Track fruits and veggies or not?
KReduced
Posts: 98 Member
I'm new to actually using MFP app, and was kind of wondering what the idea was about recording fruits and veggies? I'm mostly getting this from the new WW points system and that they have fruits and veggies as "free" food, so I was thinking if it is necessary for me to track these items? I am drinking a green monster smoothie for breakfast and using almond milk the whole thing is about 60 cal if I am NOT counting the spinach, banana, and strawberries (or whatever other fruit). Any opinions? That would be awesome! Also, I'm new so I need friends : )
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I log everything I eat bc MFP is based off a calorie count not a points system. WW helps you to eat healthier by points, MFP helps by forcing you to eat more lower calorie foods or less bad foods to stay in your goal. Good luck!1
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If you are doing WW don't track fruits and veggies. If you are following MFP then track them. You can't pick and chose your favorite parts of various programs and expect to be successful. WW gives you a lower daily calorie goal because it assumes you will eat a lot of calories in fruits and veggies. MFP assumes you will count what you are eating and doesn't account for "freebies".6
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If it has calories, you should log it.4
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If you eat it or drink it - log it. Some times logging fruit & veg can be hard as its not as easy to find in the database0
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I choose not to add. WW fruits and veggies are free... I will need to eat alot of fruit and veggies to amount to the calaries/fat/sugars a piece of pie or something else would be. Fruit is good for you and its a good snack filler instead of candy/cookies/ice cream etc....SO...........I will not add them here.11
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I've never done WW, but I've used a lot of recipes (theirs or by members) that I found to be both tasty and have sensible substitutions. I only recently learned that they don't count fruits or veggies in their point system at all which I find interesting. I'm guessing this is to encourage you to eat the "freebies" when you're feeling hungry? I kind of like this idea because it's something I struggle with. I eat a lot more of them now, but that's not saying much considered how few I ate before.
I think tracking fruits and veggies is kind of a grey area for me because calorie/macronutrient counts assume all sugars are the same. It makes it seem like eating an apple is just as bad for you as eating a spoonful of sugar but something in my brain goes "that can't be right".0 -
I track because I'm trying to keep track of the sugars I'm eating. I know they're natural sugars (and I still don't know if I should worry if I go over in my sugars intake if its all in fruits and veggies) but I need to know what I'm taking in to try and make better choices.0
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Course you should!1
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I would track fruits and veggies, especially if you eat a lot of them. I have 200 calories worth of raw veggies and can easily eat 300 calories of fruit without thinking. 500 calories is a lot to just disregard.5
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I wondered why WW wasn't working for me and then joined MFP and realised how many calories those fruit and veg had in them! They're great for your body but they're not calorie free! So, unless you're still following WW (in which case I'd used their tools to log food) you do need to add them.7
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Well, I took in 1,100 calories today… in NOTHING but fresh (non-processed) fruits and vegetables. I've never understood the whole "free" foods thing. They have calories and affect your macros…9
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Today for lunch I had 356 calories worth of vegetables (and I had some for breakfast, a snack and will have more for dinner too). If I didn't include my fruit and veggies then I'd be WAY over every day and still thinking I did well.
WW gives you a very low calorie count in their points system because they hope you're going to eat more in fruit and veg to make up for it. You either follow what WW tells you or you follow MFP. If you're using MFP, add your fruits and veg.4 -
You would be surprised. I track everything. It is a visual ticker of the things I've been eating all day. I am amazed by what I actually eat during the course of the day. I think it's a little easier for me since I don't dine out very often. My husband loves cooking. Just try to keep track of the things you are eating. You'll see. With MFP it doesn't just keep track, it gives you the dietary contents of what you're eating as well. WW doesn't do that, and MFP is free. Also, with MFP you van use the bar code and it will put it in your diary automatically. Trust me. Just try it. It will become a habit. I promise. Let me know how you're doing. We can do this together!0
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Well, I took in 1,100 calories today… in NOTHING but fresh (non-processed) fruits and vegetables. I've never understood the whole "free" foods thing. They have calories and affect your macros…
I think the assumption is most people dont eat any and if they do it will decrease the amount of heavy calorie foods they do eat.1 -
Track them. They all contain calories, even if they're low (like salad). Things like bananas are quite calorie dense (I have 100g banana most days, logs 103 cals), a small corn on the corn contains something like 136 cals.2
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Track them. They all contain calories, even if they're low (like salad). Things like bananas are quite calorie dense (I have 100g banana most days, logs 103 cals), a small corn on the corn contains something like 136 cals.
FYI corn is a grain not a veg but I agree. Track every thing you put in your ,ouch. Everything.0 -
When WW changed the program to "not" count points for fruits and most vegetables, they also altered the points of other foods to account for servings of fruits and vegetables in a customers meal plan.
