America's Best and Worst Resturants

tim_fitbuilt4life
tim_fitbuilt4life Posts: 301 Member
edited September 22 in Food and Nutrition
Eating out invariably raises a number of tricky questions: sit-down or drive-thru? Burgers or pizza? Thin or stuffed crust? And if you're dining with your family, add the biggest question of all: Will the food we eat today bring a fatter tomorrow for our kids? And fewer tomorrows for the rest of us?

So the choice between McDonald’s and Burger King shouldn’t be based solely on whether you're more terrified by the scary clown Ronald McDonald or that creepy masked Burger King. Choosing one over the other could be the difference of hundreds of calories in a meal, more than 10 unnecessary pounds over the course of a year, and countless health woes over the course of a lifetime.

During more than a year of research, my coauthor and I discovered vast dietary discrepancies between many of the places Americans love to eat most. So to help you separate the commendable from the deplorable, we put 43 major chain restaurants under the nutritional microscope — both for your benefit, and that of your family.

How did we judge the restaurants? We started by calculating the average number of calories per kid entrée, then rewarded restaurants for having healthy adult options that would appeal to the young palette, and for providing healthy vegetable sides and non-soda drink options. Finally, we docked points for those restaurants still harboring nasty trans fats.

The result is a Restaurant Report Card that holds each eating establishment fully accountable for the fare they’re serving up to all of us — moms, dads, kids, teens, and twentysomethings — along with a survival strategy for making it through any meal unscathed.

Did your favorite restaurant make the grade?

A
Chick-fil-A
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. Skip salads with ranch or Caesar dressings, any sandwich with bacon, and avoid milkshakes at all costs.

A-
Subway
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 entrée is healthy. Avoid the halo, and all will be well.

B+
Boston Market
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, 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.

B
McDonald’s
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 entrée makes for a pretty decent meal-on-the-go. McDonald’s quintessential Happy Meal® makes this possible — just beware the usual French fries and soda pitfalls. Adults should go for a Quarter Pounder without cheese.

C+
Domino’s
Domino’s suffers the same pitfalls of any other pizza purveyor: too much cheese, bread, and greasy toppings. If you don’t order carefully, you might bag your child a pizza with more than 350 calories per slice. To its credit, Domino’s does keep the trans fat off 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, make sure it's ham. And whenever possible, try to sneak on a vegetable or two per pie.

C
Burger King
BK has only four legitimate kids’ entrées 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.

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®, applesauce or Apple Fries, and water or milk. Beyond that, there is little hope of escaping unscathed.

D
Chipotle
We applaud Chipotle’s commitment to high-quality produce and fresh meats, but even the most pristine ingredients can’t dampen the damage wrought by the massive portion sizes served up here. The lack of options for kids means young eaters are forced to tussle with one of Chipotle’s massive burritos or taco platters, which can easily top 1,000 calories.

Your Survival Strategy: Stick to the crispy tacos or burrito bowls, or saw a burrito in half.

F
Applebee’s, IHOP, Olive Garden, Outback, Red Lobster, T.G.I. Friday’s
These titans of the restaurant industry are among the last national chains to not provide nutritional information on their dishes. Even after years of communication with their representatives, we still here 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?

Your Survival Strategy: Write letters, make phone calls, beg, scream, and plead for these restaurants to provide nutritional information on all of their products. Here are the phone numbers for each of the restaurants that refuse to tell us the truth!

Applebees: email, 888-59APPLE; IHOP: email, 888-240-6055 (press 1 for Guest Visit issues); Olive Garden: email, 800-331-2729; Outback: email, 757-493-7662; Red Lobster: email, 800-LOBSTER; T.G.I. Friday's: email, 800-FRIDAYS

And for a comprehensive A-to-F breakdown on 30 other chain restaurants, see the complete Eat This, Not That! For Kids Restaurant Report Card. Or check out the adult versions of the Restaurant Report Cards here

