Do you track salad etc


Do I need to track EVERYTHING?
Salads and veg etc
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Replies

  • neugebauer52
    neugebauer52 Posts: 1,120 Member
    Yes, everything: food, beverages, solids, liquids, shakes.
  • sardelsa
    sardelsa Posts: 9,812 Member
    For the most accuracy, yes. Different people will succeed at different levels of logging from everything to not at all.
  • lin_be
    lin_be Posts: 393 Member
    Yes, salads and veggies can really add up.
  • thanos5
    thanos5 Posts: 513 Member
    i log everything but water and saliva.
  • mbaker566
    mbaker566 Posts: 11,233 Member
    yes, salad, salad dress, sour cream, oils
  • springlering62
    springlering62 Posts: 8,379 Member
    thanos5 wrote: »
    mbaker566 wrote: »
    sour cream

    i thought sour cream didn't have calories

    Winner!
  • MikePTY
    MikePTY Posts: 3,814 Member
    Certainly. Particularly if your salad is more than plain lettuce. Some salads can contain things that contain a whole lot of calories. A calorie from a vegetable counts just as much as calories from beef jerky.
  • funjen1972
    funjen1972 Posts: 949 Member
    I don't track lettuce, raw spinach or seasonings, but track other veggies & salad toppings. Sometimes I'll log all the other veggies combined as red peppers, even though it might be a combination of cucumbers, onions, carrots, peppers, etc... Other toppings are logged separate - dressing, fruit, proteins, grains, etc....
  • mbaker566
    mbaker566 Posts: 11,233 Member
    thanos5 wrote: »
    mbaker566 wrote: »
    sour cream

    i thought sour cream didn't have calories

    only if it's for a birthday or holiday
  • Panini911
    Panini911 Posts: 2,325 Member
    edited March 2019
    Honestly I log as accurately as I need to to hit my goals.

    at first i was guestimating veggies and some foods. not entering gum. using cooked chicken weight. as i got closer to goal in order to keep my rate of loss going i had to start logging all these things (and moving to logging chicken/meat by raw weight VS cooked).

    i find weighing vegetables very very quick and easy though.

    ETA: not sure if by salad you mean only the VEGETABLES in the salad, but a full salad can be super high calorie depending on dressing and what is added (nuts? protein? seed? cheese? it adds up SUPER fast)
  • TeaBea
    TeaBea Posts: 14,517 Member
    There aren't really any "free" foods, even though a popular diet subscription service would have you believe otherwise. That service lowers your daily calorie start value; it's a game to encourage you to eat more veggies.
  • debrakgoogins
    debrakgoogins Posts: 2,033 Member
    funjen1972 wrote: »
    I don't track lettuce, raw spinach or seasonings, but track other veggies & salad toppings. Sometimes I'll log all the other veggies combined as red peppers, even though it might be a combination of cucumbers, onions, carrots, peppers, etc... Other toppings are logged separate - dressing, fruit, proteins, grains, etc....
    I'm glad this works for you but for a new person who is trying to understand calorie counting, it's not a good way to get started. Depending on how often they eat salads and what they are putting on the salad, it would be easy to over or underestimate the calories being consumed.
  • lemurcat2
    lemurcat2 Posts: 7,885 Member
    edited March 2019
    If I'm logging (I don't always), the point is to know what I'm eating, so I log everything (I currently log at Cron and without my veg my nutrient amounts would be way off). I am more likely to estimate amounts of low cal veg if for some reason that happens to be easier than weighing. If it's really a very small amount of something, I might be lazy about logging it or make another veg a bit bigger to account for it.
  • zeejane03
    zeejane03 Posts: 993 Member
    edited March 2019
    I just ate a 500 calorie salad, (that I made at home), so yes it's important, especially when you're just starting out to track everything :) After you transition into maintenance and have been at it a while you may be able to 'eyeball' things a bit, but that's much further along into the process.
  • texasredreb
    texasredreb Posts: 541 Member
    If you consume it; log it!
  • funjen1972
    funjen1972 Posts: 949 Member
    funjen1972 wrote: »
    I don't track lettuce, raw spinach or seasonings, but track other veggies & salad toppings. Sometimes I'll log all the other veggies combined as red peppers, even though it might be a combination of cucumbers, onions, carrots, peppers, etc... Other toppings are logged separate - dressing, fruit, proteins, grains, etc....
    I'm glad this works for you but for a new person who is trying to understand calorie counting, it's not a good way to get started. Depending on how often they eat salads and what they are putting on the salad, it would be easy to over or underestimate the calories being consumed.

    You're right. When I first started I counted EVERYTHING. Now, with experience, I tailored it to meet my needs. I should have stated that in the original post. Thanks for politely keeping me in check 😁
  • zeejane03
    zeejane03 Posts: 993 Member
    edited March 2019
    I do because I eat giant salads and my spinach and romaine can sometimes add up to a lot. Todays spinach, romaine, green onions, radishes and cucumber which are usually very low calorie amounts intake adds up to over 50 calories so it can make a difference. I mean if your talking one leaf of iceberg on your sandwich that won't make a difference but everything else yes, I do weigh and log.

    I think people have very different ideas of what a salad is and many times think it's those cute little side salads that come with meals at restaurants. When I make a salad it's game on :D My lunch salad today had 4 cups of leafy greens, a cup of cherry tomatoes, 6 sweet peppers, 1/2 of an onion, a head of broccoli, green and black olives, sunflower seeds, a serving of pinto beans, mild pepper rings, feta cheese, hot sauce and then low calorie Catalina dressing. Now that's a salad lol.
  • debrakgoogins
    debrakgoogins Posts: 2,033 Member
    funjen1972 wrote: »
    You're right. When I first started I counted EVERYTHING. Now, with experience, I tailored it to meet my needs. I should have stated that in the original post. Thanks for politely keeping me in check 😁

    The great thing about forums is that there are so many people here with years of experience doing this. It's easy to forget how we all started out. Beside, I figured someone else had flogged you enough. Twice would have just been cruel. :D
  • MmeZeeZee
    MmeZeeZee Posts: 18 Member
    edited March 2019
    Yes. I get that it's "only" 100 or so calories over the whole day for just lettuce, but then again a 30 minute medium workout is "only" 120 calories and I definitely am tracking the workouts. :smiley:
  • Danp
    Danp Posts: 1,561 Member
    My answer would be to ask you the very same question

    Do you need to log everything? That's a question only you can answer.

    In the end the goal is to manage your weight and how diligently and vigilantly you need to track your food in take to achieve this will differ from person to person. The aim is to do enough to get the result you're looking.

    I, for example, find that I am able to successfully achieve my goal (to reduce my weight) by logging consistently if not necessarily as rigorously as others. I usually don't bother counting condiments or if I grab a couple of lollies out of the bowl at work I'll not always bother to log them. Right now logging my food loosely is enough for me to be successful so any additional time and effort would be wasted or at the very least provide diminishing returns.

    Some people on the other hand find that they need to be far more strict with their logging so will have to log everything meticulously.

    So I suppose that the real answer to this question is something you'll need to discover for yourself. Log to a certain standard, a standard that you can easily stick to long term and see if it works. If you're getting results then you're level of logging is fine and if not you know that you'll need to pay more attention and log more strictly.

    Also bear in mind that your approach to logging will change over time. Mine definitely has. While I am still pretty relaxed with my logging I am more strict that I used to be and fully expect to have to tighten up my logging more and more as I lose weight and the margins I'm working with get smaller.

    G'luck