MFP says 5 scrambled eggs is 1800 calories lmao

cgreer219
cgreer219 Posts: 3 Member
edited November 22 in Food and Nutrition
Im at a loss for words, i put in my breakfast of 5 scrambled eggs and 2pcs toast. It tells me i ate 122g of protein and 1800 calories lmao. A scrambled egg is roughly 100 calories so what gives???
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Replies

  • amusedmonkey
    amusedmonkey Posts: 10,330 Member
    For scrambled eggs I do two entries: eggs and oil. There is no knowing how much oil was used in scrambled eggs in the database anyway, even if it looks reasonable (which in this case it doesn't). There is a learning curve to logging, and with time you will pick up on the syntax of "official" entries. (E.g Tomatoes, red, raw, year round average)
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,423 Member
    Some database entries are wrong. They are user entered. Information can change for products over time or they made mistakes.
    Some are right for the person who made the entry but not anyone else. Someone else's scrambled egg might include butter, cheese, milk, etc and be much higher calorie.
    Enter food you make as a recipe with the recipe builder. If there is only egg then use a plain egg entry that matches the information you know it should be.
    Use specific entries for items instead of generic. Look for your specific brand of bread not just whole wheat bread.
  • azironasun
    azironasun Posts: 137 Member
    When logging in a cooked combination of items, I break down the meal into it's individual components. For instance, I had an omelet for breakfast. If I look up 'omelet', there's omelets listed from 20 calories to 500 calories. That doesn't help me. I log it per item I used: 2 eggs, 2 egg whites, 1 oz cheese, 1/2 tomato, 1 tbsp basil and 1 tbsp butter. This gives me an accurate reading of the nutritional value.

  • Ready2Rock206
    Ready2Rock206 Posts: 9,487 Member
    Don't use someone else's recipe when you have no idea what they used. Ihop restaurant uses pancake mix in their eggs to make them fluffy - whoever entered those srambled eggs could do something similar. Or they could be including any number of things they add - you have no idea. If you made the eggs enter the eggs as raw eggs and then add whatever else you add to them.
  • LiftHeavyThings27105
    LiftHeavyThings27105 Posts: 2,086 Member
    One egg is roughly 70 calories....about 6g Protein, 0g Carbs and about 5g Fat.

    The MFP database is often really off. As so many others have mentioned, it is a 'user created database'. You get what you pay for! Ha! That was funny.

    While I do not use MFP for logging my food any longer, I used to do that. And, I created my own entries for the things that I ate. I use the label from the food items mostly.

    Also, keep in mind that the food labels are not 100% accurate. There is roughly 10% plus/minus allowed. So, are we really getting 70 calories and 6g of Protein and 5g of Fats from that one egg? No idea. But, being consistent is all that you can control, right? So, if you are consistent then you are good.

    So, your five scrambled eggs were more likely 350 Calories, 30g Protein and 25g Fat. I guess that you put A LOT OF butter on your two piecses of toast? LOL!
  • Sp1tfire
    Sp1tfire Posts: 1,120 Member
    Bad database probably from a butter lovin cream chuggin scrambled egg recipe
  • Lean59man
    Lean59man Posts: 714 Member
    Use a non-stick spray like PAM in your skillet. It has practically zero calories.
  • vingogly
    vingogly Posts: 1,785 Member
    As others have said, the database is loaded with a LOT of crap that various users have put in. Some of the entries are off by a few calories, some don't include macros, others can be off by hundreds of calories (as you've discovered). When I enter something like scrambled eggs, I'll enter the eggs used plus however much butter I've used rather than looking for an entry called "scrambled eggs". I always use grams for weight rather than volume, and have a scale with a tare setting that makes weighing things quick and easy.

    When you find a data base entry for something you know is right, you can add it to My Foods. I also have meals I've entered into My Meals for combinations I eat often. When I look something new up, I always scan the search results and if they all look suspicious, I'll go to another site (or a company site) to look up the calories and macros. As others have said, the bar code scanner is a help, too.
  • malibu927
    malibu927 Posts: 17,562 Member
    Lean59man wrote: »
    Use a non-stick spray like PAM in your skillet. It has practically zero calories.

