Recently, I gave the menu of a well-known chain restaurant to a group of students and asked them to select what they would eat if they were dining there.
They selected a starter (garlic bread with cheese), a main course (traditional lasagne with a salad), a dessert (ice cream) and a drink (a can of coke).
Using the restaurant’s own nutritional information, they calculated the nutrient content of what they had chosen (Table 1). The results left the students open-mouthed.
Their menu selection had provided:
n 106% of the guideline daily amount of calories (assuming 2000 kcal per day);
n 141-171% of the guideline daily amount of protein (depending on whether they were male or female);
n 61% of the guideline daily carbohydrate;
n 109% of the guideline daily amount of total fat;
n 192% of the guideline daily amount of saturated fat
n 52% of the guideline daily amount of salt.
It is worth noting that the dietary reference value for salt in the UK is 6 g per day, compared with 2.3 g per day in the USA.
Thus, one meal out would have provided more than the entire day’s requirement for calories; enough protein to last for one and a half days; and enough saturated fat to last for two days.
Most people have no idea of the nutrient content of the food they are eating, nor of the potentially damaging effects on their health of a dietary excess of sugar, saturated fat and salt.
Given that at least one–third of household expenditure on food and drink is spent on food eaten outside the home in the UK, food manufacturers and caterers have a real opportunity to contribute to an improvement in public health whilst also making a profit themselves.
There is now convincing research evidence to suggest that increasing the amount of fruit, vegetables and whole grains in the diet, whilst decreasing the amount of sugar, saturated fat and salt, helps to protect the body from chronic conditions such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease and various cancers.
A two-day professional training course is offered, tailored to equip caterers, and those involved in encouraging healthier catering practices, with information and practical tools to achieve healthier eating in the population.
By the end of the course, participants will:
- Understand the basic principles of nutrition
- Be aware of the importance of food in the maintenance of health and well-being
- Appreciate the role of lifestyles and culture in influencing diet
- Recognise the potential benefits for both caterers and customers of providing a choice of healthier options
- Know more about ingredient selection and methods of food production and processing that can be used to create healthier options, whilst being attractive and convenient to modern tastes and lifestyles
- Be able to apply appropriate and relevant skills and knowledge when advising catering businesses or when planning, preparing, promoting and serving healthier foods
For further information on the course content and the course tutor, Dr Jane Philpott, please click http://cookingforhealth-uk.com/healthier-catering.php.
Table 1
Menu item |
Calories per portion |
Protein g per portion |
Carbohydrate g per portion |
Total fat g per portion |
Saturated fat g per portion |
Salt g per portion |
Starter |
568 |
29.8 |
35.6 |
34 |
16.5 |
1.15
|
Main course |
934
|
42.2 |
74.4 |
33.1 |
14.6 |
1.84 |
Dessert
|
475 |
5.5 |
18.8 |
18.1 |
11.1 |
0.15 |
Drink
|
139 |
0 |
35 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
|
2116 |
77.5 |
163.8 |
85.2 |
42.2 |
3.14 |
Gov guideline
|
2000 kcal |
45 g/day (women) 55 g/day (men) |
267 g per day |
78 g per day |
22 g per day |
6 g per day |
% of guidelines
|
106% |
171% (women) 141% (men)
|
61% |
109% |
192% |
52% |