How do you count marinade?
JDelphiki
Posts: 47 Member
Tonight for dinner I am having chicken tacos. I made a marinade, which is enough to submerge the chicken. I know the amount of calories, but how to I account for how much marinade is actually consumed?
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Replies
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I don't -- too minimal to worry with.0
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I have wondered this same thing...my thought? Weigh the marinate before and after soaking the meat...the difference is what stayed! If anyone has a better way, I would love to hear it0
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It depends on the marinade. If its one with a decent amount of calories (oil based, some sugar, etc.) then weigh it before you put the meat in and then after, and divide by the number of pieces. If its basically low calorie broth and some seasoning, then I wouldn't bother except to get into the habit of recording absolutely everything (which is a good habit to build).0
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It depends on the marinade. If its one with a decent amount of calories (oil based, some sugar, etc.) then weigh it before you put the meat in and then after, and divide by the number of pieces. If its basically low calorie broth and some seasoning, then I wouldn't bother except to get into the habit of recording absolutely everything (which is a good habit to build).
This sounds pretty reasonable. The stuff I make has a good amount of honey and soy sauce, so I'd lack to track not only calories but sodium.0 -
I don't -- too minimal to worry with.
^^^^^^ this ^^^^^^0 -
It is a little more work, but it is more accurate, to make a recipe with the meat and the marinated together.0
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I don't unless it has oil in it, then I only add about a tsp to my calorie count because most of it falls off anyway. If you use honey or other sugars you may want to add a bit for it too.
If it's just spices I only try to keep track of the sodium.0 -
I just estimate 1-2 tablespoons for each piece of meat. This DEFINATELY DOES MATTER if you are following a low carb diet. Marinades--especially the pre-made ones--can be full of carbs and sugar.0
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Yes! Depending on the marinade, they can be loaded with calories as well as sodium.0
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It depends on the marinade. If its one with a decent amount of calories (oil based, some sugar, etc.) then weigh it before you put the meat in and then after, and divide by the number of pieces. If its basically low calorie broth and some seasoning, then I wouldn't bother except to get into the habit of recording absolutely everything (which is a good habit to build).
This sounds pretty reasonable. The stuff I make has a good amount of honey and soy sauce, so I'd lack to track not only calories but sodium.0 -
If I'm using something pretty high-calories, like oil or barbecue sauce, then I just count it all like all the calories went into the recipe. If I'm off by a bit, it's in the direction of greater calorie deficit for the day.0
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You can go to the receipe section of the food diary and create a marinade receipe. Ex. you would put how many chicken breast were used and how much marinade along with how many people it will feed. It will give you the calorie count and all other tracking for 1 serving.0
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I don't usually log the packet ones where you add oil, vinegar & water because I cut the oil way down so the amount per piece of meat is insubstantial. But I will log the bottled ones because, as others have said, they tend to have a lot of sugar and fat and therefore more calories. I also log any marinades I make myself. It's a wild guesstimate but most of the time it's better than not logging at all.0
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Really? I'm pretty sure no one gained weight because they didn't keep accurate track of the marinade on their meat. At the most, if it was an oil based marinade, I would add 50 calories to my meal. I never have done that though.
Life is short, are you sure you want to spend it weighing your meat before and after it sits in marinade?0 -
I have wondered this same thing...my thought? Weigh the marinate before and after soaking the meat...the difference is what stayed! If anyone has a better way, I would love to hear it
This thats how I do it.0 -
I would search for some sort of mexican seasoned chicken.0
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Yes! Depending on the marinade, they can be loaded with calories as well as sodium.
Um. The question was - How?0 -
Have you thought about, for next time, using a marinate per - for example - chicken breast?
If you use enough to literally coat the meat without any left then you could use exact measurements. E.G 0.5 teaspoon of honey, 0.5 teaspoon olive oil etc etc
I do cheat and use pre-made marinades though. I used powdered ones that you coat the meat with, in my experience they tend to be lighter in cals than others.0 -
I make a new recipe on MFP and count everything. Better to record that I had more than I did than less but weighing it was a great idea- had never thought of that!!0
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