Calorie Counting 101

Options
1202123252640

Replies

  • chanell84
    chanell84 Posts: 41 Member
    Options
    Ok thank you I was confused. I have no extreme goals I just want to lose another 60 lbs. I'm currently down 22. I have never been much of an athlete so my goals are mainly to lose the weight and get healthy. I want to have the energy to keep up with my kids. I have no intentions or desire of becoming a body builder or climbing Mount Everest. My goals are much smaller like go for a bike ride with my boys and not be winded lol.
  • timeisfiction
    timeisfiction Posts: 25 Member
    Options
    vismal wrote: »

    it doesn't take self control and movtivation to weigh in grams it takes a kitchen scale on the kitchen counter and habit...
    batteries, you also need batteries.

    Hahaha cute. So true! Batteries required.
  • megbert581
    megbert581 Posts: 5 Member
    Options
    Very helpful! Thank you for your post (:
  • HOw much have I Lost
  • greaseswabber
    greaseswabber Posts: 238 Member
    Options
    If I am unsure about the portion size of a restaurant meal I take home an easy to separate fraction (1/2, 1/3, or 1/4 ) and weigh it at home. Then I apply that to the amount I ate at the restaurant. I don't have to take a scale and I don't have to estimate as much.

    I usually bring home leftovers and need to weigh them anyway.
  • kindrabbit
    kindrabbit Posts: 837 Member
    Options
    I love this post. Counting calories suits the obsessive in me. My scale measures weight and liquids so I can measure my 40g of oats, zero the scale, then add 150ml of milk, zero again and add 150ml of water. Into the microwave then back on the scale to add my 5g of agave nectar. It's so easy! Most of my meals are prepped in the same way, in a bowl on the scale. Every ingredient is weighed and logged, then just zero the scale and add the next ingredient.

    For calories I wear a heart rate monitor. I can then manually enter the exercise and calorie after every workout. My fitbit is connected to mfp too so my walking is logged via that but all cardio and weight sessions are measured with the hrm.
  • katrinafaymurphy
    katrinafaymurphy Posts: 33 Member
    Options
    I'm doing the my fitness pal. Will be my 3rd wk on Monday, I have lost 4lb, I was hoping for more, but 2lb a wk is good isn't it? I am swimming 3x a wk to, my calorie goal is 1200 but always go under once I've added my excercise on. Am I on the right track
  • kindrabbit
    kindrabbit Posts: 837 Member
    Options
    I'm doing the my fitness pal. Will be my 3rd wk on Monday, I have lost 4lb, I was hoping for more, but 2lb a wk is good isn't it? I am swimming 3x a wk to, my calorie goal is 1200 but always go under once I've added my excercise on. Am I on the right track

    yes! you are on the right track. The general advice is to aim for 1lb a week so to loose 2 a week is excellent. Keep on keeping on! they do say that the losses in the first few weeks are usually faster than subsequent weeks so you can expect it to slow down but as long as you are loosing or maintaining and you are continuing to eat at a deficit you are good to go
  • josephmontano9
    josephmontano9 Posts: 1
    edited March 2015
    Options
    Thank you so much I was told by my baseball coach I have to go from 20% to 16% so I know this could help me.
  • shera114
    shera114 Posts: 4 Member
    Options
    Great reminders! :)
  • lucyMinaj
    Options
    golferd wrote: »
    You talked about the 20% margin of error on food labels. Do you use the label for the nutrient information or a govt website?

  • lucyMinaj
    Options
    golferd wrote: »
    You talked about the 20% margin of error on food labels. Do you use the label for the nutrient information or a govt website?

  • lucyMinaj
    Options
    golferd wrote: »
    You talked about the 20% margin of error on food labels. Do you use the label for the nutrient information or a govt website?

  • lucyMinaj
    Options
    golferd wrote: »
    You talked about the 20% margin of error on food labels. Do you use the label for the nutrient information or a govt website?

  • vismal
    vismal Posts: 2,463 Member
    Options
    lucyMinaj wrote: »
    golferd wrote: »
    You talked about the 20% margin of error on food labels. Do you use the label for the nutrient information or a govt website?
    Depends on the food. Most brand name things are not available on the USDA or if they are, they have the same nutritional facts as the label. For things like meat, fruits, and vegetables that are not brand specific I usually use the USDA.
  • charcharrenee
    Options
    vismal wrote: »
    Calorie Counting 101

    With the crazy amount of "I'm eating 1200 calories and I'm not losing weight" or "My weight loss has stalled" threads that get posted every day I decided to copy a calorie counting sticky I wrote for another forum. This is a guide to help ensure as much accuracy as possible when counting calories. It may seem OCD to some but for beginners I feel the more accurate they can be, the better. Before you post about how you can't count calories because of an ED, this thread isn't for you. If you have psychological issues with counting calories, simply don't. This thread is to help those who want to use calorie counting as a means to lose weight. It is based on the fact that if you eat less calories then you burn in a day you will lose weight. If you do not believe in this fact then please just don't post here. This thread is also not about how much you should eat and what you should eat. It is simply about how to accurately track what you do eat. Please keep the reply's to things that deal with calorie counting. If you want to talk about any of the aforementioned things, start a new thread.

