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Group says U.S. restaurants promote "extreme eating"
By Will Dunham Mon Feb 26, 2:21 PM ET
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Many U.S. chain restaurants are promoting "extreme eating" with dishes that pack at least a day's worth of calories and fat,
without giving customers facts about their orders, a consumer group said on Monday.
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Displaying restaurant offerings including a cheese-laden chicken-and-pasta dish they dubbed "Angioplasta," officials at the Center for Science in the
Public Interest said such dishes help fuel national epidemics of obesity and heart disease.
They urged local, state and national governments to make restaurants list nutritional data on their menus.
Michael Jacobson, the group's executive director, took aim at "table-service" chain restaurants like Ruby Tuesday's and Uno Chicago Grill. Such places
increasingly stuff their dishes with extra unhealthy ingredients, he said.
"What we're finding is that table-service restaurants have launched into a whole new era of extreme eating," Jacobson said. "If we're going to deal
with the epidemic of obesity and the tremendous prevalence of heart attacks and strokes, we're going to have to do something about restaurant foods."
Jacobson's group often criticizes at a variety of restaurant foods. Some critics deride the group as self-appointed food police.
Jacobson showed reporters an appetizer offered by Uno Chicago Grill that he said contained 2,050 calories. It was a cross between a pizza and
stuffed potato skins, with a deep-dish pizza crust crammed with mozzarella and cheddar cheese, mashed potatoes, bacon and sour cream.
Ruby Tuesday's offers an entree called Fresh Chicken & Broccoli Pasta so loaded with cheese and other stuff that it tipped the scales at
2,060 calories and 128 grams of fat, he said. Jacobson dubbed it "Angioplasta," alluding to angioplasty, a medical procedure to open clogged
arteries.
One slice of The Cheesecake Factory's Chris's Outrageous Chocolate Cake had 1,380 calories, with layers of cake, brownies, coconut pecan
filling and chocolate-chip coconut cheesecake, the group said.
The average daily calorie requirement is about 2,000 for women and 2,500 for men.
The trade group National Restaurant Association said many restaurants provide nutritional information about their menus, and nearly all have healthy
dishes available.
"Pointing to a select few menu items at a select few restaurants as being high in calories, and generalizing that to all restaurant fare is
misleading, inaccurate and does the public a grave disservice," the association said in a statement.
Jacobson said restaurants have had more than enough time to voluntarily provide nutritional data such as calorie, fat and salt content but many do not
-- and those that do often make the data hard to find.
"Restaurants have every right to make these foods and you have every right to eat them," Jacobson said. "But I think at the very least these
restaurants should give consumers the information that would enable them to make some decent eating choices."
If I fail math, there goes my chance at a good job and a happy life full of hard work.
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upyerbum
Posting Freak
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Registered: 10-14-2005
Location: Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
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When I go out to drop some cash in a restaraunt I don't care what's in it as long as its good and there's lots of it.
Well, its this place where nobody works, and the pigs don\'t give you any shit. Everyone smokes weed and gets drunk all day. Its a place where
cunts like me and you can truly take it easy and relax. Know what I mean?
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CR83
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I don't hold Restaurants responsible at all. As long as they tell us what the stats are on a dish. Similar to people who sue the tobacco industry.
How the fuck do you not know eat this shit and smoking that shit is bad?
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Kid Ugly
Senior Member
Posts: 738
Registered: 8-28-2005
Location: North Jersey
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Quote: | Originally posted by ChrisReed83
I don't hold Restaurants responsible at all. As long as they tell us what the stats are on a dish. Similar to people who sue the tobacco industry.
How the fuck do you not know eat this shit and smoking that shit is bad? |
Excellent point. As much as I'm an advocate for eating healthy and living a healthy life, I don't agree with the banning of trans-fats and such like
that. Are we really that far gone that the government has to play mommy and tell us what we can and cannot eat? People need to start taking some
fucking responsibility for themselves. You wanna eat Big Macs every day? Fine, go ahead. Just don't come crying to me about your health problems later
blaming everyone and everything but yourself.
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