    For a quarter second spray. I did 2-3 seconds for my eggs this morning so that added on (only 20-30 calories, but it's not zero).
  • Lean59man
    Lean59man Posts: 714 Member
    malibu927 wrote: »
    Lean59man wrote: »
    Use a non-stick spray like PAM in your skillet. It has practically zero calories.

    For a quarter second spray. I did 2-3 seconds for my eggs this morning so that added on (only 20-30 calories, but it's not zero).

    I'm using this one from Aldi's and it says 1/4 sec spray is zero.

    I did as long as you did though. Not sure what it would count.

  • Alatariel75
    Alatariel75 Posts: 18,250 Member
    Lean59man wrote: »
    malibu927 wrote: »
    Lean59man wrote: »
    Use a non-stick spray like PAM in your skillet. It has practically zero calories.

    For a quarter second spray. I did 2-3 seconds for my eggs this morning so that added on (only 20-30 calories, but it's not zero).

    I'm using this one from Aldi's and it says 1/4 sec spray is zero.

    I did as long as you did though. Not sure what it would count.

    If you're keen to know, spray your pan while it's on your scale and find an oil entry in grams.
  • cgreer219
    cgreer219 Posts: 3 Member
    Thanks guys, i didnt know the database was user created that helps. Im on a strict 1860 calorie/day and with their stats i woulda been over at breakfast. Wasnt till after that i googled an said wow i only ate like 400 not 1800 lol
  • Dannyboy313
    Dannyboy313 Posts: 14 Member
    That must be some big *kitten* chicken, how did you crack them eggs, a crowbar?? Lol
  • Alatariel75
    Alatariel75 Posts: 18,250 Member
    TonyB0588 wrote: »
    cgreer219 wrote: »
    Im at a loss for words, i put in my breakfast of 5 scrambled eggs and 2pcs toast. It tells me i ate 122g of protein and 1800 calories lmao. A scrambled egg is roughly 100 calories so what gives???

    I just went back to my last scrambled egg entry and changed it to 5 eggs. It gave me 455 calories, so something must be wrong with the entry you found in the database.

    By the way, won't 5 eggs usually serve a small family of 3 or 4 for breakfast? Seems a lot for one person. (I've heard it's one egg per person plus one extra. )

    My husband and I split 6-7 eggs when we have scramble. Out omelettes are always 3 each. 1 and a bit is a pittance.
  • AnvilHead
    AnvilHead Posts: 18,343 Member
    TonyB0588 wrote: »
    ...By the way, won't 5 eggs usually serve a small family of 3 or 4 for breakfast? Seems a lot for one person. (I've heard it's one egg per person plus one extra. )

    Not in my world. Breakfast this morning for me was 3 eggs, 4 egg whites and 2 slices of toast (along with a serving of Greek yogurt and 30g of Fiber One cereal). One egg wouldn’t even be worth the effort to me.
  • MsHarryWinston
    MsHarryWinston Posts: 1,027 Member
    edited November 2017
    TonyB0588 wrote: »
    cgreer219 wrote: »
    Im at a loss for words, i put in my breakfast of 5 scrambled eggs and 2pcs toast. It tells me i ate 122g of protein and 1800 calories lmao. A scrambled egg is roughly 100 calories so what gives???

    I just went back to my last scrambled egg entry and changed it to 5 eggs. It gave me 455 calories, so something must be wrong with the entry you found in the database.

    By the way, won't 5 eggs usually serve a small family of 3 or 4 for breakfast? Seems a lot for one person. (I've heard it's one egg per person plus one extra. )

    A single egg per person? That’s just crazy talk! I use egg whites now instead of whole eggs, but even still, I use about 1cup of egg whites. Which equals about 8 whole eggs in volume or something like that. (But only about 125 cals). Which makes for some nice huge yet low cal breakfast fry ups... for me... alone... in my mouth lol.
  • MoveitlikeManda
    MoveitlikeManda Posts: 846 Member
    TonyB0588 wrote: »
    TonyB0588 wrote: »
    cgreer219 wrote: »
    Im at a loss for words, i put in my breakfast of 5 scrambled eggs and 2pcs toast. It tells me i ate 122g of protein and 1800 calories lmao. A scrambled egg is roughly 100 calories so what gives???

