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Wednesday, 6 August, 2008 8:35 PM
America's Worst
Restaurants for Kids Revealed
Eat
This, Not That! Authors Grade 43 National Chains; 6 Receive an 'F'

Photo
courtesy of www.barnesandnoble.com
NEW
YORK -- Which kids' menus are most likely to
make your children fat? A year-long study of children's meals has
revealed vast dietary differences among America's favorite fast-food
and
sit-down chain restaurants, according to the authors of the new
book EAT
THIS, NOT THAT! For Kids. Co-authors David Zinczenko and Matt Goulding
calculated calories, fat (trans- and saturated), and sodium, as
well as
the average number of calories per children's entree, and discovered
that many of America's most popular chain restaurants are nutritional
nightmares for America's children.
The authors
compared children's entrees; credited restaurants for having
healthy adult options that would appeal to the young palate; evaluated
healthy vegetable and fruit sides and drink options that go beyond
sugar-laden soda; and docked points for restaurants still dishing
out
unhealthy trans fats or for refusing to release any nutrition
information to their customers.The
result is a Restaurant Report Card that holds each food chain
accountable for the fare they're serving up -- to moms, dads, kids,
teens, and everybody else -- along with a survival strategy for
making
it through any meal unscathed.
Did your
favorite restaurant make the grade?
Chick-fil-A excels in
every category we tested for. With a slew of
low-calorie sandwiches, the country's "healthiest" chicken
nugget, a
variety of solid sides like fresh fruit and soup that can be substituted
into any meal, and nutritional brochures readily available for perusing
at each location, Chick-fil-A earns the award for America's Healthiest
Chain Restaurant (for kids, for the adults who drive them there,
plus
anybody else wise enough to make it their fast food choice).
Your Survival Strategy:
Even the smartest kid in the class can still fail a test, so be
on your toes at all times, even at Chik-fil-A. Limit salads with
ranch or Caesar dressings, any sandwich with bacon, and make milkshakes
a special treat, not an everyday beverage.
A menu based on lean
protein and vegetables is always going to score
well in our book. With more than half a dozen sandwiches under 300
calories, plus a slew of soups and healthy sides to boot, Subway
can
satisfy even the pickiest eater without breaking the caloric bank.
But, despite what Jared
may want you to believe, Subway is not
nutritionally infallible: Those rosy calorie counts posted on the
menu
boards include neither cheese nor mayo (add 160 calories per 6-inch
sub)
and some of the toasted subs, like the Meatball Marinara, contain
hefty
doses of calories, saturated fat, and sodium.
Your Survival Strategy:
Cornell researchers have discovered a "health halo" at
Subway, which refers to the tendency to reward yourself or your
kid with chips, cookies, and large soft drinks because the entree
is healthy. Avoid the halo, and all will be well.
With more than a dozen
healthy vegetable sides and lean meats like turkey and roast sirloin
on the menu, the low-cal, high-nutrient possibilities at Boston
Market are endless. But with nearly a dozen calorie-packed sides
and fatty meats like dark meat chicken and meat loaf (which contains
an unfathomable 55 ingredients!), it's almost as easy to construct
a lousy meal.
Your Survival Strategy:
There are three simple steps to nutritional salvation: 1) Start
with turkey, sirloin, or rotisserie chicken. 2) Add two noncreamy,
nonstarchy vegetable sides. 3) Ignore all special items, such as
pot pie and nearly all of the sandwiches.
Though not blessed with
an abundance of healthy options, Mickey D's
isn't burdened with any major calorie bombs, either. Kid standards
like
McNuggets and cheeseburgers are both in the acceptable 300-calorie
range.
Your Survival Strategy:
Apple Dippers and 2% milk with a small entree makes for a pretty
decent meal-on-the-go. McDonald's quintessential Happy Meal(R) makes
this possible -- just beware the usual French fries and soda pitfalls.
Adults should go for a Quarter Pounder without cheese.
