Saturday, January 7, 2012

We take on Randy's 30'' Pizza

We take on Randy's 30'' two topping pizza. Randy's Pizza is located in Oakdale, MN, and the pizza is delicious! Now take a look to see if we won!

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Gluttony for Punishment #3 Video

We attempt to eat a mock of the Super Potato Ole from Taco John's but our Mock Ole is roughly 5 times bigger. Enjoy!

Friday, December 16, 2011

New BK fries are free 12/16/2011!


Just as the title says, BK fries are free tomorrow! Get some! They are just like the old Wendy's fries.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

6 Bad Fast Food Breakfast choices

"Breakfast is the most important meal of the day." Morning meals are essential to revving your metabolism and kick-starting your calorie burn, but indulging in a fat- and calorie-laden breakfast from your favorite fast-food chain could easily send you into sugar shock and pack on the pounds. Research shows that people who ate a big morning meal consumed an extra 400 calories per day, setting themselves up for muffin tops and pancake bottoms. Here are six breakfast drive-thru disasters and their Prevention-approved healthier, make-at-home options.

1. Starbucks® Zucchini-Walnut Muffin
Muffins are calorie sinkholes-they pack in the calories but somehow still leave your stomach grumbling. This muffin from Starbucks® seems healthy enough, boasting both zucchini and walnuts, but don't be fooled by its veggie-based name. This morning baked good has close to 500 calories and 28 g of fat.

Try Instead: Zucchini-Raisin Muffin These scrumptious zucchini muffins are half the calories and nearly a third of the fat as their coffee-house counterparts. Tricks of the trade: Load up your bread batter with tons of zucchini shreds and add raisins for a touch of natural sweetness.

2. Sonic® Sausage, Egg, And Cheese Breakfast Toaster®
A classic sausage, egg, and cheese sandwich can seem like a filling, protein-packed breakfast, but the Breakfast Toaster has over 620 calories, 42 g of fat, and a whopping 1,400 mg of sodium. That's the sodium equivalent of finishing off a whole bag of salty potato chips before lunch time rolls around.

Try Instead: Open-Faced Broiled Egg, Spinach, And Tomato Sandwich Swap the fatty breakfast meat for a tomato slice and some spinach to get a serving of veggies first thing in the AM. This version has nearly a third of the calories of that Sonic® bomb, a quarter of the fat, and over 1,000 mg less sodium.

3. McDonald's Big Breakfast® With Hot Cakes
When your breakfast came off a fast-food menu and had the word "big" in it, your waistline is headed in the same direction. This hearty breakfast has scrambled eggs, sausage, a buttermilk biscuit, hash browns, and two hot cakes piled onto a plate, making it no surprise that one order has 1,090 calories--over half your day's worth--and over 55 g of fat. The worst part? This lumberjack breakfast is sky-high in sodium: 2,150 mg.

Try Instead: Pancakes With Berries And Cinnamon Satisfy your hot cake cravings with these light and fluffy low-cal flapjacks.The secret to cutting fat and calories without losing any buttery flavor: Bake them in the oven. Top with berries and cinnamon, and you've got a mouth-watering, guilt-free pancake breakfast the whole family will love.

4. Cinnabon® Regular Caramel Pecanbon®
Once you stand within 100 feet of a Cinnabon® shop, it's hard to stop salivating over the sugary, cinnamon scent of its signature cinnamon rolls, but resist the urge to make a beeline for the pastry counter. One of these caramel-pecan buns is the ultimate calorie bomb, coming in at almost 1,100 calories per bun-not to mention it's oozing with more fat than nine chocolate chip cookies.

Try Instead: Maple-Pecan Cinnamon Roll This homemade version from the Flat Belly Diet has all the ooey, gooey characteristics you love about the fast-food variety with nearly a third of the calories and a quarter of the fat. You can even create that "just baked" taste-and scent-by popping one in the microwave.

