How do you log a marinade for a grilled meat ?
dmcb24
Posts: 56 Member
How much would you use for a serving ?
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I would normally divide by how many pieces of chicken there are. For example, if the marinade was 100 calories and I put it on 4 pieces of chicken, I would log it as 25 calories. Usually with marinade, there's some left over in the bag/pan/container you used to marinade, so this is an over calculation, but most of the marinades I use don't end up having too many calories anyways. Maybe someone else has a better way to do it.0
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If it's bottled I'll weigh/measure it out (depending of if it specifies grams or milliliters). If it's homemade, I'll weigh the ingredients as I make it and then weigh the amount I use.0
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Weigh the marinade before and after use or the meat before and after marination.0
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I eyeball it. Usually I use 1/4 cup for 6 servings of meat and most of it gets trashed, so I log 1 or 2 tablespoons and call it a day.0
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I usually just guess on marinades, honestly. I'll add about 20-25 calories per serving. Most of it seems to get thrown away or cooked out.DeguelloTex wrote: »Weigh the marinade before and after use or the meat before and after marination.
But this is actually a really good idea.
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I don't count it. I make my own. Some absorbs into the meat but most is tossed out. Unless you're using a cup of sugar you should be ok. You can always add 25 cals to your meal if it makes you feel better. I know it's there and it doesn't bother me. If you're doing a whole recipe with servings you can calculate it in the recipe builder and get more accuracy there.0
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I've never bothered...it would be so negligible as to not be worth the time and effort IMO. It certainly didn't hinder my 40 Lbs loss a few years ago.0
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I usually just log 1 tablespoon or 1 serving if its from a bottle. If it's from a packet and the whole packet is used, I divide by the number of servings its used on.0
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Give it 25 calories in the log and call it a day.0
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I weigh the marinade, in the bag, before and after the food has marinated, then I divide the total by the number of pieces and use that amount per piece. Or just make the total used part of a recipe.0
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I don't bother, particularly since I don't like any sweet marinades.0
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I don't.0
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DeguelloTex wrote: »Weigh the marinade before and after use or the meat before and after marination.
i don't use marinades or have a scale but this is what i'd do if i did.0 -
GuitarJerry wrote: »You dont' eat all the marinade, just a small portion of it.
Tag on thing - this is also true for sauteeing and frying. It's hard to tell what's what in the pan with meat (bc meat also has fat it releases). I usually log all the calories for whatever meat it is, and only some of the additional oil or fat that I use (unless I can see it's all been absorbed), but I'm curious to know how people handle this, too.0 -
Depending on how much is left over I generally log 1/2 or so. So if there was 4 pieces of meat and I used 1 cup of marinade I'd log it as 1/8 of a cup. If there wasn't much left in the bag I'd just log it all.
But I don't use a lot of marinades because my son doesn't like them so if I'm a little off it is so infrequent it isn't a huge deal.0 -
I weigh the marinade, in the bag, before and after the food has marinated, then I divide the total by the number of pieces and use that amount per piece. Or just make the total used part of a recipe.
Do you actually eat the marinade? Seems like overkill, but if it works for you...moar power!
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I usually just season my meat with salt and pepper or a spice mix. Not a huge fan of marinades.0
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Most of our marinades end up left in the pan, or thrown out, I guess Im lazy in this area because I log 25-50 calories and call it good.0
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How much I used divided by how many servings of meat. Given that most gets tossed it is an over calculation, but I tend to err on the side of overcalculating intake any way. (I don't have a scale to weigh at the moment, so I log more than I eat, and I half whatever MFP says I burn during exercise)0
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i don't0
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DeguelloTex wrote: »Weigh the marinade before and after use or the meat before and after marination.
Much of what's left over is likely meat juice. It's false precision.0
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