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Calorie difference between cooked and uncooked meat?

jessicafunkyy
Posts: 20
Ok, so I bought a package of uncooked chicken breakfast sausage from Trader Joe's. On the package it says there are 130 calories per 3 links. I had three links as part of my breakfast this morning, assuming it was 130 calories. But now that I think about it, cooked meat is usually more calories than uncooked, correct? And the nutritional information was "3 links, uncooked". So should I still count it as 130 calories or assume it was more?
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Replies
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I think the weight changes after its been cooked. I ate sausage the other day that was 150g frozen and 115 g cooked. I always go off the package. If it says 100 g is 100 calories i go by cooked weight0
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It depends on how you cook it. If you take a steak and grill it then the calories would probably drop since some fat drips off. If you cook a potato in oil then it would be more calories.0
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I too think it depends on how you cook it. Let's say when I do an omelet, I just spray the pan with like a pam spray which is 0 calories so i don't have to worry about adding any calories to my eggs, so I just count the eggs as the box says, 70 each. I would assume your links would be less calories cause of the fat you cook off, unless you do them in oil, or butter for some reason. I would just go with what the box or package tells you unless you add extra stuff to it.0
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The weight on the package should be the weight of the product raw. When you cook it, you may cook some of the fat off or the weight may change a bit. If you want to be really precise get a food scale. I just go by what it says raw or not, I figure it's not that many calories to make a big difference.0
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Just count it as 130 calories. When you cook the links they lose moisture, so they will weigh less than the raw links. However, the calories in the 3 links doesn't change. You only have to be careful about raw versus cooked when you're weighing food. For example, 4 ounces of cooked ground beef will have more calories than 4 ounces of raw ground beef only because the cooked ground beef has less moisture in it. That means that you're getting more calories in 4 ounces of cooked beef only because it has less water in it than the raw beef, and so there's more beef there.0
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I'm going to assume the calories would be about the same. Foods just lose water when they're cooked which is why they shrink/ weigh less.0
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Always weigh everything dry and uncooked.0
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I keep it simple and stick with what's on the package. Unless it's meat. I will weigh it after I cook it because it's always smaller. But now reading some of these, I am wondering if that is the right thing to do... I mean, why would I log a 8oz steak if it's only 5oz when it's done cooking?0
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