Weighing Ice Cream in Canada
recoveryroad24
Posts: 6 Member
hey guys
As most Canadians on here know when purchasing ice cream in Canada; it can be hard for those wanting to weigh our food to input and receive the accurate nutrition, to figure out a serving of the ice cream.
Do any other fellow Canadians have any suggestions/tips/tricks they've figured out to be able to weigh that darn ice cream from CAN companies like Nestle, Chapman's, Breyer's CA, etc?
So far I've contacted Nestle and Breyer's Canada to see if they also had the gram measurements of those servings on the sides of the CAN labels and both seemed confused/annoyed as to why a consumer would care?
As most Canadians on here know when purchasing ice cream in Canada; it can be hard for those wanting to weigh our food to input and receive the accurate nutrition, to figure out a serving of the ice cream.
Do any other fellow Canadians have any suggestions/tips/tricks they've figured out to be able to weigh that darn ice cream from CAN companies like Nestle, Chapman's, Breyer's CA, etc?
So far I've contacted Nestle and Breyer's Canada to see if they also had the gram measurements of those servings on the sides of the CAN labels and both seemed confused/annoyed as to why a consumer would care?
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Replies
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Check the database, some flavors might be entered in grams in there. Or you could ask on the forums probably, or check the US site to see if they post nutrition information there?0
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Surely its on the nutrition label on the side like everything else?0
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Surely its on the nutrition label on the side like everything else?
Not to be snarky, but I'm assuming she/he checked the label first before asking this question and contacting the companies for the gram equivalent.
But JIC, OP did you check the label? It sometimes has the grams in parenthesis.
Update: checking the Canadian Haagen Dazs website shows serving sizes in measurements of "cup" and "ml" not "g"0 -
I just checked - they are in mls instead of grams, but they nutrition label is there. OP I would just treat it as a liquid and measure is that way. It is a liquid actually - a frozen liquid.0
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Surely its on the nutrition label on the side like everything else?
Ice cream in Canada is, for some reason, only ever in ml, not grams, which makes it difficult to count accurately.
The last time I had ice cream I just looked up a similar flavour with the same number of calories in an American brand that showed the weight and used that to know how much 125 ml of my ice cream actually weighed, I think.0 -
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Getting it in the measuring cup isn't the problem......0
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I'm a little rusty on my math, but I think this would work:
First, weigh an empty ice cream carton. This should be fairly standard if you stick with one brand of ice cream.
Then weigh a full ice cream carton of the same size, in your desired flavor.
Math time:
Full weight - Weight of the empty carton = Weight of all the ice cream in the carton
Then read the carton's nutritional label. Check for number of servings per carton and number of calories per serving.
More Math:
Number of calories per serving x Number of servings per carton = Number of calories in the whole carton
Number of calories in the whole carton / Weight of all the ice cream in the carton = Calories per gram of ice cream
Calories per gram of ice cream x Number of grams you ate = Calories of ice cream you ate0 -
Why not just buy an appropriately sized ice cream scoop. I have many different sizes on the shelves in my warehouse.............0
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I'm a little rusty on my math, but I think this would work:
First, weigh an empty ice cream carton. This should be fairly standard if you stick with one brand of ice cream.
Then weigh a full ice cream carton of the same size, in your desired flavor.
Math time:
Full weight - Weight of the empty carton = Weight of all the ice cream in the carton
Then read the carton's nutritional label. Check for number of servings per carton and number of calories per serving.
More Math:
Number of calories per serving x Number of servings per carton = Number of calories in the whole carton
Number of calories in the whole carton / Weight of all the ice cream in the carton = Calories per gram of ice cream
Calories per gram of ice cream x Number of grams you ate = Calories of ice cream you ate
I don't yet have an empty carton yet to do so! But I suppose that's the next step.. I did try something like this the other night but I wasn't sure if it was accurate... I melted some ice cream in a liquid measuring cup to 125ml, then I weighed that melted liquid...Surely its on the nutrition label on the side like everything else?
Ice cream in Canada is, for some reason, only ever in ml, not grams, which makes it difficult to count accurately.
The last time I had ice cream I just looked up a similar flavour with the same number of calories in an American brand that showed the weight and used that to know how much 125 ml of my ice cream actually weighed, I think.
That's easy for brands like Ben and Jerry's but for brands like Nestle and Chapman's that don't have US counterparts, it limits things.
