Question about canned beans

sean_hancock
sean_hancock Posts: 3 Member
edited February 2018 in Food and Nutrition
On the side of most cans of beans, black, pinto, etc., It says about 3.5 servings per container. However, if you drain and weigh the beans there’s just barely 2 servings in weight. Which is correct? Is that 3.5 servings listed on the can including the water that’s in the can? I never know how to account for the calories eating beans because there’s clearly not 3.5 serving drained and weighed. Thoughts?

Replies

  • ladyhusker39
    ladyhusker39 Posts: 1,406 Member
    The servings don't particularly matter. Weigh them in grams and don't worry about it.

    But to answer your question, they're approximate servings plus you're draining off some of the water weight.
  • sean_hancock
    sean_hancock Posts: 3 Member
    Well, I think the servings do matter. In the nutrition label it says that there are 3.5 servings per can X 125 grams per serving for approximately 437 grams per can (420 calories). But drained and weighed there are only < 2 servings in the can (approximately 240 calories). Is “bean water” really holding 180 calories?

    Maybe I should drain and weigh the beans and divide that number by 3.5?
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Really, just drain the beans and use the USDA entry for the cooked, drained version of the type of beans it is: No need for mental contortions.

    This is the easiest.

    If you want to use the can information, I'd assume the 3.5 is correct (it includes the water) and so if you drain and use half a can (which is normal for me), I'd multiple the calories (or grams) times 3.5 and then divide by two (or 3 if you use a third or so on).
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    PixelPuff wrote: »
    Go by the grams of the beans themselves. Ignore the 'servings' it says.

    It does suck that they seem to be underfilling the cans food-wise to that extent, but the liquid is included in their weight calculations.

    They go by the weight of the whole can itself, not just the beans. They do not say, "x beans, x water"... So however much water weight is in there, they don't remove calorie. They assume it is ALL beans.

    This - there may be a few calories in the water that they count towards the weight - but it's mostly in the beans.

    Much like that bag of frozen vegetables to be steamed has a weight that includes the frozen water.
    Microwave them and open bag and they will lose weight.

    Now - difference on those bags - they usually say 45g frozen weight per serving (or whatever). So 45g cooked and missing water would actually be more calories than an label.
    In those cases you have to do the math on your cooked serving from the total cooked weight, %.
    Or eat the whole bag!

    Much easier with beans.
    But you need to do the same thing.
    Full can weight divided by serving weight is exactly how many servings in can.
    Drain water - weigh total. Divided by same servings.
    Weigh what you are eating for that new per serving size.

    And then write that down and buy the same can again.
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,092 Member
    PixelPuff wrote: »
    Go by the grams of the beans themselves. Ignore the 'servings' it says.

    It does suck that they seem to be underfilling the cans food-wise to that extent, but the liquid is included in their weight calculations.

    They go by the weight of the whole can itself, not just the beans. They do not say, "x beans, x water"... So however much water weight is in there, they don't remove calorie. They assume it is ALL beans.

    No, they don't assume it is all beans. They assume you're weighing the beans with a proportionate amount of the liquid from the can.

    As AnnPT77 says, the easiest thing to do is use the USDA entry for "beans, [specific bean type], mature, cooked, boiled, drained."

    https://ndb.nal.usda.gov/ndb/search/list
  • PixelPuff
    PixelPuff Posts: 902 Member
    PixelPuff wrote: »
    Go by the grams of the beans themselves. Ignore the 'servings' it says.

    It does suck that they seem to be underfilling the cans food-wise to that extent, but the liquid is included in their weight calculations.

    They go by the weight of the whole can itself, not just the beans. They do not say, "x beans, x water"... So however much water weight is in there, they don't remove calorie. They assume it is ALL beans.

    No, they don't assume it is all beans. They assume you're weighing the beans with a proportionate amount of the liquid from the can.

