One Burger = 2 Servings?
I posted a while ago that lots of nutrition labels on food packages and in restaurants are misleading because they list the calories per serving, like the Uno Burger on the Uno Chicago Grill restaurant menu, and you think, hmmm, that’s not too bad, 540 calories (although 320 calories are FAT calories) but you probably didn’t notice that the amount being served to you is TWO servings, so if you eat the whole burger, it is actually 1080 calories, with 640 fat calories.
You can see this yourself by going to this page: http://www.unos.com/kiosk/nutritionUnos.html and clicking on the Burgers And Sandwiches link. Apparently on the Uno website, I can’t send you directly to the Burgers page.
One the other hand, if you purchase a bag of chips, and look at the calories in a serving size, it is pretty small, but it is a TINY amount of chips as well, like 7 or something. Should this be changed? Should the government step in and make serving sizes larger? Should they make the whole Uno Burger be a serving, so the restaurant has to list ALL of the calories in it? The FDA is now reevaluating this mess, and the problem is that does it imply you should eat more if the serving size is bigger? That would encourage our overweight population to eat more, I would think.
We just have to stop eating such large portions, whether or not the FDA steps in.
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