Homemade meals - calorie counting

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Please know that I'm VERY new to calorie counting.

My wife and I make a lot of homemade meals and we generally use healthy food (but for a few ingrediants here and there). I have zero clue on how to calculate the calories or even the service size per ingrediant once it's all mixed together. Are there general tips for this? Do I need to do all my counting before its even made/cooked?

Replies

  • ShellyMacchi
    ShellyMacchi Posts: 975 Member
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    i use the recipe section to add it to my 'recipes' ..just put in amount of each ingredient used, as well as number of servings anticipated from the recipe... et voila! everything is counted for you! *S*
  • significance
    significance Posts: 436 Member
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    Yep. Count the calories for the individual ingredients, add them together, and divide by the number of serves. This site allows you to add a recipe, which will doing the maths for you and save you having to enter all the ingredients every time you cook the same thing.
  • ronda_gettinghealthy
    ronda_gettinghealthy Posts: 777 Member
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    go to the food tab and then to my recipes and it will walk you through how to put it together and give you a final answer. You can use the usda website for cals you cant find. I have tons of my foods and recipes in here because I too cook from scratch a lot. Good Luck
  • sctracy
    sctracy Posts: 41 Member
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    I'll measure my food a little differently, depending on what it is.

    I'll click the Recipe tab and enter everything I put into the meal. If I can physically divide the dish easily enough into equal parts, I'll do that. (For example, if I saute chicken and vegetables, I'll literally draw a line through the food and divide it into 4 servings -- and I'll enter my recipe as 4 servings). Sometimes I will make the whole dinner, and then measure it out in cups. If there are 6 cups, then I'll enter the recipe as 6 servings and I'll then measure my own portion in cups. Other times, if it seems easiest, I'll measure the chicken, for example, in ounces and then calculate the rest of the meal separately.

    You basically just have to enter every ingredient into the Recipe and then figure out whatever way you can to most easily divide it into equal servings.

    Good luck! :)
  • Kwblaw
    Kwblaw Posts: 2
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    Thanks so much for the advice everyone!
  • jimbo831
    jimbo831 Posts: 15
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    Also, if you don't have one already, I highly recommend a food scale. I have found that many servings are measured by weight, and not measurable volume, or even if volume is included, it is estimated, but weight is way more reliable for most. Bed Bath & Beyond has a very nice "Biggest Loser" branded food scale for just $20 that has worked great for me. It even has a tare feature so you can exclude the weight of whatever container you are weighing it in. This has made my calorie tracking so much easier!
  • bethrs
    bethrs Posts: 664 Member
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    Also, if you don't have one already, I highly recommend a food scale. I have found that many servings are measured by weight, and not measurable volume, or even if volume is included, it is estimated, but weight is way more reliable for most. Bed Bath & Beyond has a very nice "Biggest Loser" branded food scale for just $20 that has worked great for me. It even has a tare feature so you can exclude the weight of whatever container you are weighing it in. This has made my calorie tracking so much easier!

    What jimbo said. I got mine on Amazon for about the same cost. I would marry it if it were legal.
  • Bridgetc140
    Bridgetc140 Posts: 405 Member
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    I agree about the food scale. For instance, last night I made roasted red potato "fries"....obviously they will not fit into cups and counting would not be an exact measure. So after I'm finished with something like that, I put it all in a big bowl, change the unit to grams and divide by whatever the number of servings is and divvy it out that way. Also with pasta, it may be tedious, but I boil the servings separately so that I know exactly how much I am getting. Rice I just use the cups since it's pretty standard. I always measure chicken and vegetables separately if it's not a casserole. With casseroles, I usually just eyeball it because pouring it all in one bowl would probably make it a little less appealing for some reason. It can be done!! Homemade meals are THE BEST for counting calories because you know exactly what you put in it and have total control! Good luck!
  • jimbo831
    jimbo831 Posts: 15
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    One tip to the OP that I ran into with my wife the other day when she cooked (I am the cook 95% of the time) is to make sure you weigh any meats before you cook for calorie counting purposes. Precooked weights are the ones the labels are referring to. She weighed the chicken after she cooked it!