Should you put your fruits & veggies in your diary?
tasmith3631
Posts: 3
I've heard since fruits and veggies do not have many calories and your body uses more calories to digest them, should I be putting them in my diary? I have been so far but I don't know if I should keep doing it or not.
0
Replies
-
I think you should definitely keep them in there. Not only is it nice to just have a complete record of what you've eaten that day (at least for me I like having that :P), but since fruit does have carbs and sugars; you're also going to want to track that.0
-
I do.. but it always puts me over on my limit0
-
Don't believe everything you hear, especially regarding foods and your diet. Put them in.0
-
I've heard since fruits and veggies do not have many calories and your body uses more calories to digest them, should I be putting them in my diary? I have been so far but I don't know if I should keep doing it or not.
Most fruit have quite a bit of calories as they contain a lot of sugar.0 -
You should track everything you eat or drink that has calories. That's how MFP works. You can't know how much you're eating, and whether or not you're hitting your calorie goals, unless you track all of it.0
-
Thats just a myth with most fruits/veggies. I think the only one that really works is celery.
I would log every fruit and veggie you eat, for sure.0 -
Yes, yes and yes once more for good measure. There is no such thing as "free food". A medium apple has 80 calories and a medium banana about 110 calories. If you eat one of those each day, that's 1330 calories per week you aren't tracking. That's not even counting the other fruits and vegetables you are (hopefully) eating. People are having difficulties on the new Weight Watchers Plus plan for this reason. You can't eat all of the fruits and vegetables you want, on top of another 1200+ calories and expect to lose weight.0
-
You can gain weight if you eat 3,000 calories of strictly fruit and vegetables a day.
Log all of it.0 -
I log in all of mine...10 calories is 10 calories0
-
Yes, i record the fruit and veg that i eat . it just keeps me aware of the calories i get left haha!:D0
-
This is mfp, not weight watchers. a calorie is considered a calorie no matter it's source, even the 2 calories of spinach I had in my lunch. I eat a crap ton of fruits and veggies in a day, probably at least 400 calories worth, I'd go over by about 1/3 of my base calories per day if I didn't log them and was still trying to reach 1340 calories.0
-
Log everything0
-
You gotta track those! Like before-mentioned, they have carbs and sugars in them. Thankfully, they're the good sugars and carbs, but they do add up. The whole "negative calorie" isn't exactly honest . . .0
-
It's not always just about the calories, but also to see what you eat during the day. Trends of time and consumption, periods of life where you felt stressed and ate differently, or happy and ate differently. The food diary stays there, you can always look back on a day. The more you fill in about how you feel/what you eat/how you moved that day, the better picture you paint as you look back and see what worked well and what didn't.0
-
I log everything because all of it counts!0
-
I can't see any reason why you wouldn't. If you are watching nutrition as well as calories you definitely should. I think I'd be under on calories everyday if I didn't log my veggies.0
-
What good is a Food Diary if you don't LIST Everything...There is Even a Place to List Water! Everything is Important. Also, Fruit has high sugar and there a many high carb/glycemic veggies. Don't be fooled!0
-
SOME veggies you could probably get away with not tracking after you're familiar with which ones are VERY low-cal (lettuce, spinach, etc) but you should be logging all your fruit for sure. Just a couple of servings of fruit can account for 10% of your daily calories so yes, they count!0
-
I've heard since fruits and veggies do not have many calories and your body uses more calories to digest them, should I be putting them in my diary? I have been so far but I don't know if I should keep doing it or not.
You must be referring to the new weight watchers plan, fresh fruits and non starchy veggies are Not counted either by their points system or if you're counting calories and go by their plan you can allow yourself 1200 to 1400 calories per day plus the "free" foods. I got this information out of woman's world magazine. I started on this plan and really like it. Hope this helps.0 -
I put everything on mine even the no calorie things just so i can still look at fat content etc.0
-
Yes, put them in. Fruits are healthy, but they have a lot of carbs and sugars. so if you are watching carbs and sugars you really need to log them. And as for veggies - it depends on the veggie - but I would still log them. When you're under calories fruits and veggies are a good source of heathy calories!0
-
If you are doing the MFP thing and counting calories, you should log everything. If you want fruits and veggies to be "free calories" then try weight watchers. Some programs work for some and others work for others. Best of luck!0
-
Looking at my diary for today, more than a third of my calories came from fruit and veg, so I'd say keep on tracking them or you could end up way off where you think you are!0
-
Sounds like you are headed down the long river of d Nile. A calorie is a calorie. Is a celery stick, a radish or a handful of lettuce going to amount to anything? Probably not. But most other vegetables and all fruits have some calories. The benefit of eating fruits and vegetables is that the calorie count is VERY LOW, compared to any other food. And the health benefits are incredible. A daily menu of at least three servings of fruits, three servings or more of vegetables and small amount of lean protein, including beans, peas and legumes and good fats is the key to success. Stay away from and eat in strict moderation any packaged or processed food including cereals, breads and pasta. My cheap two cents anyways.0
-
Yes. A banana has 80 to 110 calories depending on the size. Same as a cup of low fat yogurt. A small/medium apple has 50 to 60 calories. A cup of bluberries has about 80. These are all excellent foods and you should eat them, but you have to track them.0
-
i log everything that has calories! the only thing i don't log is the couple drops of lime juice i like to add to my water and the nutrition facts on the container say it has 0 calories.0
-
I've had moments since switching from Weight Watchers to My Fitness Pal that I have wondered about this exact thing. WW let me eat unlimited fruits and veggies, and MFP does not.
I actually think that it's better for me to track them all, even though some have very few calories. That being said... I was losing just fine on WW, without counting them. But WW and MFP are two different animals, so now I count them! :-)0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 427 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions