Weighing vs measuring food
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I usually weight meat, pasta and ingredients when I am baking but I never really thought about doing it with fruit or veggies. I will have to start that because it really makes sense. I am so obsessed with having the right numbers with cals in/cals out.
I also believe everyone should have an HRM because MFP and cardio machines are usually off by a lot. They usually overestimate around 20-30%. We are so focused on getting our food calories right, why in the heck wouldn't we do the same for the calories we burned?0 -
I can see how weighing could be very helpful. However, in my case I know the 10-15 pounds of winter weight I can tend to put on is not due to eating too many, apples, bananas, onions, 1/4 cups of 2% cheese, or the extra calories in a reasonable portion or roast beef or chicken. My excess pounds come from double portions of meat, fried cheese sticks, or mindless consumption of sweet & salty treats when I'm tired, stressed, or bored paired with lounging under an electric blanket on my sofa with a book.0
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I agree with the importance of using a scale but feel the need to point out just because you see say Dole - Wildly Nutritious Mixed Fruit, 1 cup 70 in someone's log it doesn't mean they are using a measuring cup. That is how I logged it but it was 140g weighed out my scale according to label on weight of that 1 cup the database only shows cups or the entire package sizes.0
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I use a digital food scale. It can measure grams, ounces and pounds. I also use a measuring cup. I have had success using these two items. I am careful with my meat portions and have been pleasantly surprised that I really don't need those big portions. I mostly eat chicken, fish and turkey. I use turkey products like sausage and burgers. I stay away from fried foods as much as possible. It's usually grilled, baked or smoked. But, the bottom line is you have to find what works for you.0
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after reading this. i could definitely improve in this area. but i also want to argue that i dont want to be 60 walking around measuring everything. if its cereal or things in a box with serving sizes, i do grab a measuring cup. but things things like fruits and veggies im not going to go crazy. im not going to measure out cups of lettuce and tomatoes. and many items like bananas and apples have the fruit sizes listed. when i get into dinners i will create a recipe. enter all the ingredients. and if the meal creates leftovers, i will put the additional in the correct serving size in plastic bowls. and when all else fails, just estimate up? i just think its getting a little too crazy when your talking onions and such.
I agree with you on this. I don't want to have to weigh everything for forever, but if you practice it enough when you are at home and it is easy to do, then it makes it easier to not have to do this forever. After years of measuring out 1/4 C of shredded cheese periodically, I thought I could eyeball it pretty well and have done that pretty often. The last 3 times I've been at home and had shredded cheese, I grabbed my normal serving and threw it on my plate already on the scale. Each time it came out to exactly 28 grams. I was pretty darn proud of myself! LOL.
Seriously, though, knowing what an accurate measurement of XYZ looks like is a great tool to have and once you get comfortable with it, you will be much better able to guesstimate when the need arises and won't have to post an "Oh no, I'm going on vacation/out to dinner/to a party, what am I going to do?!?!?!" You shouldn't have to weigh or measure every single thing you eat for forever or even for years. If you practice it for a while, you can then periodically check yourself but life should be much easier.0 -
Maybe it's just being English and always having scales about in the kitchen for baking but when I first joined MFP I was so confused about things being '1 cup' and the like. That means nothing - I mean, 1 full tightly packed cup, 1 loosely packed one, 1 with everything chopped very finely, 1 without - so much potential for variation. I had no idea of how much '1 cup' was as nobody I know uses measuring cups for anything (baking tends to be done in grams or ounces and we measure butter and don't use 'sticks').
I've always done everything in weight not volume (excluding liquids) so I had no idea how much that was and often had to search harder to find an item in the database I could use. I still get frustrated if I have to use '1 large' or '1 small' for apples and '1 portion' annoys me too as portion sizes can vary wildly too.0 -
Maybe it's just being English and always having scales about in the kitchen for baking but when I first joined MFP I was so confused about things being '1 cup' and the like. That means nothing - I mean, 1 full tightly packed cup, 1 loosely packed one, 1 with everything chopped very finely, 1 without - so much potential for variation. I had no idea of how much '1 cup' was as nobody I know uses measuring cups for anything (baking tends to be done in grams or ounces and we measure butter and don't use 'sticks').