5. Hardee's® Double-Loaded Omelet Biscuit
This "Double-Loaded" omelet from Hardee's® packs 800-calories and has three types of breakfast meat-bacon, sausage, and ham-on top of a buttery biscuit.

Try Instead: Hearty Egg Sandwich This breakfast sammy fills you up without weighing you down by swapping out the trio of artery-clogging breakfast meats and adding in rich Hass avocado and tomato slices. This less-than-400-calorie version also slashes the fat and calories by using reduced-fat Cheddar.

6. Dunkin' Donuts® Chocolate-Coconut Cake Donut
While you already know that a doughnut isn't diet-friendly food, you should know that one of these chocolatey treats has 550 calories, over a quarter of your day's worth. It also has nearly as much sugar as a whole chocolate bar.

Try Instead: Strawberry-Banana-Topped French Toast Satisfy your sweet tooth without breaking the calorie bank with this decadent strawberry and banana French toast. You would never guess this entire rich meal is less than half the calories of just one doughnut.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Food Trends 2011




When you’re in a competitive market, you have two options to stand apart from the competition: You can make a superior product, or you can come up with a gimmick. And while many companies move their industries forward by striving to achieve the former, many inevitably succumb to the temptation to do the latter. In the past few years we’ve seen film studios race to churn out 3-D movies, fast food companies introduce goofy, high-calorie menu items and beer companies find new ways to modify their cans and bottles.

Of course, pinning down what does or doesn’t constitute a gimmick is tough.

“It depends on who you ask – one person may call something a gimmick that’s deconstructive and degrading, but if you ask the creator, they’ll call it an innovation or a feature,” says Sasha Strauss, a branding expert and managing director of brand consulting firm Innovation Protocol. But he adds that whatever you call it, a product gimmick is only a bad thing if it detracts from the main event and hurts the brand.

“When companies add on unnecessary supplements that distract us, it degrades our connection to the brand to begin with,” he explains. “When they say, ‘Check out A, now check out A-plus-1,’ what they’ve done is distracted the audience from importance of A and put the attention on the plus-1.”

There are good gimmicks and bad gimmicks, in other words. Here are four gimmick products from 2011, some of which flopped and some of which accomplished exactly what the company set out to achieve.

Burger King’s Stuffed Burger

2010 was very much the year of weird fast food, with such gimmicky offerings as a sandwich with fried chicken in place of bread (KFC’s infamous Double Down) and a quesadilla filled with macaroni and cheese. And while 2011 couldn’t quite match that level of fast food lunacy, the year kicked off with a bang when Burger King introduced the BK Stuffed Steakhouse Burger in January.

The burger featured jalapenos and cheddar cheese, both eminently reasonable toppings for a burger. But the toppings weren’t on top – they were incorporated into the meat of the patty, little chunks of flavor to encounter as you eat.

As we said at the time, Burger King didn’t invent the idea of a burger stuffed with its toppings – blue cheese-stuffed burgers, for instance, can be a culinary delight. But we sampled the Stuffed Steakhouse Burger and found it to be a step down from its usual burger offerings. And given that Burger King has been pulling out all the stops in a desperate bid to play catch-up in the fast food wars – including a brief flirtation with a “Pizza Burger” in 2010 – we feel comfortable tossing this sandwich in the “gimmick” category.

The menu item has since been discontinued, and unless it attained a McRib-style cult status we’re not aware of, we don’t expect to see it again.

To Strauss, though, that doesn’t matter. Gimmick though it may be, the burger was meant to project an air of innovation while strengthening the customer’s connection to the brand.

“Imagine if you just had the same burger once a week for three years: You’d need to be reminded of why it was great to begin with,” he explains. “In my perception, it wasn’t about trying to sell you a new burger, but about reminding you why you loved Burger King’s burgers to begin with … And at the same time, it’s designed to get your attention.”

