How Much Spaghetti?
fatty2sixpack
Posts: 67 Member
My dad made some spaghetti with spaghetti noodles, Ragu Sauce, and some ground turkey meat. I can't put in the measurements in the recipe builder because I don't know how much of what he put in the recipe. When I put it in the food search database there are so many results with different calories amounts. Can you give me an estimate in grams or some advice on how much spaghetti I should get?
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Replies
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Pasta is kind of tricky. I assume you don't have a scale to weight it?
The sad news for pasta lovers is that the serving sizes are much smaller than we'd like.
A serving a spaghetti is about the size of a baseball.
Most of us would rather have a serving the size of a frisbee, but you'd have to fit that in to your calorie plan for the day.
Hope that helps!1 -
Dip your 1 cup measure into the pot and fill-er up. Use a clean knife to trim the spaghetti smooth with the top of the measure. 1 cup of cooked spaghetti is a reasonable portion for you. It's a lot easier to get precise when you do your own cooking. Good luck. Maybe see what the "serving size" is for everything in the pot and log 1 serving of each.2
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I found this for you, too. Charts like this help me a lot.
http://topsytasty.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Serving-Size-of-Common-Foods1.jpg0 -
I found this for you, too. Charts like this help me a lot.
http://topsytasty.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Serving-Size-of-Common-Foods1.jpg
Would the "pasta serving fits in an ice cream scoop" be dry pasta? It's still not easy to guess with cooked pasta because the expansion of the pasta between 8 and 12 minutes of cooking makes the volume of the cooked pasta different.1 -
JeromeBarry1 wrote: »I found this for you, too. Charts like this help me a lot.
http://topsytasty.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Serving-Size-of-Common-Foods1.jpg
Would the "pasta serving fits in an ice cream scoop" be dry pasta? It's still not easy to guess with cooked pasta because the expansion of the pasta between 8 and 12 minutes of cooking makes the volume of the cooked pasta different.
I think it's cooked pasta, since that's the way we eat it.
But it's tricky, isn't it? You could pack it in tight or just scoop it loosely, right?
Really, the best way to go is to use a food scale -- inexpensive and easy to use.0 -
If it's hard to see what an exact serving size is and you can't measure it, I always go by how much of the total package I ate. For instance, if your dad cooked the entire package of spaghetti, you can look at the box (or look up the brand online) to see how many total servings are in the package. Multiply the number of serving per package by the calories per serving. From there, you look at how much you ate (say 1/4 of the amount that he cooked), and divide by 4 (or however much you had). You can do this for each ingredient, but focus on the more calorie dense items. Veggies, spices, etc will add very few extra calories.
This is just a rough estimation, but should get you closer to an idea of how many calories for logging purposes. For future reference, a 56g serving of pasta is about 200kcal. I eat a lot of campanelle, and that's a little over 1 cup cooked.3 -
I really had to practice with pasta, as it is so often served at people's houses. I would weigh one serving dry at home, cook it and put it on my plate and really study it a little before I ate it. Sounds a little lame as I type it out, but pasta is important to me! I'm at the point now where I can eyeball what one serving of cooked pasta looks like (or two!). And if you have enough sauce that it nicely coats the pasta, but not so much sauce that you need a piece of bread to clean it off your plate, it's around a half cup.
Best you can do right now OP is estimate, logging each thing individually. Pasta, sauce, turkey. And if he cooked the turkey before adding it to the sauce, log a tablespoon of oil as well. This is the kind of thing that with practice and experience will become easier!1 -
I really had to practice with pasta, as it is so often served at people's houses. I would weigh one serving dry at home, cook it and put it on my plate and really study it a little before I ate it. Sounds a little lame as I type it out, but pasta is important to me! I'm at the point now where I can eyeball what one serving of cooked pasta looks like (or two!). And if you have enough sauce that it nicely coats the pasta, but not so much sauce that you need a piece of bread to clean it off your plate, it's around a half cup.
Best you can do right now OP is estimate, logging each thing individually. Pasta, sauce, turkey. And if he cooked the turkey before adding it to the sauce, log a tablespoon of oil as well. This is the kind of thing that with practice and experience will become easier!
