pasta servings?
myaminals
Posts: 197 Member
how do y'all measure pasta? dry or cooked? the box says 2/3 cup 200 calories.
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Replies
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Dry.0
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The pasta I have right now has an uncooked serving as 75g and 270 calories. I have no idea how many grams 2/3 a cup is but maybe you do.0
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I think the whole wheat pasta i buy is 56g (dry) per 200 calorie serving. Could be wrong as I'm at work right now.0
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On a digital food scale, 2 oz of dry pasta is one serving (200 cal)0
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thanks for the help everyone! I think I have been counting it wrong.0
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Dry with a scale.0
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Dry with food scale is right. I rarely eat pasta, but when I do I go for the big 3.5 oz dry serving. Very satisfying, esp. if you use barilla's protein pasta.0
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thank y'all for the help. i will try the protein one next!0
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dry, mine says 85g (dry) and its so sad to look at uncooked haha.
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ashleyjongepier wrote: »dry, mine says 85g (dry) and its so sad to look at uncooked haha.
So sad! I think that every time I weigh out my pasta! It looks so pathetic I do a serving and a half.0 -
Yes I would rather eat it less often and enjoy it to satiety when I have it!0
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Just had barilla's protein spaghetti with homemade Piedmontese meatballs last week when my daughter was home from college.
So. Damn. Good.1 -
I have a related question...when you're cooking pasta for multiple people, how do you figure out the amount you ate? Obviously the weight's a lot different after it's cooked. Do you cook your serving separately? I usually just weigh it when it's dry so I know the total weight and eyeball my proportionate share...probably not a good strategy.
Edit: I just saw the post above that mentions there are entries for cooked pasta that I can use. Duh.0 -
thanks y'all. yeah definitely not something i can fit in everyday. there is not that much for the calories.0
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I have a related question...when you're cooking pasta for multiple people, how do you figure out the amount you ate? Obviously the weight's a lot different after it's cooked. Do you cook your serving separately? I usually just weigh it when it's dry so I know the total weight and eyeball my proportionate share...probably not a good strategy.
Edit: I just saw the post above that mentions there are entries for cooked pasta that I can use. Duh.
The entry for cooked pasta is a good idea.
I recently saw someone here who cooks her pasta separately in a metal colander so she doesn't have to use a second pot. I thought that was pretty clever.3 -
That is clever! I will give it a shot. Probably more accurate, since the amount of water absorbed probably varies a bit. Thanks for the tip!0
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I have made for every pasta or rice kind two entrees in my data list.
Cooked and uncooked
So i started with the uncooked 56 gram = 200 calories ( for example) Cooked the 56 gram and when cooked weighed it again so i had the cooked amount too.
Now it doesn't matter if i have it cooked or dry it is always right when i choice the right option to log it. I did this also for meat and potatoes etc.
I do this with every new food that i get. And i never have to do it again.
Some find it a lot of work, but for me to figure out later how much cooked is ( when my husband cooked something without weighing upfront) was more annoying.
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per usda, 140 grams of cooked pasta is equal to 221 calories....definitely a sad little pile for this full-blooded sicilian lol1
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I have a related question...when you're cooking pasta for multiple people, how do you figure out the amount you ate? Obviously the weight's a lot different after it's cooked. Do you cook your serving separately? I usually just weigh it when it's dry so I know the total weight and eyeball my proportionate share...probably not a good strategy.
Edit: I just saw the post above that mentions there are entries for cooked pasta that I can use. Duh.
If you weigh the uncooked pasta and you know the weight of the serving you're eating yourself then you can calculate what fraction of the pasta is yours. That fraction will be the same once it is cooked, so you can weigh all the cooked pasta and then take that same fraction of it by weight as your own portion. That way you know you're getting exactly the serving you want regardless of the change in weight during cooking.
For example if you're making 200 grams of uncooked pasta and you want one serving of 50 grams for yourself, your fraction is 1/4. Let's say that once cooked the pasta weighs 500 grams, and you know that 1/4th of 500 is 125, you know that your serving is exactly 125 grams.
I have gotten used to weighing a lot of things twice. I am terrible at eyeballing portions and too short to be able to mess it up too much.2 -
Ahh, that's great advice! Thanks, Kalici!0
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You're welcome!0
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Just had this problem as I was creating a recipe. I measured out the portion size according to "per serving" according to number of family members when I put it in the pot to cook. But when I was weighing the rest of the ingredients for the casserole I realized I had to weigh the pasta cooked as well to determine the serving size/weight for the whole recipe. USDA website to the rescue! They list different types of pasta cooked in grams!!0
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I have a related question...when you're cooking pasta for multiple people, how do you figure out the amount you ate? Obviously the weight's a lot different after it's cooked. Do you cook your serving separately? I usually just weigh it when it's dry so I know the total weight and eyeball my proportionate share...probably not a good strategy.
Edit: I just saw the post above that mentions there are entries for cooked pasta that I can use. Duh.
Cooked rice and cooked pasta entries are usually way off though.
Personally, I weigh it dry, then cooked, and just do a bit of math to figure out how many grams is a serving of cooked pasta.
So I'll put the box on the scale and tare it and dump pasta in the water, put the box back on the scale, write that number. Divide it by 56 to figure out how many servings I'm cooking. Then I weigh it cooked and divide by the number of servings to see how many grams a cooked serving is. Then I just have whatever, divide by 130g and enter that on MFP as the number of servings (using the dry entry).
If you've done it once, and always cook it the same time, you don't even have to do it every time. Now I just know that 130g of cooked pasta is one serving (that's for Ronzoni healthy harvest, any type).
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I have discovered Creamettes brand pasta that is 150 calories per serving (56 grams). I weigh it dry. Two servings is only 300 calories and 26 grams of fiber, which is amazing.0
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thanks everyone for the help. i will definitely look for the creamettes brand!0
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thank you! i just saw the calories may have to think twice about that one.0
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I have a related question...when you're cooking pasta for multiple people, how do you figure out the amount you ate? Obviously the weight's a lot different after it's cooked. Do you cook your serving separately? I usually just weigh it when it's dry so I know the total weight and eyeball my proportionate share...probably not a good strategy.
Edit: I just saw the post above that mentions there are entries for cooked pasta that I can use. Duh.
I eat 50g dry as does my hubby, my teenagers have 100g dry each, once the pasta is cooked I weigh it and I have a 6th.
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