If every person living in New York City chose a McDonald’s cheeseburger
instead of a Big Mac for lunch today, they would save over 1.9 billion
calories — IN ONE DAY! That’s equal to about 274 tons of body fat. Can
you see why the NYC public health department has just legislated the
listing of calorie counts on restaurant menus?
Read the full article.
While this is a great step, we argue that this is only part of the
solution. The other part is that people need to know what their daily
calorie limit is so that they can know how a 1,420 calorie lunch fits –
or not – into their total calorie allotment for the day. Let’s look at
this more closely:
A man walks into a Burger King in Chicago. He orders the combo meal
with the Whopper, large fries and a large soft drink. Grand total:
1,550 calories. He doesn’t even have a clue that he just ate 74% of his
total daily calories in one meal.
A second man walks into a Burger King New York City. This restaurant
lists the calories of each food item on the menu board. He sees that
the Junior Whopper, medium fries, and a medium soft drink all have
fewer calories than the big combo meal. Grand total: 970 calories.
Better than the guy in Chicago but he still ate nearly 50% of his daily
calorie total at lunch.
A third man walks into the same Burger King in NYC. He has learned from
the Stand Up & Eat web site, that he needs about 2,000 calories per
day to stay in calorie balance. He decides that he wants to keep his
calories about 1/3 of his daily calorie total (about 660 calories) so
he orders the grilled chicken salad and uses ½ of the ranch dressing.
That adds up to only 335 calories so he orders a diet coke and a small
fries for a grand total of 565 calories. He has about 100 calories
leftover to add to another meal or snack.
Here’s our argument. Providing calorie information on menus is a good
idea. At least people can see and compare the low to high calorie
options. But a recent report from the International Food Information
Council stated that only 11% of American adults know how many calories
they need in a day. So we need to make people aware of just how many
(or for most of us, how few) calories we need each day.
Let’s hope NYC – and other places – are successful in getting calorie
labeling in restaurants. In the meantime, calculate how many daily
calories you need. Send the calculator to people whom you think need to
know their calorie limits.
Would it make a difference to YOU if restaurants listed calorie information on the menus?