How to determine calories in meat that has a bone in it
zestyzaftig
Posts: 103 Member
I feel incredibly dumb asking this question since I'm such a raging foodie.
So, let's say I have a chicken thigh. I weigh it after I'm done roasting it. Then I eat the meat. Should I weigh the bone when I'm done and subtract it from the original weight to get my total ounces/grams to calculate the calories?
...or does the nutritional info for bone-in meats take into account the weight of the bone?
So, let's say I have a chicken thigh. I weigh it after I'm done roasting it. Then I eat the meat. Should I weigh the bone when I'm done and subtract it from the original weight to get my total ounces/grams to calculate the calories?
...or does the nutritional info for bone-in meats take into account the weight of the bone?
2
Replies
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Am interested to, I love chicken thighs xx0
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Plus hubby and I split a T-bone steak last night, which brought up the issue yet again. Sigh.1
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The meat I buy has the caloric values listed for 100g of edible product. Caloric information I have seen on the Internet etc is practically identical, so I think that the first calculation you suggested sounds appropriate0
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On the packet I get it says 218 g is 271 calories ( with skin that is, I roast mine and have the skin really crispy) The one I did weigh with the bone in was 218g so it is right but what would happen if i cut the meat off the bone and just cooked that, i know it would be less calories. So confusing xx1
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I guesstimate the weight of the bone, but always make the value a bit lower. If you're trying to lose weight then the aim is to consume less calories. You might be cheating yourself out of say 50 calories, but it will help you reach your goal just that tiny bit quicker.0
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I know this discussion thread is old but if I understand it right, if I take my home raised beef ..in this case a t bone Steak weigh it and then weigh bone after eating and subtract that is the amount I use as my serving.0
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Yep, that's exactly what I do.
Weigh it with the bone then after eating weigh the bone.0 -
I try not to overthink it - I weigh raw, find the right entry for raw, and don't worry about it after that. Bones don't weigh that much, and any discrepancy is a bonus deficit that helps offset typical errors in logging.1
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Use the entry for cooked meat and weigh what's leftover and subtract.
For a breast I just pull the meat off before I weigh it (at least if it's not a dinner party).0 -
I weigh the portion, eat it, then weigh the bones/fat/whatever else I didn't eat and subtract.
We had bone-in pork chops the other night and this worked out great. 8oz before, 2.5oz of bone and fat I didn't eat, so 5.5oz consumed. Works for me!0 -
I weigh it cooked, after cutting the meat from the bone, before I eat it.0
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lalepepper wrote: »I try not to overthink it - I weigh raw, find the right entry for raw, and don't worry about it after that. Bones don't weigh that much, and any discrepancy is a bonus deficit that helps offset typical errors in logging.
Keep in mind that bones can be a significant portion of a product's weight. In many cases, as much as 25% to 30% of the total (which, in the case of an 10 oz bone-in steak, can be the equivalent of roughly 200 calories of meat).
Your approach is very conservative but it may be overly so, especially if you're trying to work with a relatively low calorie target.0
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