How dare these restaurant chains not post nutritional information?
Replies
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Haven't there always been build your own pizzas on the menus? I remember that option since I was a kid. My family usually got pepperoni, olives, mushrooms and then anchovies on half.0
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This is turning into a good debate: when should restaurants be required to post nutritional info? Here are some options
- Make it entirely voluntary (never required)
- Required it for chains selling standardized items (the current requirement for 20 or more locations)
- Require it for all restaurants, all meals
I wonder if restaurants should be allowed to do their own estimates listed as such. It is pretty easy to do that with a variety of online tools (including MFP).0 -
Note that at one time, fast-food and other restaurants weren't required to reveal their ingredients to the public. Check out the ingredients for McDonalds "fries:"
FRENCH FRIES:
Ingredients: Potatoes, Vegetable Oil (Canola Oil, Soybean Oil, Hydrogenated Soybean Oil, Natural Beef Flavor [Wheat and Milk Derivatives]*, Citric Acid [Preservative]), Dextrose, Sodium Acid Pyrophosphate (Maintain Color), Salt. Prepared in Vegetable Oil (Canola Oil, Corn Oil, Soybean Oil, Hydrogenated Soybean Oil with TBHQ and Citric Acid added to preserve freshness), Dimethylpolysiloxane added as an antifoaming agent.0 -
I think it would depend on the requirements to establish - if they are providing a ballpark - i.e.
pizza a - 500-800cal (depending on customization) - all places could do this
pizza b - 564 cal (as written) - verified by an independent body - totally different story0 -
Jthanmyfitnesspal wrote: »This is turning into a good debate: when should restaurants be required to post nutritional info? Here are some options
- Make it entirely voluntary (never required)
- Required it for chains selling standardized items (the current requirement for 20 or more locations)
- Require it for all restaurants, all meals
I wonder if restaurants should be allowed to do their own estimates listed as such. It is pretty easy to do that with a variety of online tools (including MFP).
I think the way it is, is just fine...if you're a chain with more than 20 locations, you should have the resources whereby the requirement wouldn't be overbearing.
I don't think allowing a restaurant to just use a database like MFP would be any good...to be remotely accurate I think it needs to be sent to a lab as it is now. Even then there's a wide margin of error depending on who's cooking...the error rate just using some database would be even higher.
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Jthanmyfitnesspal wrote: »This is turning into a good debate: when should restaurants be required to post nutritional info? Here are some options
- Make it entirely voluntary (never required)
- Required it for chains selling standardized items (the current requirement for 20 or more locations)
- Require it for all restaurants, all meals
I wonder if restaurants should be allowed to do their own estimates listed as such. It is pretty easy to do that with a variety of online tools (including MFP).
voluntary ..
I don't want the government in my bedroom, dinner, personal life, etc...
People need to learn to use common sense and not turn to "big brother" government at every level of society...6 -
Jthanmyfitnesspal wrote: »Note that at one time, fast-food and other restaurants weren't required to reveal their ingredients to the public. Check out the ingredients for McDonalds "fries:"
FRENCH FRIES:
Ingredients: Potatoes, Vegetable Oil (Canola Oil, Soybean Oil, Hydrogenated Soybean Oil, Natural Beef Flavor [Wheat and Milk Derivatives]*, Citric Acid [Preservative]), Dextrose, Sodium Acid Pyrophosphate (Maintain Color), Salt. Prepared in Vegetable Oil (Canola Oil, Corn Oil, Soybean Oil, Hydrogenated Soybean Oil with TBHQ and Citric Acid added to preserve freshness), Dimethylpolysiloxane added as an antifoaming agent.