    As AnnPT77 says, the easiest thing to do is use the USDA entry for "beans, [specific bean type], mature, cooked, boiled, drained."

    https://ndb.nal.usda.gov/ndb/search/list

    I more meant the weight assumption on the can versus the label's calorie information. The label is to be if all of the weight was beans.
  • Lillymoo01
    Lillymoo01 Posts: 2,865 Member
    The beans I buy in Australia state on the can that the serving size is for the beans drained. So much easier that way as the liquid would have less calories than the beans so just draining and using the nutritional information given on the can which includes liquid and beans would be inaccurate. Because of this, if your serving from the can includes the liquid then using the USDA database would be much more accurate.
  • Lean59man
    Lean59man Posts: 714 Member
    I always rinse the beans off before eating them and do not eat the liquid.
  • amusedmonkey
    amusedmonkey Posts: 10,330 Member
    edited February 2018
    I hate logging canned beans because the nutrition on the can includes the liquid weight in most cases, at least for the products I buy. I rinse and drain them then I use the USDA entry for cooked beans by weight.
  • fitoverfortymom
    fitoverfortymom Posts: 3,452 Member
    I've been doing it all wrong (100lbs lost later), but I'm making chili tonight so I'll enter my recipe with the USDA rinse/drained/cooked values and see what a difference there is.

    What I'm meaning to say is anecdotally, for over a year I've used the measurement on the can after rinsing/draining beans and still been wildly successful. The +/- is probably not that big of a deal for a person who has a lot to lose. Could make a difference for someone with a much smaller deficit (like me now).

    I don't eat a lot of beans except when I make soup or chili, so could be a lot more impactful for a vegetarian who eats canned beans on the regular.
  • missysippy930
    missysippy930 Posts: 2,577 Member
    Lean59man wrote: »
    I always rinse the beans off before eating them and do not eat the liquid.

    Me too. Plus, by rinsing, you get rid of some of the excess sodium. I even rinse the low sodium cans of beans I purchase.

    If you really want to be that accurate, use dried beans and make them your self.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    I hate logging canned beans because the nutrition on the can includes the liquid weight in most cases, at least for the products I buy. I rinse and drain them then I use the USDA entry for cooked beans by weight.

    Yeah, me too, and I find them annoying too, for the same reason.
  • slaite1
    slaite1 Posts: 1,307 Member
    Well, I think the servings do matter. In the nutrition label it says that there are 3.5 servings per can X 125 grams per serving for approximately 437 grams per can (420 calories). But drained and weighed there are only < 2 servings in the can (approximately 240 calories). Is “bean water” really holding 180 calories?

    Maybe I should drain and weigh the beans and divide that number by 3.5?

    This is what I do. Sometimes I will make my own food entry based off the grams drained weight, particularly if I use the brand often. I find a lot of variation in different brands of canned beans, so I don't like to use the usda cooked entry. I know the serving amount is not exact (i.e. can may say 3.5 servings and actually have 4), but I figure it is pretty close.
  • ladyhusker39
    ladyhusker39 Posts: 1,406 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Really, just drain the beans and use the USDA entry for the cooked, drained version of the type of beans it is: No need for mental contortions.

    The servings and weights on the can assume beans + liquid, but most of the calories and nutrients are in the beans. If you dump the whole can (liquid + beans) into a soup or something, you can use the can data. If you drain the contents and use just the beans, trying to do math from the label is a fool's errand.

    If you have free time and like to learn about food, look up "aquafaba". ;)

    https://www.bonappetit.com/test-kitchen/ingredients/article/aquafaba-health-benefits

    Enjoy your beans! :)

    Thanks for clarifying. You said it better than I did. When I'm on my phone I try to bottom line things.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,203 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Really, just drain the beans and use the USDA entry for the cooked, drained version of the type of beans it is: No need for mental contortions.

    The servings and weights on the can assume beans + liquid, but most of the calories and nutrients are in the beans. If you dump the whole can (liquid + beans) into a soup or something, you can use the can data. If you drain the contents and use just the beans, trying to do math from the label is a fool's errand.

    If you have free time and like to learn about food, look up "aquafaba". ;)

    https://www.bonappetit.com/test-kitchen/ingredients/article/aquafaba-health-benefits

    Enjoy your beans! :)

    Thanks for clarifying. You said it better than I did. When I'm on my phone I try to bottom line things.

    I thought you did fine. OP wasn't buying it, even after your and others' sensible, cogent, concise, clear comments. It seemed like time to trot out a wall'o'text (my specialty ;) ).
  • karahm78
    karahm78 Posts: 505 Member
    slaite1 wrote: »
    Well, I think the servings do matter. In the nutrition label it says that there are 3.5 servings per can X 125 grams per serving for approximately 437 grams per can (420 calories). But drained and weighed there are only < 2 servings in the can (approximately 240 calories). Is “bean water” really holding 180 calories?

