and blood cholesterol"
The inclusion of modest amounts soya protein (ca. 25 g) into the diet of adults with normal or mild hypercholesterolaemia resulted in small, highly significant reductions in total and LDL cholesterol, equivalent to ca. 6% LDL reduction. This practically achievable intake, particularly when combined with other dietary measures, can make a useful contribution to blood cholesterol management.
Basically soya protein reduces cholesterol, so i would be interested to hear what makes you think its bad for you.
Mainly for the simplicity of cooking, we are now an inadvertent vegetarian household.
Surprisingly, we are quite enjoying the change in diet.
However, we've discovered three unpalatable products for lazy days... These, some god-awful sausages and the worst of them all, burgers with some (can't recall, maybe) BBQ sauce. All of which were part of the Linda McCartney brand.
I know it's subjective and if I'm honest, our guest was okay with the sausages (we were not). We'd bought 2 boxes of each - the remainder went to, oh, I'm ashamed to say, landfill.