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how do you measure "bulky" fruit?

brennamathis
Posts: 23
Example--cantaloupe or watermelon balls. If I look it up, it'll say 1 cup. Do you actually measure like a measuring cup level with one cup? Or do you weigh out 8 oz? Because it's a biiiiig difference in amount, at least the way I'm cutting it?
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bump. I started using the measuring cup method and then switched to weighing it. I'd like to hear what more knowledgable people have to say about this.0
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I've been using the measuring cup method, but I almost wonder if I'm making myself miss out on some of my fruit and/or logging more calories than I'm actually eating because of the way I'm measuring.0
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I measure cantaloupe by the slice - the USDA entry has info for a slice (1/8th of a cantaloupe).0
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I use a food scale and find the nutrition information based on grams or ounces.1
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I cut mine up into pieces and measure 1 cup0
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I'd get a food scale, honestly. I LOVE mine, and I feel so much more confident that I'm accurate with my calories consumed. I used to just estimate, which can be fine, but I want to be honest with myself and make sure I don't go over, and it was really easy for me to say "oh, seems like a little over half a cup, but a half cup would be just fine!" Do that for long enough and it all catches up
Since I've had the food scale, it has been easier to portion, too! Ex: I eat a lot of yogurt, now that I measure it with a food scale I can just put as much as I want and record the g/oz, not worry about whether I got the right portion of a cup.0 -
I have a scale, that's my issue though. One cup of melon balls put in a measuring cup vs. 8 oz (one cup) measured on the scale are two VERY different amounts when you put them next to each other. Just went through to do a comparison--putting cantaloupe balls in the 1 cup measuring cup gives me 12-13 melon balls. Weighing out 8 oz (still one cup!) of melon balls gives me 25-26 melon balls. That's twice as much if I'm weighing by ounces vs. filled cup, but they're both *technically* one cup, kwim?0
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I have a scale, that's my issue though. One cup of melon balls put in a measuring cup vs. 8 oz (one cup) measured on the scale are two VERY different amounts when you put them next to each other. Just went through to do a comparison--putting cantaloupe balls in the 1 cup measuring cup gives me 12-13 melon balls. Weighing out 8 oz (still one cup!) of melon balls gives me 25-26 melon balls. That's twice as much if I'm weighing by ounces vs. filled cup, but they're both *technically* one cup, kwim?
A cup is not a unit of weight.
If it says one cup of melon balls it's talking about volume and the 12 - 13 balls in a measuring cup. If it says 8 oz it's talking about the weight and the 25 - 26 balls on a scale.0 -
Thank you! I think what threw me is there was one fruit I pulled up one day...can't remember what, strawberries, or melon, or something like that--and it had BOTH measurements, 1 cup (8 oz). It really threw me off when I saw that, and I ended up searching for another version of it that had it listed how I was measuring (by an actual cup, not in oz)....just made me wonder what everyone else did.0
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Ask it ihow much it lifts.0
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I use a food scale and find the nutrition information based on grams or ounces.
This for sure.0 -
I just weigh it. I don't understand the obsession you Americans have with ******* "cups" !0
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I use the food scale, in grams, for almost everything. The only exception to that is that I still weigh meat in ounces.
And liquids I obviously use a liquid measuring cup.0 -
I measure cantaloupe by the slice - the USDA entry has info for a slice (1/8th of a cantaloupe).
1/8th of what size cantaloupe? I've bought cantaloupes that are only a little larger than a softball and others that are almost as big as a honeydew. They aren't both the same amount of calories for 1/8th of each.0 -
I measure cantaloupe by the slice - the USDA entry has info for a slice (1/8th of a cantaloupe).
1/8th of what size cantaloupe? I've bought cantaloupes that are only a little larger than a softball and others that are almost as big as a honeydew. They aren't both the same amount of calories for 1/8th of each.
There are measurements involved, I don't remember off the top of my head. You can log it however you want, I'm ok with being like 5 calories off for a piece of fruit.0 -
Weigh them if you want to be precise, and check against the USDA database entries in the MFP database that give 100 g as the unit.
Though, cantaloupe and similar fruit are so low cal that it isn't as crucial to log them precisely. Unless you are a raw foodist or something and munch on the stuff all day long.0 -
I use a food scale and find the nutrition information based on grams or ounces.
This for sure.0 -
I measure fruit by fractions of the whole fruit. That's what I'm doing with the half watermelon I bought for the 4th of July.0
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Weigh it. 100g of something will always be the same amount. But depending on how you cut/slice something, it can vary a lot.0
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Everyone has their own way, no need to be rude about it.0
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I have a scale, that's my issue though. One cup of melon balls put in a measuring cup vs. 8 oz (one cup) measured on the scale are two VERY different amounts when you put them next to each other. Just went through to do a comparison--putting cantaloupe balls in the 1 cup measuring cup gives me 12-13 melon balls. Weighing out 8 oz (still one cup!) of melon balls gives me 25-26 melon balls. That's twice as much if I'm weighing by ounces vs. filled cup, but they're both *technically* one cup, kwim?
A cup is not a unit of weight.
If it says one cup of melon balls it's talking about volume and the 12 - 13 balls in a measuring cup. If it says 8 oz it's talking about the weight and the 25 - 26 balls on a scale.
THIS! 1 cup is NOT necessarily 8 oz. (Fluid, yes, most are 8 ounces... food is usually about half about that!)0 -
I weigh it in grams. It's the most accurate measurement.0
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Everyone has their own way, no need to be rude about it.0
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Of course a food scale will be most accurate. But this is something I plan on doing the rest of my life, and I'm pretty sure a food scale isn't going to be available every time I eat. I'd rather put some effort into learning how to estimate food portions as accurately as possible without a scale. But if you enjoy it, by all means use a scale.0
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I've found that the longer I've used a food scale at home the better I've gotten at estimating weights in general. Because I become so accustomed to what the amount looks like while I'm weighing it that it becomes more of a second nature. Last night I was portioning a big pile of fresh chicken breast that I'd diced for easy prep after unfreezing into 5oz servings. Every portion I placed on the scale was within 1/2-1/4 of an ounce of the 5oz. The first time I did it was putting on anywhere from 3 1/2 to 6 1/2 ounces at a time.
So relying on a food scale at home has actually made me much more confident in the estimates I've had to make while away from it.0 -
Find the nutrition in weight not volume0
This discussion has been closed.
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