Logging a bite?
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Leana088
Posts: 581 Member
Sometimes, like in the case of sweets, 1 or 2 bites is enough to satisfy my craving for it. How the heck do you log a bite of something?
Also I should mention, that sometimes the food is in grams, while other times it's just one unit, like "One ice cream cone". (Yes, I take one bite from an ice cream cone haha)
Also I should mention, that sometimes the food is in grams, while other times it's just one unit, like "One ice cream cone". (Yes, I take one bite from an ice cream cone haha)
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Replies
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Sometimes, like in the case of sweets, 1 or 2 bites is enough to satisfy my craving for it. How the heck do you log a bite of something?
Also I should mention, that sometimes the food is in grams, while other times it's just one unit, like "One ice cream cone". (Yes, I take one bite from an ice cream cone haha)
Bite it. Spit it onto a scale, log it, then shove it back into your mouth. In the case of ice cream you may have to lick your scale to get it all back into your mouth.0 -
ncboiler89 wrote: »Sometimes, like in the case of sweets, 1 or 2 bites is enough to satisfy my craving for it. How the heck do you log a bite of something?
Also I should mention, that sometimes the food is in grams, while other times it's just one unit, like "One ice cream cone". (Yes, I take one bite from an ice cream cone haha)
Bite it. Spit it onto a scale, log it, then shove it back into your mouth. In the case of ice cream you may have to lick your scale to get it all back into your mouth.
Hahaha! Yeah, might not find it so appetizing after that anymore...0 -
ncboiler89 wrote: »Sometimes, like in the case of sweets, 1 or 2 bites is enough to satisfy my craving for it. How the heck do you log a bite of something?
Also I should mention, that sometimes the food is in grams, while other times it's just one unit, like "One ice cream cone". (Yes, I take one bite from an ice cream cone haha)
Bite it. Spit it onto a scale, log it, then shove it back into your mouth. In the case of ice cream you may have to lick your scale to get it all back into your mouth.
Hahaha! Yeah, might not find it so appetizing after that anymore...
Ya but seriously. Why would you just not weigh whatever it is before and after you bite it. Or maybe I am missing something.0 -
gotobedhungry wrote: »Depends on what it is... 1 or 2 bites of cheesecake or something could have 100 calories. Also depends on how big the bites are. I always overestimate to be safe.
A bite for me would be a teaspoon I suppose. If something is measured in grams that's fine, but an ice cream cone is measured by unit. Which decimal would I use for that.0 -
ncboiler89 wrote: »Sometimes, like in the case of sweets, 1 or 2 bites is enough to satisfy my craving for it. How the heck do you log a bite of something?
Also I should mention, that sometimes the food is in grams, while other times it's just one unit, like "One ice cream cone". (Yes, I take one bite from an ice cream cone haha)
Bite it. Spit it onto a scale, log it, then shove it back into your mouth. In the case of ice cream you may have to lick your scale to get it all back into your mouth.
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gotobedhungry wrote: »Depends on what it is... 1 or 2 bites of cheesecake or something could have 100 calories. Also depends on how big the bites are. I always overestimate to be safe.
A bite for me would be a teaspoon I suppose. If something is measured in grams that's fine, but an ice cream cone is measured by unit. Which decimal would I use for that.
Do you really need to be that accurate? I'm all for accuracy but if you take a bite of an ice cream cone and call it 0.05 (1/20th) servings are you going to be that far off?0 -
ncboiler89 wrote: »ncboiler89 wrote: »Sometimes, like in the case of sweets, 1 or 2 bites is enough to satisfy my craving for it. How the heck do you log a bite of something?
Also I should mention, that sometimes the food is in grams, while other times it's just one unit, like "One ice cream cone". (Yes, I take one bite from an ice cream cone haha)
Bite it. Spit it onto a scale, log it, then shove it back into your mouth. In the case of ice cream you may have to lick your scale to get it all back into your mouth.
Hahaha! Yeah, might not find it so appetizing after that anymore...
Ya but seriously. Why would you just not weigh whatever it is before and after you bite it. Or maybe I am missing something.