so what? Ever seen the ingredient list for a strawberry?5 -
Jthanmyfitnesspal wrote: »Note that at one time, fast-food and other restaurants weren't required to reveal their ingredients to the public. Check out the ingredients for McDonalds "fries:"
FRENCH FRIES:
Ingredients: Potatoes, Vegetable Oil (Canola Oil, Soybean Oil, Hydrogenated Soybean Oil, Natural Beef Flavor [Wheat and Milk Derivatives]*, Citric Acid [Preservative]), Dextrose, Sodium Acid Pyrophosphate (Maintain Color), Salt. Prepared in Vegetable Oil (Canola Oil, Corn Oil, Soybean Oil, Hydrogenated Soybean Oil with TBHQ and Citric Acid added to preserve freshness), Dimethylpolysiloxane added as an antifoaming agent.
meh, I don't have a problem with it..those ingredients serve purposes-
The sodium acid pyrophosphate and dextrose is also generally added to pre-chopped frozen potatoes you buy at the grocery as well. (keeps them from turning black, sticking to each other).The antifoaming agent is there as a safety measure for employees (reduced splatter, especially if those fries are frozen) - some other fast food places also add it to the oil. The seasonings many of us add have random flavorings.5 -
Jthanmyfitnesspal wrote: »Note that at one time, fast-food and other restaurants weren't required to reveal their ingredients to the public. Check out the ingredients for McDonalds "fries:"
FRENCH FRIES:
Ingredients: Potatoes, Vegetable Oil (Canola Oil, Soybean Oil, Hydrogenated Soybean Oil, Natural Beef Flavor [Wheat and Milk Derivatives]*, Citric Acid [Preservative]), Dextrose, Sodium Acid Pyrophosphate (Maintain Color), Salt. Prepared in Vegetable Oil (Canola Oil, Corn Oil, Soybean Oil, Hydrogenated Soybean Oil with TBHQ and Citric Acid added to preserve freshness), Dimethylpolysiloxane added as an antifoaming agent.
I have no idea why you have added scare quotes to fries here. Which of these ingredients concerns you? Which ones turn them from fries to "fries"?8 -
Jthanmyfitnesspal wrote: »This is turning into a good debate: when should restaurants be required to post nutritional info? Here are some options
- Make it entirely voluntary (never required)
- Required it for chains selling standardized items (the current requirement for 20 or more locations)
- Require it for all restaurants, all meals
I wonder if restaurants should be allowed to do their own estimates listed as such. It is pretty easy to do that with a variety of online tools (including MFP).10 -
Jthanmyfitnesspal wrote: »This is turning into a good debate: when should restaurants be required to post nutritional info? Here are some options
- Make it entirely voluntary (never required)
- Required it for chains selling standardized items (the current requirement for 20 or more locations)
- Require it for all restaurants, all meals
I wonder if restaurants should be allowed to do their own estimates listed as such. It is pretty easy to do that with a variety of online tools (including MFP).
Not to mention that requiring it of all places would result in a lot of smaller places using estimates and online databases, things that aren't always accurate. That leaves them more vulnerable to things like media stories "calling them out" for using incorrect calorie counts and harm to their reputation in the community.
Requiring every restaurant to provide calorie counts pretends that all restaurants have equally fixed menus (as you have called out) and equal resources. Chains can usually afford to do the type of analysis for accurate calorie counts. The corner diner often doesn't. It's an unequal burden.0 -
cwolfman13 wrote: »Jthanmyfitnesspal wrote: »This is turning into a good debate: when should restaurants be required to post nutritional info? Here are some options
- Make it entirely voluntary (never required)
- Required it for chains selling standardized items (the current requirement for 20 or more locations)
- Require it for all restaurants, all meals
I wonder if restaurants should be allowed to do their own estimates listed as such. It is pretty easy to do that with a variety of online tools (including MFP).
I think the way it is, is just fine...if you're a chain with more than 20 locations, you should have the resources whereby the requirement wouldn't be overbearing.
I don't think allowing a restaurant to just use a database like MFP would be any good...to be remotely accurate I think it needs to be sent to a lab as it is now. Even then there's a wide margin of error depending on who's cooking...the error rate just using some database would be even higher.
