How much should I over track my calories?
jameschappell1
Posts: 9 Member
I know it's a good idea to over track the calories that I'm tracking, just to be safe about weather what the label says is actually correct. I'm just wondering how much should I actually over track, I am currently just adding an extra 50 calories onto every meal I eat, is this too much, too little?
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Replies
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What’s actually best is to try to be as accurate as possible, using a food scale. Are you weighing all your foods?14
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WinoGelato wrote: »What’s actually best is to try to be as accurate as possible, using a food scale. Are you weighing all your foods?
I'll weigh the foods that I make my self, I more talking about if I buy something pre made0 -
jameschappell1 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »What’s actually best is to try to be as accurate as possible, using a food scale. Are you weighing all your foods?
I'll weigh the foods that I make my self, I more talking about if I buy something pre made
packets can be up to 20% off... but i figure it all evens itself up over time...11 -
Don't over track.
You want your numbers to be as accurate as you can get them so that you can troubleshoot later if necessary. You don't want to be stuck trying to remember when or if you adjusted and how much.16 -
If packaged food is high calorie density, you can weigh it and compare it to the grams listed on the package. I weigh most things once, to get an idea of how accurate the package serving size is, and then don't bother afterwards. If whatever it is is low calorie density I don't bother weighing.
If what you mean by purchased food is restaurant food or similar, the best thing is to get nutritional information from the seller, and if that's not possible, estimate high, because many restaurants like to use a lot of fats and sweetener. I find that most restaurant food is not filling enough for the calories involved, so it's easier to eat mostly food I prepare myself.6 -
Don't overtrack. If your tracking is not accurate for some reason, statistics tells us that on average you will underestimate by the same amount that you overestimate so it evens out. By overtracking on purpose you will introduce an artificial bias. It will make it more inaccurate, not less.
ETA: the 20% error in packaged food means both 20% under and over.8 -
Don't overtrack. Be accurate.
After eating at/very near your calorie goal for 4-6 weeks, you'll see whether your average weekly loss rate is a sensible moderate one. At that point, if necessary, you adjust your calorie goal up or down as needed to hit a reasonable average weekly loss rate.
Overtracking just introduces pointless error.9 -
Don't overtrack. If your tracking is not accurate for some reason, statistics tells us that on average you will underestimate by the same amount that you overestimate so it evens out. By overtracking on purpose you will introduce an artificial bias. It will make it more inaccurate, not less.
ETA: the 20% error in packaged food means both 20% under and over.
Estimating food is not a random event like flipping a coin. Research actually shows that most people (especially most overweight people) consistently underestimate how many calories they are consuming. Even trained dieticians.6 -
Don't overtrack. If your tracking is not accurate for some reason, statistics tells us that on average you will underestimate by the same amount that you overestimate so it evens out. By overtracking on purpose you will introduce an artificial bias. It will make it more inaccurate, not less.
ETA: the 20% error in packaged food means both 20% under and over.
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TavistockToad wrote: »jameschappell1 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »What’s actually best is to try to be as accurate as possible, using a food scale. Are you weighing all your foods?
I'll weigh the foods that I make my self, I more talking about if I buy something pre made
packets can be up to 20% off... but i figure it all evens itself up over time...
Not in Australia. Very rarely will you find a serving to be less than indicated by the packaging but quite often it will be over1 -
Lillymoo01 wrote: »TavistockToad wrote: »jameschappell1 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »What’s actually best is to try to be as accurate as possible, using a food scale. Are you weighing all your foods?
I'll weigh the foods that I make my self, I more talking about if I buy something pre made
packets can be up to 20% off... but i figure it all evens itself up over time...
Not in Australia. Very rarely will you find a serving to be less than indicated by the packaging but quite often it will be over
you lucky thing!0 -
"I know it's a good idea to over track the calories that I'm tracking,"
Disagree. Sounds like a bad idea and likely to create a random inaccuracy rather than improve it.
"is this too much, too little?"
That you have to ask should tell you that you are guessing rather than estimating!
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I didnt ever deliberately over track - but I did track quite loosely and I did accept that package sizes are what they say they are and didnt weigh them.
This worked for me and my results were what I expected them to be.