I've always done everything in weight not volume (excluding liquids) so I had no idea how much that was and often had to search harder to find an item in the database I could use. I still get frustrated if I have to use '1 large' or '1 small' for apples and '1 portion' annoys me too as portion sizes can vary wildly too.
I think it's just us being European.
My scale also measures nutrients, which I find extremely helpful. I bought one for each family member.0 -
I will start weighing my food, to see if that makes a differnce. I made my Baked Chicken Red Potato Bake, using weight vs measurement. And it's less calorie per serving when i put in my reciped maker.0
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Don't forget to weigh the cup holding the food on the scale, and subtract from the total. You're not going to eat the cup.0
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I just measured out what dry vs cooked spaghetti is. Barilla brand is 200 calories for 56 grams dry. Cooked that equals approximately 151 grams. 151 grams is a heaped 1 cup measuring cup.
I was pleasantly surprised that my 3/4 of a cup of pasta is about 3/4 of a serving!0 -
The weight of the onion is to be weighed before you chop it up not after. You are inflating calories this way.
Just like you weigh meat before cooking not after.
Typically you don't weigh meat before. A serving of chicken is approximately 4 oz raw or 3 oz cooked. Most databases use cooked meat values (according to a few articles I've read). When you cook meat, you lose some of the fat.
On the weight of the onion, weighing it after you chop it is fine since there is no change in moisture content or anything else occuring during the chopping. If you are weighing it raw, weighing it chopped or whole shouldn't make a calorie difference, except if you discard part of the onion while chopping, then your weight would be off.
As for weighing meat, to be the most accurate, you should weigh it BEFORE cooking as the raw weight is much more accurate than the cooked weight. In the MFP database, if you put in chicken breast, raw or ribeye steak, raw, etc. it is easy to find these measurements that use raw instead of cooked. The reason for weighing anything (meat or veggies) raw is that when you cook something, the final weight is determined by how much moisture is lost or gained, which can vary greatly. You really aren't losing a ton of fat when you cook most items. The only time I really make an exception to the pre-cooked and after cooked weight is ground meat when I cook the meat and drain AND rinse the meat. Then, I look for an entry that describes that process. In that case, you are losing a good deal of fat through the cooking and draining and rinsing process. But, if you start with boneless skinless chicken, there's really very little fat to lose during cooking.
A great example of why raw weight is better than cooked weight is steak. You could start with an 8 oz ribeye and have it cooked medium-rare and weigh 6.5 oz cooked and then go ahead and cook it further to make it well done and the final weight could be 5 oz cooked. Track it raw and you are tracking nearly 450 calories; using one of the "cooked, grilled" entries, the medium rare 6.5 oz steak comes out to about 439 calories but the well done 5 oz cooked steak only comes up as 336 calories. That's a huge discrepency for that one piece of meat when the only thing that changed was how much moisture was lost. The same happens with pork chops and chicken and lots of foods. If you cook yours and it comes out "dry" and weighs an ounce less than mine does, but we both started with the same size chop, are you really getting less calories than me? Nope, you're just getting less moisture.
Just being off by a little bit here and there can quickly lead to frustration and "stalls".
This is exactly the info I have been looking for.0 -
Interesting....0
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Most of the things I eat match up pretty well measured in volume or by weight -- i.e., two tablespoons of peanut butter actually weigh 32g, half a cup of cottage cheese actually weighs 125g, etc. I don't know if this is a fluke of my scale, a fluke of my measuring utensils, or just the fact that I work food service and understand how to properly measure by volume (without "packing").
I do still weigh everything but pourable liquids, though. A lot of times I'll log something (cottage cheese is the perfect example) by cups, but I'll weigh those cups to make sure my grams are in line with the serving size; in other words, if the label says a serving is "1/2 cup or 125g," I will use my 1/2 cup measuring cup, weigh it to make sure it's 125g, but then log it as 1/2 cup. Usually I do this when there is no weight option in the database, as I am generally too lazy to make my own entries.
My one caveat is dry carbs like pasta, rice, and cereal. Those little f*ckers have to be weighed and there's just no telling what volume measurement the proper serving will be. I've started avoiding them a little, just for that reason.0 -
Great thread, thanks! Food for thought for sure.0
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