I agree. Putting very expensive requirements on small businesses will just result in many of these businesses failing (and jobs being lost). Restaurants have a very high failure rate already...requiring something that is unnecessary and expensive will just make it even harder to remain viable. And God forbid they want to introduce new dishes...it makes it much more expensive and complicated. And it basically makes it impossible for a chef to have a daily special. The restaurant found a great price this week on scallops and wants to do a special scallop dish? Too bad...by the time they send the recipe to a lab and get results back all of those scallops will have already gone bad and been thrown away.
Nutrition info is great for big chains that very rarely introduce new items and who can spread the cost over dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of individual restaurants. For a mom and pop shop...it is an insane and impractical idea.
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I actually agree with the OP. I get that it's expensive but people need to know. Anyone heard of Slim Chicken? People are OUTRAGED that the restaurant won't post their nutrition information. I went there once and won't go back because I have no idea how many calories I'm consuming.
More and more people are becoming calorie conscious so I think it makes good business sense, but if they don't want to post it they don't have to post it. I'll just move on to a restaurant who does (besides, Raising Canes is much better than Slim Chicken anyway )
It's not good business sense if you only have one or a few restaurants and the cost will actually put you out of business. If you can guaranty to Slim Chicken that you will personally buy one or two million dollars worth of their chicken if they post nutrition info, maybe they will do it for you. But they will probably ask for cash up front...and I don't blame them.0 -
sisterlilbunny wrote: »I apologize. Are you legit mad over this or being facetious? Cause I mean yeah it's annoying but I make due because, you know, it's not up to them to take care of us.
^Same. I can't tell whether to read this as a little fun hyperbole or some really over-the-top outrage. I like my weird little hole-in-the-wall places and food trucks and whatnot. I'd hate to see new startups fail because I couldn't estimate the calories on my plate.3 -
MoiAussi93 wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »Jthanmyfitnesspal wrote: »This is turning into a good debate: when should restaurants be required to post nutritional info? Here are some options
- Make it entirely voluntary (never required)
- Required it for chains selling standardized items (the current requirement for 20 or more locations)
- Require it for all restaurants, all meals
I wonder if restaurants should be allowed to do their own estimates listed as such. It is pretty easy to do that with a variety of online tools (including MFP).
I think the way it is, is just fine...if you're a chain with more than 20 locations, you should have the resources whereby the requirement wouldn't be overbearing.
I don't think allowing a restaurant to just use a database like MFP would be any good...to be remotely accurate I think it needs to be sent to a lab as it is now. Even then there's a wide margin of error depending on who's cooking...the error rate just using some database would be even higher.
I agree. Putting very expensive requirements on small businesses will just result in many of these businesses failing (and jobs being lost). Restaurants have a very high failure rate already...requiring something that is unnecessary and expensive will just make it even harder to remain viable. And God forbid they want to introduce new dishes...it makes it much more expensive and complicated. And it basically makes it impossible for a chef to have a daily special. The restaurant found a great price this week on scallops and wants to do a special scallop dish? Too bad...by the time they send the recipe to a lab and get results back all of those scallops will have already gone bad and been thrown away.
Nutrition info is great for big chains that very rarely introduce new items and who can spread the cost over dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of individual restaurants. For a mom and pop shop...it is an insane and impractical idea.
One of my wife and I's favorite local eateries is a place called Farm and Table...they have their own farm and then get food from other farms in the area and around the state for their menu...it turns over very regularly and Sunday brunch is the best because they have a couple of fixed food items, but most of it comes from the chef's imagination with what is leftover from the weekend before new shipments come in Monday...prime rib hash is awesome...
This obviously wouldn't exist at all if they were required to provide the nutritional information and I would be missing out on some serious awesomeness just because people can't seem to use common sense and they need a nanny to tell them the calories.
I mostly eat at local restaurants, and they're always running 3 or 4 chef's specials, which are usually my favorite things to try...wouldn't happen in the every restaurant has to have their nutritional information posted calorie counting utopia...5 -
cwolfman13 wrote: »It costs a lot of money...if mom and pop shops were required to do that, there wouldn't be too many mom and pop shops.
