Big Mac

alfadl

New member
I have been counting calories and working out heavily for the last 5 month, I lost around around 17KG, I usually work out for 1000 calories 5 days a week. I read yesterday that a Big Mack has 560 calories, so if I eat 700 calories between Breakfast and Lunch and a Big Mac on an early Dinner, will that make me loose wight?. its a total of 1300 calories with a work out of 1000 calories.
Appreciate your answers.
Hassan
 
ive eaten plent of big macs and lost weight :)

I found though that 2 hamburgers have less calories and are more filling, or i order a big mac without mayo or cheese (which is most of the tasty stuff, and also the higher calorie stuff)
 
Huh? You will eat 1300 cals and burn 1000 cals? So you will have an excess of 300 calories? I'm a little confused. As far as a big mac, everyone should have a cheat every now and again, just wouldn't do it daily.
 
What excersise are you doing to loose 1000 a day? I have been doing 4 miles of walking and loosing 400, but I would love to be knocking out 1000 a day, it could really open my eating options up. :)
 
One or two won't hurt, but when it comes to crap like Big Macs, I'd start thinking about not only the calories, but what's actually in there. There's a whole bunch of processed stuff in there, and they're re-heated for hours sometimes. Really no nutrition value at all :(.

Sometimes when I cheat, I try and make it up by downing two tasty V8's and some All-Bran cereal to get some nutrition in there somewhere.
 
actually theres nothing majorly bad about a Big Mac. Its bread, Meat, Salad, Cheese and Mayo. Nothing overly strange about it. All in all its a fairly well balenced meal. The only thing wrong about it is that most people order 2 or 3!
I would be more concerned about whats in your cereal, try reading this
 
I agree a burger here and there won't kill you......but it will definately clean you out (if you know what I mean).

Eww. TMI.
 
I have been counting calories and working out heavily for the last 5 month, I lost around around 17KG, I usually work out for 1000 calories 5 days a week. I read yesterday that a Big Mack has 560 calories, so if I eat 700 calories between Breakfast and Lunch and a Big Mac on an early Dinner, will that make me loose wight?. its a total of 1300 calories with a work out of 1000 calories.
Appreciate your answers.
Hassan

Ok I'm not sure if I understand but..

If your only eating 1300 calories a day you will lose weight sitting on the couch.

If you only eat 1300 calories, and burn 1000 of them working out, you might die.

Your body needs more than 300 calories leftover to keep your organs working, and to support your weight.
 
If you are working out that much you need more food than just 1300 cals.

As for the big mac issue, while its crappy for you as far as nutritional value, having one now and again isn't going to hurt your weight loss efforts as long as you compensate for it. Granted, right now you are completely overcompensating.
 
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I dont really get the whole McD's thing because I have never liked the food. I much rather go to the store and buy some meat for a home cooked burger than to eat the processed crap most fast food places serve. You can eat a lot more food for the same amount of calories if you cook it yourself (and it will taste 100000000000000000000000 times better).

But, you can lose weight eating fast food. Im sure it's possible to lose weight eating fast food 3 times a day as long as you put in the equal amount of exercise. Definately not a good idea though since it has potential short and long term side effects.
 
What excersise are you doing to loose 1000 a day? I have been doing 4 miles of walking and loosing 400, but I would love to be knocking out 1000 a day, it could really open my eating options up. :)

I read somewhere about subtracting 10% off what the calorie counting says on the machines we use (treadmill, elliptical etc) not sure about that, but that sounds legit. Well, one time, for 82 minutes on the treadmill with different settings like running, jogging, high incline.. blah, it said I burned 1000 calories when I ended my workout. I thought that was kinda funny but I felt accomplished. :O)
 
Check out this video, makes you wonder what sort of chemicals McD's puts in its "food".



You may be better off with a regular burger with 100% meat rather than food with a bunch of chemical additives. Dont get me wrong, I eat McDs once in a blue moon myself but I wouldn't add it to my diet once a week if I was trying to get healthy.
 
mannnn i don't touch ANYTHING from McDonalds. sort of on principle sort of because they put meat in basically everything except the soda. i mean really beef flavoring/crap in the fries???
 
and what is wrong with meat? nothing.
I think this thread has gone into stupidity and folklore. contrary to popular belief, they dont lace everything with cyanide and chemicals. They buy in a bunch of patties from one company, a bunch of buns from another etc and put them together. theres nothing fancy or strange about it. Its no worse than buying the same ingrediants fro the supermarket and putting them together yourself.
 
I dont believe the patties at fast food restaurants contain 100% meat. I have nothing against burgers, whether or not you're dieting, but there may be better ways to attain a healthy lifestyle than by introducing one Big Mac a day--like eating a low fat burger at home (and that way you avoid the temptation of ordering the super size fries!)

****

It’s Called Junk and You Still Eat It

By Sara Khorshid

The profits of giant fast food chains hit billions of dollars every year as hungry consumers all around the world continue to line up to get hamburgers or pizzas with French fries and sodas. Fast-paced citizens of the 21st century spend their money and risk their health to eat junk. Mainly composed of fat and salt, fast food is nothing but that. Americans eat it to enjoy its delicious taste and to save their time and effort.

