How to report food

I have way too much difficulty reporting food. I don't eat prepared foods EVER. And I rarely eat out. And it is almost impossible to report home cooked meals. AM I missing something? Is there a way to report that I ate 2 cups of linguine and then report the sauce ingredients? I keep getting lists of prepared dinners.

Replies

  • amblight
    amblight Posts: 350 Member
    If I'm making just 1 portion of something, I just log the ingredients individually for as my lunch for example. If it's something I'll only eat a portion of at that meal, I create a recipe, add the ingredients there, and then when you need to add it, you choose 'my recipes', and find the food there.
  • asciiqwerty
    asciiqwerty Posts: 565 Member
    just search for ingredients

    and/or use the recipe builder to find the ingredients you used when you cooked

    i mainly cook at home, filling in the diary is time consuming but it does work
  • ashenriver
    ashenriver Posts: 498 Member
    Try the recipe builder.

    It has its own issues as you will find out.

    What I usually do when I make a recipe is while I cook I write down the ingredients and amounts on a piece of paper, then after dinner I would build the recipe using the website. This way I can sit down and search for the proper ingredients ie the entries without the star, check the nutrition label on packaged goods and not pause dinner to do so.

    The tricky part comes to determining the serving size and not being able to edit the serving size when you use the recipe again. (though apparently you can on the phone app)

    Do not waste your time with the new recipe builder that you import the recipe from a website or using the phone app.
  • asciiqwerty
    asciiqwerty Posts: 565 Member
    a trick to serving sizes is to weight the whole of the final cooked recipe

    set the serving to the number of whole grams in the final product

    then weigh out what you serve yourself (in grams) and log grams servings

    so my loaf that i cooked recently gave 765g i logged using the recipe builer 765 servings
    then when I cut a slice that weighed 34g i log 34 servings of 1 g
  • kommodevaran
    kommodevaran Posts: 17,890 Member
    Are you cooking yourself or is someone else cooking for you?
  • Anonycatgirl
    Anonycatgirl Posts: 502 Member
    It *is* a pest if you're a scratch cook--you have to enter your favorite recipes manually, and if you like to make a variety of foods, it gets old--but you'll eventually have enough favorite recipes and enough foods in your recent/frequent tabs that it gets easier.

    As for serving sizes in the recipe builder, I try to make a note in my recipe title. If I know it's a cup or 250 grams or whatever, I can calculate more easily if I'm having more or less when I get leftovers the next day.
  • wannakimmy
    wannakimmy Posts: 488 Member
    a trick to serving sizes is to weight the whole of the final cooked recipe

    set the serving to the number of whole grams in the final product

    then weigh out what you serve yourself (in grams) and log grams servings

    so my loaf that i cooked recently gave 765g i logged using the recipe builer 765 servings
    then when I cut a slice that weighed 34g i log 34 servings of 1 g

    great tip, thanks!
  • supermysza
    supermysza Posts: 167 Member
    I use the phone app to log things as I cook, that way nothings gets left out and I know the calories are accurate
  • sarahsue001
    sarahsue001 Posts: 14 Member
    This is how I deal with serving sizes:

    Most of my recipes already have suggested serving sizes, but if they don't, it is pretty easy to figure out if you cook a lot.

    I divide as soon as I am done cooking, (before eating). I usually eyeball though. So if I make a casserole/lasagna that should serve 8, I slice it into 8 pieces, put one each on a plate for me and my husband and put the other 6 into individual containers for leftovers, already divided.*

    *I make meal plans weekly and already know when they leftovers are going to be eaten, whether I freeze them for later or use them for lunches.

    I do not make sweets much but if I make brownies in a 9x13 pan, I cut them up into 24 squares.

    Same for soup or liquids. I use a soup ladle and put one level ladle into our dinner bowls and tupperware until they are all even.

    I do my best to keep things even. Breads, meatloafs and such are the hardest. You have to make the "shorter" end pieces thicker than the "taller" middle pieces. Sometimes I do weigh these things.

    It is a little weird when we have people over. No one gets seconds.... I have other food, snacks around if people are still hungry. My friends have gotten used to it. I try to cook just as many servings as people coming so there is no food left. (My sister's fiance is a big eater (and super fit), so I serve him two servings).

    For my husband and I the rule is if you are still hungry after dinner, you have to wait an hour then you can eat something else. Since I have a plan for the leftovers we tend not to overeat at dinner and if we are still hungry we usually have popcorn later.
  • JoRocka
    JoRocka Posts: 17,525 Member
    am I the only one who thought

    "well I would call 9-1-1 first... and then the CDC.. perhaps the store where I bought it"........

    lulz