Weighing Food Scale
 
            
                
                    geminigarcia199017                
                
                    Posts: 529 Member                
            
                        
            
                    Do you have to weigh the same foods everyday or just on different foods that has not been weighed.                
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            You weigh everything you eat. Nothing you eat is going to be the same weight as the first time you weighed it. Even prepackaged foods have different weights.0
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            Every food every time you eat it.
 This apple may weigh 48 grams and tomorrow's apple may weigh 51 grams.
 If one serving of breakfast cereal is 37 grams, you need to weigh out 37 grams every time if you want exactly one serving. If you get 29 grams, you can divide to get that you are eating 0.78 servings this time.0
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            geminigarcia199017 wrote: »
 Yes. One slice could be 44 g and the next 51 g. That difference in weight will change the calories.0
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            geminigarcia199017 wrote: »
 Yes. The package may say one slice of bread is 8 grams, but it could vary wildly. One slice from the package may be 7 grams and another may be 12 grams. There is always variance in weight, no matter the item.0
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            geminigarcia199017 wrote: »What about creating the same entry nutrition information with the same food name! MFP does not allow the same food name twice.
 you dont have to make a new entry. record the weight of the food in your diary.
 find the item (with a gram weight) select it , enter the weight. done.
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            geminigarcia199017 wrote: »What about creating the same entry nutrition information with the same food name! MFP does not allow the same food name twice.
 There should be an option to edit the nutrition info if it is wrong (as long as it's not a verified food). I edit foods all the time so that the serving size is in grams instead of cups.0
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            geminigarcia199017 wrote: »How bout weighing cerealsIf one serving of breakfast cereal is 37 grams, you need to weigh out 37 grams every time if you want exactly one serving. If you get 29 grams, you can divide to get that you are eating 0.78 servings this time.
 Also, if your database entry includes a per one gram choice, you can choose that and then just enter the grams in the servings area.0
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            geminigarcia199017 wrote: »How bout weighing cereals
 Weigh everything that's not liquid...ESPECIALLY cereal and nut butters. 0 0
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            geminigarcia199017 wrote: »How bout weighing cereals
 Why not? If a serving of cereal is 50 grams and you pour out and eat 75 grams, you'd want to log that you had 1.5 servings. If the 50 gram serving size is 100 calories, having 1.5 servings comes to 150.
 Alternatively, you could use the scale to insure you actually poured out 50 grams so that you didn't get more calories than expected.
 Single serving items should be weighed when possible, too. If you have a snack bar that has a label serving of 25 grams but the actual bar in the package is 29, you are getting 16% more.
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            A mars bar would be part of everything.geminigarcia199017 wrote: »How bout weighing cereals
 Weigh everything that's not liquid...ESPECIALLY cereal and nut butters. 
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            - Zero scale
- Put unwrapped bar on scale
- Read number
- Compare number to serving size on label
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            Seriously?
 Why are people continuing to respond to this blatant troll?0
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            geminigarcia199017 wrote: »How do you weigh a Mars chocolate bar on a food scale or just scan the barcode.
 When you scan the bar code, all that tells you (if the info has been input accurately) is the nutritional information for one serving. The nutrition label will say something like:
 Serving Size: 1 bar (35 g)
 Now take your food scale, put a plate on it and the tare out the weight of the plate so that it says 0, then put the unwrapped candy bar on the plate to get the weight in grams.
 If it says 35, you have exactly one serving. If it says 37, then it has 1.06 servings. If it says 34, then it has 0.97 servings.0
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            Wait. What if we stick the mars bar in a blender and liquify it? HOW DO WE WEIGH IT THEN?????? Ready2Rock206 wrote: »A mars bar would be part of everything.geminigarcia199017 wrote: »How bout weighing cereals Ready2Rock206 wrote: »A mars bar would be part of everything.geminigarcia199017 wrote: »How bout weighing cereals
 Weigh everything that's not liquid...ESPECIALLY cereal and nut butters. 
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            geminigarcia199017 wrote: »Weighing your food is complicated all the damn time!!!! Scanning the food label to me gives more accurate readings
 Weighing food gets easier. Soon you will know which ones are accurate and which ones need weighing. Hang in there.0
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            Lol, I could tell this was troll bait the second time the user posted.0
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            geminigarcia199017 wrote: »Weighing your food is complicated all the damn time!!!! Scanning the food label to me gives more accurate readings
 No, it doesn't. It just helps you look the item up, your phone has no way of knowing how much is in the package.
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            geminigarcia199017 wrote: »Weighing your food is complicated all the damn time!!!! Scanning the food label to me gives more accurate readings
 Scanning only tells you the nutritional information per serving. It doesn't tell you how many servings you ate. The food scale tells you how much of a serving you had.
 The meal bars I like often weigh at least a serving; typically more though. I had one the other day that was 57 g when a serving is 45 g. That turned a 170 calorie bar into a 215 calorie bar. Just scanning the label would have told me it was 170 calories which was incorrect for that particular bar since it was more than a serving.0
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            So, if you don't want to weigh, don't weigh.0
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