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Kristin Kirkpatrick, M.S., R.D., L.D.

Kristin Kirkpatrick, M.S., R.D., L.D.

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'Healthy' Restaurant Foods to Avoid

Posted: 06/ 9/11 08:28 AM ET

The thought of enjoying a great meal out with friends and family excites me. I love getting a "night off" from cooking, enjoying a nice glass of wine (and all its benefits!) and taking a break from it all. What I don't want to do, however, is take a break from portion control and good nutrition. Unfortunately, if there was ever a situation where that could occur, a trip to my favorite local restaurant is it.

While many eateries are providing more nutritious options for the health-conscious consumer, the old high-fat, high-calorie favorites can still be found at almost any restaurant. Did you know that the average restaurant meal is about 1,200 calories? We tend to eat more at restaurants for several reasons. First, studies show that we eat about 40 percent more when we are in groups than when we are alone. We often see dining out as an opportunity to "treat ourselves" and forgo healthier options. The biggest reason (no pun intended!) we eat more is because the portion sizes at restaurants are often much larger than what we would eat at home. While your wallet may appreciate the great "deal" for so much food, it's actually a really bad deal when it comes to your health.

I spoke with many of my friends regarding what they felt was healthy fare at their local restaurant and was astonished by their answers. Foods such as spinach and artichoke dip were seen as a "way to get more vegetables," and popular appetizer sliders were viewed as a way to "control portions." I visited several local, independent and chain restaurants to see for myself just how "healthy" these options were. While I do believe that you can have a healthy dining experience by incorporating different tactics (for example, ask that half of your order get boxed up before it comes to the table), choosing the following foods off a restaurant menu is probably not the right first step toward a great healthy dining experience.

Spinach And Artichoke Dip
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A popular appetizer at any restaurant, patrons often think they are doing something good by ordering this dish because it contains vegetables -- but a half cup of this deadly dip will put you back almost 350 calories.

Finish the whole thing yourself and you may be looking at consuming up to 1,000 calories and 25 grams of saturated fat. That's before including the "dippers," which are probably fried corn chips. If you really want some spinach, order it as a salad or mixed with whole-grain pasta.
Total comments: 209 | Post a Comment
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I'm still ordering it!
None of this for me, please

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My message here is not to avoid dining out completely, just be more conscious of your choices, how much you're eating and drinking and how you feel halfway through your meal. If you're no longer hungry, stop -- don't wait until you're full.

 

Follow Kristin Kirkpatrick, M.S., R.D., L.D. on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ClevelandClinic

The thought of enjoying a great meal out with friends and family excites me. I love getting a "night off" from cooking, enjoying a nice glass of wine (and all its benefits!) and taking a break from it...
The thought of enjoying a great meal out with friends and family excites me. I love getting a "night off" from cooking, enjoying a nice glass of wine (and all its benefits!) and taking a break from it...
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Pinkasaurus
22 hours ago (10:16 PM)
Weird article. I have never heard anyone refer to sliders or spinach artichoke dip as "healthy."
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TheBestPatriot
"It is what it is."
07:06 PM on 6/12/2011
What restaurant has spinach dip listed as healthy?
11:55 AM on 6/12/2011
Its okay to eat any of these food, it's the quantity which matters.
06:06 AM on 6/12/2011
Who Cares ya only live once! This is NEWS?
05:20 AM on 6/12/2011
Lame article. Readers would have to just come out from under a stump to be unaware of these facts.
02:09 AM on 6/12/2011
I don't understand the logic here. How can a mere 350 calorie serving of anything be "deadly"?
01:09 AM on 6/12/2011
Arm yourself with a calorie, fat, and carbohydra­te counter. Then, choose your menu options accordingl­y. No one puts a gun to anyone's head and forces them to order high-calor­ie, high-fat, high-carbo­hydrate options.
12:26 AM on 6/12/2011
amazing the amount of quackery an article like this draws out.
here's the secret: calories in, calories out and don't eat garbage that comes from a chemistry lab and not from nature. simple.
12:17 AM on 6/12/2011
When I go out to eat I eat everything on the plate if it's good.
thereisonlyoneparty
more amazing than you
12:16 AM on 6/12/2011
Nothing of these things are remotely healthy.

Anyone who thinks that these are "healthy" choices deserves to catch a heart attack.
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ChicagoBob
Hydrogen, given enough time turns into people.
11:02 PM on 6/11/2011
I am so sick of all the "watch out for this" stuff. Nobody eats only sliders, or only onion soup, or only the picks you list here, or only the stuff you classify as 'bad.'

Yes, restaurant food is full of fat. That's why it tastes so good, sometimes. But the stuff that comes in cans, boxes, bags, and cartons and can be found in every supermarke­t and convenienc­e store is the real threat to our national health. That's the stuff worth talking about.

Just saying.
10:34 PM on 6/11/2011
Watch out everyone, when deciding to have a bite out! Some of these dishes looks r very deceiving!
08:22 PM on 6/11/2011
Avoid a Cobb Salad? Seriously? Because it's the only food listed here that contains only whole foods, is low in carbohydra­tes, and has healthy natural fats? The reason the United States has an obesity problem is the USDA and its recommende­d low-fat, high-carbo­hydrate diet. For most Americans, that usually means a diet full of highly processed ingredient­s and unnatural, unhealthy fats.
06:13 PM on 6/11/2011
I wasn't aware that anyone thought any of these foods were healthy.

Anyhow. Ordering them once in a while won't hurt you, people. It's the endless cycle of feeling guilty after eating them, then deluding yourself into thinking, "Oh, my health is ruined now, I might as well eat the whole basket/bow­l/containe­r," that can hurt you. Sometimes I'm not sure what side articles like this are on... saying you "DO NOT EAT THESE FOODS" can only add to the guilt, surely? All things in moderation­.
02:07 PM on 6/11/2011
It seems this article is a bit "over the top". Knowing what is and is not good for us, per calories and cholesster­ol, etc. is good. We are the ones who are doing the ordering. When out with others, things like dips or sliders can be shared. One slider is a meal for me with a cup of soup or salad. Ditto the French onion soup. What we need to remember is portion control and how our bodies react to foods we normally find in restaurant­s which are businesses there for the money we spend. It's not the restaurant­'s fault if we insist on having chicken fingers instead of grilled chicken or a Cobb salad instead of a green salad with lemon juice and a few bleu cheese crumbles instead of regular dressing. It's our money. How do we want to spend it? On real food or on junk?