The 30 Worst Fast-Food Restaurant Choices

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Reader beware: the 30 unhealthiest choices at fast-food restaurant chains -- and the healthier substitutions you can make to avoid the calorie bomb.

Why Eating Out Is Making You Fat

In recent years, American restaurants have been piling layers of fat, salt, and sugar on their creations -- all of which tricks our brain into craving more food, says former FDA commissioner David Kessler, MD, in his book The End of Overeating. "Even lettuce has become a vehicle for fat," he says, citing the cream-based dressings, cheese chunks, bacon bits, and oil-soaked croutons that turn many restaurant salads into health hazards.

If you're watching your calories -- or your life expectancy -- there are a few fast rules to follow if you eat out at a popular restaurant chain:

  • Avoid anything with the word "sampler" or "platter," unless you plan to share it with three or more people and make it your main course.
  • Skip anything that comes in an edible bowl or includes the words stacked, stuffed, double, triple, slammed, or dunked.
  • Nachos are something best shared with a group, and subs are something best measured in calories, fat, and sodium -- not inches.
  • When you see the words crispy or glazed, realize that's what will happen to your arteries and your eyes, respectively, if you consume too many of these items.
  • Dressing and sauces are among the major calorie culprits of many restaurant choices, sometimes doubling the fat and sodium content of an entree. Ask for all sauces on the side, and try replacing cream-based dressings with mustard (straight mustard, not sugar-loaded honey mustard), suggests New York City-based nutritionist Sharon Richter, MS, RD. Other good alternatives: lemon and grated cheese (25 calories per tablespoon).
  • Just because an item falls under the word "appetizers" does not mean it should be followed by more food. Not even in the same day. Some of the country's most ubiquitous food establishments serve appetizers that would stuff a Sumo wrestler.

And remember, the average woman needs 1,500 to 1,800 calories a day to maintain weight (depending upon activity level and frequency), and the American Heart Association recommends limiting dietary fat to 30 percent of total calories.

Armed with these basic tenets, prepare yourself as we unveil some surprising calorie bombs -- and the choices you can make to avoid them.

Next:  Quizno's

 

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Comments (24)
763706820
roland8ball206205 wrote:

MEDIA NEEDS TO HELP SPREAD WORD THAT THESE PLACES TO EAT NEED TO HELP TAKE OUT FATS AN SODIUM FROM THERE MEALS THEY SERVE

8/10/2010 06:52:02 AM Report Abuse
limam11 wrote:

what about the Ninety-Nine? there crispy fish tacos are about 1200 calories, I believe. I usually go for the red pepper hummus appetizer at an estimated 500 calories!

8/9/2010 02:31:19 PM Report Abuse
clearsplash wrote:

could you include not your average joe's next time please?

8/9/2010 11:32:50 AM Report Abuse
cs_pb wrote:

Eating out is WAY over rated!! Keep your money people!

7/23/2010 01:48:15 PM Report Abuse
jamiebenzy wrote:

How about the mineral stripped salt they use, the GMO ( genetically modified ) ingredients and MSG? Also, don't fall for the media hype that eating healthy is bland. That's a load of bull. I eat an all organic vegetarian diet and NO TOFU! Everything I eat tastes delicious and is good for me. Also, I "vote" with my dollar since I don't support any of these corporate owned chains.

7/22/2010 11:27:52 AM Report Abuse

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