Restaurants
bevsha
Posts: 4 Member
Hello. How do you track your food when you eat at a restaurant?
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Replies
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Some places have calories posted on their website.
Most do not and even the ones that do, it's still just a guess. Every chef will prepare each meal differently, most are not weighing and measuring each ingredient.
So what I do is try my best to guess the calories and log it as best as possible. I don't worry too much about it and it's never halted my progress anyway.0 -
I pretty much only go to restaurants that have nutrition information available. The places I go to the most are Panera Bread, Subway or for a nice dinner I go to Longhorn Steakhouse or maybe Outback. If you order "naked" food it can be easier to calculate. For example you can log a baked potato with more certainty than mashed potato because you have no idea how much milk/cream/butter whatever the cook used. A naked steak is easier to calculate than chicken or pasta in a sauce. Mostly I try to avoid restaurants - I think a lot of us do.2
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If going to a restaurant is a rare treat, and you don't find the restaurant here in the database, just pick the same dish at a different restaurant. Most of the chain restaurants are in here. It's not going to be exact but that's no big deal if it doesn't happen often.
If you eat out alot, you need to try a little harder and to be blunt, it can make consistent weight loss more difficult. I try to deconstruct the dish in my head, eyeball the portions, and log each individually. I also always log an tablespoon of oil or butter, as that's often what makes restaurant dishes extra special. This method can be dodgy when you first start out. But if you pay attention while weighing out your portions at home, over time it makes you better at eyeballing portions when you're away from home.
Also make sure you don't forget the side stuff when logging a restaurant meal. That piece of bread. The one piece of someone else's app. The salad dressing, etc. :drinker:2 -
I tend to travel and eat out a lot at times.
One thing that has really helped me is to separate a “special occasion meal” vs a “meal away from home.” A meal away from home should fit in my general meal plan; I try to order ala carte, such as a sirloin (no butter or sauce or spice) and steamed broccoli, or a grilled chicken breast (again, no sauce or marinade) and asparagus, etc. I’ll be clear that I do not want anything else on the plate, no sides or bread, etc. I have a short list of restaurants and meals, so that I can keep it relatively boring and mundane. If I can’t find a restaurant that works, I’ll stop at a gas station with good options, or even go to a grocery store and pick up a rotissere chicken and bag of veggies (still usually cheaper than drive-thru and far fewer calories). I have several “meals” built in MFP for specific restaurants that I go to often for meals away from home.
For special occasions, I’ll see what nutritional info or menus they have online, and pre-plan what I’ll order. I enter that into MFP first and build my day around it.
It’s pretty well studied that people underestimate the calories eaten at a restaurant, and that the meals are usually 25-50% more calories than what’s listed on the websites. So, if I’m eating out a lot, I add-in fake “restaurant overage” calories. I made food entries of that name in MFP, with my macro percentages. I’ll add-in an additional 20% overage if it’s something I’m easily able to count (eggs, for instance), and 33% overage if it’s something that I can’t measure well.1 -
If it's not already in the database, I'll just use a similar restaurant. Ruby Tuesday, Applebees, Chili's, TGI Friday are all pretty similar. Friendly's and Perkins. Or the food and 'deli'.0
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If they don't have calories posted on their menu I search what I can find to be the next best guess. Usually overestimate.0
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I usually look for a similar meal from a similar restaurant (veggie omelette, 800 calories? seems legit,) overestimate the count a bit and try to log with precision the rest of the day. Seems to work okay.0
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I usually do and where they don't have calories listed, I try to google and overestimate what I find.0
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I always track when i eat out. Most places i can put in the search of MFP and will bring up. If not i google it and try to find the best fit. What i find if i dont log when i eat out that it allows me to cheat .0
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If you want to lose weight, you shouldn't be going out to eat on a regular basis unless that's your one big meal of the day. Restaurants put a lot of fat and stuff into their food because it's the easiest way to make it taste good. It should be a rare treat, in which case don't binge, but don't bother logging it. Be in the moment during special occasions and put your phone down, don't obsess over the calories for a night.3
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I lost all of my weight eating out on a regular basis. You can find the nutrition information for most chain restaurants online and many have them listed on the menu. For non-chain restaurants I just use the information for a similar dish from a similar chain.1
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I consider restaurants my "rest day" dinner0
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tinkerbellang83 wrote: »
True...sorry about that. You'll hear this again and again on MFP. Everyone's fitness, weightloss/gain journey is different
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animated341 wrote: »If you want to lose weight, you shouldn't be going out to eat on a regular basis unless that's your one big meal of the day. Restaurants put a lot of fat and stuff into their food because it's the easiest way to make it taste good. It should be a rare treat, in which case don't binge, but don't bother logging it. Be in the moment during special occasions and put your phone down, don't obsess over the calories for a night.
This is the exact opposite of the advice I would give.
I eat out fairly regularly - lunch at a fast casual place like Panera or Chipotle during the work week, fast food sometimes on the weekends when running around with my kids, a family meal at a neighborhood italian or pizza place, and about once a month either a girls night out or date night with my husband, about once a month work trips which involve some bigger meals than normal as well.
I always log my best guess when I eat out - chain restaurants make that easy, or as others have said, even when a non-chain restaurant you can find a similar item from a chain. I also plan ahead by looking at the menu ahead of time if I'm going somewhere new - I think about what i might order, look it up in the data base to see how much it's going to "cost" me, and then I plan my week around it. I often bank calories for those meals during the week, so I have a little more to "spend" on the weekend. Saving 100-200 calories each weekday leaves me with 500-1000 calories to use on the weekend if I have a special meal or event. I also make sure I exercise the day I'm going to have a bigger meal, to have more calories to play with. Lastly, I prioritize what I really want to eat and don't order/indulge in things that aren't going to satisfy me as much - if I'm going to somewhere with a great dessert menu - I might just get an appetizer and/or a salad for dinner and focus on dessert. If I'm going to a steak place, I will forgo the appetizer, and the dessert, so that I can have steak and nice glass or two of wine. I often skip the bread at restaurants where it's just an average every day loaf.
I also keep in mind that a heavier restaurant meal may cause short term water retention and so I don't sweat it if the scale goes up a bit the next day.
But i always log everything - this is when I eat in restaurants, at Thanksgiving, Christmas, etc. Having a reasonable estimate of my intake helps me keep perspective and not freak out when the scale surprises me - most of the time I find when I log that my plan has helped keep my weekly calories in check.
Oh and I lost all the weight I wanted to lose (>30 lbs) and am currently in maintenance by still going out to eat on a regular basis...5 -
tinkerbellang83 wrote: »
True...sorry about that. You'll hear this again and again on MFP. Everyone's fitness, weightloss/gain journey is different
No apology needed, I still eat out, I just have to plan it into my week and having a rest day from logging is just not happening unless I am on a diet break (usually same as @WinoGelato mentions above)0
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