1500 calories for a PIECE of cake?
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lol too true0
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"hehe people dont realise how many hidden cals are in cakes. I make my own sometimes and there quite low until i add the buttercream on top , then that doubles them usually to around 400 cals each or more. Home made brownies are about the same or worse ,depending on how much chocolate I put in. I know know that in the uk, most peices of cake are around 500 cals, carrot cake is higher ofcourse, its all the oil they out in it. I try and go for cheesecake and leave the base alone, at least the cheesecake is protein mostly and not just sugar and fat."
This is precisely why I never bake either, even though I'm capable of making some very simple stuff like Tollhouse cookies. Those simply can NOT be in the house, period as you know what happens to home-baked cookies that are any good. I did a brief stint with baking my own whole-grain breads and all years ago, but you know, same thing when it's fresh out of the oven and one will eat far more than one or two slices. Actually, these days I don't even BUY bread. The closest thing I have to it is Ezekiel sprouted english muffins - I have half of one of these at breakfast. And we do have whole wheat tortillas. But even with those, one has to be careful, as just one has 22 grams of carbs, so I cut one in half to bring the carb count down to go along with my eggs or some cheese. The only things my oven gets used for are the very occasional baked potato, or roasted veggies. I come from a family of excellent bakers, but most of that gene passed me by. Just today, a friend of mine was telling me that a friend of ours is a baker, but her stuff is full of refined flour and sugar, and she has arthritis, but refuses to change her eating habits.0 -
That must've been a huge slice of cake!
Costa (a UK coffee shop) has all the calories on display by the counter, and they have carrot cake, It says it has about 615 calories per slice, and I thought that was a lot. Muffins there are about 450 calories. I guess in the UK we have smaller portion sizes than in the US.
I'm sure if you make cakes yourself they have less calories.
I prefer not to get cakes/dessert out.0 -
restaurants suck. I hate them all.
You spend all that money on food only to learn that the food is all ****. I don't understand why it's so difficult for a restaurant to make decent food that has a normal amount of calories... but apparently they are all stupid and lazy and use prepackaged and frozen stuff and then add a pound of butter and whatever other fattening crap they use.
I hate restaurants.0 -
mmm CARROT CAKE!!!! I only allow myself that once or twice a year and always split the portion. Cream cheese icing adds lots of calories0
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At least with carrot cake you get " 1 of your 5 a day "
:drinker:
If you want carrot cake try
http://chocolatecoveredkatie.com/2012/04/03/five-minute-carrot-cake-for-one/
Its a single serve ( though i ended up with 4 and froze 2). And much better than store bought/ restaurant.
:smooched:
I've stoped buying cakes/ biscuits and if i want some i have to make them myself. Normally by the time i get home i'm too tired to bake so i end up going without.0 -
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1500 calories, Wow. You will have to jog about 2000 miles.0
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Carrot cake hate.......your all reported.0
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It's easy to see why we put on weight isn't it. 1500 calories for a slice of cake.....the sad thing is, I see people's food diary all the time where they've added a 'generic' entry from the database after eating out, so it's like: 'Generic, Carrot Cake, 1 Slice - 249 calories' Yeah right, you just KNOW they didn't have a 249 calorie slice. 1500 is probably more likely to be close to the average.
My sister once made some death by chocolate cake thing and decided to work out the calories, thinking it would be 3-400 calories a slice. Turned out to be 1800 calories a slice.0 -
One night a few weeks ago, my husband ordered Dominos pizza, and just the half of one that I had was over 1000 calories. Once I realized that I was glad that I didn't have a whole pizza to myself. I guess I should've realized though, pizza isn't exactly skinny food of course.0
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People love muffins because they are so moist and light but what makes them so also makes them 700 Calories each!
I make moist and light muffins at only 80 calories per....what kind of muffins are you eatting?0 -
Carrot cake always seems to be the highest. I don't know what the hell they put in to make it so calorific. Maybe they just mold it out of the lard and spray paint it orangey.
Carrot cake or carrot muffins always highest in fat because of the amount of OIL that is used to make them. If you were able to see the restaurant make the them you would never eat them. I worked at a donut shop a long time ago. Once you realize the ingredients it is impossible to eat without guilt0 -
I never order dessert at the restaurant, I'm usually pretty full after my meal plus those desserts are crazy expenssive.0
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i remember a friend of mine saying she wanted to order a piece of carrot cake because "it's so healthy". dafuq.
I know, right? Does carrot cake even have any carrots in it????0 -
I believe it! Desserts alone can be killer!0
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My sister is a cake baker and makes a carrot cake TO DIE FOR!
I said to her about making a skinny licious range which she won't do, personally I think she is missing a trick there, but get this she says to me her carrot cake is low fat because of all the carrots and pineapple she uses! She fails to mention all the butter, oil, cream cheese and castor sugar! It is absolutely loaded!
