Are French Fries
Really A
Vegetable?
The government, nutritionists,
doctors, and dietitians
implore us to eat 5 servings of vegetables a day. Considering that a
serving is
only half a cup, a decent-sized side of vegetables and a big salad does
it for
the day.
But are we eating that
consistently?
For the average American child,
25% of their intake of
vegetables consists of french
fries or potato chips. Adults eat an average of 4 servings of french fries per
week. A small
(are there any small servings still out there?) serving of french
fries carries 187 calories – a bag a day is over 68,000 calories a
year, almost
20 pounds of extra weight!
Is it any wonder that 15% of our
children are obese and that
the percentage is growing all the time?
For all the diet and health
information that daily blares
from our radios, televisions, and Internet portals, we are drowning in
our own
fat. We spend half our family food budget on eating out, primarily at
fast food
outlets, where the true nutritional and caloric values of the offerings
require
the skill of a Sherlock Holmes to uncover.
Think what it could do for our
collective waistlines if we
simply deleted french
fries
from our diet and substituted real, live vegetables (a rare commodity
in the
fast food industry). We may yet be saved by the lowly green bean.
We can try to get the word out
but the U. S. Department of
Agriculture has only two million a year to spend on the cause and the
food
advertisers spend forty billion a year to convince us otherwise.
Oh well, maybe we didn’t want to
be slim anyway.