    I just went back to my last scrambled egg entry and changed it to 5 eggs. It gave me 455 calories, so something must be wrong with the entry you found in the database.

    By the way, won't 5 eggs usually serve a small family of 3 or 4 for breakfast? Seems a lot for one person. (I've heard it's one egg per person plus one extra. )

    My husband and I split 6-7 eggs when we have scramble. Out omelettes are always 3 each. 1 and a bit is a pittance.

    Yes I cold eat more than one, but 4 or 5 per person is a lot!! Anyway, enjoy your breakfast all of you.

    in YOUR opinion. some people eat bigger portions than other. if it fits his caolories for the day and is a meal the size that he needs he could have 10 eggs if he wanted.

    when I have egg I have 2 full eggs and the whites of 3
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    An egg plus a bit more is like 80-90 calories, which would be a super tiny breakfast. Admittedly when I have eggs I usually only have 2 (in an omelet), but I have a bunch of other food (vegetables, feta cheese, smoked salmon) with them too. Ends up being around 350-400 cal, which is what I like for breakfast.

    Anyway, like everyone else said, log the ingredients (5x70 [depending on the size of the eggs] + whatever else you used, probably) + the specific bread used + anything added to the bread (like butter).
  • cgreer219
    cgreer219 Posts: 3 Member
    Yea i would never make it past 9am if i ate like 1 or 2 eggs, id be starving. Even 5 eggs and im still hungry but i dont have much for choices and eggs are cheap lol. For lunch about a 4oz chicken breast with broccoli or green beans and the same for dinner. I snack on honey roasted peanuts, a mouthful every few hours to curb hunger.
  • deannalfisher
    deannalfisher Posts: 5,600 Member
    why so little?

    assuming eggs are 100 cals - 5eggs = 500cal;
    4oz chicken (assuming raw) approx 125cal (x2 for lunch/dinner)
    say 100cal for broccoli/green beans (x2 for lunch/dinner)

    honey roasted peanuts (1/2cup is approx 160cal) - assuming 4 handfuls = 3 servings = 160*3 = 480

    480+500+125+125+100+100 = 1430ish cal approx...no wonder you are hungry - minimum calorie intake for males should be 1500 a day and that is if you are sedentary/old/short - which you don't appear to be...
  • maura_tasi
    maura_tasi Posts: 196 Member
    When I search the database I add usda at the end and I find I get a more accurate entry. I also weigh all of my food so my entries say things like whole egg 50 grams and egg white 30 grams, not just "5 scrambled eggs". I use the spray oil so I quick add 5-10 calories for that. To get the most accurate calorie entry you really have to weight everything and record it in grams in your entries and not just use the "generic" "homemade" or "1 serving" entries.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    If you get grocery store eggs you can rely on the size given (large or extra large or whatever) as quite standardized and therefore accurate. I make omelets and use farm eggs so often weigh them, but it's not something I'd worry about. (The USDA entries are good, of course, and if you find the one MFP input it will have all the various serving options like "one large egg.")
  • ritzvin
    ritzvin Posts: 2,860 Member
    Lean59man wrote: »
    malibu927 wrote: »
    Lean59man wrote: »
    Use a non-stick spray like PAM in your skillet. It has practically zero calories.

    For a quarter second spray. I did 2-3 seconds for my eggs this morning so that added on (only 20-30 calories, but it's not zero).

    I'm using this one from Aldi's and it says 1/4 sec spray is zero.

    I did as long as you did though. Not sure what it would count.

    I weigh the canister before and after. 2-3 seconds is probably somewhere about 3-4g (~27-36-ish calories).
  • twinkles4
    twinkles4 Posts: 124 Member
    I think the entry was deleted, but there was this one that said 1 tsp of garlic powder was 13500 calories. I was caught by it a few times in some of my recipes lol.
  • starryphoenix
    starryphoenix Posts: 381 Member
    It’s better if you input the exact kind of eggs. Just imputing the type of meal more often than not is inaccurate unless if said meal has the calories listed. Scrambled eggs vary greatly.

    If I were to log it this is how I would do it.

    Brand of eggs + input number of eggs in serving section
    Butter? Or whatever else I use
    Cheese

    Just a basic example.
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