Help! I'm addicted to Wendy's Big Bacon Classic Combo

rollerboy

Teletubby Sport Hunter
Dec 5, 2004
903
0
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San Francisco
georgebushmoron said:
Well I still am a workout freak, so the burger meals aren't making me fat... yet.
The fat all goes to your spectacularly large, eggshaped head.

Nah, seriously, the danger has nothing to do with how fat you are. Heavy intake of transfats increases your risk of heart disease by an order of magnitude. Unsaturated fats such as olive oil are high in calories (and hence fattening), but essentially harmless with respect to heart disease.

Eating fast food 5 days a week is the dietary equivalent of chain smoking. Seriously, you're cruising for a heart attack if you don't change your ways.
 
May 13, 2004
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Yuk....Wendy's.......

I'm kinda partial to Fatburger(west end on Denman), but for fast food(haven't had it in ages thou.....it's gotta be a McDonalds Quarter Pounder)
 

totravel

New member
May 21, 2004
783
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0
Big Trapper said:
Hey... HEY... HEY...
Cool Fat Albert reference.:D

Anyway, there is no such thing as a healthy burger. I eat them as an occasional special treat (I actually prefer BK Whopper, then Harvey's), but no way I'd risk the health hazard of everyday.
But pussy, that's a different story.:)
 

hornyitalian06

New member
May 5, 2006
619
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Edmonton
Wendy's Big Bacon Classic Combo

Georgebushmoron, Bacon Classic Combo is great a Wendys. However, if you are ever to visit Calgary, you must go to Pete's Drive In. They the best burgers, fries and especially thick milkshakes:p ;) :cool: :D
 

necko

New member
Feb 26, 2005
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Republic of Burnaby
Sure I'm trying to lose weight and u guys talking fastfood, I'm craving that Bacon Mushroom cheese extra fat burger:(Just kidding I just don't eat fast food, I don't feel good afterwards
 

Lesbian Hunter

Throw Me to the Lesbians
Aug 17, 2006
474
4
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Victoria
Starbuck's serves some fat drinks

Starbucks ® Coffees (16 fl oz) Calories
Starbucks, Caramel Frappuccino® Coffee - no whip 280
Starbucks, Caramel Frappuccino® Coffee - whip 430
Starbucks, Coffee Frappuccino® Coffee 260
Starbucks, Caffe Latte, w/non-fat milk 165
Starbucks, Caffe au Lait, w/whole milk 155
Starbucks, Mocha Malt Frappuccino® Coffee - whip 570
Starbucks, Caffè Americano 15
Starbucks, Cappuccino 150
Starbucks, Cappuccino, w/ low-fat milk 142
Starbucks, Caramel Macchiato 320
 

gordfurb

New member
Dec 7, 2005
114
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0
petes drive inn

i don't understand the hype of petes drive inn in calgary, i waited in line for 30 minutes,and was not impressed with the food there although they did give me a lot of onion rings, the burgers were blahh to plain just a burger with ketchup and relish and mustard. IT was hardly fast food i could have sat down at a nice restaurant and had a nice healthy meal for the amount of time i waited in line..:mad: .....oh well i had to find out...
 

Big Trapper

Sr. Member***
May 13, 2002
661
1
0
New York City mulls ban on restaurant trans fats
26/09/2006 8:30:00 PM

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NEW YORK (AP) - Three years after the city banned smoking in restaurants, health officials are talking about prohibiting something they say is almost as bad: artificial trans fatty acids.


The city health department unveiled a proposal Tuesday that would bar cooks at any of the city's 24,600 food service establishments from using ingredients that contain the artery-clogging substance, commonly listed on food labels as partially hydrogenated oil.
Artificial trans fats are found in some shortenings, margarine and frying oils and turn up in foods from pie crusts to french fries to doughnuts.

Doctors agree that trans fats are unhealthy in nearly any amount, but a spokesman for the restaurant industry said he was stunned the city would seek to ban a legal ingredient found in millions of American kitchens.

"Labelling is one thing, but when they totally ban a product, it goes well beyond what we think is prudent and acceptable," said Chuck Hunt, executive vice-president of the city's chapter of the New York State Restaurant Association.

He said the proposal could create havoc: Cooks would be forced to discard old recipes and scrutinize every ingredient in their pantry. A restaurant could face a fine if an inspector finds the wrong type of vegetable shortening on its shelves.

The proposal also would create a huge problem for national chains. Among the fast foods that would need to get an overhaul or face a ban: McDonald's french fries, Kentucky Fried Chicken and several varieties of Dunkin' Donuts.

Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden acknowledged that the ban would be a challenge for restaurants, but he said trans fats can easily be replaced with substitute oils that taste the same or better and are far less unhealthy.

"It is a dangerous and unnecessary ingredient," Frieden said. "No one will miss it when it's gone."

A similar ban on trans fats in restaurant food has been proposed in Chicago and is still under consideration, although it has been ridiculed by some as unnecessary government meddling.

The latest version of the Chicago plan would only apply to companies with annual revenues of more than US$20 million, a provision aimed exclusively at fast-food giants.

A few companies have moved to eliminate trans fats on their own.

Wendy's announced in August that it had switched to a new cooking oil that contains no trans fatty acids. Crisco now sells a shortening that contains zero trans fats. Frito-Lay removed trans fats from its Doritos and Cheetos. Kraft's took trans fats out of Oreos.

McDonald's began using a trans fat-free cooking oil in Denmark after that country banned artificial trans fats in processed food, but it has yet to do so in the United States.

Walt Riker, vice-president of corporate communications at McDonald's, said in a statement Tuesday that the company would review New York's proposal.

"McDonald's knows this is an important issue, which is why we continue to test in earnest to find ways to further reduce (trans fatty acid) levels," he said.

New York's health department had asked restaurants to impose a voluntary ban last year but found use of trans fats unchanged in recent surveys.

Under the New York proposal, restaurants would need to get artificial trans fats out of cooking oils, margarine and shortening by July 1, 2007, and all other food stuffs by July 1, 2008. It would not affect grocery stores. It also would not apply to naturally occurring trans fats, which are found in some meats and dairy.

The Board of Health has yet to approve the proposal and will not do so until at least December, Frieden said.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration began requiring food labels to list trans fats in January.

Dr. Walter Willett, chairman of the Department of Nutrition at the Harvard University School of Public Health, praised New York health officials for considering a ban, which he said could save lives.

"Artificial trans fats are very toxic, and they almost surely cause tens of thousands of premature deaths each year," he said. "The federal government should have done this long ago."
 

wolverine

Hard Throbbing Member
Nov 11, 2002
6,384
9
38
E-Town
A fast food burger is nice to have on occasion when the urge is strong, but not as a dietary staple. I can often kill such urges by remembering the agonizing times on the toilet when my bowels turn into a streaming shit fountain after indulging in a McGrease meal. Or remember the cardboard-like aftertaste and overbloated feeling of a Whopper combo when the smells of Burger King's charbroiler is trying to lure me in. Or remember the horror stories about what has gone into Wendy's chili.
 
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