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Why not just buy an appropriately sized ice cream scoop. I have many different sizes on the shelves in my warehouse.............
An ice cream scoop is a great tool for measuring volume, but inaccurate for measuring weight (grams).
That being said, I rarely measure food in weight. I like my American measurements of cups, tablespoons, etc. even though I know they aren't as accurate.
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Could you try and figure out the calories in the whole carton? Then you would know there are 2000 calories in 2 litres (for example). Then weigh the full container. Now you know that 2 litres weighs 1300g/1.3kg (again for example). You can then figure out how many calories your serving has based on weight (if 1300g has 2000 calories, then 150g has X calories).
Makes sense?0 -
Am I the only Canadian that just measures out "1 cup" and is done with it?0
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I just checked the equivalency for milliliters to grams (of water) and it's 1 to 1.
Is that useful? I really don't know b/c American.
Also here's the link.0 -
Ice cream would weigh more than water I would think, cream or milk being denser than water.0
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Why not just buy an appropriately sized ice cream scoop. I have many different sizes on the shelves in my warehouse.............
An ice cream scoop is a great tool for measuring volume, but inaccurate for measuring weight (grams).
That being said, I rarely measure food in weight. I like my American measurements of cups, tablespoons, etc. even though I know they aren't as accurate.
But the nutritional labelling is listed by volume. Why would you not use the information available? Liquids should be measured by volume, solids by weight. Needing to convert ice cream to grams in order feel you have the proper "weight" so you can eat it is like only buying gasoline for your car in 1 gal ( or liter) bottles because you can't don't trust the weights and measures act.
I certainly don't weight beer before I drink it.
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Could you try and figure out the calories in the whole carton? Then you would know there are 2000 calories in 2 litres (for example). Then weigh the full container. Now you know that 2 litres weighs 1300g/1.3kg (again for example). You can then figure out how many calories your serving has based on weight (if 1300g has 2000 calories, then 150g has X calories).
Makes sense?
That does! Thanks for your suggestion, now to just get an empty tub!0 -
I was looking for the same answer ... I bought chapmans ice cream and in the states it has the same calories but slightly different by maybe +1 -1 on the macronutrients . Should I go ahead and use the grams serving size the US uses ?0
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I was looking for an easier way to figure this out and came across this old thread.
Ice cream is a weird product, there is air in ice cream which gives it the texture we love! So if you take a cup of ice cream and just leave it a bowl and let it melt, it certainly will not be a full cup afterward.
It will weigh the same though, so here is what you need to do...
1. weigh the full container - write it down
2. take all the iced cream out of the container in comes in, and weigh the container and save the weight.
3. full container less empty contain equals weight of ice cream.
4. Volume on container label = weight of the ice cream (for example if the container says it's 1L and the actual weight is 800g) then you know that 1L = 800g.
weight / volume - 800/1000 (1L = 1000mL) or .8
if serving size is 1/2 cup or 125mL then .8 * 125 = 100g
put it in a note on your phone so you don't have to do this over and over
if you buy the same brand, save the container weight.
different flavors will weigh different amounts unfortunately.
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I'm very glad Ben &Jerry's mention volume AND weight on their ice-cream here 😄0
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This is a zombie thread. But just another thought to complicate things: Is the volume measured frozen or not frozen? Frozen fluids have a smaller volume that liquids. And if you warm up the fluid the volume is a tiny bit bigger, and vaporize it even more. Hmm.. is it possible to inhale ice cream?0
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Surely its on the nutrition label on the side like everything else?
In Canada they only need to post the volume amount for things that are liquid with processed. The problem with ice cream is after it is churned and frozen that volume amount is useless. So yes, the OP looked at the nutrition label, and the grams are not there. I can assure of that as a Canadian.0 -
Yeah, zombie thread, and like so many old threads, it seems kind of bizarre.
I'm all for accuracy in food measurement . . . but I'd have to be eating a lot more ice cream than I'd want to fit into my calorie allowance before I'd stress out over the accuracy loss of a volume measure (like ml) vs. a weight measure (like grams) if the former were pretty easy to figure (measured scoop) and the latter not readily calculated. I would think we'd be talking about a few grams or milliliters of error per serving, tops.
Maybe other people eat way more ice cream way more often than I do, and choose the caloric high end (like Ben & Jerry's Chubby Hubby at around 720 calories a US cup (about 237 ml)) when they do eat it. Dunno.
