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The Hidden Calories Of Home Cooking

J.M. HIRSCH   02/17/09 02:47 PM ET   AP

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CONCORD, N.H. — Eating at home can save you some cash, but beware the calorie cost.

Though restaurants often take the blame for portion distortion _ the trend of serving up ever larger helpings _ cookbook recipes have done some Supersizing of their own, a study published this week in the Annals of Internal Medicine found.

"There's so much attention that's been given to away-from-home eating and so much attention that's been focused on restaurants and the packaged food industry, it makes me wonder whether it's actually deflecting attention from the one place where we can make the most immediate change," says Cornell University marketing professor Brian Wansink, who directed the study.

The study, which looked at how classic recipes have changed during the past 70 years, found a nearly 40 percent increase in calories per serving for nearly every recipe reviewed, about an extra 77 calories.

The study identified the trend in numerous cookbooks, but it focused on American kitchen icon "Joy of Cooking," first published during the '30s and regularly updated with new editions since then, most recently in 2006.

Those editions gave researchers a continuity of recipes from which to draw their data, Wansink says.

Of the 18 recipes published in all seven editions, 17 increased in calories per serving. That can be attributed partly to a jump in total calories per recipe (about 567 calories), but also to larger portion sizes.

Only the chili con carne recipe remained unchanged through the years. The chicken gumbo, however, went from making 14 servings at 228 calories each in the 1936 edition, to making 10 servings at 576 calories each in the 2006 version.

Beth Wareham, editor of the latest edition, says the 2006 edition includes information about nutrition and healthy eating, and advocates the eating of good fats and whole foods.

She also says portion sizes are carefully determined using practices standard to the industry, and that since the first editions of the book much has changed about food, how it is produced and how it is consumed.

Most excess calories in the American diet still come from food eaten outside the home, says Marion Nestle, professor of nutrition and food studies at New York University. But she says the study is yet another illustration of how accustomed people are to eating ever increasing quantities of food.

And changes in "Joy of Cooking" have been going on for a while. Increases in overall calories per recipe have been gradual, but portion sizes tended to jump, first during the '40s, again during the '60s, and with the largest jump in the 2006 edition.

The first significant signs of restaurant portion inflation didn't show up until the late '70s, says Wansink.

Lisa Young, an adjunct nutrition professor at New York University, had similar findings in a 2002 study that compared the book's brownie recipe from the '60s and '70s editions to the recipe from the 1997 edition.

"Same recipe. Same pan. But in the '60s and '70s it yielded 30 brownies," she says. "In the 1997 edition it yielded 15."

She also was able to trace the trend to other recipe sources. For example, a popular chocolate chip cookie recipe that decades before produced 100 cookies, made only 60 during the '80s, though no ingredients had changed.

Wansink says he is more concerned by the increase in overall calories per recipe _ what experts call caloric density _ than in the portion size increases, which is a more easily recognized phenomenon.

"That (calorie increases) is more insidious because that's the sort if thing the average person wouldn't notice, wouldn't even think would have happened over the years," says Wansink, author of "Mindless Eating," an examination of why people overeat.

Much of the change can be attributed to money. Relative to household income, food is cheaper than during the '30s. So recipes once padded with less expensive (and lower calorie) ingredients like beans, now often have more meat, Wansink says.

The scope of Wansink's study is limited. It measures the recipes only as written, not as eaten. Because people may eat more or less than the suggested serving, estimating the effect on the typical diet is challenging.

But a 40 percent increase is significant. A change of even 10 percent can affect weight, especially when dealing with high calorie foods, says Wansink. His solution? Don't let a full portion get anywhere near your plate.

"It's not enough to just be aware," Wansink says of the recipes once intended to serve nearly twice as many people are they do today. "Put half of it away as soon as it's cooked."

___

On the Net:

Annals of Internal Medicine: http://www.annals.org/

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CONCORD, N.H. — Eating at home can save you some cash, but beware the calorie cost. Though restaurants often take the blame for portion distortion _ the trend of serving up ever larger helpings...
CONCORD, N.H. — Eating at home can save you some cash, but beware the calorie cost. Though restaurants often take the blame for portion distortion _ the trend of serving up ever larger helpings...
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05:15 AM on 02/20/2009
calories aren't bad for you. bad judgement is bad for you.

ALSO EXERCISE IS GOOD FOR YOU!!
02:26 PM on 02/19/2009
the prob is people eat while they cook to taste it...sometimes the tasting goes too far
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Pupadup4oBama
09:03 PM on 02/20/2009
Im currently in Weight Watchers, and they say that even if you are doing a little tasting - you still have to account for it. Very helpful to think of it that way.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
coveark
Obstructionists, get off the hill !!!
07:38 AM on 02/19/2009
Cookbooks do not make people fat...............Pigging out does.

