calculating calories in homemade foods
melgcoo
Posts: 23
I'm still struggling with trying to figure out how to calculate the calories when I just make a big pot of "something" for my family for dinner. For example, my son is fighting a cold, and the rest of us are trying to avoid catching it. I made a big pot of turkey noodle soup.....
I had some turkey bones / carcass left over from another meal (I froze it... makes wonderful broth!).... I boiled it for a while, added some turkey white meat to it (again, left over), some mixed veggies (frozen, not canned) and some noodles. The pot is large, so we can eat on it for a few days.
How on earth can I figure out the calories in this?
When I'm just cooking for myself, or not something all "lumped-together" it is easier for me to calculate. But how do I figure out calories in things like homemade soup?
I would appreciate any and all suggestions. Thanks!
I had some turkey bones / carcass left over from another meal (I froze it... makes wonderful broth!).... I boiled it for a while, added some turkey white meat to it (again, left over), some mixed veggies (frozen, not canned) and some noodles. The pot is large, so we can eat on it for a few days.
How on earth can I figure out the calories in this?
When I'm just cooking for myself, or not something all "lumped-together" it is easier for me to calculate. But how do I figure out calories in things like homemade soup?
I would appreciate any and all suggestions. Thanks!
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Replies
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I create a recipe with all the ingredients used in the meal in full quantities (eg. 400grams of mince, 2 cans of tomato soup, etc). Then I will divide the recipe up into serving sizes (this is easy because there's only 2 of us, so I usually do 2 serves). With a soup, I would recommend doing the recipe, weighing it up and creating serving sizes based on the weight. Then you can measure out a portion of it and know roughly how many calories in it.
Hope this makes sense.0 -
I create a recipe with all the ingredients used in the meal in full quantities (eg. 400grams of mince, 2 cans of tomato soup, etc). Then I will divide the recipe up into serving sizes (this is easy because there's only 2 of us, so I usually do 2 serves). With a soup, I would recommend doing the recipe, weighing it up and creating serving sizes based on the weight. Then you can measure out a portion of it and know roughly how many calories in it.
Hope this makes sense.
Exactly. This has worked for me. After a while the process becomes easier.0 -
I create a recipe with all the ingredients used in the meal in full quantities (eg. 400grams of mince, 2 cans of tomato soup, etc). Then I will divide the recipe up into serving sizes (this is easy because there's only 2 of us, so I usually do 2 serves). With a soup, I would recommend doing the recipe, weighing it up and creating serving sizes based on the weight. Then you can measure out a portion of it and know roughly how many calories in it.
Hope this makes sense.
Exactly. This has worked for me. After a while the process becomes easier.
that's what i do too, then guestimate how many servings. it's just me and my boo, and usually there are some leftovers, so i do maybe 2.5 servings. sometimes all you can do is guess0 -
I do that with just about everything we cook at home. Serving size of most soups is one cup.0
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The recipe calculator under tools has been a lifesaver for me! I enter my ingredients and the number of portions it will make and the hardwork is done.0
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What they said. I would make the addition that when making a big pot of soup with any luck your soup pot has grooves on the side that indicate 1 quart, 2 quarts, etc. Lets say your pot of soup comes up to the 2-quart mark. There are 4 cups in a quart so that is 8 cups of soup total. If you figure one serving is 2 cups that means the pot of soup has 4 servings. When you put your recipe into MFP put in all the ingredients you used to make the soup (as the agove commenters mention) and in the box to indicate how many servings it makes say 4. When dishing up a bowl of soup for yourself make sure you are taking just 2 cups and you will know that is one serving.0
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A great idea I read on here (if it was you please claim) was to mark a dowel with measurements for your large pots. Pour in a cup of water - mark-another cup-mark, etc. Then once a recipe is made and you enter all the ingredients you also know how many servings you have in terms of cups and it makes it easy to serve yourself and know what each cup is.0
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What I've done with a couple recipes is exactly at the other posters have, then I'll use a 1 cup measuring cup to scoop the food into a tupperware container. Then I know how much the recipe made and how to measure it out in the future (i.e. what a serving actually is - for example I made some pasta sauce, it made 9 cups so I knew I had 18 servings of 1/2 cup.)0
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I create a recipe with all the ingredients used in the meal in full quantities (eg. 400grams of mince, 2 cans of tomato soup, etc). Then I will divide the recipe up into serving sizes (this is easy because there's only 2 of us, so I usually do 2 serves). With a soup, I would recommend doing the recipe, weighing it up and creating serving sizes based on the weight. Then you can measure out a portion of it and know roughly how many calories in it.