Fast Food= Processed Food

Basically, fast food is processed food; but what is processed food to begin with? Processed food is simply food that has been altered in a factory from the way in which nature presented it, as part of a bulk process where natural and chemical food additives are added. This leaves the final product without its naturally created nutrients like vitamins, minerals, and enzymes. Besides giving the food its delectable taste, food additives keep it lasting unspoiled for a long time, which means that processed food is usually stored for a long time before it is purchased and eaten! The oldest natural food additives are salt, sugar, and vinegar; and although these are natural, an excess in their amounts seriously endangers the health.

Junk foods characteristically contain high amounts of salt (sodium chloride). Sodium is necessary for various metabolic functions; too much of it, however, is associated with an increased risk of hypertension (high blood pressure). Hypertension is a known risk factor for heart disease.

If this is the case with natural food additives, then how about artificial ones? With the advent of processed foods in the past thirty years, there has been a massive explosion in the chemical adulteration of foods with additives.
In his best seller, Fast Food Nation, Eric Schlosser reveals to the American public very interesting facts about what they eat. He talks about his experience in a factory in New Jersey where he discovered how the flavors of McDonald's food products are fabricated.

Current food processing methods gather many parts of many animals into one burger. The burger's beef has to be deep-fried in oil at high temperatures over 300° C, and this goes for almost all the popular fast foods that have to be deep-fried, consequently, they become denatured and possibly even carcinogenic.

Moreover, there is a very interesting story to tell about the popular McDonald's French fries exposing the way they are processed, and the flavors that distinguish them. For decades, McDonald's cooked its French fries in a mixture of 7% cottonseed oil and 93 % beef tallow. The mixture gave the fries their unique flavor and more saturated beef fat per ounce than a McDonald's hamburger. In 1990, amidst a barrage of criticism over the amount of cholesterol in its fries, McDonald's switched to pure vegetable oil. This presented the company with a challenge: how to make fries that subtly taste like beef without cooking them in beef tallow. A look at the ingredients in McDonald's French fries suggests how the problem was solved. Toward the end of the list is a seemingly innocuous yet oddly mysterious phrase: "natural flavor". That ingredient helps to explain why the fries taste so good.
We thus see how the mouth-watering tastes of the much popular American fast food diet are all about chemicals, artificial flavors and food additives that are added to the food in the course of a hi-tech manufacturing process.

Fat and Sugar: Obesity Has Become A Phenomenon

Simply put, fast food is high in fat and sugar – that is to say high in calories – and low in its nutrient value. Fast food is particularly high in saturated fats, generally preferred by the food industry because it is cheap and can withstand high cooking temperatures.

It has been scientifically proven that saturated fats are correlated to cholesterol levels in the blood, and can therefore cause heart diseases.

While experts state that a healthy meal should have less than 30% of its calories from fat, with 9 grams of fat and 270 calories, a McDonald's hamburger just breaks the 30% ceiling. Burger King's hamburger has 15 grams of fat and 320 calories, i.e. 42% of its calories are from fat. Other famous restaurants' hamburgers have more calories and larger percentages of fats. Thus, hamburgers give us much more calories than we need and their calories come mainly from fats.

When it comes to sugar, it is enough to say that the typical can of soda contains an equivalent of 10 teaspoons of sugar.

Fast food thus offers much more calories than our systems can digest; and these extra calories are stored in our bodies in the form of fats. Excessive storage of fats in the body leads to obesity, which does not merely prevent people from looking slim, but it furthermore predisposes them to many disorders, such as insulin-dependent diabetes, hypertension, stroke, and coronary artery disease. More fatally, obesity has been linked to an increased incidence of certain cancers, notably cancers of the colon, rectum, prostate, breast, uterus, and cervix.

If fast food and soft drinks mark the American way of life, then it is easy to understand why more than half of all adult Americans are overweight. Actually, both scientific studies and common sense indicate that fast food is the primary reason for obesity.

Consuming junk food does not only mean eating the chemical food additives that are added while the food is being processed, nor is it limited to looking fat and getting exposed to obesity-related illnesses. The problems of fast food are far more diversified.
 
According to the book Fast Food Nation, the smell of McDonald's French Fries - that has always made me nauseus but others find so appealing - -comes from a factory on the New Jersey turnpike... Now I love my former home state of New Jersey and will defend her to the death - but the turnpike is a shithole - and no human being should ever eat anything that comes from the turnpike :)

Now the fresh mozarrella from that little italian deli in Lyndhurst - entirely a different story :)
 
of course the patty isnt 100% meat - ever done cooking? you need stuff to make it stick together usually :)
Also any minced meat is usually the leftovers and crap off the floor unless you are paying for prime mince, which i cant see a large corperate doing for the sake of a few whingers (though in NZ they actually do use 100% NZ Beef apparently).
Sausages also are the same, in fact they cannot be considered sausages here unless it has over 50% meat, and a few dont so they get called 'sizzlers' and other wanky names.
Chicken nuggets are probably the worst, they appear to be entirely chicken fat, chicken skin, and god only knows what :)

But again, this is not a McDonalds thing, this is how they make our food. Ever looked at the ingrediants of a mince meat pie? Parts of noses, eats, livers, lungs, etc. Its not because they are out to get you, its just how they make the food, thats why its so cheap. Like cheese is just moldy cream/milk kinda thing.

But either way, this still has nothing to do with weight loss, which its all about anyway, and you can eat snails and tree bark if you want, so long as the calories in are less than the calories out :)
 
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