I involve feedback on Lightlife veggie products, specifically the veggie bacon & veggie cutlets Please Help!?

I am wondering what they taste approaching? (I have tried the veggie bologna, but didn't concern for it at all -the piece, smell & texture were gross) However, I do want to try the bacon & cutlets because someone told me they fondness fairly clothed, but I would prefer vegetarians' opinions. Can you suggest other veggie products that are excellent?

Answer:
Lightlife smart bacon is vastly good. I close to it better when it's crisp and it's great alone or on a sandwich (BLT)
The Gimme Lean sausage is very appropriate too!

My all time favorite is Quorn tender. They have a great texture and are exceedingly versatile. I use them within stir-fries, salads, casseroles and so much more.
I prefer Tofurkey deli slices but you won't find them as efficiently as Lightlife. Wholefoods and smaller healthfood stores have it. The bologna slices are icky from lightlife because they smell resembling garlic. Also, eat anything you try on bread before you negotiator. Morningstar farms stuff is well brought-up and mainstream, although most of it isn't lacto-vegetarian.
As a meat eater married to lacto-vegetarian, The house rule is meat outside the home, but not in it.

As a result, my wife cooks veggie sausage links or patty with a tofu scramble for breakfast.

I've tried masses brands including lightlife, and have found that Morning Star products taster best. Their Sausage links satisfy any cravings I might hold in the morning, and in a minute prefer them over real sausage.

As for cold cuts, try Tofurky brand. They are excellent and hold a great taste! Try their smoked tofurky flavor. They also gross a great thanksgiving "turkey".

Best of luck.
litelife turkey have a mild flavor and makes a great sandwich. But if you are looking for amazing lacto-vegetarian products try the morning star farms chain the sauage and bacon are so tasty! oh and the unproved grillers burgers.
Boca, and Morning Star are my fav's Boca is apposite for there vegi cheese burgers, false ground beef, and Morning Star have sausagepatties , and chicken parmisan of course adjectives meatless.
Quorn is not lacto-vegetarian and I wouldn't touch it. The bologna is gross. I have never like it and I've been lacto-vegetarian for 8 years. The Canadian bacon is pretty good. I use that contained by place of the bologna. The salami and pepperoni are good also. Meat analogs are a chance thing, but they own a place and that is to back transition people into veggie/vegan lifestyles. Tofurky is the best hand down-although it makes your pee smell(honest!). The tempeh bacon is yummy and so is the smart bacon. The riblets from Boca are scarily similar to the McRib from my youth. And Boca is owned by the company formerely agreed as RJ Reynolds-yikes! Morningstar is very glib to find, and although I'm not big into their stuff, they have these untried vegan staek and chicken strips and they are pretty mouth-watering! The steak is really peppery so watch out.
I'm sorry I can't answer this question specifically, since I haven't tried these distinctive products, but I can recommend a good veggie bacon: Morningstar Farms. It's the best of the two or three I've tried. Someone else recommended Tofurky sandwich meat, and it really is excellent, and my favorite that I've tried. For cutlets, the closest entry I guess I eat are Morningstar's Chik Patties. They're comparatively good, especially on a bun near some barbecue sauce!

Lightlife does make something that I undeniably love - their Smart Strips Chicken Strips. I throw them in soups (especially Asian-style noodle soups - yum!) or stir-fries, and they're really spicy. Their Gimme Lean hamburger- and sausage-style crumbles pretty much rock my world. I use those in things similar to Hamburger Helper and pasta sauces. There are also several brands of frozen veggie meatballs that are quite angelic, and I believe it's Yves that makes a luscious veggie Italian-style hot dog.

Isn't it about a million times easier to be a lacto-vegetarian these days than it be even five years ago? Viva la soybean!

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