FWIW, if a person truly wants to geek out about this, the density of ice cream in grams per milliliter (for converting milliliters to grams with more accuracy) is estimated on various web sites. The Australian food authorities, for example, say:Regular fat: 0.56
Reduced or low fat: 0.55
Rich (fat greater than 12.5%): 0.63
Source:https://www.foodstandards.gov.au/sites/default/files/2023-12/npc-specific-gravities.pdf
grams = milliliters × density
milliliters = grams ÷ density
For example, that would make 100 milliliters of regular fat ice cream weigh about 56 grams, or 100g of regular fat ice cream measure about 179 milliliters, I think.
But that's Australian ice cream, I suppose. There are published conversion factors from other countries, but that one was easy to find/quote, and others don't look wildly different. There are even calculators online that do the conversion for a middling value of density (such as 0.554 g/mL in this one: https://www.inchcalculator.com/convert/gram-to-milliliter/ which will do conversions in either direction).
All of the above assumes I did the arithmetic accurately, which is never a sure bet.
No matter where a person is, though: How much extra effort is the presumed extra accuracy worth, in the real life big picture context, as a practical matter? Of course that's a question for the individual.
(Yeah, I like nerdy rabbit holes.)0 -
How would you even measure ice-cream in volume, accurately. That is what seems complicated to me, way easier to weigh. How soft is your ice-cream if you can fill volume measurements easily? 🤪
PS Ben &Jerry's ratio seems to be around 0.88 for the ones I checked, chunks matter!0 -
How would you even measure ice-cream in volume, accurately. That is what seems complicated to me, way easier to weigh. How soft is your ice-cream if you can fill volume measurements easily? 🤪
PS Ben &Jerry's ratio seems to be around 0.88 for the ones I checked, chunks matter!
In the US, there exist portioning ice cream scoops. They may not be quite as accurate as a measuring cup for a liquid, but it's very much like a measuring cup with a handle, a top that can be leveled with a knife if desired, and a sweep-y push-lever device that releases the ice cream. It'd be reasonable close, I think.
And we're talking about countries where the label doesn't include a serving weight, so using weight isn't as easy as it is in countries where weight is on the label.
My larger point was "how often is a person eating ice cream, how much ice cream is it, how calorie dense is that particular flavor, and how far off in calories (or body fat loss rate) is any imperfect way of measuring it likely to be?"
If it's straightforward to measure by weight, sure, that's best. If it's not straightforward, I think it's reasonable to consider whether the approximation (whatever it is) is so far off as to be a problem in the big picture.
A mainstream ice cream (say Breyer's Vanilla Chocolate Strawberry, in the US) is around 160 calories per 2/3 C serving. A premium ice cream (many of the Ben & Jerry's flavors, for example) runs more like 400 calories per 2/3 cup serving. As noted, the grams per volume differ by flavor, but the Breyer's seem generally to be around 80-some grams per 2/3 cup, B&J more in the 140s, approximately.
If a person measures carefully in some sensible way (like a measured scoop) rather than weighs, how much off will the result be? 20% off would be quite a lot, IMO. Could be under (more likely) or over (less likely) in estimating calories. But 20% is 32 calories for the mainstream ice cream, 80 calories for the premium, in the standard serving size.
Maybe someone is eating full servings (or more) of premium ice cream daily, but I don't think most of us would when reducing calories. (I'm not judging those who do.) If the calorie estimate is 32 or 80 calories low consistently, and we eat a standard serving of ice cream every single day, then that's 0.064 or 0.16 pounds (1.024 or 2.56 ounces) slower fat loss for the week, or in metric about 29.1 or 72.7 grams slower fat loss.
As always, that's if I did the arithmetic accurately, as I try to do.
If anyone wants to, they can do the arithmetic for actual types of ice cream they eat, in the frequencies and amounts they typically eat, to think about practicality vs. probable estimating error.
IMO, if the accuracy is easy, yeah, go for it. I'd be accurate (weigh food) whenever practical. But if it's hard to reach that accuracy, how much angst or effort is that much difference in calories (and weight loss rate) worth? That's an individual decision.
Personally, I'd make my most accurate easy/practical measurement, log the calories, and not worry about it. In a context where everything is estimates and approximations, I'm fine with that approximation. But that personal decision would be based on amounts/frequencies/types of ice cream I might eat. Others mileage will vary.
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