I think you would be appalled at how many calories certain things have.But in all honesty, i think it would be wonderful if all places did have such info. Just to see how bad of a diet i'm eating.![]()
I think you would be appalled at how many calories certain things have.But in all honesty, i think it would be wonderful if all places did have such info. Just to see how bad of a diet i'm eating.![]()
ingredients I think are important, for someone like myself who won't consume any animal derivatives, I like to know exactly what is in my food. People don't always know what constitutes an animal derivative, and can be quite flippant about it if they have no problem with it themselves.
ingredients I think are important, for someone like myself who won't consume any animal derivatives, I like to know exactly what is in my food. People don't always know what constitutes an animal derivative, and can be quite flippant about it if they have no problem with it themselves.
But to be analytic of calories and nutrition, I think is over the top. You don't go to a restaurant for a chemistry lesson. You can get a rough idea of the nutritional quality from an ingredients list I think.
Also, if things are made to order, there is no fixed recipe, so you can only roughly estimate it's nutritional information. So much so that to tag some options with a "low calorie" icon, and other icons for "diabetic safe", or whatever, seems more realistic than a load of numbers.
They shouldn't have to. People should just know better than to eat things which are obviously full of fat/sugar. It's not hard to figure out which things are bad for you. People will still eat unhealthily regardless of how good the labelling is. The nanny state is bad enough as it is.
This is exactly the sort of thing imposed by a nanny state. The populace must be too stupid to know that fried foods have high fat content so let's make a law that forces business to spend money to find and publish that INFORMATION on their menu. It's positively absurd. If you're that worried about eating healthy, you shouldn't be at any restaurant.They shouldn't have to. People should just know better than to eat things which are obviously full of fat/sugar. It's not hard to figure out which things are bad for you. People will still eat unhealthily regardless of how good the labelling is. The nanny state is bad enough as it is.
Oh STFU about the "nanny state". All that is being asked for is INFORMATION to allow people to make fully informed choices about the foods they eat.
I was under the impression that restaurants had that information available upon request.
So, what you don’t know won’t hurt you, right? Adopt the same philosophy as us non-Orthodox American Jews: Pork and shellfish are kosher as long as they’re in Chinese food.I don't need to know how much cholesterol is in my butter, but I would like to know which food has butter in it. I would also like to know if lard is used or beef stock, as I am a vegetarian.
No way.
It would be insanely expensive to do for every item on a changing seasonal menu. It would basically force restaurants to make the same thing, all the time. Fine for the chains who do that anyway, and can easily incorporate it into their overheads, but it would be prohibitively expensive/time-consuming for independent restaurants with changing seasonal menus or with varying specials of the day.
t want to see unchanging menus and chain restaurants squeezing the better restaurants out.
It would be nice if an approximation (since serving sizes always vary somewhat) was available at the restaurant for those who want it but mandatory? Nope.
for the most part, it's common sense, isn't it? If the protion size is huge, it's probably more than what would be considered as one serving in any other packaging so even if it's a generally healthy item, eating the equivalent of four servings would probably be a Bad Thing. The heavy sauces and majorly processed foods are likely to be the high-calorie/unhealthy items and the minimally processed items will generally be better as long as you don't pile on other stuff like salad dressings and mayo.
Sadly, these days common sense is massively uncommon.
Jan
This is exactly the sort of thing imposed by a nanny state. The populace must be too stupid to know that fried foods have high fat content so let's make a law that forces business to spend money to find and publish that INFORMATION on their menu. It's positively absurd. If you're that worried about eating healthy, you shouldn't be at any restaurant.They shouldn't have to. People should just know better than to eat things which are obviously full of fat/sugar. It's not hard to figure out which things are bad for you. People will still eat unhealthily regardless of how good the labelling is. The nanny state is bad enough as it is.
Oh STFU about the "nanny state". All that is being asked for is INFORMATION to allow people to make fully informed choices about the foods they eat.
I think this would place an unreasonable financial and operational burden on independent restauranteurs.
Didn't say I didn't. I said it would be nice if the information was available but I didn't want it mandatory. I don't want menus that look like the back of a soup can with nutritional information. I don't want the governmental support mechanism that would be necessary to check and ensure that the information was accurate. I read an article the other day that somebody writing a new diet book checked some of the calorie info provided in an area (New York?) where that info has to be on the menus now and it's frequently as much as 20% off. What good is inaccurate information?Why do you not want diners to have MORE information to make informed food choices?
That's true. Cottage cheese has a higher sodium content than one would expect from its taste, for instance. So what? If it's that important to keep track of so closely that you have to monitor it for everything that goes into your mouth, carry a pocket calorie/nutrient guide and work it out for yourself. Don't place the burden on businesses already overburdened by bureaucratic red tape as it is. For most of us, knowing that most restaurant portions are usually enough for multiple measured servings is enough.It's not that easy. Some foods are higher in certain aspects than their bulk would indicate. A deceptively small amount of product can have extremely high amounts of carbs, or salts, or fats.
Most of them are likely to care more that one more bureacratic regulation has just added a buck to their favorite meal.Unreasonable as opposed to diners not being able to make fully informed food choices?
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