Fast Food B.S.

May 14, 2009 by Tim Rudd  
Filed under Blog

Ok have you seen these commercials all about this new Kentucky grilled Chicken?

 There is no doubt that this is a better option than the fried chicken alternative, but it’s still not even close to an ideal food choice.

kfcsides2

Congratulations! You are eating “grilled” chicken with a bunch of garbage on the side. Lord knows that mac &cheese, gravy mashed potatoes and biscuits aren’t going to help you look any better naked!

KFC says the grilled chicken has significantly fewer calories and fat, plus much less sodium, than its Original Recipe fried chicken that launched the brand more than a half-century ago.

After all, just as, if not more, damaging to our waistlines are the high calorie side dishes accompanying the chicken which are filled with refined starches and sugars and unnecessary amounts of saturated fat.

To me it’s like covering feces with a newspaper- it still stinks!

nose

For way too long now the fast food industry has made billions on misinforming consumers about what is and isn’t healthy.

KFC claimed that it recently switched cooking oils to eliminate all trans fats from their products- a noble effort indeed.

But upon further review, this does not look to be the case…

Here are the ingredients directly from their website:

KFC ® Grilled Chicken:

Fresh Chicken Marinated with: Salt, Sodium Phosphate, and Monosodium Glutamate Seasoned with: Maltodextrin, Salt, Bleached Wheat lour, Partially Hydrogenated Soybean and Cottonseed Oil, Monosodium Glutamate, Spices, Palm Oil, Natural Flavor, Garlic Powder, Soy Sauce (Soybean, Wheat, Salt), Chicken Fat, Chicken Broth, Autolyzed Yeast, Beef Powder, Rendered Beef Fat, Extractives of Turmeric, Dehydrated Carrot, Onion Powder, and mot more than 2% Each of Calcium Silicate and Silicon Dioxide Added as Anticaking Agents. Contains Wheat and Soy

I don’t know about you, but this certainly doesn’t sound like all that healthy to me. First of all, “Partially Hydrogenated Soybean and Cottonseed Oil” is not good for you and is a form of trans fat.

Trans fats are synthetic fats that are essentially foreign agents in our bodies. There is truly no room for them in a healthy diet.

A good rule of thumb when choosing a food or product is that the fewer the ingredients the healthier it is for you, and were talking less than 5 ingredients as a standard. Now as you can see above KFC grilled chicken has well over 20.

Fast food and convenience store marketing campaigns make it very hard for us trainers to do our jobs.

When a company says:

“Our _____ (name of product) is good for you because it’s low in fat or fat-free”

OR

“Our _____ (name of product) is good for you because it’s got no sugar”

OR

“Our _____ (name of product) is the perfect snack because it’s only 100 calories.”

In general, here are some great user-friendly guidelines to cut through all of the BS these money-hungry SOB’s are sending our way:

Beware of foods labled “Fat-Free or Low Fat”:

These food choices are often high in sugar or contain added sugar to make them taste better, but in the end destroy your metabolism wreak havoc on your energy levels and prevent fat loss.

Look Out for products that are labled or touted as “Sugar-Free:

These food choices are typically made with artificial ingredients and sweeteners and/or are sometimes higher in fat to make up for taste lost and/or often contains sugar-alcohols that tear up your digestive system.

Stay Away From “100 Calorie” Items:

These low calorie bags contain ZERO nutritional value with little to no protein and are low in fiber and natural, healthy fats. Plus, these weight-gainers by another name do not fill you up between meals.

Probably the most infamous “healthy” marketing campaign is 100-CALORIE SNACK PACKS.

snackpac

                                                                 localsnac22  Which is better for you body: 100 calories of broccoli or 100 calories of Oreo’s?
GET IT?
Good!

I know personally I could easily eat 10 of these packs without getting stuffed- I guess that would be a 1,000-CALORIE SNACK PACK ;)

Unfortunately, we live in a calorie-conscious society, and marketers truly take piggyback on this.

But you don’t need to be a dope like the rest of them.

Educate yourself.

Educate your friends.

Educate your family.

Remember, the market determines the direction companies will go. If we choose not to put this garbage in our bellies anymore, they will make less of it ;)

NO B.S. Fat Loss

Tim Rudd

PS- I just know you have got something to say about this hot button issue. Please make a comment to this blog post about what pisses you off the most about this KFC Grilled Chicken, or any other fast food marketing campaign for that matter!

Bookmark and Share

Comments

One Response to “Fast Food B.S.”
  1. Kelley says:

    Oh but there’s more…like what the chickens were pumped full of on the “farm”, how they are raised, what they are fed and how they are dispensed with.

    How can chickens raised in cages (crammed so full that they can’t turn around, much less walk around or peck or scratch), stacked to multiple stories inside a building, fed genetically modified grain, pumped full of antibiotics and possibly hormones, be considered a healthy option to begin with? For KFC to then add the list of nasty ingredients on top of that…well, it’s just NOT FOOD.

    The first time I saw a semi truck loaded with cages crammed so full of chickens that you couldn’t shove a penny between the bodies (and yes, they were still alive), was the day that free range became my priority. My body and soul are better for it.

    Okay, I’ll bite my tongue and climb down off the soap box now.

    Kelley

Speak Your Mind

Tell us what you're thinking...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!