My dinner conversion help?
dniania
Posts: 251 Member
I'm having a hard time converting my shredded lettuce to grams .. ok 1 serving is 100 grams and I want to eat 3 servings how many cups of lettuce is that
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Replies
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300 grams? :huh:2
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Chef_Barbell wrote: »300 grams? :huh:
I mean I can't convert grams to cups I'm getting different answers0 -
Do you have a food scale?1
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Chef_Barbell wrote: »300 grams? :huh:
I mean I can't convert grams to cups I'm getting different answers
Because grams is a solid measurement (weight) and cups are a liquid measurement (volume).1 -
deannalfisher wrote: »Do you have a food scale?
You definitely need one of these.0 -
Chef_Barbell wrote: »Chef_Barbell wrote: »300 grams? :huh:
I mean I can't convert grams to cups I'm getting different answers
Because grams is a solid measurement (weight) and cups are a liquid measurement (volume).
This. Your logging won't be accurate if you're using volumetric measurements for solid foods. And if your logging is inaccurate, then it's likely you're consuming more calories than you think you are.1 -
Isn't one cup roughly 240 grams? But surely it's easier to calculate in grams anyway.0
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convertunits.com is your friend.0
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kellyokc405 wrote: »
Nope.1 -
I agree with many of the posts. It would depend upon what type of lettuce, is it chopped or shredded, etc.? You can fit more shredded lettuce than chopped or whole baby lettuce in a cup. If you can swing it I'd get a scale, I have a "Ozeri" scale that will weigh in several different measurements ounces, pounds, ml, g. I think I bought it on Amazon but they are available just about everywhere. Good luck!0
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On the other hand, it's 'lettuce'. Huge amounts are still extremely low in calories. Eat however much you want and don't sweat it.0
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comptonelizabeth wrote: »Isn't one cup roughly 240 grams? But surely it's easier to calculate in grams anyway.
Nope, one cup is 250 ml (not grams) (in Australia) and a bit less in the US. I don't know about other countries.
You can't just convert a cup measurement to a weight measurement because foods have different densities - if you think about it, a cup of minced meat is going to weigh more than a cup of marshmallows.
This is why weighing food is great for solids (eg 100g meat) , cups are best used for liquids (eg 100ml milk).
The only time I like cup measures for things like lettuce is if I'm out and need to estimate - it's easier for me to think "that's about a cup of lettuce or cherry tomatoes, or two cups of soup" vs "oh, probably 85g of lettuce or 500ml of soup". In this instance, I know these numbers are estimated but I can live with that.0
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