Replies

  • RaeN81
    RaeN81 Posts: 534 Member
    Very cool info! Thanks for posting it.
  • dmmihelcic
    dmmihelcic Posts: 161 Member
    tcharrisjr,
    Thanks for the info. You are a wealth of information! Wish I had read this before I went to Olive Garden last week. Who new how bad their salad was?
    For now if I eat fast food, I stick to Subway salads with only vinegar as dressing.
    I have had to completely swear off Indian food. My god its good, and there in lies the problem.
    Dave
  • lkm111
    lkm111 Posts: 629 Member
    Love Chick-Fil-A! I had the best grilled sandwich I have had in a long time. I also ate the waffle fries, which probably are not the best for me, but I logged them and added some extra exercise that day. They were really good, too! :smile:
  • biglazydog
    biglazydog Posts: 15 Member
    Thanks for posting this very useful info.
  • janemartin02
    janemartin02 Posts: 2,653 Member
    Thanks for the info!!
  • frankbo25
    frankbo25 Posts: 206 Member
    IHop is finally starting to provide healthier options that they do provide info on. Just stay away from the omelets
  • AKosky585
    AKosky585 Posts: 607 Member
    Thanks for the info,although for here in Columbus Ohio at least, Olive Garden does provide a calorie amount on the menu under every item now...no fat grams or anything, but they are providing calories right on their menu now.
  • Stewie316
    Stewie316 Posts: 266 Member
    Just had Chick fil a for the first time a few days ago and it was awesome. Even though the fries aren't a healthy option, they're the best fast food fries ever. I got the small and threw half away before I started eating and it was still statisfing.
  • jhandley
    jhandley Posts: 118
    Yea the burrito bowl from chipotle wasnt near as bad as i thought it was going to be - of course i added sour cream but even then it wasnt bad! the rice isn't fried so that's a plus!
  • zeala
    zeala Posts: 119 Member
    Chipotle gets a bad grade because large portion? Stupid. I rather then eat half of their meal, and know it uses good ingredients than the others like McDonalds and Dominos. When it comes to food it really isn't always just about the calories each meal has, but the quality of ingredients used.
    I just can't take a list seriously that give McDonalds a B
  • kdiamond
    kdiamond Posts: 3,329 Member
    Honestly, and I know everyone hates to hear it, is stay away from all of them!! It is nothing but processed and sodium laden garbage. Seriously!! I love to eat out but I limit it to once a week, and even then I try to eat at a natural, mom and pop place where the food is cooked in healthier ways. It is really tough to reach your goals when you're eating at these places.
  • nikhil_c8
    nikhil_c8 Posts: 100 Member
    Dont Find Taco Bell Lsited here...There Fresca Menu is quite good
  • SP0472
    SP0472 Posts: 193 Member
    Honestly, and I know everyone hates to hear it, is stay away from all of them!! It is nothing but processed and sodium laden garbage. Seriously!! I love to eat out but I limit it to once a week, and even then I try to eat at a natural, mom and pop place where the food is cooked in healthier ways. It is really tough to reach your goals when you're eating at these places.

    I agree with you. I cut all of it out of my diet mostly because I can't control how much I eat. The more I eat, the more I want of it and it's just too tempting.

    We have 2 mom&pop restaurants very close to home that make fabulous food - and they make it how you want. One place is owned by a Greek family so they specialize in a lot of grilled meats. So yummy! The other place serves Italian food. The pizza is really good - fresh ingredients, not greasy and they're skimpy on the cheese!
  • Great info! TFS!
  • kdiamond
    kdiamond Posts: 3,329 Member
    I agree with you. I cut all of it out of my diet mostly because I can't control how much I eat. The more I eat, the more I want of it and it's just too tempting.

    We have 2 mom&pop restaurants very close to home that make fabulous food - and they make it how you want. One place is owned by a Greek family so they specialize in a lot of grilled meats. So yummy! The other place serves Italian food. The pizza is really good - fresh ingredients, not greasy and they're skimpy on the cheese!

    That's great! We also have a brazilian steakhouse I love to go to, the one where they just walk around with all the meat you can eat! My theory is, I only eat out if the food is actually yummier than what I can make at home! Otherwise, I might as well just make it, then I know what's in it anyway! Win win
  • BullDozier
    BullDozier Posts: 237 Member
    I gotta disagree with you on Chipotle, for a couple of points.

    First, just like with Subway, you can put whatever you want on it, and leave whatever you want off. I can make a sub 500 calorie Chipotle burrito bowl just as easily as I can make a 1000+ calorie Subway sandwich. I'd also argue that the quality of meats at Chipotle are miles above the quality you'll get at Subway. Looking soley at calorie totals do not tell the whole health picture.

    As far as kids, Chipotle has flyers right inside the restaraunt with their "kids" options. They describe several (such as quesadillas, or fewer tacos than a full order) which would provide fewer calories, and a more kid sized meal than a full burrito. Also, they will pretty much make whatever you ask for. If you can think up a meal for your kids with the ingredients they have behind the counter, they will make it for you.

    I think you definitely miss the mark with your Chipotle grade.

    Edited to add:

    Chipotle burrito bowl with rice, black beans, chicken and green chili salsa; 455 calories, 1000 miligrams sodium.

    Subway 6" Ham sub on wheat with lettuce, tomato, onion & green pepper; only 290 calories, but 1200 miligrams sodium.

    I've eaten both of these, and that bowl will keep you filled a lot longer than the 6" sub.

    Let's pig out at both of these places, now. We think we're eating healthly, so lets throw everything on.

    To the bowl, we're going to add cheese, sour cream, guacamole and corn salsa and getting a bag of chips. We're now at 1085 calories and 2290 mg sodium.

    To the sub, we're getting a footlong, adding mayo, pickles, black olives, jalapenos, and cheese. Now we're at 912 calories and 3400 miligrams sodium (we don't even have a side of chips).

    I'll take Chipotle whether I'm being sensible or pigging out.
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