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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Chefs not weighing calories in deciding portion size

Marilynn Marchione Associated Press

BOSTON – If you don’t pay attention to calories when deciding how much of something to eat, you might want to know that some of the chefs serving it to you don’t either.

A survey of 300 restaurant chefs around the country reveals that taste, looks and customer expectations are what matter when they determine portion size. Only one in six said the calorie content was very important and half said it didn’t matter at all.

While it may make diners happy to get piles of pasta and mountains of meat, they’ll pay the price in pounds, said doctors at the annual meeting of the Obesity Society, where the survey was presented Saturday.

Chefs agreed that big servings encourage people to eat too much, but said it’s up to the diner to decide how much to consume – and how much to take in a doggie bag.

Portion sizes have bloated during the last few decades, a trend that worries doctors and experts.

“As you increase portion sizes or the variety of meals served, people are going to consume more calories,” said Thomas Wadden, president of the Obesity Society and director of the Center for Weight and Eating Disorders at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.

He had no part in the study, which was led by Barbara Rolls, an obesity researcher at Pennsylvania State University. She and others gave questionnaires to chefs attending culinary meetings last year. More than 400 responded, and 300 who gave complete answers formed the final sample.

Two-thirds were executive chefs at fine or casual dining restaurants, and the rest were assistant or kitchen chefs. Most had worked at least 20 years, and three-fourths had a degree in culinary arts.

Chefs said these factors strongly influence portion size: food presentation (70 percent), cost (65 percent) and customer expectations (52 percent). Only 16 percent said calories were a big influence.