Calculating calories... I suck at math lol

newfitmommy2
newfitmommy2 Posts: 7 Member
edited November 2024 in Food and Nutrition
I'm trying to figure out calories per gram on frozen fruit. I don't want to use cups.

It says 70 calories per 1.5 cups or 140 grams. I don't want to use a .5 cup because I want accurate calories.

Replies

  • cs2thecox
    cs2thecox Posts: 533 Member
    70 cals per 140g
    0.5 cals per 1g
  • laurenebargar
    laurenebargar Posts: 3,081 Member
    edited November 2017
    ^^^^
  • newfitmommy2
    newfitmommy2 Posts: 7 Member
    cs2thecox wrote: »
    70 cals per 140g
    0.5 cals per 1g

    Thanks :smile:
  • HeidiCooksSupper
    HeidiCooksSupper Posts: 3,834 Member
    Another way to look at it. One-and-a-half cups is three half-cups. So, saying it a different way, half a cup is one third of one-and-a-half cups. Half a cup therefore has one-third the grams of one-and-a-half cups.

    140/3 = the number of grams .5 cups = 46.67 calories. Now grams are very tiny. There are 454 of them in a pound, so generally round them to a whole gram. 47 grams of your fruit equivalent to half a cup.

    Despite being raised to use cups and tablespoons, pounds and ounces, I find grams to be very useful for measuring food. For example, a tablespoon of heavy cream is 15 grams. I use the scale and measure 15 grams of cream into whatever I want the cream in and don't have to dirty a tablespoon measure.

    I also find grams very handy for dealing with odd-sized servings. For example, today I cut 35 grams of cheese into my eggs. (Oops. I was aiming at 28.) When entering it into my diary I just divide 35 by 28 (using a calculator) and find I had 1.25 one-ounce servings of cheese and fix the diary accordingly.

    That's why you see odd things in my diary like 1.2 tablespoons of cream. It's really 18 grams of cream (1.2 x 15). I dip raisins by the handful out of a 5-pound box and throw the handful on the scale. It varies anywhere from 25 to 40 ounces depending on the grab. I found a listing for raisins with a 100 gram serving so I just put a decimal point in front of how many grams I grabbed and that's the portion of a 100 gram serving I'm going to eat. A 34-gram handful is 0.34 of a 100g serving.

    The more you do it, the easier it gets. And thank goodness for calculators, eh?
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,160 Member
    edited November 2017
    Weigh out your portion in grams. Divide that by 140 (the number of grams in one serving). Log the result as the number of servings you ate.

    E.g., you weigh the amount of frozen fruit you're putting in your smoothie or whatever, and you find it's 120 g.
    120/140 = .857...
    Round and log .86 servings.


    Edited to fix typo.
  • newfitmommy2
    newfitmommy2 Posts: 7 Member
    Weigh out your portion in grams. Divide that by 140 (the number of grams in one serving). Log the result as the number of servings you ate.

    E.g., you weigh the amount of frozen fruit you're putting in your smoothie or whatever, and you find it's 120 g.
    120/140 = .857...
    Round and log .86 servings.


    Edited to fix typo.

    Wow... That's very easy. Thanks!
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