What do you weigh on your food scale?
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Lemme clarify, sorry I shouldn't have said everything. I think its important that you weigh things that people find hard to gauge weight/portion by looking at it, like pasta, nuts, rice etc also. Especially high calorific items.0
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I agree with everyone. Everything.0
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I'll only use it if I'm going to split up a meal into multiple servings during the week.0
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I use my food scale a lot, but don't weigh absolutely everything. I generally weigh calorie-dense foods like nuts, cheeses, pasta, breakfast cereal. I also weigh meats (both uncooked and cooked). I generally don't weigh fruits and vegetables unless I am using them in a recipe.
Oh, and hops and malt for my beer brewing...0 -
I wish. I don't have a scale (and likely would be too lazy to use one).0 -
Not enough. Cheese, and meat are my most frequent. I need to get back to weighing everything that I don't use a measuring cup for.0
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Thanks guys! I guess I'll try to start weighing everything!0
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Everything, need to, to be accurate.0
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Everything.
I agree!!0 -
I weigh pretty much everything. One interesting thing I discovered is that 15g (1T peanut butter per the label) is way more peanut butter than I thought. I also often find that my portions of meat by eye would be not enough, but pasta etc, too much.0
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Mostly potato chips.
And when I make a salad I just put the bowl on there and re-tare it after each ingredient - this makes logging salads easier.0 -
pasta, all meats, fruits, veggies, jerky, cheese..0
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Everything.
damn!! you beat me lol0 -
My salami.0
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Everything.
I weigh out all my snacks at home and put them in baggies for work, that way I can be more accurate than a "handful". I check serving sizes and label the baggies too. I'm a little quirky like that.
Happy weighing!0 -
Everything except slices of store bough slices of bread or buns.
I even use the scale when preparing one pot dinners like spaghetti, weigh the whole amount and divide by servings. Then weight out my portions. I used to be a hassle, but now it's just habit. I put my container, bowl, plate, etc on the scale, zero it out and start adding food.0 -
Mostly meats, chicken, cheese, avocados, butter, peanut butter, fruit, mostly high density foods and snacks. Raw/salad veggies - tomatoes, greens, lettuce, cucumber, etc - not so much.
I do use measuring cups for cooked veggies, potatoes, grains. But I'm not fanatical about it. Considering I was eating about 2700cals/day pre-MFP with no exercise and now aim for 1880cals/day with exercise, an +/- variation of 100-200 cals per day isn't going to deter my weight loss efforts in the least.0 -
I recently discovered that using a food scale for canned items with a liquid base (like beans) is a bad idea. After draining the liquid, the serving size in grams is no longer accurate. What I thought was 1 serving was really almost half of the can. So, I need to rethink that one, but I weight everything else.0
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I weigh pretty much everything. One interesting thing I discovered is that 15g (1T peanut butter per the label) is way more peanut butter than I thought. I also often find that my portions of meat by eye would be not enough, but pasta etc, too much.
when I got my food scale, I discovered I was getting about 15% less protein and 15% more carbs than I thought.
Small amounts like tablespoons are easier to do on the scale. To make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, I stick the entire plate with bread on the scale and then zero it out. I scoop the peanut butter onto the bread to get the right grams and then again with the jelly. Much easier than dirtying and washing tablespoons. Same with mayo and other condiments.
Also, MUST weigh cookies and breakfast cereal. The quantities on the package are never right. Cereal that says 1 cup for the serving is almost always just 3/4 cup because it's broken down in the package. Cookie serving will say something like "about 5" but when you count the number of cookies in the package, you can see they are rounding up and you can really only have 4.5 for that number of calories.0 -
everything.0
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