Richard’s Mexican Restaurant – Albuquerque, New Mexico
In 2006 and 2007, the CalorieLab compiled the “fattest state” rankings based on a risk factor assessment provided by the Center for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention. CalorieLab determined an overall increase in obesity in all states but California. Garnering the discomfiting dishonor as the fattest state in the union two years in a row was Mississippi. The Magnolia State was the first state ever in which two-thirds of its citizenry or higher were either overweight or obese by CDC standards. Our neighbor to the north, Colorado, ranked as the leanest state in the fruited plain two years running despite the percentage of its citizens now considered obese climbing to 17.6 percent. In many national ratings involving education, health care and other quality of life measures tracked, the Land of Enchantment seems to fall in the ignominious neighborhood of Mississippi. I had expected the stout girth of our citizens to approximate the voluminous magnitude of the Deep South state’s rotund residents since statistics usually place us in the same neighborhood. Surprisingly, New Mexico was far distanced from Mississippi, ranking as the 42nd fattest state–or 8th leanest state if you prefer. By CDC standards, 59.8 percent of the state’s citizenry is…