Listen to this man. Seven years of college, you know. Trying to reason with 2020 and, now, 2022.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

The Sporting Event New Nutrition Plate

This past week, the USDA came up with a new way to measure nutrition to replace the food pyramid.

The June 5th Chicago Tribune's Main Event in the sports section took a tongue-in-the- cheek look at the proper levels of consumption at sporting events.

It was in the form of baseball's home plate and divided into portions:

Frosty Beverages-- beer featured, but also pop (as we in the Midwest call it).
Melty Cheeses-- pizza and nacho cheese.
Encased Meats-- brats and hot dogs
Cold Sweets-- ice cream
Sweets-- Cracker Jack's, of course.

ESTIMATED CALORIES: Somewhere north of 10,000 (mostly empty calories, too!).
SODIUM INTAKE: Excessive
VEGETABLE AND FRUIT INTAKE: Minimal (unless you count ketchup--and we do).

Of course, all this doesn't figure in whether you're able to afford to ATTEND the game or eat and drink once you're in. I hear beer at Wrigley Field is $7 this year. I remember writing in my journal back in April 1981 that after my first trip to the ballpark that year, that they had raised the price of beer to $1.50 and I couldn't afford to drink there anymore.

Eating Healthy at the Ballpark? --RoadDog


LIVING NEAR CHICAGO...We had so much fun on the Northwest Tollway, that we added the Elgin-O'Hare and the I-355 to the congestion. (Incidentally, the Elgin-O'Hare does not go to either place.

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