this post was submitted on 03 Mar 2024
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Eggs aren't fertilized and thus aren't embryos tho.
I already checked they can eat fertilized eggs as well.
I mean, unless people are eating Filipino Balut on a regular basis.... I don't think that the vast majority of eggs are fertilized.
I guess Balut is a good question and the island / city of Ilo Ilo is predominantly Catholic. So I could ask around lol. But honestly, I avoid that food. It just doesn't look right....
I looked it up and it doesn't matter for the purposes of lent if it is fertilized or not
Could you give a source? Not calling you a liar just curious
https://www.stanthony-hughson.org/question/are-eggs-considered-meat-catholic/
I don't see any specific mention of fertilized eggs in that page. I don't think it's safe to assume just because they don't explicitly mention it that the rule is the same.
I think it's fine. Whatever isn't explicitly forbidden is always permitted and at the same time it is almost certain that everyone who eats eggs has had a fertilized one at least once.
I mean you say that but I'm pretty sure my mom's island is the only place in the world where fertilized eggs are eaten on a regular basis and also has a majority Catholic population.
And I've never heard of this situation really coming up. I'd expect the answer to be written in Ilocano as well.
How and where did you look this up?
I found out about it this week and just looked around online plus asked a Pinay friend.
Maybe not anymore, but they were for thousands of years while this has been practiced.
Eatus the fetus? 🤔
Feed us fetus!
Instructions unclear, feeding you ground feet.
I believe you, but do you have a source for that?
Pretty sure that's a US thing or maybe more regulated markets. I've seen videos of like street markets where a food vendor cracks an egg over their grill and a formed chicken pops out. They have to quickly flick them off.
Balut (Aborted Duck eggs) is straight up a delicacy in my Mom's home island and the island is mostly Catholic. So it's an actual issue.
It's literally sold like ice cream on that island. Every street corner, the locals love it.
I ate balut growing up and we don't eat it at Lent as it's considered meat. Tiny, tiny bird meat.
Thanks!! I'm probably going to ask my mom later but good to hear a response earlier!
Since when has consent meant anything to the Church?
They can find a loophole for eating an omelette a few days a year but not one to save women from dying?
Wrong. Eggs can be fertilized. Many people eat them without even realizing.
It's unlikely a factory farm would bother to have a rooster around after the hens start laying.
We're talking religion here, so I guess it could be a virgin fertilization...
They also don't have meat.
Explain "meat spots" then