Even if Burger King never expected the Stuffed Steakhouse Burger to take off, creating this strange product projected an air of innovation and change while simultaneously reminding customers how much they love Burger King’s staple menu items.

Coors Light’s Cold Activation Cans

In the crowded light beer market, brands such as Miller Lite and Bud Light generally try to stand out by making outrageous commercials and introducing product gimmicks (just look at Miller Lite’s “vortex bottle,” which apparently swirls your beer around before it goes in your mouth). Coors Light is no different, but all of its marketing efforts are in keeping with the central attribute of the brand: The idea that the beer is really, really cold.

Previous attempts to hammer this point home took the form of the cold-activated can, which featured an image of mountains that turned blue when the contents reached a low enough temperature. But this year the company took things to the next level with a two-stage cold activation can, featuring two color-activated bars indicating when the can was “cold” and “super-cold.” The result was a series of commercials, including one where a man assures his girlfriend that he’s studying for the “bar exam,” only for it to be revealed that he’s examining the bars on a can of Coors Light (get it?). The company also introduced the Cold Activation Window – a beer case with a special window that allows you to peer in and see the cold-activated cans inside.

Given that this latest can design reinforces Coors Light’s existing brand perception, it’s hard to call it a misstep by the company. Still, the relentless gimmicks have some people rolling their eyes.

“I can’t help thinking it’s dangerously close to a SNL parody,” wrote Steffan Postaer on his blog, Gods of Advertising. “In my view, the brand is jumping the shark.”

Bud Light’s Writable Labels

You didn’t think Bud Light was about to get out-gimmicked by Coors, did you?

While Coors Light has built its brand around low temperatures, Anheuser-Busch has always sought to position its flagship light beer as a uniquely social animal that brings people together and fuels endless good times. Just look at its dual slogans, “The sure sign of a good time” and the vaguer “Here we go.” To that end, it’s created a gimmick bottle of its own in the form of a label you can write on.

The label has a small section where you can scribble out messages by applying pressure with a key or coin. In the commercials, revelers are seen using the label to scribble out their names, phone numbers or, for some reason, a picture of a football. This is dubbed “the latest innovation in social networking.” Another commercial has two bachelors inviting loads of beautiful women to their party by handing out bottles inscribed with their apartment number. In a press release announcing the bottle, the company explains that it “allows adult beer drinkers the unique opportunity to add their own personal touch to the bottle.”

Now, we don’t really have a gripe with the company giving drinkers the chance to let their creativity run free. And we can kind of understand why it would be useful to scratch your name on the bottle if everyone at the party is drinking Bud Light and you want to remember which one is yours. But the other applications seem pretty limited. Are people really going to start sharing phone numbers at bars by writing on each other’s bottles of Bud? You can’t exactly stick an empty bottle of beer in your wallet, and it’s a lot easier to just tell the other person your number so they can put it in their phone. Oh, and if you find yourself drawing pictures of footballs on your bottle of beer, you’re probably not at a very fun party.

Agata Kaczanowska, a beverage industry analyst with market research firm IBISWorld, says there’s a simple reason why light beers such as Coors Light and Bud Light tend to use this sort of gimmicky packaging.

“[Light beer] is really the most homogenous product that the beer industry has,” she says. “They don’t differ much in price or taste and they have very similar brewing processes, so they’re creating a way to differentiate their product and associate the brand with fun.”

The good news is that Anheuser-Busch has (for the moment) turned its attention to improving the product inside the bottle rather than the bottle itself with Bud Light Platinum, but who knows if it will be anything special.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Gluttony For Punishment #2


In this challenge we are eating some extremely spicy hot wings, so spicy that they cause tears, sweating and pain!

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Gluttony #1



It's finally here! The first Gluttony For Punishment challenge is here and we are happy to give you a look into it. And if you like the look of what we are cooking, there are recipes for the dish at www.gluttony4punishment.com

Big thanks to the cast! We hope you enjoy