May 19, 2013

Save Email Print Bookmark and Share
A A
Reporter: Jennifer Hardy Email

Annual Xtreme Eating Awards Released

extreme_eating_2013

UNDATED -- The Center for Science in the Public Interest has released the latest list of "Xtreme Eating" foods found at restaurants across the country.

According to the CSPI, the average adult should consumer about 2,000 calories a day. However, according to the study, a breakfast of Country Fried Steak & Eggs can use up 1760 of those calories. CPSI says that's like eating five McDonald's Egg McMuffins covered in 10 packets of sugar.

A rack of Baby Back Ribs with Shiner Bock BBQ Sauce at Chili's will add 1,660 calories to your intake and more than 5,000 milligrams of sodium.

Johnny Rockets' Bacon Cheddar Double burger has 1,770 calories,
An order of the chain's Sweet Potato Fries adds another 590 calories
The chain's Big Apple Shake—a milkshake that actually contains a slice of apple pie—has 1,140 calories. That meal delivers a total of 3,500 calories, nearly two days' worth. It's like eating 3 McDonald's Quarter Pounders with Cheese, a large Fries, a medium McCafé

"I hope the Obama Administration promptly finalizes overdue calorie labeling rules for chain restaurants," CSPI executive director Michael F. Jacobson said.

"Not only do Americans deserve to know what they're eating, but, as our Xtreme Eating "winners" clearly indicate, lives are at stake. And perhaps when calories become mandatory on menus, chains will begin innovating in a healthier direction, instead of competing with each other to make Americans heavier and sicker."


US Business News

  • Yahoo Deal Shows Power Shift
    Yahoo has agreed to pay $1.1 billion for Tumblr, a six-year-old company with more than 100 million users but very little revenue, a deal that highlights the shifting balance of power in the technology business.
  • Wanted: Miners in Brazil for Anglo American
    While rising labor costs have become almost routine for global mining firms locals in Brazil have been willing to take lower-level jobs such as operating a conveyor belt or maintaining machines for less than $10,000 a year.
  • Xbox Girds for a Smartphone Battle
    What's underneath the hood of the latest Xbox videogame console represents a multiyear odyssey of trying to figure out how to keep the machine "cool" in the age of smartphones and tablets.
  • Dreamliner's Other Issues Get Attention
    Boeing and its customers are refocusing on fixing more technical issues that affect the reliability of the 787 jet, as the aircraft resumes commercial flights after battery woes that led to a global grounding.
  • Stephen King Says No to E-Book
    Stephen King has no plans for a digital edition of his new book, "Joyland," hoping to get more people to shop for it in a physical bookstore.
  • An Independent Scotland Risks Financial Shocks
    An independent Scotland would have banking assets worth more than 1,250% of Scottish gross domestic product, putting taxpayers at significant risk in the event of another banking crisis, the U.K. Treasury said Sunday.
  • For Multinationals, Europe Is Soft Spot
    Soft European markets were a consistent and negative theme of the first-quarter results from big U.S. industrial companies, and concerns about further deterioration are expected to be a key topic at the annual conference that starts Monday.
  • Sandy's Effects Likely to Lift Home Depot, Lowe's
    This week, when Home Depot and Lowe's report fiscal first-quarter results, the reconstruction phase from last year's superstorm Sandy will be looming large as cooler-than-normal temperatures delay spring selling.
  • 'Star Trek' Transports Overseas
    "Star Trek: Into Darkness" grossed $70.6 million this weekend in the U.S. and Canada, falling short of Paramount Pictures' hopes. But the movie sold better overseas than the 2009 "Star Trek."
  • 'Now You See Me' Banks on Magic
    'Now You See Me,' to be released May 31 by Summit, hopes to make movie magic without computer-generated special effects. Director Louis Leterrier hired magic consultants, including David Copperfield, to create and execute some of the more complicated illusions.