Cooking in oil, now much to count?
MonaRN81
Posts: 20 Member
Hi everyone
So tonight for supper im roasting chicken breasts, carrots, squash and mushrooms together. There are 3 breasts and a bunch of veggies. I added about 5 tbsps of olive oil to coat. How much olive oil do you think one would consume eating a breast and some veggies?? I know alot ends up in the drippings at the bottom but have no clue how much to count. 1 tbsp??
So tonight for supper im roasting chicken breasts, carrots, squash and mushrooms together. There are 3 breasts and a bunch of veggies. I added about 5 tbsps of olive oil to coat. How much olive oil do you think one would consume eating a breast and some veggies?? I know alot ends up in the drippings at the bottom but have no clue how much to count. 1 tbsp??
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Replies
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That's suppose to be "how much to count". It wont let me edit it.0
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If the total ends up being three servings, i would divide the 5 tbls by 3 and add that into my log. I just assume none is lost in the process.0
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Hi everyone
So tonight for supper im roasting chicken breasts, carrots, squash and mushrooms together. There are 3 breasts and a bunch of veggies. I added about 5 tbsps of olive oil to coat. How much olive oil do you think one would consume eating a breast and some veggies?? I know alot ends up in the drippings at the bottom but have no clue how much to count. 1 tbsp??
I collect the drippings and measure how much and deduct from how much I used.0 -
Yes that is three servings, well I'll probably only have half a chicken breast, but for 3 people. But I also know that not all the oil makes it in as it is visible in the bottom. But I guess some of that could be from the chicken too. I wish there were a way of knowing this for sure! I like to count very accurately!0
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This is asked on here a lot. I count most of it just to be safe. So if you eat 1 chicken breast and some veggies, I'd say that's a third of the meal which is 1.66 tbsp of oil, so I would probably put 1.5 tbsp of oil into MFP. You could also just look at the food after it's cooked and see if most of the oil is absorbed into the food or if most of it dripped off onto the pan and estimate from there.0
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It never hurts to overestimate.
Unless you're guessing someone's weight.0 -
Ohhh measuring what's left is good! Dont know why I didnt think of that.0
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D'oh! I should have searched for it. Sorry if this is an annoying reoccurring question!0
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Either measure what's left in the bottom of the pan or don't (I vote don't, just count the whole amount you added)
Main benefit will be from doing it the same way over time; that way your process is consistent.0 -
Ohhh measuring what's left is good! Dont know why I didnt think of that.
While that maybe the most accurate way, the chicken and vegetables are going lose water and that will be mixed in with the oil that you are seeing. I would not deduct the full amount leftover from the original amount.0
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