Bottom line - go by results
Start by logging everything, aiming for neither over tracking or under tracking
If you are not losing as expected - either tighten up your logging or allow some leeway - either by aiming for less than you should, realising that what you think you track as , say, 1500 calories, is really more like 1700
OR by quick adding say 50 calories to each meal without actually eating anything for that 50.
But only tweak like this after about a month, and only if you need to - so you can see what your results are like with tracking to target first.
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Lillymoo01 wrote: »TavistockToad wrote: »jameschappell1 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »What’s actually best is to try to be as accurate as possible, using a food scale. Are you weighing all your foods?
I'll weigh the foods that I make my self, I more talking about if I buy something pre made
packets can be up to 20% off... but i figure it all evens itself up over time...
Not in Australia. Very rarely will you find a serving to be less than indicated by the packaging but quite often it will be over
For instance a company could label 1 serving size is 100 calories, when in reality it may contain 120 calories, so you may end up consuming more than you think.
I'm not sure what the guidelines are in other countries, but whatever it is it's impossible to track calories with 100% accuracy, we can only do our best estimate with the information we're provided.2 -
The package says 1/2 cup measure dry oatmeal is 150 calories. When I dump it on my scale and weigh the scant 1/2 cup it and times the grams by the calories per gram it always calculates out to over 200. Not weighing is a great way to eat more than you think!5
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I have never understood the idea behind overtracking (never heard that term but I guess it's as good as any.) You're concerned that the numbers provided on labels are wrong so you decide to add another level of wrongness? Just log according to the weight/measurement, wait a month, and then adjust your calories up or down as needed.6
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This is why I follow 1200-1500 calories a day plus I what I burn through exercise. To leave some room for calculation errors like underestimating calories I eat.0
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Lillymoo01 wrote: »TavistockToad wrote: »jameschappell1 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »What’s actually best is to try to be as accurate as possible, using a food scale. Are you weighing all your foods?
I'll weigh the foods that I make my self, I more talking about if I buy something pre made
packets can be up to 20% off... but i figure it all evens itself up over time...
Not in Australia. Very rarely will you find a serving to be less than indicated by the packaging but quite often it will be over
I'm finding that too. No actual statistics to back it, but of all the packages I've weighed over the time I've been here, only once have I had something come in under weight.0 -
As for overtracking, nope, not me. I aim to be as accurate as possible, and expect that there will be some things I can't control for (restaurant food is the main one). I prefer to not be adding in an additional unknown that doesn't have to be there.1
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I will round up to just make math easier, ie: something is 190 calories and I will just call it 200 - always higher, never lower, but that's the only type of rounding I do. I do however do my TDEE at a lower multiplier than I actually think it is and base my goal off of that. I use the light multiplier, even though most weeks I am moderate, and I make my deficit around 500 calories from that. That has helped in the biggest way for me personally. I feel that for the past year that has saved me from assuming I burned more/ could eat more. If one week I ate at that low activity multiplier's maintenance calories or one week I didn't have time to work out as much as I would have liked, the lower TDEE was kind of my safety net to not go way over calorie allotment.
I will get some nay-sayers but I lost 50 pounds in 48 weeks and did not weigh one thing, not one. So there are different strategies for all, but be as honest as possible with your CICO and adjust as fit.0 -
jillstreett wrote: »I will round up to just make math easier, ie: something is 190 calories and I will just call it 200 - always higher, never lower, but that's the only type of rounding I do. I do however do my TDEE at a lower multiplier than I actually think it is and base my goal off of that. I use the light multiplier, even though most weeks I am moderate, and I make my deficit around 500 calories from that. That has helped in the biggest way for me personally. I feel that for the past year that has saved me from assuming I burned more/ could eat more. If one week I ate at that low activity multiplier's maintenance calories or one week I didn't have time to work out as much as I would have liked, the lower TDEE was kind of my safety net to not go way over calorie allotment.
I will get some nay-sayers but I lost 50 pounds in 48 weeks and did not weigh one thing, not one. So there are different strategies for all, but be as honest as possible with your CICO and adjust as fit.
That isnt how I did it - but it does go by the guideline of Go By Results
If your aim was to lose 1lb per week and you lost 50 lb's in 48 weeks - then what you are doing is working and it aint broke so dont fix it.
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