Hope this makes sense.
Great answer. Figuring out by weight is so easy. The other way is to measure out how many cups you have when you are done, and define your serving size accordingly. I make a 4 quart batch of soup weekly, and this is how I figured it out.0 -
The recipe calculator under tools has been a lifesaver for me! I enter my ingredients and the number of portions it will make and the hardwork is done.
*This*
Since I cook most of our foods, I prefer adding my recipes rather than guessing or using the "store-bought" version of things. It is especially nice when you cook large meals and then have leftovers that you want to use for lunches.0 -
I take a different approach. It's a bit of a pain and more work, but I see better results. I weigh my serving out and cook it separately than my husbands. I find it easier than "guessing" what a serving is because when it was all cooked together, I overestimated myself.
So, I guess, if you have the time and are willing to do a few more dishes, I find it easier for me to make mine separately then lump it together and try to sort it out. There are some things this doesn't apply to but it works for the most part.0 -
I just log it an ingredient at a time...0
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I create a recipe with all the ingredients used in the meal in full quantities (eg. 400grams of mince, 2 cans of tomato soup, etc). Then I will divide the recipe up into serving sizes (this is easy because there's only 2 of us, so I usually do 2 serves). With a soup, I would recommend doing the recipe, weighing it up and creating serving sizes based on the weight. Then you can measure out a portion of it and know roughly how many calories in it.
Hope this makes sense.
When I make a batch of protein brownies, I divide the pan into equal sections (by eye), then I cut them, weigh the whole batch and then divide by the number of sections I cut... weigh each one individually and cut and splice to make them as even as possible or mark the container with 3/4 serving, 1.5 serving, etc. so I know when I take it out of the freezer. Again, this is very strict but I freeze these portions and I want to make sure I am accurately claiming my calories (to the best of my ability).
I don't do this with everything... when I'm making my salad I'm sometimes lax on weighing every piece of lettuce, spinach, etc. that goes in it.... and when I'm making dinner if I add a dollop of some sort of sauce I may (depending on what it is) not count it...
This is usually way too much for some people. But I know this works for me and that is what I will continue to do.0 -
I take a different approach. It's a bit of a pain and more work, but I see better results. I weigh my serving out and cook it separately than my husbands. I find it easier than "guessing" what a serving is because when it was all cooked together, I overestimated myself.
So, I guess, if you have the time and are willing to do a few more dishes, I find it easier for me to make mine separately then lump it together and try to sort it out. There are some things this doesn't apply to but it works for the most part.0 -
I create a recipe with all the ingredients used in the meal in full quantities (eg. 400grams of mince, 2 cans of tomato soup, etc). Then I will divide the recipe up into serving sizes (this is easy because there's only 2 of us, so I usually do 2 serves). With a soup, I would recommend doing the recipe, weighing it up and creating serving sizes based on the weight. Then you can measure out a portion of it and know roughly how many calories in it.
Hope this makes sense.
This^^0 -
I made a batch of sour cream enchiladas that produced 11 enchiladas. In the my recipes calculator tool on mfp do I say the number of servings just for the flour tortillas is 11 or 1? I am trying to save the entire recipe for future use. Thanks in advance!0
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I made a batch of sour cream enchiladas that produced 11 enchiladas. In the my recipes calculator tool on mfp do I say the number of servings just for the flour tortillas is 11 or 1? I am trying to save the entire recipe for future use. Thanks in advance!
I would put the entire thing in the recipe builder, so if you use 11 tortillas in a recipe then when you add your ingredients add 11 tortillas, same way with all the other ingredients for the whole pan. Then at the top you could make it 11 servings which would tell you what each individual enchilada would be. That way if you actually eat 2 enchiladas then you would put you had 2 servings in your tracker for that meal. Hope I didn't confuse you more!0 -
Thank you!0
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All of the above, sometimes in the event I don't feel like guesstimating servings on the recipe I do put 1. And when I divide the dish into servings on plates or into tupperware I then enter the food item on my diary and put the amount as .25 or .50 depending on that.0
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I have not found anyway of typing in ingredients and having it calculate the calories.0
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Lots of wonderful answers here, but they don't answer the question of how many calories in broth.
If you put a chicken leg into water and cook it for 1 hr, you do not have to count all the calories in the chicken leg, since only a little bit of the calories actually went into the water.
So how do you calculate broth?0
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