I'm sure that all of the ingredients in their pizzas have nutritional information, including the flour, dough, cheese, sauce, toppings, etc., and they should be relatively consistent in how much they use for each product (if not, they aren't running things efficiently and aren't controlling their food costs). Therefore, I'm not buying that it is some monumental effort to provide nutritional information.0 -
Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »It costs a lot of money...if mom and pop shops were required to do that, there wouldn't be too many mom and pop shops.
I'm sure that all of the ingredients in their pizzas have nutritional information, including the flour, dough, cheese, sauce, toppings, etc., and they should be relatively consistent in how much they use for each product (if not, they aren't running things efficiently and aren't controlling their food costs). Therefore, I'm not buying that it is some monumental effort to provide nutritional information.
They can't just rely on that...it goes to a lab...
and again, if you don't like it, don't eat local....go to a chain and eat crummy, institutionalized franchise food.4 -
Yeah, I just can't get worked up over this. Restaurants shouldn't be required to leap over MORE red tape to do business. Mom and Pops are becoming fewer and further between, and I don't think that's a good trend.4
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cwolfman13 wrote: »Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »It costs a lot of money...if mom and pop shops were required to do that, there wouldn't be too many mom and pop shops.
I'm sure that all of the ingredients in their pizzas have nutritional information, including the flour, dough, cheese, sauce, toppings, etc., and they should be relatively consistent in how much they use for each product (if not, they aren't running things efficiently and aren't controlling their food costs). Therefore, I'm not buying that it is some monumental effort to provide nutritional information.
They can't just rely on that...it goes to a lab...
Displaying nutritional info is voluntary for restaurants with less than 20 locations, so if a local (non-franchise) restaurant wants to display nutritional information, it isn't subject to the FDA standards for calculating nutrition (I see it all the time on menus for local businesses who put disclaimers that the stats are estimated).0 -
Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »It costs a lot of money...if mom and pop shops were required to do that, there wouldn't be too many mom and pop shops.
I'm sure that all of the ingredients in their pizzas have nutritional information, including the flour, dough, cheese, sauce, toppings, etc., and they should be relatively consistent in how much they use for each product (if not, they aren't running things efficiently and aren't controlling their food costs). Therefore, I'm not buying that it is some monumental effort to provide nutritional information.
They can't just rely on that...it goes to a lab...
Displaying nutritional info is voluntary for restaurants with less than 20 locations, so if a local (non-franchise) restaurant wants to display nutritional information, it isn't subject to the FDA standards for calculating nutrition (I see it all the time on menus for local businesses who put disclaimers that the stats are estimated).
But the post you are quoting I said if it was required...if it was required they do it, it would be subject to FDA standards....
I've personally never seen a local establishment even provide estimates...and frankly I could care less...I have common sense and I can guestimate well enough.2 -
I prefer to make my own, then I can calculate exactly how many calories I am consuming. Tastes great too.
My recipe for food processor pizza dough:
1 3/4 cups flour
1 package yeast (2 teaspoons)
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon sugar
Throw it all in a food processor and add 3/4 cup hot water and 1 tablespoon olive oil
Process on low until a dough ball forms.
Knead in another 1/4 cup of flour.
Let rise covered in a warm spot for 30-45 minutes.
Roll out desired size on a lightly oiled surface, sprinkle a little cornmeal on a baking sheet and throw on your dough, add your toppings and bake at 425 for about 15-18 minutes.
This makes 2-4 individual sized pizzas depending on size and thickness so that is about 565 calories for the entire batch.
I use reduced fat cheese, lean pepperoni, etc...
I'm sure there are ways to reduce the calories but this works for me, once or twice a month.
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JeepHair77 wrote: »Yeah, I just can't get worked up over this. Restaurants shouldn't be required to leap over MORE red tape to do business. Mom and Pops are becoming fewer and further between, and I don't think that's a good trend.
Yeah, the Ermagherds are a bit over the top...3 -
Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »It costs a lot of money...if mom and pop shops were required to do that, there wouldn't be too many mom and pop shops.
