iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Chain Restaurants Will Make Kids Menus Healthier

By MARY CLARE JALONICK   07/13/11 01:02 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- Parents seeking healthier restaurant meals for their kids can start to look beyond chicken nuggets and macaroni-and-cheese.

At least 19 large restaurant chains – including Burger King, Chili's, IHOP and Friendly's – plan to announce Wednesday that they will include healthier options on their children's menus. At least 15,000 restaurant locations will focus on increasing servings of fruits and vegetables, lean proteins, whole grains and low-fat dairy. The items will have less fats, sugars and sodium.

Less healthy foods like burgers and fries will still be on the menu, but the restaurants say they will do more to promote healthier options. Chili's, for example, will highlight a chicken sandwich with a side of pineapple or mandarin oranges on their kids' menu. Burger King has recently reformulated children's chicken nuggets so they include less sodium, and employees taking orders will ask if customers want healthier apple fries instead of the standard "fries with that?"

The effort is part of a new National Restaurant Association initiative to give kids more healthy options at restaurants and to make it easier for parents to find those options. Some of the items are already on menus, but restaurants will advertise them more prominently and flag the healthier menu items to make ordering easier.

To be part of the program, restaurants must include at least one kids' menu item that is 600 calories or less and meets other nutritional requirements. A side dish worth less than 200 calories must also be included.

"This could provide a great push toward healthier offerings at restaurants," said Robert Post, the Agriculture Department official in charge of developing the department's dietary guidelines, which came out earlier this year. Those urged Americans to eat less salt.

"We hope this is a trend toward new items and voluntary reformulations," Post said.

The companies signing up for the initiative are Au Bon Pain, Bonefish Grill, Burger King, Burgerville, Carrabba's Italian Grill, Chevys, Chili's, Corner Bakery Cafe, Cracker Barrel, Denny's, El Pollo Loco, Friendly's, IHOP, Joe's Crab Shack, Outback Steakhouse, Silver Diner, Sizzler, T-Bones Great American Eatery and zpizza.

Joe Taylor of Chili's said the company has responded to consumer demands for healthier foods. While diners looking for a healthier meal used to have to ask for substitutions, they now have more options.

"We've seen our guests customize their meals to a greater degree when they are looking to hold the mayo or add the broccoli," Taylor said.

Patrick Lenow of IHOP said the restaurant will add two new children's menu items because of the effort, including pancakes with fruit and scrambled eggs with fruit. The company had already limited everything on their children's menu to under 600 calories and made fruit a default side, instead of fries – a change that has dramatically increased fruit consumption at the restaurants, Lenow said.

Several restaurant chains haven't committed yet to joining the effort. Maggiano's, owned with Chili's by Brinker International, is not part of the program. Neither is McDonald's, the world's largest burger chain.

Dawn Sweeney, president and CEO of the National Restaurant Association, said the group is hoping to add additional restaurants to the effort in coming months.

First lady Michelle Obama last year attended a National Restaurant Association meeting in Washington and pleaded with them to take a little butter or cream out of their dishes, use low-fat milk and provide apple slices or carrots as a default side dish on the kids' menu. She said Americans eat a third of their meals in restaurants, which have long been seen by many as the worst offenders in terms of nutrition.

Many restaurant companies are starting to reformulate menu items and add new healthier sections to their menus, however, as consumers have shown a heightened interest in nutrition.

The federal government will also soon require restaurants to post calories on their menus. FDA guidelines will require chain restaurants with 20 or more locations, along with bakeries, grocery stores, convenience stores and coffee chains, to clearly post the calories.

John Dillon of Denny's said the company recently took photos of French fries off their menus.

"Where before we may have been concerned about not having French fries pictured on our menu, we're now finding that has actually helped our business," he said.

