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More calories by weight?

Pageturner66
Posts: 3 Member
So, at a friend's advice, I weighed all the ingredients in my spaghetti and put them in by weight instead. THing is, this caused the calories to skyrocket (17,000 calories per serving?). I noticed that depending on whether I put in the info as grams or as items, it had a really major difference. My two sweet onions went from 212 calories to 14,000 calories depending on whether I put them in as two onions or as 446g of onion. Anyone have this happen?
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Replies
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446G of onions is 178 kcal so the entry you have chosen isn't correct.2
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RuNaRoUnDaFiEld wrote: »446G of onions is 178 kcal so the entry you have chosen isn't correct.
446g of onion is also a LOT of onion!!!1 -
*shrugs* It's just two medium sized onions. I chose 'sweet onion' because that's what it was at Hannaford.0
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Pageturner66 wrote: »*shrugs* It's just two medium sized onions. I chose 'sweet onion' because that's what it was at Hannaford.
and you eat all that in one sitting?0 -
What? No, that recipe makes like 8 servings.0
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sounds like a bad entry - did you use like USDA onion, sweet, diced (or similar)1
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I have found that some entries may be correct for a certain measurement, but when you choose a different option the conversion is incorrect causing the calories to skyrocket. For example, something might be 100 calories for an ounce, but if I choose 28g (which is the same thing), it goes to several thousand. You just have to pay attention when you are logging and choose a different entry if something doesn't make sense.0
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Pageturner66 wrote: »So, at a friend's advice, I weighed all the ingredients in my spaghetti and put them in by weight instead. THing is, this caused the calories to skyrocket (17,000 calories per serving?). I noticed that depending on whether I put in the info as grams or as items, it had a really major difference. My two sweet onions went from 212 calories to 14,000 calories depending on whether I put them in as two onions or as 446g of onion. Anyone have this happen?
Because every MFP member can input into the database there are some really crazy records. The longer you use it the less frustrating it becomes. When entering food I'm not used to I keep the USDA database open in a separate tab. Of course, it takes a little getting used to as well.0 -
Pageturner66 wrote: »So, at a friend's advice, I weighed all the ingredients in my spaghetti and put them in by weight instead. THing is, this caused the calories to skyrocket (17,000 calories per serving?). I noticed that depending on whether I put in the info as grams or as items, it had a really major difference. My two sweet onions went from 212 calories to 14,000 calories depending on whether I put them in as two onions or as 446g of onion. Anyone have this happen?
The USDA vegetable entries are usually per 100g (not 1g)..double check you didn't accidentally enter 44,600g.2 -
There is something wrong with how you're weighing or logging the serving. Weighing often results in higher calories because measuring cups and items tend to underestimate, but not 200 vs 12,000!0
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