    Logging foods: In the old days, to calorie count, we had to use paper and pencil. This is why programs like weight watchers became so popular. It essentially dumbed down calorie counting to a point system and made things easier to track. With the advent of software like Myfitnesspal, there is no need for the dumbing down. You can track calories, macro nutrients, micro nutrients, and exercise with very little hassle.

    To correctly implement calorie counting you must log everything you consume in a day that contains calories. This includes liquids and/or supplements that contain calories. Some people also log calorie free foods (gum, diet soda, black coffee, etc). Since they do not contain any calories, this is optional. They may however contain something that you want to track (vitamins, minerals, sodium).

    Weighing foods: You must weigh your foods! Do not estimate! Weigh everything on a kitchen scale. Preferably a digital scale that weighs in grams. Only liquids should be measured by volume (cups tablespoons, etc). On a package of oatmeal the label will usually say that a serving size is ½ cup. It will also have 40g in parentheses. Use a scale to weigh out 40 grams. You will find that if you dump oats into a ½ cup measuring cup that it won’t always equal 40 grams. This becomes more important with calorically dense food such as peanut butter. 1 tablespoon is usually 100 calories, however one can easily put 2-3 “tablespoons” worth of peanut butter on the end of a normal kitchen spoon. Instead weigh the peanut butter according to how many grams are in a serving. The same goes for scoopers found in supplements. One scoop of whey does not always equal 1 serving. Always weigh your whey! Here are some links to a couple of kitchen scales for purchase:
    http://www.amazon.com/EatSmart-Precision-Digital-Kitchen-Silver/dp/B001N07KUE/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1391480839&sr=8-5&keywords=eatsmart+scale
    http://www.amazon.com/Ozeri-Digital-Multifunction-Kitchen-Elegant/dp/B004164SRA/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1391480816&sr=8-1&keywords=food+scale

    [b[Handling foods with no nutritional information[/b]: Sometimes fruits, vegetables, and meats do not come with nutritional information. The USDA has a comprehensive list of nearly all fruits, vegetables, and many different cuts of meats in grams.

    http://ndb.nal.usda.gov/ndb/search/list

    Using myfitnesspal you can simply search the fruit, vegetable, or meat with “usda” afterwards to obtain the same nutritional information. When weighing meat, ALWAYS WEIGH IT RAW. The nutritional facts are based on the raw weight of meat unless packaging specifically states otherwise. This is true for just about any food you cook. If you are simply searching the database for a food with no nutritional information, be wise at what you pick. Don't pick the one option that is significantly lower in calories then all the others simply because it is. You must also be careful with the bar code scanner. Sometimes the scanner will not give you the correct product. Verify this whenever possible.

    Dining out: When dining out, attempt to find nutritional information on the restaurant you are at. Many larger chains have all that information available. Know that this is somewhat of an estimate as they are not weighing things to the gram in the kitchen. They also might be liberal with ingredients like butter and oil which can add up quickly. If the restaurant does not provide nutritional information for their meals, attempt to deconstruct your meal and track it piece by piece. If you want to be 100% accurate you can bring a scale to a restaurant. This not something I do as I don't often eat out, but depending on how accurate you wish to be, it is an option. It's worth considering if you eat out frequently.

    Accuracy: Accept the fact that you will never be 100% accurate. The FDA allows for up to a 20% margin of error with nutritional information. You must simply do the best you can possibly do to not let that margin grow any larger by estimating what you have eaten. Along these lines you will find products that claim to be zero calories like mustard, cooking spray, and many others. They actually have somewhere between 0-5 calories per serving. Because of rounding they can claim zero on the label. If you want to be precise, count them as 5 calories a serving. This is increasingly important if you consume these products frequently.

    Once you have a solid idea of what your daily/weekly consumption is like, it is easy to manipulate calories to fulfill whatever your goals may be. Before you decide that you need to increase or decrease calories to help accomplish goals, ask yourself “Am I tracking everything correctly?” Are you drinking something with calories and not counting it? Are you weighing everything to the gram? Are you having cheat days/meals that you are not tracking? If you answer yes to any of these then your caloric goals may be correct, you are simply not meeting them. Know that if you eat 1500 calories a day and have a once a week cheat day of 3000 calories you are effectively eating 1714 calories a day. This is why you need to track your cheat days. It's okay to have them but if you track them, you can prevent them from skewing your results.