___

Online:

Array

___

Array

FOLLOW HUFFPOST FOOD

WASHINGTON -- Parents seeking healthier restaurant meals for their kids can start to look beyond chicken nuggets and macaroni-and-cheese. At least 19 large restaurant chains – including Burger ...
WASHINGTON -- Parents seeking healthier restaurant meals for their kids can start to look beyond chicken nuggets and macaroni-and-cheese. At least 19 large restaurant chains – including Burger ...
Filed by Joe Satran  |  Report Corrections
 
 
  • Comments
  • 129
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4  Next ›  Last »  (4 total)
photo
butchcliff
The future is unwritten
08:10 AM on 07/17/2011
Its good to make restaurants and schools to offer healthier choices. But dont ever think they could take kids away from anybody. Keep educating parents and grandparents is all they can do. Nanny State?
11:45 AM on 07/15/2011
Let the resturants serve what they want ( it's none of your business) it's their business.
Eat there or not. That's your business. Not the family next door, not the family in the news,
not the family in the other state for goodness sakes. Either the resturant will stay in business or it will not. Maybe we should close the business that sells sushi because a lot of people don't like it. Huh! But if people eat there and you don' t like it ? You don't want to feed it to your kids?
It's none of your business.
10:53 AM on 07/15/2011
Eating habits start at home, but this is a step in the right direction.
07:24 PM on 07/14/2011
I don't think kids will eat it. I am in my 50's. Growing up my father worked late everyday and my mom made a kid's meal and and an adult meal. Who wants to cook expensive food for kids who do not want to eat it? Most kids' palates are not what the adult palate is. As a kid, my food choices were very limited despite the offerings. The only meal my mother could guarantee I would eat was french fries with ketchup. My brother was PBJ. Other foods came up at the dinner table, we just would not eat them for the most part. As an adult my favorites are green beans and cauliflower and I was 25 before they became my favorites. To this day, when we go visit my mom, there are always hot dogs for the kids who may not like the real dinner and you cannot let them go hungry or just eat bread.
07:18 PM on 07/14/2011
It would help if they made the healthier options the same price as the not so healthier, that way parents aren't spending 5 or 6 bucks on a kids meal vs the 3-4 dollar unhealthier version. That's why obesity effects more people with lower incomes than those with higher budgets.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dancenownzen
06:57 PM on 07/14/2011
I am STANDING UP clapping my hands together and cheering that FINALLY perhaps we can begin to address the poor health and eating habits we have come accustome too in AMERICA
03:15 PM on 07/14/2011
Cooking is a lost art.
08:08 PM on 07/14/2011
You have no idea how lost. On weekends parents come in and buy pancakes to go. They buy pancakes, sausage, and eggs. We laugh because they could go to grocery store and buy a box of 10 for what they pay for 3. It's laziness, parents can't be bothered anymore. A can of ravoli costs less then a 4 piece nugget, also healthier. Kids will eat what you raise them on. Feed them a diet of junk and that is all they will eat.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:13 PM on 07/14/2011
Every commercial I see lately, is geared towards the African American population. Sad......anything to make a buck.
07:15 PM on 07/14/2011
AA's eat at Fast Food restaraunts. A lot of single moms and the fast food is cheaper and you are in and out of the restaurant. Commercials want to hit their target markets.
03:07 PM on 07/14/2011
Health.gov is a great resource that gives menu ideas, serving sizes, and ways to stretch a budget. I also think that anyone who delivers in a hospital or goes to a doctor for a well-child visit should receive a copy of the USDA nutrition guidelines with serving sizes and the list of USDA approved "convenience" foods (those that have high protein, low fat and low salt) so that every parent is informed before feeding their child.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:07 PM on 07/14/2011
So, it is not the responsibility of parents,,,, nanny state. Blame the eateries for the ills of parenting, its just crazy.
photo
iuriggs6
Sure thing. Shoot, Timmy.
05:04 PM on 07/14/2011
I couldn't agree more.
02:51 PM on 07/14/2011
Why is there a picture of a happy meal on an article about healthier kids meals, when McDonald's is not participating? My other comment is that I am glad healthier choices are being offered and are apparently profitable as others are doing it as well, but at the same time the unhealthy versions are still offered, sometimes it is okay to eat these foods, just like it is okay to sometimes eat dessert, just walk to the fast food place or go to the park after to burn off the extra calories.
