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Restaurants Promote "X-treme Eating"Huge Portions, High Fat Content Can Cause Big Trouble |
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February 27, 2007
Those aren't typos. It's more like par for the course at Ruby Tuesday, On the Border, the Cheesecake Factory, and countless other top table-service chain restaurants. But since those chains make almost zero nutrition information available on menus, their customers don't have a clue that they might be getting a whole day's worth of calories in a single dish, or several days' worth in the whole meal. And rather than compete to make their products healthier, restaurant chains are competing with each other to make their appetizers, entrees, and desserts bigger, badder, and cheesier than ever before. "Burgers, pizzas, and quesadillas were never health foods to begin with, but many restaurants are transmogrifying these foods into ever-more harmful new creations, and then keeping you in the dark about what they contain," said Michael F. Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI). "Now we see lasagna with meatballs on top; ice cream with cookies, brownies, and candy mixed in; ‘Ranchiladas,' bacon cheeseburger pizzas, buffalo-chicken-stuffed quesadillas, and other hybrid horribles that are seemingly designed to promote obesity, heart disease, and stroke." Some of the "X-Treme Eating" options highlighted in the March issue of CSPI's Nutrition Action Healthletter include:
Though fast-food chains or coffee shops typically serve much smaller portions than these and other major table-service restaurants, they too can provide some startlingly high-calorie items. A venti-sized White Chocolate Mocha and a blueberry scone from Starbucks would provide 1,100 calories -- or about as much as one would find in a Burger King bacon double cheeseburger, medium fries, and medium Coke. "Americans eat out on average about four meals a week," said CSPI nutrition policy director Margo G. Wootan. "Studies show that women who eat out more than five times a week eat 300 more calories per day on average than women who eat out less often. With dishes like these, it's easy blow your diet not just for the day but for the whole week." As a result of action move by the New York City Board of Health and the support of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, many chain restaurants that operate in the Big Apple will be required to list calories on menus and menu boards starting this summer. CSPI says the time is ripe for other cities, states, and Congress to pass Menu Education and Labeling (MEAL) legislation. Such bills, which have been introduced in 19 cities and states in recent years, would apply only to standardized menu items at chain restaurants. Councilmember Phil Mendelson of the District of Columbia has announced he will reintroduce legislation that would require chain restaurants operating in the nation's capital to list calories on fast-food menu boards, and calories, saturated plus trans fat, sodium, and carbohydrates on printed menus. Only chains with 10 or more locations nationally would be covered by the ordinance, not smaller chains or independent restaurants, and only for standardized menu items, not special orders or daily specials. "Obesity, diabetes, and other diet-related diseases shorten the lifespan of too many of our citizens, and exact an enormous share of our health-care dollars," said Mendelson. "Menu labeling, like any one thing, won't solve the obesity epidemic, but it's one more thing that would help consumers make the healthier choices, if that's what they want to do." Federal MEAL Acts were introduced in the U.S. House and Senate in the last Congress and are expected to be reintroduced this year. "When nutrition labeling took effect for packaged foods, it revolutionized the supermarket, and greatly expanded the number of healthy options for shoppers to choose from," said U.S. Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-CT), the MEAL Act's lead sponsor in the House. "Nutrition labeling at chain restaurants would help Americans exercise personal responsibility and encourage the restaurant industry to exercise corporate responsibility." While McDonald's, Burger King, and other fast-food chains publish nutrition brochures, they're often hard to find in restaurants or are absent altogether, according to CSPI. And while some table-service chains may list a little nutrition information for lighter fare, none list nutrition information for all of their standardized items. But, those occasional steps in the right direction do prove that big chain restaurants will be easily able to comply with MEAL Act-style labeling laws, despite the claims to the contrary by industry lobbyists, according to CSPI. The numbers in "X-treme Eating" come from the companies themselves, though obviously not from the companies' menus. Report Your Experience
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