Curious on why the tablespoon of oil if the turkey was cooked? Is it being assumed oil was used to cook or something? I can't say as I have ever used oil to cook ground meat since it sort of "oils" itself as it cooks, so that statement just caught me off guard. No judgement, was just curious :-).
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I stick to 2 ounces of pasta and then load up on the veggies and mushrooms and such. But the ground beef I'm not sure. I don't eat much beef or pork.0
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I really had to practice with pasta, as it is so often served at people's houses. I would weigh one serving dry at home, cook it and put it on my plate and really study it a little before I ate it. Sounds a little lame as I type it out, but pasta is important to me! I'm at the point now where I can eyeball what one serving of cooked pasta looks like (or two!). And if you have enough sauce that it nicely coats the pasta, but not so much sauce that you need a piece of bread to clean it off your plate, it's around a half cup.
Best you can do right now OP is estimate, logging each thing individually. Pasta, sauce, turkey. And if he cooked the turkey before adding it to the sauce, log a tablespoon of oil as well. This is the kind of thing that with practice and experience will become easier!
Curious on why the tablespoon of oil if the turkey was cooked? Is it being assumed oil was used to cook or something? I can't say as I have ever used oil to cook ground meat since it sort of "oils" itself as it cooks, so that statement just caught me off guard. No judgement, was just curious :-).
I know people who don't put anything in a fry pan without some oil, but I know a lot of bad cooks
I've never cooked ground turkey, but isn't it more lean? Would it still oil itself?0 -
If you're looking to eat more pasta with lower carbs check out Dreamsfield pasta0
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I know people who don't put anything in a fry pan without some oil, but I know a lot of bad cooks
I've never cooked ground turkey, but isn't it more lean? Would it still oil itself?
I make ground turkey in a ceramic pan a few times a month, no added oil or anything. Ground chicken works similarly. Just stir it up pretty regularly, which you would want to do for ground meat anyway. I have made turkey meatballs similarly with no extra oil. I haven't made turkey burgers or anything like that though.
Growing up we never added oil to cook meat like that so it never crossed my mind to do it :-).
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Weigh it 2 oz dry or pass it by! If you have to eat it prepared go with double that and if its mixed well you just have to figure out the proportions and break it down from there. Was the grease from the meat included or not? Sometimes you just have to pass and make something else till those who cook around you start understand yu have to have weights and measures during preparations.2
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I know people who don't put anything in a fry pan without some oil, but I know a lot of bad cooks
I've never cooked ground turkey, but isn't it more lean? Would it still oil itself?
I make ground turkey in a ceramic pan a few times a month, no added oil or anything. Ground chicken works similarly. Just stir it up pretty regularly, which you would want to do for ground meat anyway. I have made turkey meatballs similarly with no extra oil. I haven't made turkey burgers or anything like that though.
Growing up we never added oil to cook meat like that so it never crossed my mind to do it :-).
I've never used oil to cook ground turkey either and used ro make it almost daily. Ground chicken works the same way.
OP this is one of those times when it is best guess. Good luck and you are doing really good0 -
Honestly just eat the pasta. But I'd say to be safe a cup of cooked pasta0
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If it's hard to see what an exact serving size is and you can't measure it, I always go by how much of the total package I ate. For instance, if your dad cooked the entire package of spaghetti, you can look at the box (or look up the brand online) to see how many total servings are in the package. Multiply the number of serving per package by the calories per serving. From there, you look at how much you ate (say 1/4 of the amount that he cooked), and divide by 4 (or however much you had). You can do this for each ingredient, but focus on the more calorie dense items. Veggies, spices, etc will add very few extra calories.
This is just a rough estimation, but should get you closer to an idea of how many calories for logging purposes. For future reference, a 56g serving of pasta is about 200kcal. I eat a lot of campanelle, and that's a little over 1 cup cooked.
As to oil for ground turkey. I use ground turkey breast, not much fat so use about 1TBSP for a pound, just enough to coat the bottom of the pan. Regular ground turkey will have plenty of fat on it's own but as someone mentioned up thread some people use oil to cook meat by default.
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