Written By: Elizabeth Daeninck, MS, RD
Title: Registered Dietitian
Alumni: Colorado State University
Last Updated on:
The Mexican fare served up at restaurants like Chipotle or Qdoba is often seen as a healthier fast food option than the usual burger and fries. But the volume of food you get at these places can go well beyond your needs for one meal! Their supersized burritos can contain more than 1400 calories and 65 grams of fat – far more than the fair share of one menu item! This amount of fat is recommended as an upper limit for a whole day, never mind one meal.
Read on to see what you can do to customize your burrito order to make it a healthier option that won’t put you over your calorie and fat gram budget for a meal (or the day!)….
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By simply cutting out all that gooey cheese, you will remove over 100 calories and 9 grams of fat.
Although you may be tempted to have sour cream added to your burrito, it will cost you an extra 120 calories and 10 grams of fat. Try a burrito without the sour cream – with all the flavors already in there, we bet you won’t even notice!
Did you notice that just by following the first two steps of the burrito makeover – resisting the cheese and sour cream – you will save over 200 calories and close to 20 grams of fat?
When you have both rice and beans, you are consuming over 60 grams of carbohydrates (and that doesn’t even include the tortilla shell, salsa and extras, which pack on up to 90 more grams). That’s a lot of carbs (up to 150 grams in one burrito), when you consider that the recommendation for a 2000 calorie diet is a total of 300 grams for a whole day. If you are a carb counter, a burrito with rice, beans, and fixings is equivalent to over 5 slices of bread!
Here are a few things you can do to reduce the carbs (and calories) in your burrito:
When you choose corn salsa instead of tomato salsa, you add an extra 75 calories and 16 grams of carbs! By simply opting for the tomato salsa, you can keep your burrito’s calories down without compromising flavor.
Guacamole is one add-on that I recommend. Despite the fact that guacamole is high in fat, it is high in monounsaturated fats, which are the heart-healthy “good” fats. So, by including this extra, you may actually be doing your body a favor.
Regardless of how you choose to cut the calories and fat in your burrito, the servings at most fast-food Mexican restaurants are still huge. Try splitting your burrito in half (to share or eat later). It’s a great way to make your meal more reasonable calorie-wise, and I bet you’ll still feel full.
Trimming down the calories and fat in your Chipotle or Qdoba burrito is possible without cutting out the flavor. Use the burrito makeover tips above to help you in cut back on how much you consume when treating yourself to one of these burritos.
Alumni: Colorado State University – Elizabeth Daeninck is a Registered Dietitian with a master’s degree in Exercise Physiology and Nutrition. She has taught classes at the college level and facilitated weight loss group meetings, presented a variety of nutrition seminars and is a published author and researcher in the field of nutrition.
beans, burritos, cheese, guacamole, mexican, rice, salsa, sour cream