I think the reasoning behind that was to get people to eat more fruits/vegetables and not to choose a 100-calorie pack of processed food over fresh produce.
That said, fruits and vegetables do contain calories and if you don't log fruits/vegetables in MFP, you aren't logging those calories when you log other food in your diary.
Count points or count calories, it really doesn't matter. But if you don't log calories for fruits and vegetables on MFP, you aren't getting a true picture of the number of calories you are eating every day.1 -
if it goes in your mouth, it goes in your food diary.1
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the confusion comes in when people who dont use the program refer to them as " free " and assume
"ZOMG you cant lose if you dont track ever speck!"
basically when they created the system it included your full 3-5 servings of fruits and vegetables a day in the base points calculation...soooooo sort of like say if MFP gave you 100 cals for a day (small number to keep it easy) WW system would give you more like 75 but tell you hey ...dont count the fruits or veggies on the pre approved list! so although you don't track them daily in your point count, they aren't " free "...you are still supposed to list them in your food journal and also count how many servings you have each day.
is it possible to go over by say eating only really high cal produce choices? absolutely.
if you are really following the program the way it was intended and not trying to cheat the system/yourself and you have even the smallest bit of common sense then its pretty unlikely.Well, I took in 1,100 calories today… in NOTHING but fresh (non-processed) fruits and vegetables. I've never understood the whole "free" foods thing. They have calories and affect your macros…0 -
Log so that you can track your nutrients. Calories are not the only thing in food, nutrition is more important.1
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I track everything that goes into my mouth!! MFP has set a goal of 1800 calories per day. I try and hit 1500 instead. I started on 21 October 2012 @ 257 # and as of today (13 Jan 2013) weigh in @ 234.8. Not bad for 72 with COPD1
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to the OP:
when i was on WW i had the etools and i tracked only my points foods on that one but on MFP i tracked everything mainly because i was curious as to how close they would be at the end of the day.
if you chose not to track your fruits and vegs. make sure you remind yourself that even if it says you have extra cals at the end of the day that you dont take that as a free pass to eat more. like another poster said, you pretty much have to pick the WW plan or the MFP plan and then track accordingly.
i lost 35 pounds in about 3 months on WW, got pregnant and had a baby and then lost an additional 30ish in 4 months on MFP for a grand total of about 60+/- lbs.1 -
Yes. Many fruit are very high in calories..its pure sugar. You need to track it.0
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Absolutely - I made a veggie soup and I was kidding myself that it did not have any calls of any significance. If you are using things like root veggies and carrots - lots of carbs.
Also do not forget that fruit has lots of sugar - sugar is less easily absorbed from fruit but still adds up .
This does not meant that you hit the biccies - fruit and veg is far superior and should be the largest part of your diet.1 -
Track everything. Everything!
Its a good habit to get in to. That includes drinks as well. If you have milk in tea/coffee you need to track that as well.
Fruit is good but should be limited (and not all fruit is equal), Veggies are better.0 -
In the mouth......in my diary!
In fact, posting fruits and veggies is my way if "bragging" to MFP friends that I am complying to the promise I made to myself!
Its not all about the cals.....a balance of carbs, proteins, potassium, and sodium is important also.1 -
Weight Watchers likes to manipulate what you eat by giving you lower or free points for healthy foods. The problem is, that at it's heart, WW is a Calorie restricting program. Allowing "freebies" to a group of people that might have restraint issues isn't a smart idea.
A few years ago if you ate a lot of fiber with your meal it could lower the points down to almost nothing. So people took it too far and started putting fiber powder in stuff that they shouldn't be eating, and they wondered why they didn't lose weight. So weight watchers changed their calculation so that you could only count up to 4g fiber at a time, and you could only get the benefits of that 4g once per day (if you ate high fiber bread, you could only eat that bread once use the fiber, after that one time you had to calculate points without it). This made it harder to game the system. Of course people just found a ton of fiber rich snacks and ate a ton of different ones to keep their points low.
Veggies were already free and so were most condiments. But Weight watchers as a group noticed that because food with fiber was so low in points people were avoiding (even lean) proteins. They changed their program again to include Protein, and Carbs into their calculation. Their new calculation reduced the amount of points for a lean piece of meat. But it also caused another problem (in testing the new program). Because they were now measuring carbs, a bunch of fruits shot up in point value. We all know that fruits are good for us, but people with low points would not reach for a banana, they would reach for a processed snack that hadn't gone up in points. So weight watcher's idea was to reduce the amount of calories you received every day and allow you to have unlimited fruit.
Remember what I said above about restraint?1 -
Even if something I ate or drank had no calories or anything, I still log it to see what I consumed that day.0
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Yes I do...0
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