Portion Size, Then Vs. Now


 

Soda  

                                    

Original 8-ounce bottle    12 ounce can                  20-ounce bottle
97 calories                        145 calories                     242 calories

While the 12-ounce can used to be the most common soda option, many stores now carry only the 20-ounce plastic bottle, which contains 2.5 servings of soda. When presented with these larger sizes, humans have a hard time regulating our intake or figuring out what a serving size is supposed to be. A 2004 study, published in Appetite, gave people potato chips packaged in bags that looked the same, but increased in size. As package size increased, so did consumption; subjects ate up to 37 percent more with the bigger bags. Furthermore, when they ate dinner later that day, they did not reduce their food consumption to compensate for increased snack calories—a recipe for weight gain.

Plates

It’s not just food portions that have increased; plate, bowl, and cup sizes have as well. In the early 1990s, the standard size of a dinner plate increased from 10 to 12 inches; cup and bowl sizes also increased. Larger eating containers can influence how much people eat. A study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine found that when people were given larger bowls and spoons they served themselves larger portions of ice cream and tended to eat the whole portion.

Prices

32 ounces                                            44 ounces                                 64 ounces
388 calories                                          533 calories                               776 calories
$0.99                                                   $1.09                                        $1.19 

We Americans love to get the most bang for our buck. When confronted with a 32-ounce drink for 99 cents versus a 44-ounce drink for ten cents more, the decision is easy. You’d have to be a sucker not to go big. But our ability to get the most out of our dollar doesn’t always serve us well. Value pricing, which gets us a lot more food or drink for just a little increase in price, makes sense from an economic standpoint, but is sabotage from a health standpoint. A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that Americans consume around 10 percent more calories than they did in the 1970s. Given no change in physical activity, this equates to around 200 extra calories per day, or 20 pounds a year.

What is normal?

Increased portion sizes give us more calories, encourage us to eat more, distort perceptions of appropriate food quantities, and along with sedentary lifestyles, have contributed to our national bulge. Unless you’re trying to gain weight, it might help to reacquaint yourself with serving sizes. The NHLBI tells us that a serving of meat should be the size of a deck of cards while one pancake should be the size of a CD. It’s unlikely that we’ll see a scaling down of food to these sizes anytime soon, so perhaps we should all become familiar with another image: the doggy bag.

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01.06.2010
lue
I would have agree and disagree... yes things like coke bottles have grown bigger but they also cost more... whereas mc donalds probably cost more than it di before, but it is still the same sizes... also i would like to know where you found that huge burger from.... heck if only it were that big... but if it were it would be tricky to eat it as is... also have you seen in comparison what a marathon runner used to eat "way back when" and how little atheletes eat and how much supliment vitamins he gets from pills...????
01.02.2010
Jim Mowreader
Coca-Cola originally came in a 6.5-ounce bottle, not an 8-ounce bottle. Pepsi-Cola was the inventor of the 12-ounce bottle; their marketing jingle was "twice as much for a nickel too, Pepsi-Cola's the one for you." Coke also had a "King Size" bottle--26 ounces, or four 6.5-ounce servings.
12.22.2009
Jessi Wall
Just to let you know, as a barista at Starbucks.. a Grande cup of coffee is only 5 calories. I just don't like the comparison of a mocha to a cup of coffee.. a 16-oz mocha consists of 14-oz of milk and 2-oz espresso, which is completely different from a brewed cup of coffee. I think it would've been the exact same back in the day.
12.13.2009
Mike
Some of the apologists here are pretty bad. I for one am a fat person. Not overweight, not chunky, I am freaking fat. I am fat because I am lazy and I eat 6 of those oversized bagels and a half dozen coffees a day. Granted as one pointed out the coffee doesn't have whipped cream and all the fufu bits on it, but the thing is 20 or more ounces vs a home sized 6 or 8 ounce cup. If it takes more cream and sugar it has more calories - so the author is correct. Now, were I not an overconsumptive pig, I would not have had a heart attack and a stroke in the past 24 months. Could I tell what a portion size really was I may not be a member of the walking dead. We have a responsibility to know what we are shoving in our faces, but manufacturers also have a responsibility to let you know that a bagel is three servings of bread.
11.20.2009
bradley mayor
the problem with our food is nutrients and genetics. both are a mess, neither will change. corp interests and greed rule our green land
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