10:59 AM on 07/15/2011
good point about the Happy Meal ! and the other point too. I must admit when I go out to eat (which is rare!) I don't choose based on health, I choose based on what I feel like eating especially on "special occaisions"... However, if I had to rely on fast food regularly I'd be very glad to have a healthy option.
02:34 PM on 07/14/2011
My kids will rarely, if never, eat fast food. I ate it as a kid and will never go anywhere near it again. It is just nasty.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:17 PM on 07/14/2011
F & F'd people do it because it is quick and kids complain to get it. My kids didn't want it after seeing a crew of big construction guys eating salads out of a quick mart for lunch. That became their new thing, big salads from the mart to go. I explained that you cannot eat junk and work or play in the heat. No more drive-thru before practice!
02:19 PM on 07/14/2011
Fast food joints give you exactly what they say they are. Yes, the burgers or fries, or whatever are great, but man the fat and salt intake. Parents need to start taking on responsibility for their children being fat. I listened as one mother said sometimes it is just great not to have to fix a meal. Then don't have kids. They are what as known as a resposibility. You have to take care of them, not RONALD MCDONALD, OR BURGER KING!!! Make your kids get out and ride ten speed bikes, play little league baseball, football, basketball, swim, play tennis, lift weights, go jogging, or even walk around the inside of a mall 5 times to get excersize. Feed them fruits, vegetables, meat, and dairy. And don't give me that whole milk has too much fat, bull crap. When I was in school we bought cokes and pepsi's, could buy Little Debbie cakes at the lunch counter and I still was 6'4" and was only 185 lbs. I drank whold milk like it was the last water on earth. SO start telling facts. Parents are not responsible for their kids anymore so they make the goverment do it for them!!!!!!!! Must be the children who grew up in the drug years!
02:53 PM on 07/14/2011
I agree, I actually drank milk that had more fat than whole milk from my dad's dairy farm and my parents were always asked if they fed us, we just weren't allowed inside unless it was raining, get outside was all we heard, go play, that and the fast food joint or a restaurant was a very rare every other month treat followed by ice cream at Dairy Queen.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:24 PM on 07/14/2011
So was a coke......who would let their kids just gulp that junk.
02:10 PM on 07/14/2011
I think parents need to set an example of exercise for kids. We go swimming, hiking, biking, walking with our kids. My husband and I stay active. I think that is more important than anything. It becomes a lifestyle to include exercise in what you do. It's when our children are in their late 30's to 40's that poor eating and lack of exercise will show it's affect. If we set an example of sitting around in our 30's/40's then our children will do the same as they age.
PE is not the answer. It a very limited work out from my experience. To me it was more of an introduction to different sports.
My parents made sure we lived a 20 minute walk from school, so everyday I got 40 minutes of walking with 2 hills to climb.
01:37 PM on 07/14/2011
I love how these writers want to beat up on McDonalds. No one acknowledges how they put the option of apple slices instead of fries in their happy meals for years now. It is the parents responsibility to decide what their child eats, it is the parents responsibility to address excercise.
Bombard your school boards with letters demanding P.E. make sure your children are in sports or somekind of physical excercise a few times a week. If we as americans don't stop being lazy in relationship to the care of our children the government will and then where will freedom be.
02:21 PM on 07/14/2011
I thought it was a good thing when McD put an apple option with their happy meals, but I didn't like the lack of a peel on the apple. The peel contains some very important chemical compounds for health. I didn't want my kids to learn to eat apples with out peels. I wish other kids weren't being taught this by McD. Lucky for me my kids thought apples tasted bad without the peel. I also do not like the introduction of a very sweet substance to dip a fruit in. That's easy enough to pull out of the meal, but once again is teaching many kids to eat apples that way instead of in their natural delicious state.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:20 PM on 07/14/2011
They remove the apples skin because they are treating the apple with an anti-browning chemical/rinse which would not make the skin hold up well in a plastic bag for weeks. Buy a fresh apple for your kids!