I’m not blinkered to the natural
state of meat. I don’t have a moral problem with eating it as long as certain
conditions have been met in animal husbandry. (I don’t agree with the argument,
‘If you’re not prepared to kill an animal you shouldn’t be willing to eat it’
because that doesn’t make any sense for the way life operates in the 21st century: I’m not prepared to keep sheep for wool, or drill for my own oil, but
I’m willing to wear a sweater and drive a car.)
But I’m not attracted to ordering
anything off a menu that has the word ‘muscle’ in it (as opposed to mussel). So
I can’t imagine myself walking past this restaurant and thinking, ‘Hey, I
really want to eat here!’
Muscle Maker Grill, Century Plaza Shopping Center, Deerfield Beach, FL |
Apart from the name, I’m
also put off by the didactic strap-line. Call me perverse but when I’m eating
out my focus is on sensory pleasure; I don’t want a menu wagging its finger and
telling me what’s good for me.
The first MMG opened in 1995 and
there are now over 200 franchises. I guess that’s not a lot when you consider
the size of the United States and compare it with MacDonald’s 14,000+, although
they have had a 40 year head start. But MMG are offering an alternative to
existing fast-food outlets and they have a nutrition poster that flashes up the
differences.
No deep fried food, whole wheat,
lean meat without, they promise, compromising on taste. It sounds good so I
should really push myself past the Charles Atlas ‘you won’t kick sand in my
face again’ suggestiveness of the name and judge it on experience.
There are a couple of things on
the nutrition poster that annoy me though: no butter and zero-fat. And one
thing that’s not on the poster (or on the website): any mention of sugar.
Isn't it common knowledge by now that it’s not fat that’s making blimps out of
everyone, it’s sugar, hidden sugar? (In my case it’s mostly the hidden sugar in
wine.) And I don't want to eat a bunch of laboratory produced chemicals in its place either.
Maybe I’ll email MMG and ask them
for their line on this. But I suppose change is more likely to happen if it
happens gradually. Cut out some of the rubbish we eat and replace it with healthier
alternatives and once that change has transformed into habit, we can address
others.
So I should be more supportive of
the MMG’s vision: it’s worthy, admirable, necessary even. And their food is the
kind of food I like too: wraps, pasta, salads, asian flavours. I should peel
off my skin of literary snobbishness and appreciate that they’re doing
something positive, something good…. so how about The Good Grill instead?
Hungry Writing Prompts
- Write about flesh.
- Write about what attracts you, what repels you.
- Write a list of things that make you healthy.
- Write about the sweetest thing you know.
- Write about a habit you want to shed, a habit you want to adopt.
Comments