    Tips:Here are some tips that I personally like to use in my own tracking of calories:

    When weighing condiments I zero the scale with the container sitting on the scale. I apply the condiments to my food. I then put the container back on the scale. It will read a negative number in grams. That is how much condiment I used. This does not work for aerosols like pam or whip cream.

    If my goal is weight loss and am going out to eat at a restaurant with no nutritional information, I reconstruct the meal in myfitnesspal and add 10% to the caloric total. This is in case I underestimated. Research shows humans are notorious at underestimating what they eat. In the rare case I overestimated the calories contained in the meal, I can enjoy a small extra deficit for the day. Even if they do provide nutritional information, this might be worth doing. Again, the chef is going to exercise portion control but he isn't weight his butter or your steak on a food scale and tracking to the gram.

    Myfitnesspal lets you enter in your own foods. If something is not in their database you can add it. I get my burritos from Chipotle the same way every time. They have all their nutritional information listed on their website. After I determine the values of my burrito I create the food in MFP and don’t have to bother with it next time. The same goes for Subway.

    If you want to weigh liquids, this site will help you based on what liquid you are weighing http://www.convert-me.com/en/convert/cooking/

    Final thoughts: Counting calories is in my opinion the best thing one can do to help lose weight. This guide was written to help you be as close to 100% accurate as possible. Some of you might not like the idea of bringing a food scale to a restaurant or weighing condiments. These things aren't musts. If you don’t want to do them then you must accept that you will be less accurate than if you had. If you are a bodybuilder preparing for a competition then you will want to be as accurate as humanly possible. If you are just trying to lose weight with no real deadlines and don’t mind if your diet takes a few weeks longer than planned, feel free to be a little less strict. If you find you are not losing weight despite the fact that your caloric intake is low enough that you should be, then you need to start considering doing things like weighing condiments. Only then can you be truly sure it is time to lower calories. I hope this guide helps you guys. Feel free to add your own tips and ask questions! Again, don't turn this into a debate about anything, that isn't the intention of this thread. Make sure your reply's are about calorie counting!

    Bumping to keep! Thank you. This was very helpful. I have been so unsure about calorie consumption and what exactly to back. This has helped my understanding tremendously! I was feeling discouraged and like I was ruining my workouts by eating back exercise calories (because of posts I've read about people not doing eating back exercise and having success losing weight) but this reassured me that I can not just eating 1200 calories a day! Thank you.
  • knt217
    knt217 Posts: 115 Member
    edited March 2015
    Options
    Moving to a different post. :)
  • duckyruth
    duckyruth Posts: 19 Member
    Options
    What is bumping? Also want to say Vismal this opens my eyes to lots of things to consider & implement...it almost scares me.

    Additionally, am I doing it wrong when I exercise but still eat my allotted calories? I shouldn't?

    I'm new to this & need help in losing weight & working MFP! Have to do this myself & learn properly as can't afford paying.

    Any help will be apreciated. Don't know if I should write a post in introduce myself & have no idea who or how to friend. Put a post in for mentor but no reply.

    Thanks.
  • duckyruth
    duckyruth Posts: 19 Member
    Options
    I love this post. Counting calories suits the obsessive in me. My scale measures weight and liquids so I can measure my 40g of oats, zero the scale, then add 150ml of milk, zero again and add 150ml of water. Into the microwave then back on the scale to add my 5g of agave nectar. It's so easy! Most of my meals are prepped in the same way, in a bowl on the scale. Every ingredient is weighed and logged, then just zero the scale and add the next ingredient.

    For calories I wear a heart rate monitor. I can then manually enter the exercise and calorie after every workout. My fitbit is connected to mfp too so my walking is logged via that but all cardio and weight sessions are measured with the hrm.

    Karen...what kind of scale do you have? Is it necessary to have one? I'm a beginner here on MFP & too old & probably lazy to weigh everything. What happens when you go to restaurant? Can I count on MFP first & learn to deal with cal counting on this app & carefully watch my portions first? I've lost 12 lbs but not sure I trust my scale cause it doesn't seem to give me the same weight twice in a row & it's an electronic weight watcher's brand!

    Anyway, as I've said any help anyone can give I am listening & willing to learn.
  • peterjens
    peterjens Posts: 235 Member
    Options
    duckyruth wrote: »
    What is bumping?

    I frequent a 'ukulele forum and there they use it in the marketplace section to Bring Up My Post - in other words, sometimes the 'ukulele they are trying to sell gets "lost" in the conversations about it being for sale. So the original poster bumps their original post back up to the top of the heap.