I think that all foods in restaurants should have a calorie content next to it, some do but not enough, I am sure it will make some think twice about what they put in their mouths, and also bar drinks, these young binge drinking girls that get plastered and into trouble on a weekend will think twice if they realise just how much calories they are drinking on their nights out.
That's just crazy talk!!!! I'm with you about posting calories for food items, but let's leave the drinks out of it. I don't see any problem with young (or even older) girls binge drinking and getting into trouble. Sheeeeshhh... what are you trying to do, ruin my social life????:laugh:0 -
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Test recieved. Now... what the hell are we testing again?0 -
I eat out 4 times per week and have been doing so while losing nearly 2.5lbs per week.
I do so at lunch time though and have a meal more similar to a lunch in the evening.
The trick is to check the calories carefully. As an example I might have half a roast chicken basted in a hot sauce with a *small* portion of spicy rice and that will come in at around 800 cals. But that's all I'll have. No starter and no desert.
Deserts are very calories heavy, but even at 1,000 cals for one, I fail to see the harm once per month.
Everything is ok in moderation. There' no need to feel like you've failed if you have one desert every few weeks even when you're losing weight, much less maintaining it.
A bigger problem is candy bars, potato chips, bad main meal choices, multiple courses etc every week.0 -
People love muffins because they are so moist and light but what makes them so also makes them 700 Calories each!
I make moist and light muffins at only 80 calories per....what kind of muffins are you eatting?
I'm guessing... the kind you can see with the naked eye?:laugh:0 -
It's crazy, isn't it? But I constantly see around here people talking about "oh, it takes 3500 calories to put on a pound" as if that's hard. I could easily put on a pound a day if I set my mind to it -- i.e. eating a piece of carrot cake like yours, getting some crepes at IHOP, eating half a pizza, and a burger and fries. BAM! The calories in foods at restaurants are really absurd.
When people say it takes 3500 calories to put on a pound, they are talking on top of maintenance. So if those foods added up to your maintenance calories for the day, you wouldn't gain a pound of fat. You may gain a pound of water weight, but thats about it.
To OP:
Oh well, you live and learn.
Life is too short to not eat cake and sweets.0 -
I eat out maybe twice/year. On a side note about portions, I work for Frito Lay (sorry that I contribute to the obesity epidemic, but they pay well) and the little $1.49 bags of chips at the registers of supermarkets - there are almost 3 servings in each little bag. Now do the people that buy those actually stop eating after 1/3 is gone?? I doubt it. And if you've ever looked at an individually wrapped muffin or danish, etc, it states there are 2 servings in each pkg!0
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Two words. Cheesecake Factory. Any of their desserts will AMAZE you.0
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Im confused, I looked up carrot cake and a slice comes in about 200 to 500 Calories.....Where did you get 1500 from?0
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Speaking of muffins...I found a good no fat banana oat muffin recipe yesterday and made them, only 103 calories...Now if I could figure out how to post the recipe on here, I would. :ohwell:0
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I'm thankful that more restaurants have nutrition guides available.
I would like to think that they are mostly accurate
It's nice to be able to go online before we even head out the door and make healthier choices.
I've also learned a lot about what is and is not healthy/low calorie.
Eye opening! :noway:0 -
I never order dessert at the restaurant, I'm usually pretty full after my meal plus those desserts are crazy expensive.
Same with DH and me. Restaurant portions (even locally-owned, non-chain places) are too big for us and we almost always take some of it home in a box. There's rarely any room left for dessert! At business dinners, if others want to have dessert, I just enjoy another glass of wine.
Once in a great while (maybe every other month) they'll have a bakery cake at our church to celebrate something or other. Frosting on bakery cake is my weakness. I thoroughly enjoy a piece, don't think about the calories, then back away from the table.
For me, the shocker was bagels. We have the Einstein's chain here and sometimes people bring them in to work. I think a raisin one is something like 300 calories. Heck, they're not real bagels anyway. I lived in NJ in a town where they had a bagel shop that made real bagels, which are boiled in water before they're baked. No more Einstein's for me.0 -
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Restaurant dessert portions are always sized for sharing with between 2 and 4 people. The carrot cake slice that is 1500 calories is for 4. But restaurants don't tell us that.
When I go out, I look up the calories of desserts in chain restaurants before ordering. Then I usually pick the lowest calorie one and share it. If I know the calorie count before I eat it, I know how much of it I can eat before putting it in my mouth and dealing with the guilt after.
Ask for a separate plate so you can portion out your share of it and just eat that. I'm not ever going to give up dessert, but checking first then portioning out my share is my way of doing things and still being satisfied.0
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