Healthy Foods . Unhealthy Portions.

bstrength85
bstrength85 Posts: 23 Member
edited September 23 in Food and Nutrition
So, maybe this is a dumb-question but does anyone have a simple rule or regulator in which they use to measure appropriate portions of food? It is the one area of eating healthy that I've yet to understand and/or master and would love some practical,and good advice on.

I don't struggle staying well-within my calorie limits, as a matter of fact, I typically have to eat a bit in the evening just to burn through some of the net leftover calories. I have a semi-intense workout regiment (Approx 2 1/2-4hrs per day) and know that it won't be that way forever. So, I'd like to learn some substantial portion control for when my workout habits slow down in the near-future due to the ever increasing busy'ness of life.

Thanks for ANY AND ALL advice on the matter. Maybe include some healthy "snacks" that some of you have used as placebos amidst your dietary battles.

Sincerely, thanks! :glasses:

Replies

  • Mindful_Trent
    Mindful_Trent Posts: 3,954 Member
    The best advice I can give is to invest in a food scale and use measuring cups for liquids. After you formally measure things for awhile (I measure/weigh everything!) you'll get a good sense of how much portions really should be, such as 1 cup (8 fl. oz) of milk or 100g of baby carrots or 100g of rice or what a real serving of cereal is.
  • Simonscat
    Simonscat Posts: 249
    I think it's different for everyone?!
    What I eat may not fill someone else...!
    I think it's just guess work. As long as you aren't piling the food. And using a regular plate!
  • JLeeAlton
    JLeeAlton Posts: 311
    Agreed.. get a scale and use measuring cups. That is what I do when I prepare meals.
  • Leannek74
    Leannek74 Posts: 374 Member
    The best advice I can give is to invest in a food scale and use measuring cups for liquids. After you formally measure things for awhile (I measure/weigh everything!) you'll get a good sense of how much portions really should be, such as 1 cup (8 fl. oz) of milk or 100g of baby carrots or 100g of rice or what a real serving of cereal is.
    Good advice, portion control was my biggest hurdle initially but now it's second nature!
  • welly5
    welly5 Posts: 293 Member
    Here are the only tips I have about portion control:


    salad dressings : I usually make my own because I love cooking and making flavors (and store bought ones have crazy sodium) but you really need to watch how much dressing you use. Big salad = lots of dressing so having a big salad for dinner isn't always the healthiest

    Cheese: I love cheese and having mini baby bells (that come in the red wax) is helpful because they are already portioned out for you. They are great in omlettes

    eggs: one egg plus a few egg whites makes a great omlette

    Meat: if you have a kitchen scale take the time to check out how much 5oz or 3oz of cooked meat looks like. You don't have to do it every time but once you get an idea of how much a few ounces of chicken is it's easier to eyeball it.


    My boyfriend hates measuring, weighing anything like that but he tries to make his plate 50% veggies, 25% carbs, 25% protein
  • jyt2573
    jyt2573 Posts: 80
    http://foodportions.com/

    This is a good jump off point.
  • Hi,
    Hows it going, if you are burning up lots that great, to be honest I would think its ok to be up to 200 cal under your goal. I certainly wouldn't think eating in the evening to make up your cals is a good thing.

    Anyway to what you were saying about portion sizes, you can weigh etc. but really you want to be eating portion sizes that fit in your hand- a hand ful of rice, a piece of meat the size of the palm of your hand, as for nuts have them in 10s only, nuts are healthy and most contain fats that actually help breakdown food, make sure you chew though, us westerners tend to chomp chomp swallow way too much which means that the body is more likely to store some as fat and some goes undigested- leaving you nutruient poor. So generally we eat portion sizes way too big - but if you can have a handful of veg and a chop the size of your palm thats good portion control. Forget about what they serve in restaurants thats just mad- people would not accept normal sizes they want to feel they are getting value so most food establishments will give you double the portion size you should be eating!!

    Good luck - Barb
  • bstrength85
    bstrength85 Posts: 23 Member
    wow!

    You guys (n gals) are friggin awesome!

    Thank you so much! I'm not gonna like, seddy said (pun?) it best, "my boyfriend hates measuring" lol. me too! i dont want to be the guy with the scale,. walking around lookin like a drug dealer. lol

    thanks everyone!
    ps-jyt2573- 78 lbs? dang! You go girl!
  • nilisabel
    nilisabel Posts: 338
    yessir!

    I use a deck of cards for 3 oz of meat, two dice (or the size of my thumb from the web to the thumb-tip) for an ounce of cheese, a tennis ball for a cup of rice or cereal, and I don't really limit my veggies. fruits, i usually try to eat small or medium ones, about the size of a hackey-sack or less. if it's a baseball sized orange or a banana longer than my hand-span, I count it as a double portion. a serving of nuts is about a quarter cup or 200 calories and um that just comes from measuring stuff a lot. a quarter cup is 4 tablespoons, and something like 20-30 almonds I'd say. I guess an easy measurement would be say just cup your hand and pour a few into the palm until it's about halfway full, and when in doubt, go a little light on the pour.

    Hope it helps!
  • bstrength85
    bstrength85 Posts: 23 Member
    great info barb! That makes it really practical and easy to remember! I really appreciate the help! :glasses:
  • bethvandenberg
    bethvandenberg Posts: 1,496 Member
    Ok here's how I do it, not scientific at all. :) I think I saw it on BL long ago as a rule of thumb.

    Meat=about the size of your palm (about the size of the deck of cards, in the box.) lol
    carb=the size of a baseball, it's about 1 cup.
    Veggies=the size of a softball.

    The carb thing seems pretty high to me, but I did measure stuff out and it was roughly right on the money. :)

    That's how I make my plate and judge.
  • No worries, good luck in your quest!
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