    Maybe I should drain and weigh the beans and divide that number by 3.5?

    This is what I do. Sometimes I will make my own food entry based off the grams drained weight, particularly if I use the brand often. I find a lot of variation in different brands of canned beans, so I don't like to use the usda cooked entry. I know the serving amount is not exact (i.e. can may say 3.5 servings and actually have 4), but I figure it is pretty close.

    Yeah, I assume the variations are due to the seasonings, etc in each variety (some have some pork, etc in them for flavor)
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,092 Member
    I've been doing it all wrong (100lbs lost later), but I'm making chili tonight so I'll enter my recipe with the USDA rinse/drained/cooked values and see what a difference there is.

    What I'm meaning to say is anecdotally, for over a year I've used the measurement on the can after rinsing/draining beans and still been wildly successful. The +/- is probably not that big of a deal for a person who has a lot to lose. Could make a difference for someone with a much smaller deficit (like me now).

    I don't eat a lot of beans except when I make soup or chili, so could be a lot more impactful for a vegetarian who eats canned beans on the regular.

    The bolded is an important point. It's less likely to make a difference if you make a mistake or choose to estimate or use a random "homemade" database entry if it's for something you don't eat often.
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,092 Member
    karahm78 wrote: »
    slaite1 wrote: »
    Well, I think the servings do matter. In the nutrition label it says that there are 3.5 servings per can X 125 grams per serving for approximately 437 grams per can (420 calories). But drained and weighed there are only < 2 servings in the can (approximately 240 calories). Is “bean water” really holding 180 calories?

    Maybe I should drain and weigh the beans and divide that number by 3.5?

    This is what I do. Sometimes I will make my own food entry based off the grams drained weight, particularly if I use the brand often. I find a lot of variation in different brands of canned beans, so I don't like to use the usda cooked entry. I know the serving amount is not exact (i.e. can may say 3.5 servings and actually have 4), but I figure it is pretty close.

    Yeah, I assume the variations are due to the seasonings, etc in each variety (some have some pork, etc in them for flavor)

    I don't know about other posters, but when I talk about draining and using the USDA entry for cooked beans of whatever variety you're eating, I'm talking about plain canned beans that are packed in plain cooking water, with nothing other than salt and perhaps preservatives added.

    If there are spices and pork in the can, that's a sauce, and it's not meant to be drained and rinsed (and if you drain and rinse it, you're just wasting money, because those sorts of beans cost more than plain canned beans). Of course I would use the information on the nutritional label for that sort of bean.

    More importantly, the OP made clear that s/he is asking about beans packed in a liquid that gets drained, so any spices in the liquid are irrelvant.
  • slaite1
    slaite1 Posts: 1,307 Member
    I did not mean a sauce or spiced. I also generally try to use plain beans, but did not always check the ingredients. Some are made with a decent amount of added sugar or corn syrup, which I assume accounts for the variation (something I never realized until I checked). It's not a sauce, they're not labeled any differently, just the way particular brands make them. Red kidney beans are a common culprit.

    Although now that you point that out, it would make sense to use the usda entry as long as the beans were, indeed, only beans and water. I've never been one to use cooked entries I guess.
    karahm78 wrote: »
    slaite1 wrote: »
    Well, I think the servings do matter. In the nutrition label it says that there are 3.5 servings per can X 125 grams per serving for approximately 437 grams per can (420 calories). But drained and weighed there are only < 2 servings in the can (approximately 240 calories). Is “bean water” really holding 180 calories?

    Maybe I should drain and weigh the beans and divide that number by 3.5?

    This is what I do. Sometimes I will make my own food entry based off the grams drained weight, particularly if I use the brand often. I find a lot of variation in different brands of canned beans, so I don't like to use the usda cooked entry. I know the serving amount is not exact (i.e. can may say 3.5 servings and actually have 4), but I figure it is pretty close.