I'm sure that all of the ingredients in their pizzas have nutritional information, including the flour, dough, cheese, sauce, toppings, etc., and they should be relatively consistent in how much they use for each product (if not, they aren't running things efficiently and aren't controlling their food costs). Therefore, I'm not buying that it is some monumental effort to provide nutritional information.
They can't just rely on that...it goes to a lab...
Displaying nutritional info is voluntary for restaurants with less than 20 locations, so if a local (non-franchise) restaurant wants to display nutritional information, it isn't subject to the FDA standards for calculating nutrition (I see it all the time on menus for local businesses who put disclaimers that the stats are estimated).
But if they're just estimating, what's the point? If the chef who works on weekdays measures the oil he's using, but the weekend chef likes to white knuckle it and "splash" it on, you have a better chance of judging how much oil you are eating correctly than blindly logging "estimated" numbers anyway.
I honestly think the only useful point to published info like this is to make sure my estimate is in the same ballpark as the restaurants, and to help me narrow down which meals to consider. Even fast food, where you assume everything is cookie cutter, is just an estimate. I've ordered a Wendy's chicken sandwich when the chicken cutlet was bigger than the roll, and when the chicken has been smaller than the roll. When they've put on a dab of mayo, and when they clearly lost control of the bottle and dumped a quarter cup of mayo on my sammie. When the fries are overflowing the carton and when the fries only come up halfway. None of those meals was probably anywhere near what the published info said. It's all estimates, I might as well estimate it myself <shrug>2 -
cwolfman13 wrote: »Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »It costs a lot of money...if mom and pop shops were required to do that, there wouldn't be too many mom and pop shops.
I'm sure that all of the ingredients in their pizzas have nutritional information, including the flour, dough, cheese, sauce, toppings, etc., and they should be relatively consistent in how much they use for each product (if not, they aren't running things efficiently and aren't controlling their food costs). Therefore, I'm not buying that it is some monumental effort to provide nutritional information.
They can't just rely on that...it goes to a lab...
Displaying nutritional info is voluntary for restaurants with less than 20 locations, so if a local (non-franchise) restaurant wants to display nutritional information, it isn't subject to the FDA standards for calculating nutrition (I see it all the time on menus for local businesses who put disclaimers that the stats are estimated).
But the post you are quoting I said if it was required...if it was required they do it, it would be subject to FDA standards....
I've personally never seen a local establishment even provide estimates...and frankly I could care less...I have common sense and I can guestimate well enough.
My kid has severe food allergies, so it would take a complete lack of common sense not to understand the ingredients that he is eating. There are a lot of factors that dictate what people could and couldn't care less about.2 -
Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »It costs a lot of money...if mom and pop shops were required to do that, there wouldn't be too many mom and pop shops.
I'm sure that all of the ingredients in their pizzas have nutritional information, including the flour, dough, cheese, sauce, toppings, etc., and they should be relatively consistent in how much they use for each product (if not, they aren't running things efficiently and aren't controlling their food costs). Therefore, I'm not buying that it is some monumental effort to provide nutritional information.
They can't just rely on that...it goes to a lab...
Displaying nutritional info is voluntary for restaurants with less than 20 locations, so if a local (non-franchise) restaurant wants to display nutritional information, it isn't subject to the FDA standards for calculating nutrition (I see it all the time on menus for local businesses who put disclaimers that the stats are estimated).
But the post you are quoting I said if it was required...if it was required they do it, it would be subject to FDA standards....
I've personally never seen a local establishment even provide estimates...and frankly I could care less...I have common sense and I can guestimate well enough.
My kid has severe food allergies, so it would take a complete lack of common sense not to understand the ingredients that he is eating. There are a lot of factors that dictate what people could and couldn't care less about.
You can simply ask if the item contains whatever he is allergic to. If the waitress doesn't know, she can simply ask a chef.
