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McDonald's puts the calories on its menu – but is anyone counting?

Genevieve Roberts
Tuesday 06 September 2011 10:00 BST
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Play to the gallery: 'Shame'
Play to the gallery: 'Shame'

When IT consultant Paul Venables last visited a McDonald's restaurant, he ordered a quarterpounder with cheese and large fries.

Yesterday, he swapped the fries, at 460 calories, for a fruit bag at 42 calories – and held the cheese – knocking just under 500 calories from his meal.

Mr Venables, 42, from Esher in Surrey, was inspired partly by McDonald's decision to label its menus with calorie counts at its 1,200 stores from this week. "Obviously, some people won't care, but I am concerned about the obesity problem in this country," he said.

It remains to be seen whether Mr Venables will stick to his new diet.

Indeed, in New York, where McDonald's has been publishing calorie counts since 2008, the average lunchtime purchase has dropped less significantly, from 829 to 785 calories.

Some 5,000 food outlets will offer calorie count menus by the end of the year. Burger King, Starbucks, Pret A Manger, Pizza Hut and KFC have also signed up to the voluntary scheme, as part of the Government's Public Health Responsibility Deal.

But Pizza Express, Subway, Domino's Pizza, Nando's, Caffe Nero and Costa are yet to join.

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said it would help fast-food fans, "spot those hidden calories in their favourite foods and keep an eye on their waistlines". He added: "One in six meals are now eaten outside the home and for those meals we often have no idea how many calories we are eating."

While Steve Bridges, 44, from Guildford, was not influenced in his choice of meal – a 490-calorie Big Mac – he believes it will have an effect.

"I eat healthily most of the time and don't normally eat in McDonald's," he said. "But it does make you more aware: it's interesting to see the companies which have opted out." Edona Nurdini, 26, agreed that the decision to include calories would add to people's awareness: "It also helps McDonald's to recover its reputation because it's never been associated with health."

A survey of 1,000 people for Which? found two out of three adults backed the policy of all fast-food chains, pizza stores and coffee shops publishing the number of calories on their menus. Some people at McDonald's in Cannon Street in central London yesterday were surprised their lunches were not more calorific.

Daniel Pryce, 25, who works in a law firm, chose a McChicken sandwich (385 calories), small fries (230 calories) and Sprite zero (two calories). "I don't come here that often, so I just eat whatever I want," he said. "But eating a McDonald's isn't actually that bad."

A Big Mac contains 25 per cent of the average woman's suggested calorific intake. It has 10 grams of saturated fat – almost half the daily recommended amount – and 2.1 grams of salt, 40 per cent of the daily guideline. Denniz Messi, 24, from Greece, said that even if the calorie counts were not sky high, it did not make McDonald's healthy.

"We all know this food is fattening and not good for your health," she said.

All McDonald's stores will publish calorific values from tomorrow.

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