    Yeah, I assume the variations are due to the seasonings, etc in each variety (some have some pork, etc in them for flavor)

    I don't know about other posters, but when I talk about draining and using the USDA entry for cooked beans of whatever variety you're eating, I'm talking about plain canned beans that are packed in plain cooking water, with nothing other than salt and perhaps preservatives added.

    If there are spices and pork in the can, that's a sauce, and it's not meant to be drained and rinsed (and if you drain and rinse it, you're just wasting money, because those sorts of beans cost more than plain canned beans). Of course I would use the information on the nutritional label for that sort of bean.

    More importantly, the OP made clear that s/he is asking about beans packed in a liquid that gets drained, so any spices in the liquid are irrelvant.

  • hroderick
    hroderick Posts: 756 Member
    I like the juice. It is called pot liquor. With a name like that it has to make you feel good,
  • abirdintherain
    abirdintherain Posts: 73 Member
    This thread is giving me a complex. I've never thought about canned beans so much in my life.

    Good info, though! Lol.
  • karahm78
    karahm78 Posts: 505 Member
    karahm78 wrote: »
    slaite1 wrote: »
    Well, I think the servings do matter. In the nutrition label it says that there are 3.5 servings per can X 125 grams per serving for approximately 437 grams per can (420 calories). But drained and weighed there are only < 2 servings in the can (approximately 240 calories). Is “bean water” really holding 180 calories?

    Maybe I should drain and weigh the beans and divide that number by 3.5?

    This is what I do. Sometimes I will make my own food entry based off the grams drained weight, particularly if I use the brand often. I find a lot of variation in different brands of canned beans, so I don't like to use the usda cooked entry. I know the serving amount is not exact (i.e. can may say 3.5 servings and actually have 4), but I figure it is pretty close.

    Yeah, I assume the variations are due to the seasonings, etc in each variety (some have some pork, etc in them for flavor)

    I don't know about other posters, but when I talk about draining and using the USDA entry for cooked beans of whatever variety you're eating, I'm talking about plain canned beans that are packed in plain cooking water, with nothing other than salt and perhaps preservatives added.

    If there are spices and pork in the can, that's a sauce, and it's not meant to be drained and rinsed (and if you drain and rinse it, you're just wasting money, because those sorts of beans cost more than plain canned beans). Of course I would use the information on the nutritional label for that sort of bean.

    More importantly, the OP made clear that s/he is asking about beans packed in a liquid that gets drained, so any spices in the liquid are irrelvant.

    I get what you are saying, but sometimes this isn’t obvious.... the “recipe” for some varieties of black beans (for instance) are different due to the different preparations.

    I was specifically responding to the person I quoted (not the OP), who was noting different information for different brands, and thus relevant to the conversation taking place.
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,092 Member
    hroderick wrote: »
    I like the juice. It is called pot liquor. With a name like that it has to make you feel good,

    I drink pot liquor from greens (e.g., kale, collards, etc.) or asparagus (or mix it with V-8 or tomato juice), but I don't find the cooking liquid from beans especially appetizing.
  • amusedmonkey
    amusedmonkey Posts: 10,330 Member
    hroderick wrote: »
    I like the juice. It is called pot liquor. With a name like that it has to make you feel good,

    I drink pot liquor from greens (e.g., kale, collards, etc.) or asparagus (or mix it with V-8 or tomato juice), but I don't find the cooking liquid from beans especially appetizing.

    I only like it in soups and stews because it thickens them. I still rinse the beans so they don't glob together, though,
  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    I've been doing it all wrong (100lbs lost later), but I'm making chili tonight so I'll enter my recipe with the USDA rinse/drained/cooked values and see what a difference there is.

    What I'm meaning to say is anecdotally, for over a year I've used the measurement on the can after rinsing/draining beans and still been wildly successful. The +/- is probably not that big of a deal for a person who has a lot to lose. Could make a difference for someone with a much smaller deficit (like me now).

    I don't eat a lot of beans except when I make soup or chili, so could be a lot more impactful for a vegetarian who eats canned beans on the regular.

    The bolded is an important point. It's less likely to make a difference if you make a mistake or choose to estimate or use a random "homemade" database entry if it's for something you don't eat often.

    Yes, I eat canned beans 5-6 times a week usually. It's a measurement I feel is personally important for me to be very accurate with.

    (For what it is worth, I drain and use the USDA entry).