Sharon Udasin | Slap a label on that burrito
Just like grocery-aisle food, items from restaurants and vendors should come with nutritional information
· October 20, 2006, 5:00 am
As I walk down Spruce Street during the lunch hour craze, it's nearly impossible to slip through the mazes of people awaiting their food. To most students, the smoldered tin boxes that line the sidewalk are actually a desirable chain of mobile eateries. Yet the astonishing popularity of these houses of fat sparks the question - is student health in jeopardy?
Recently in New York City, Mayor Michael Bloomberg attempted to legislate a citywide ban of the infamous trans fats. However, it's unlikely that we will see any comparable health movements in Philadelphia, the homeland of the succulent masterpiece that we all fondly know as the cheesesteak.
Though we have shown significant improvement, Philadelphia continues to rank regularly as one of the five fattest cities in America, according to the annual survey in Men's Fitness magazine. And while we may be elitist Ivy Leaguers, Penn students are no exception to this Philadelphian tradition.
"I try to have less fat wherever I can," popular food-truck owner Hemo Abdelaziz said. An admirable claim, yet the specific ingredients of Hemo's secret sauce remain a public mystery.
The public, however, has a right to know what they're eating.
While the ingredients can surely remain a secret, no food vendor - even Hemo - should be allowed to hide his food's nutritional value. Rather than restricting certain ingredients, like in New York, we should be educating people about healthy choices.
In grocery stores, such labels appear on every packaged product. With precise and reliable data, we have the personal choice whether or not to purchase an item.
At the Fresh Grocer, manager Jim Ronaldson noted that trans-fat information "used to be on the back of packages - now they put it in bold print on the front," and these readily available data have a positive effect on consumers' decisions. As the five-year manager of the store, Ronaldson has had plenty of time to observe the dietary habits of Penn students. "They're always reading the ingredients - always," he said.
According to the Food and Drug Administration, "food served for immediate consumption" has always been exempt from the nutrition-label requirement. But ultimately, it's food, and it can affect your health just as much as items from the grocery aisle. Therefore, the FDA should consider requiring restaurants and food vendors to provide nutrition information.
"It would be beneficial for all consumers to be able to view information about each menu item," Nutrition professor Stella Volpe said, adding that it may be difficult for restaurants that regularly tweak their menus.
Perhaps the government could perform a trial run with the help of volunteers, owners whose restaurants have simpler, more standardized menus. If this experiment proved successful, they could slowly expand to businesses with more complex and varying selections.
Dimitrios Dimopoulos, owner of Greek Lady and Allegro's Pizza, feels that this strategy would create a more health-conscious clientele and increase business productivity. Enthusiastic about the idea, he plans to create an integrative binder with nutritional information about each of his menu's selections. He would have no problem providing these details because the "food is consistent, so it's the same ingredients."
"We have nothing to hide," Dimopoulos said. "People should know exactly what they are eating."
Several chain restaurants already provide nutrition details for some of their selections. Chili's includes a "Guiltless Grill" menu, which provides calorie information, as well as total grams of carbohydrates, fats, saturated fats and fiber. Such information can grant health-conscious Penn students some peace of mind in their otherwise anxious lifestyles.
"I always find myself trying to estimate calories and fat content of food that I eat, and I haven't quite mastered the science yet," Wharton senior Sejal Patel said. "I would probably be more inclined to eat at a place that told me exactly how much fat, trans fat [or] cholesterol ... I was paying for. And I would also be less likely to splurge on something like dessert if I knew just how unhealthy it was."
If a box of Cheerios tells consumers its precise measure of dietary fiber per serving, eventually, so too should a sandwich from a Spruce Street food cart. If you're looking to stay within your daily allotment of saturated fat at Taco Pal, I'm pretty sure you'll have to be satisfied with just one bite of that burrito.
But maybe a label on that burrito would make people think twice before asking for sour cream.
Sharon Udasin is a College senior from East Brunswick, N.J. Her e-mail address is udasin@dailypennsylvanian.com. Shed a Little Light appears on Mondays.




Comments (5)
Stiv
December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm
Flag this comment
What's even funnier is the fact that last year they wrote up a bunch of health viloations for some on campus eateries and almost every student said "Yeah it's gross, but I'll still eat there!" LOL
Fit But He Knows It
December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm
Flag this comment
Mens Fitness 2006 fattest cities, Philadelphia = 23 http://www.mensfitness.com/rankings/358?page=2
dumb, dumb, dumb
December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm
Flag this comment
You know, it shouldn't stop at restaurants and vendors...I plan to DEMAND that I am given labels for every stinking thing I eat at a barbecue or holiday party or even if one of my friends just wants to give me a SNACK.
Johnny Oduya
December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm
Flag this comment
If you go to a barbecue, nutritional information is implicitly available because all rolls and beef patties and such come with nutritional information on their labels. And if you by fresh beef that doesn't come with nutritional information, that kind of food is relatively standard. If you eat at one of these trucks, and I don't know why you would anyway because their food is greasy and disgusting, you have absolutely no idea what you are eating. While it is obvious that most food does contain fat, at these trucks, there is undoubtedly not the same amount of trans fats in each item, so it is certainly possible to be made aware of it. I do not think the writer is advocating a law or anything here anyway, what I think she is suggesting is that these places should voluntarily make this information available. This is a great idea and would not only be better for consumers but also be better for business. If they provided this information, they would attract a whole new customer base just by showing that some things are healthy. One last thing, in repsonse to "Wow", you wait for Fridays to see what reidiculous things Sharon comments about, but if you look at the dates of all columns except for this one, those dates correspond to Mondays. So what exactly can't you wait for on Fridays? I guess you can't wait to wait 3 more days to read her column?
Wow
December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm
Flag this comment
This column gets dumber by the week. I wait for Fridays to see what ridiculous things Sharon will gripe about. I cant believe this is the same paper that printed great columns by Melody Kramer and Gabe Oppenheimer. What a waste of newsprint/bandwidth. Do you want ANYONE to think for themselves? Or should the government do everything - slap a label on everything because people are too dumb to realise that sour cream is fatty - or - my personal favorite yet - get them to banish Jews for Jesus. I showed that to a couple of people at work, and we all agreed that it was some of the silliest writing we'd ever read.
Comments are closed for this item.