This is the answer by AI about the question "To which category is fish classified to":
In Western contexts, fish is generally NOT considered “meat” in everyday, culinary, or religious terms, even though biologically it is animal flesh.
Why fish is not meat:
Religious tradition (especially Catholic): Fish is allowed during Lent and fasting days because it is cold‑blooded and aquatic, while “meat” refers to warm‑blooded land animals and poultry.
Culinary practice: Kitchens and supermarkets separate “Meat” (butcher) from “Seafood” (fishmonger) – they are handled and cooked differently.
Everyday language: The word “meat” in daily use defaults to land animals; if you ask for “meat” in a store, you won’t be directed to the fish counter.
Dietary labels: There are clear distinctions –
Pescatarian: eats fish but no land meat.
Vegetarian: no fish nor meat.
Vegan: no animal products at all. Saying “no meat” does not imply “no fish.”
What fish IS categorized as:
Culinary: Seafood – alongside shellfish, in a separate category parallel to Meat and Poultry.
Biological: Fish (as a vertebrate group) – though scientifically it is muscle tissue, this definition is rarely used in daily life.
Religious/cultural: Aquatic life or cold‑blooded water dwellers.
Dietary identity: The protein source for Pescatarians – a distinct dietary group, not a subset of vegetarianism or meat‑eating.