Domino's suffers the
same pitfalls of any other pizza purveyor: too much
cheese, bread, and greasy toppings. If you don't order carefully,
your
child's pizza might come laden with more than 350 calories per slice.
To
its credit, Domino's does keep the trans fat out of the pizza, and
it
also offers the lowest-calorie thin crust option out there.
Your Survival Strategy:
Stick with the Crunchy Thin Crust pizzas sans sausage and pepperoni.
If your must order meat, ask for ham. And whenever possible, try
to sneak on a vegetable or two per pie.
BK has only four legitimate
kids' entrees on the menu, and none of them
-- French Toast Sticks, hamburger, mac and cheese, chicken tenders
--
are particularly healthy. And while the recent addition of Apple
Fries
provides a much-needed healthy side alternative for kids, the menu
is
still sullied with trans fats. BK pledged to follow in the wake
of
nearly every other chain restaurant and remove trans fats from the
menu
by the end of 2008, but so far, we've seen little action. In fact,
a
large order of Hash Browns has an outrageous 13 grams of the
heart-threatening fat, and even an order of Cini-minis will add
4.5
grams of trans fats to your kid's breakfast.
Your Survival Strategy:
Adults can sign on for the Whopper Junior and a
Garden Salad, and escape with only 365 calories. The best kids'
meal? A
4-piece Chicken Tenders(R), applesauce or Apple Fries, and water
or
milk. Beyond that, there is little hope of escaping unscathed.
We applaud Chipotle's
commitment to high-quality produce and fresh
meats, but even the most pristine ingredients can't limit the damage
wrought by the massive portion sizes the chain serves up. The lack
of
options for kids means young eaters are forced to tussle with one
of
Chipotle's behemoth burritos or taco platters, which can easily
top
1,000 calories. Don't think you'll escape by ordering up a salad,
either
-- even a leafy bowl at Chipotle can knock out more than half a
day's
worth of calories.
Your Survival Strategy:
Stick to the crispy tacos or burrito bowls, or
saw a burrito in thirds.
| Applebee's,
IHOP, Olive Garden, Outback, Red Lobster, T.G.I. Friday's |
GRADE:
F |
These titans of the restaurant
industry are among the last national
chains that don't provide nutritional information on their dishes.
Even
after years of communication with their representatives, we still
hear
the same old excuses: it's too pricey, it's too time-consuming,
it's
impossible to do accurately because their food is so fresh. Our
response
is simple: If every other chain restaurant in the country can do
it,
then why can't they? Recent New York legislation requiring these
restaurants to run calorie counts on their menus gave diners a glimpse
of what these establishments are hiding: At Friday's, no fewer than
nine
sandwiches and ten appetizers topple the 1000-calorie barrier; at
IHOP,
the "healthiest" entree-size salad has a staggering 1050
calories; and
at Outback, even a simple order of salmon will wipe out 75% of your
day's caloric allotment.
Your Survival Strategy:
Write letters, make phone calls, beg, scream,
and plead for these restaurants to provide nutritional information
on
all of their products. Ask them why they refuse to tell us the truth!
For a comprehensive A-to-F
breakdown on 30 other chain restaurants --
plus the best and worst meals at each -- see the complete EAT THIS,
NOT
THAT! For Kids Restaurant Report Card at eatthis.com/restaurants.
EAT THIS, NOT THAT! For
Kids is available nationwide on August 19th.
DAVID ZINCZENKO, SVP/Editor-in-Chief
of Men's Health magazine, is the
author of New York Times bestsellers The Abs Diet and The Abs Diet
for
Women. Once an overweight child, Zinczenko has become one of the
nation's leading experts on health and fitness. He is a regular
contributor to the Today show and has appeared on Oprah, Ellen,
Good
Morning America, and Primetime Live.
MATT GOULDING is the
food and nutrition editor of Men's Health. He has
cooked and eaten his way around the world, touching down in Allentown,
Pennsylvania, where he divides most of his time between keyboard
and
stovetop.
Source: Rodale; EAT THIS, NOT THAT! For Kids
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