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2017 Xtreme Eating Awards promotes better choices in Michigan’s restaurants

CSPI Urges Senator Stabenow to Support Consumer Choice and  Oppose Anti-Menu Labeling Legislation
With Michigan’s adult obesity ranking in the top 15 in the nation, the Center for Science in the Public Interest’s annual “Xtreme Eating Awards” show just why the majority of Michiganians want to know what’s in the food they eat. The annual awards, which expose just how many high caloric items are hiding in plain sight, were announced today by the nonprofit and published in the July/August issue of the group’s Nutrition Action Healthletter.
This year’s awards are more important than ever as Sen. Stabenow considers S. 261, anti-menu labeling legislation. The legislation would weaken menu labeling by letting pizza chains avoid in-store disclosure requirements and allow restaurants to use arbitrary serving sizes to help obscure the calories in menu items. Last Thursday, the House Energy and Commerce committee passed a similar piece of legislation to deceive consumers, despite the fact that consumers across Michigan consistently ask for menu labels to help them make healthy, informed choices about their food. Many restaurants have already implemented menu labels and support consistent, national standards.
 History
The 2010 Affordable Care Act included provisions requiring calorie counts on the menus and menu boards of chains with 20 or more outlets such as Starbucks and Panera here in Michigan. The Food and Drug Administration had scheduled the rules to go into effect May 5 of this year. But less than a week before that deadline, lobbyists for pizza chains, supermarkets and convenience stores convinced the Trump administration to delay the implementation date. In response, CSPI conferred its first-ever Xtreme Putting Profits Before Public Health Award to Domino’s—the loudest industry voice against calorie labeling.
“Americans deserve to know what we’re eating, but Domino’s would prefer that we’re kept in the dark,” said CSPI senior nutritionist Lindsay Moyer. “Every day of delay means the industry has more opportunity to weaken the law that Congress passed seven long years ago.”
The FDA is accepting public comments until Wednesday, Aug. 2 on its proposal to delay menu labeling, and CSPI is encouraging Americans to register their opposition with the agency before then.
Awards
To put the following nutritional nightmares into context, a day’s worth of calories is 2,000, a day’s worth of sodium is 2,300 milligrams, a day’s worth of saturated fat is 20 grams and a day’s worth of added sugar is 50 grams. The Cheesecake Factory has never gone home empty-handed from the “Xtreme Eating Awards,” and 2017 is no exception:  The California-based chain is a double dis-honoree this year, with a 2,310-calorie entrée that fuses the toppings of a meat lover’s pizza with a bowl of pasta, and an alcoholic milkshake with nearly 1,000 calories. What follows are just a few of the 2017 “Xtreme Eating Award” winners.
 

 

 

 

 
The full list of “winners” for Worst Visceral Effects, Worst Cheese in a Leading Role, and other categories is available at https://cspinet.org/xtreme-eating-2017.
 
“Leave it to America’s chain restaurant industry to market a stack of pancakes as a side dish, or to lard up quesadillas and pasta with pizza toppings, or to ruin a perfectly good sweet potato,” said Moyer. “These meals are extreme, but even the typical dishes served at restaurants are a threat to Americans’ health because they increase the risk of obesity, diabetes, heart disease and more.”

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