You don't use a food scale?

quiksylver296
quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
edited November 2021 in Getting Started
We have many new members who have been around for about three weeks now. And there are lots of posts saying "I've been doing this for three weeks and haven't lost any weight!" Many responses to those threads tell the member to use a food scale. This video illustrates why a food scale is such a powerful tool for most people's weight loss. (Although I wish it used peanut butter instead of oatmeal. ;) )

https://youtu.be/XpHykP6e_Uk

If anyone has any other infographics or videos that are pro-food scale, add 'em!
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Replies

  • tcunbeliever
    tcunbeliever Posts: 8,219 Member
    1 T = 0.5 oz

    assuming you have a scale with at least one decimal for ounces, you should be able to weigh that

    If not, you would need to weigh a full ounce and then only use half, maybe?
  • davepollack
    davepollack Posts: 19 Member
    Thank you all again for the info. Never thought about weighing liquids. Will need to start doing that.
  • Momepro
    Momepro Posts: 1,509 Member
    We're trying to weigh more of our stuff, our dinner gets weighed as best we can and usually I have leftovers for lunch so that gets weighed too. Prepacked stuff I don't weigh, but I've started weighing snacks I bring to work like crackers and such and I've definitely been estimating 10-20% low

    You might want to be aware that many pre-packaged foods don't weigh the same as their serving size suggests. For example, I bought some flour tortillas once that had a weight in grams for a single tortilla, but when I weighed the tortilla it weighed a full 30% more than the package claimed.

    On those, I generally figure if I eat them often enough it will probably average out, but if I don't, best to weigh.

  • LivingtheLeanDream
    LivingtheLeanDream Posts: 13,342 Member
    Glad someone did a post about this, hopefully all the panicking newbies will read it.
  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    sexysizeme wrote: »
    Lesson learned going to do my best to measure everything on my scale

    Yay! Tell what what you find out. It’s always interesting to learn what happens.
  • wizzybeth
    wizzybeth Posts: 3,578 Member
    Since it comes up so often, if you're looking to buy a food scale you don't need anything fancy. A friend of mine bought hers on eBay for $8. Mine cost about $20, but I didn't shop around and just bought what I could at Target. You want a scale that has a tare button (they all should) and can switch between ounces and grams easily. If you're cooking big pots of food for a family or weekly batches, then the ability to weigh heavy loads will be nice (11 pounds is a common upper limit for food scales). Other than that, get the cheap one unless you have very specialized needs.

    I paid about $30 for the EatSmart scale on Amazon that has a weight limit of 15 lbs. I chose this one because it has a large platform and a very large, easy to read display - my other scale ($10 at Walmart) had a much smaller display .