Because, how do you log one bite in mfp if the serving size of a cone in the database is: "1 cone". If the bite is 5 grams...is that like 0.10 of 1 cone or something?0 -
ncboiler89 wrote: »gotobedhungry wrote: »Depends on what it is... 1 or 2 bites of cheesecake or something could have 100 calories. Also depends on how big the bites are. I always overestimate to be safe.
A bite for me would be a teaspoon I suppose. If something is measured in grams that's fine, but an ice cream cone is measured by unit. Which decimal would I use for that.
Do you really need to be that accurate? I'm all for accuracy but if you take a bite of an ice cream cone and call it 0.05 (1/20th) servings are you going to be that far off?
Yeah, unless I was taking bites all day long I wouldn't even worry about it. How many calories could it be in the grand scheme of things?0 -
ncboiler89 wrote: »gotobedhungry wrote: »Depends on what it is... 1 or 2 bites of cheesecake or something could have 100 calories. Also depends on how big the bites are. I always overestimate to be safe.
A bite for me would be a teaspoon I suppose. If something is measured in grams that's fine, but an ice cream cone is measured by unit. Which decimal would I use for that.
Do you really need to be that accurate? I'm all for accuracy but if you take a bite of an ice cream cone and call it 0.05 (1/20th) servings are you going to be that far off?
That's what I've been trying to find out man! Hahaha0 -
Presumably you eat the rest at some point, if so just log the whole thing once...0
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ncboiler89 wrote: »ncboiler89 wrote: »Sometimes, like in the case of sweets, 1 or 2 bites is enough to satisfy my craving for it. How the heck do you log a bite of something?
Also I should mention, that sometimes the food is in grams, while other times it's just one unit, like "One ice cream cone". (Yes, I take one bite from an ice cream cone haha)
Bite it. Spit it onto a scale, log it, then shove it back into your mouth. In the case of ice cream you may have to lick your scale to get it all back into your mouth.
Hahaha! Yeah, might not find it so appetizing after that anymore...
Ya but seriously. Why would you just not weigh whatever it is before and after you bite it. Or maybe I am missing something.
Because, how do you log one bite in mfp if the serving size of a cone in the database is: "1 cone". If the bite is 5 grams...is that like 0.10 of 1 cone or something?
Estimate. The little amount you are estimating is not going to make any difference at all. I mean how far off can you be? You're talking a few calories unless you REALY suck at estimating. Like I said, if I took a bite of 1 cone (to use your example) I would put something like 0.05 servings (or 0.05 cones) in MFP.0 -
ncboiler89 wrote: »gotobedhungry wrote: »Depends on what it is... 1 or 2 bites of cheesecake or something could have 100 calories. Also depends on how big the bites are. I always overestimate to be safe.
A bite for me would be a teaspoon I suppose. If something is measured in grams that's fine, but an ice cream cone is measured by unit. Which decimal would I use for that.
Do you really need to be that accurate? I'm all for accuracy but if you take a bite of an ice cream cone and call it 0.05 (1/20th) servings are you going to be that far off?
Yeah, unless I was taking bites all day long I wouldn't even worry about it. How many calories could it be in the grand scheme of things?
A teaspoon of nutella has 40 calories0 -
jump up and down for a few minutes and burn it off0
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I always log up, to be safe.0
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ncboiler89 wrote: »gotobedhungry wrote: »Depends on what it is... 1 or 2 bites of cheesecake or something could have 100 calories. Also depends on how big the bites are. I always overestimate to be safe.
A bite for me would be a teaspoon I suppose. If something is measured in grams that's fine, but an ice cream cone is measured by unit. Which decimal would I use for that.
Do you really need to be that accurate? I'm all for accuracy but if you take a bite of an ice cream cone and call it 0.05 (1/20th) servings are you going to be that far off?
Yeah, unless I was taking bites all day long I wouldn't even worry about it. How many calories could it be in the grand scheme of things?
A teaspoon of nutella has 40 calories
Ya. So if you miss it by half a teaspoon you are off by 20 calories. Not a big deal imo.0 -
Thanks anyhow0
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measure spoon. zero out scale. put ice cream on spoon. weigh again. put in face.0
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i would eat the whole cone to avoid the problem.0
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Most of the time the box says how many grams one serving (so one cone) should be. Find out, weigh it and then get your decimal that way0
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