How do you weigh your food?
klynn_cox
Posts: 17
So I have been wondering when you measure something out say Green beans for instance. How are you suppossed to weigh them? I have been weighing out all my food on a scale. So if a cup of green beans is the recommended serving size I weigh out 8 oz. But MAN its a lot! So I started wondering if I was suppossed to weigh them out physicaly in a measuring cup. Then it wouldnt be 8oz becasue they take up more room in the cup. What is the correct way? Because weighing things out on the scale just seems like the serving I end up with is a lot of food to be eatting.
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Replies
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You are suppose to measure them in a measuring cup. When you weigh them, it should be in grams, the nutritional info should say how many grams a serving is0
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Sometimes it not obvious if the serving is by weight or by volume. The second poster had this right. I tend to worry less about green veg, or anything leafy, I'll eyeball. Protien sources, whole grains, and fruit, I measure.0
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My measuring cups is all I have been using so far for most things. If I need the weight, it is usually for meat, and I can make a good guess based off the weight of the total package and then the fact that the whole package is divided into four fairly equal parts for each of my family members. I'm not in a hurry to buy a food scale, at least not until I am much closer to goal weight.0
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I only weigh meat so I know how many ounces I'm eating. For everything else I use measuring cups/spoons.0
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I only weigh meat so I know how many ounces I'm eating. For everything else I use measuring cups/spoons.
^^ this is what I do as well!0 -
i never weigh by cups i always weigh by weight on a good set of scales.0
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I stand on the bathroom scale and eat.0
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I use scales to weigh everything, but then in the UK we don't really have measuring cups.
I have noticed though that 'serving' on the pack of something isn't always a sensible size. Use your common sense a bit - if it looks like too much, have less!0 -
I use a combination of both. If it is a low calorie food like veggies then a ball park measureing in a cup is fine. For things like peanut butter I realized that you have to be careful when using tablespoons. A 1 tbsp serving by weight is actually only about 3/4 of the tbsp full. If you are using a whole tbsp, especially if it is not level, you will be getting quite a bit more calories than what you log. These little things can add up very quickly.0
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1 cup = 8 fluid ounces, not 8 ounces by weight
If you want the most accurate measurement, weigh your food. The nutritional info should give you volume as well as weight, whether it's in ounces or grams. If you have a digital scale, you should be able to toggle between grams and ounces depending on what your nutritional info is given in.0 -
Thank you all! That helps a lot! So now that I know I have been eatting far my veggies than I need I will stop making my portions so gigantic!0
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