There is no cost involved in that and it is not overly burdensome to the business. Providing calorie and macro information is an entirely different story...and not necessary for health reasons.3 -
Why should they put up the info just because a very small number of the population count calories.0
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According to the FDA (https://www.fda.gov/downloads/Food/LabelingNutrition/UCM249276.pdf)...
"The per-item estimated cost of nutrition analysis ranges from $275 per item ($59 database +$216 administrative cost) to $866/item ($495 lab work+$216 administrative cost +$100 shipping+$55 food cost), with a mean estimate of $571 per item."
They only estimated initial costs for chain restaurants, because the FDA guidelines are only intended to cover chains, but here is what they said about the average cost per chain:
"The 600 largest restaurant chains (by sales) have an average of 80 unique menu items, excluding alcoholic beverages. If this average holds for all restaurant establishments that are subject to the proposed requirements, the average per chain cost of analysis ranges from $22,000 ($275/item x 80 items) to $69,300 ($866/item x 80 items), with a mean estimate of $45,600."7 -
MoiAussi93 wrote: »Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »It costs a lot of money...if mom and pop shops were required to do that, there wouldn't be too many mom and pop shops.
I'm sure that all of the ingredients in their pizzas have nutritional information, including the flour, dough, cheese, sauce, toppings, etc., and they should be relatively consistent in how much they use for each product (if not, they aren't running things efficiently and aren't controlling their food costs). Therefore, I'm not buying that it is some monumental effort to provide nutritional information.
They can't just rely on that...it goes to a lab...
Displaying nutritional info is voluntary for restaurants with less than 20 locations, so if a local (non-franchise) restaurant wants to display nutritional information, it isn't subject to the FDA standards for calculating nutrition (I see it all the time on menus for local businesses who put disclaimers that the stats are estimated).
But the post you are quoting I said if it was required...if it was required they do it, it would be subject to FDA standards....
I've personally never seen a local establishment even provide estimates...and frankly I could care less...I have common sense and I can guestimate well enough.
(Pssst - it is *couldn't care less*)
My kid has severe food allergies, so it would take a complete lack of common sense not to understand the ingredients that he is eating. There are a lot of factors that dictate what people could and couldn't care less about.
You can simply ask if the item contains whatever he is allergic to. If the waitress doesn't know, she can simply ask a chef.
There is no cost involved in that and it is not overly burdensome to the business. Providing calorie and macro information is an entirely different story...and not necessary for health reasons.
Yeah, we always talk to the waiter and sometimes the chef. Sometimes I am less than impressed by their lack of knowledge concerning their own foods.
I'm not saying that non-franchise restaurants should be forced by law to disclose nutrition, I'm just saying that I appreciate the ones that are meticulous and go the extra mile for their customers.0 -
Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »It costs a lot of money...if mom and pop shops were required to do that, there wouldn't be too many mom and pop shops.
I'm sure that all of the ingredients in their pizzas have nutritional information, including the flour, dough, cheese, sauce, toppings, etc., and they should be relatively consistent in how much they use for each product (if not, they aren't running things efficiently and aren't controlling their food costs). Therefore, I'm not buying that it is some monumental effort to provide nutritional information.
In order to post nutritional information the food has to go to a lab certified by the FDA and the lab has to run several tests to determine the average nutritional information. Not a cheap option for a business that runs on a slim profit margin.1 -
Bry_Lander wrote: »cwolfman13 wrote: »It costs a lot of money...if mom and pop shops were required to do that, there wouldn't be too many mom and pop shops.
I'm sure that all of the ingredients in their pizzas have nutritional information, including the flour, dough, cheese, sauce, toppings, etc., and they should be relatively consistent in how much they use for each product (if not, they aren't running things efficiently and aren't controlling their food costs). Therefore, I'm not buying that it is some monumental effort to provide nutritional information.
In order to post nutritional information the food has to go to a lab certified by the FDA and the lab has to run several tests to determine the average nutritional information. Not a cheap option for a business that runs on a slim profit margin.
If you have less than 20 locations then there isn't any FDA involvement.
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