Guzzeling soda is definately a factor in many cases..
06:58 PM on 02/18/2009
There is a difference between home cooking having more calories and someone eating too much of something, causing them a higher calorie intake. The cooking is the same - it is how much you eat that is the difference.
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yorkie
03:37 PM on 02/18/2009
I THINK THE SCRIBE HERE IS ATTEMPTING TO DRAW ATTENTION THAT MANY OUT THERE IN THE RURAL, MIDWEST PARTS OF USA USES OLD OUTDATED COOKBOOKS AS WELL AS LOCAL CHURCH AND CLUB COOKBOOKS...WRITTEN WITH HOMESPUN STYLE THAT OFTEN LEAVES OUT STEPS AND HEALTHY INGREDIENTS ....AND MANY USE SAME COOKING STYLES FROM THE 50'S-60'S AND USE FEW COOK BOOKS AT ALL....BUT TIMES ARE A CHANGING WITH MORE MOBILE PEOPLES AND URBAN GROWTH.....BUT THAT MEANS LESS HOME OWNED GARDENS ETC......MODERATION, AND CUT THE ADDITIVES AND PRE PKGD FOODS WHENEVER POSSIBLE.....WE NEED TO MAKE THE EFFORT TO EAT HEALTHY, BE SMART, AND PATIENT AS WELL.....
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sukiposeyzena
10:00 PM on 02/18/2009
I like your thoughts but the caps make your post less appealing.
Just some honest feedback, yorkie.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Tom Joad
"While there is a lower class, I am in it "
02:41 PM on 02/19/2009
I eat to much. Stop yellin' at me... :)
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pupadup4oBama
09:04 PM on 02/20/2009
Ha ha, :) seriously my ears are hurting!
10:19 AM on 02/18/2009
Portion control and cooking with low fat ingredients can go a long way to decreasing calories.

It's better to eat smaller meals more often.

No meal should be more than 500 calories total. If people stuck to smaller low calorie meals and ate more often, we wouldn't have an obesity epidemic in this country.
02:49 PM on 02/20/2009
Some fat is good for you. I cook with olive oil and sometimes butter. This makes me feel satisfied, so I eat less. No weight problem here.

I wonder about eating small meals more often. It's been said that it keeps glucose levels more even. But there's old wisdom that explains that it's better to wait until a meal is fully digested before adding new food to the stomach.
09:34 PM on 02/21/2009
If you eat high carb meals you have to eat small meals more often. If you eat high protein meals, you do not need to eat nearly as often. This is a myth about hypoglycemia, which I have. The body only needs to eat small meals more often if what it is eating is considered sugar by the body (all carbs, unless very low on the glycemic index, that includes whole wheat bread). Meeting your observation, carbs are absorbed quickly by the body - which turns it into pure glucose.
Take it from someone who has gone through this and whose body is highly sensitive, a high protein, some fat, low carb meal will take you through the day better than anything, especially if that meal is breakfast.
Many times this way of eating will also lower cholesterol, triglycerides and other blood indicators (carbs cause you inflammation which they consider very detrimental to both heart disease and cancer).
This diet, however, has the opposite effect if you eat high carbs with it.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pupadup4oBama
09:07 PM on 02/20/2009
we don't have to necessarily eat lo-cal, but we DO have to watch our portion control and when cooking we use healthy ingredients, or when dining out we request or order exactly what we want, or take half home (also economical too).
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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06:51 PM on 02/17/2009
No worries. Soon it's going to be normal to eat 1 1/2 meals a day, consisting of gruel and rubber-like bread. Just let the recession finish everyone off. People complained about the Starbucks no decaf after 12:00, just watch the sparks fly over that.

On a serious note --- wait, that was a serious note.... Okayu, anyone?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
missviv
12:33 PM on 02/20/2009
I wonder what the calorie count of Soylent Green it?
06:14 PM on 02/17/2009
This article is some trumped up nonsense grasping for attention. And misleading to boot.

Eating out will STILL make you fatter, unless you're making really fattening meals out of crappy processed ingredients at home. You can't convince me that a meal from KFC is worse for me than grilled chicken breast and some stir-fried veggies from home.

And we're blaming COOKBOOKS for the obesity eipdemic? Does anyone seriously divide a pot of chili into 10 or 14 equal servings? Of course not. Most sane people ladle out a dish of chili and if they're still hungry, they go back for seconds. Most cooks are aware that they can substitute lower-fat ingredients for the called-for full-fat ingredients. There are probably more low-fat, heart-healthy cookbooks out there than ever before.

I can't imagine where else we can place the blame before it has to rest on the shoulders of those who are rightfully responsible: The INDIVIDUAL.
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Aabby
"Facts have a liberal bias."-Ste­ven Colbert
03:00 PM on 02/18/2009
my thoughts exactly
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pupadup4oBama
09:09 PM on 02/20/2009
That was some tough-love right there..:).
Great points - all!
02:23 PM on 02/17/2009
First off, restraurant portions have increased in size over the last 50 years, so don't blame cookbooks for increased calories. Second, if you want to weigh less then eat less and exercise more.
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psychmaj323
06:21 PM on 02/17/2009
lol, yep