Edinburgh Eatery Makes PETA’s List of the UK’s Top 10 Spots Serving Vegan Japanese Food
Edinburgh Eatery Makes PETA’s List of the UK’s Top 10 Spots Serving Vegan Japanese Food
Edinburgh – As Brits’ taste for Japanese food and interest in sustainable eating are on the rise, to help locals find sushi options that respect sea life and keep oceans healthy, PETA is naming Edinburgh-based eatery Shinsen Sushi one of its best spots for vegan Japanese food in the UK.
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The restaurant boasts a colourful vegan sushi menu and animal-friendly versions of traditional Japanese foods, such as mushroom ramen, pumpkin katsu, and aubergine teriyaki. Standouts include the red uramaki “inside-out rolls” filled with enoki mushrooms, sweet inari tofu, and kanpyo (pickled gourd) as well as the temaki hand rolls packed with oshinko (daikon radish), cucumber, and kaiso seaweed.
“From the enoki sushi rolls nestled in red pepper to the crispy pumpkin katsu, Shinsen Sushi’s vegan options bring the flavours of Japanese cuisine and protect animals,” says PETA Director of Vegan Corporate Projects Dawn Carr. “PETA’s top 10 picks will delight any foodie who loves sushi but can’t stomach the violence and cruelty of commercial fishing.”
PETA points out that killing “bycatch” – non-target marine animals who are accidentally caught in fishing nets – is one of the biggest threats to marine biodiversity worldwide and has resulted in widespread species extinction, habitat destruction, and irreversible damage to ocean ecosystems. Each person who goes vegan spares the lives of nearly 200 animals every year, including fish, who are known to feel pain as acutely as pigs or chickens, have long-term memories, are able to recognise themselves in a mirror, and can communicate with each other using low-frequency sounds that humans can hear only with special instruments.
Also on PETA’s list are Happy Maki in Brighton, Sushi Me Rollin’ in Newcastle, Nishimura in Swansea, Cottonopolis in Manchester, Temaki in Glasgow, Kyoto Sushi & Grill in Birmingham, 123V in London, Sakushi in Sheffield, and chain restaurants itsu and Wasabi (with several UK locations).
PETA – whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to eat” – opposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview. For more information, please visit PETA.org.uk or follow the group on Facebook, TikTok, X (formerly Twitter), or Instagram.
Contact:
Lucy Watson +44 (0) 20 7837 6327; [email protected]
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