Insightful conversation about my diary?

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Replies

  • Hollis100
    Hollis100 Posts: 1,408 Member
    A food scale hasn't been necessary for me to lose weight, but it obviously helps other people. I once ordered a scale and it's still in the box.

    The biggest tool that helps me is not a measuring cup, spoon, or a scale. It's meal planning and prep.

    I didn't get fat because I didn't measure an extra tablespoon of salad dressing or ketchup. I got fat because at work I would grab a bag of potato chips (750 calories, according to the label) and a candy bar (250 calories, same info) = a whopping 1000 calories of food with little nutrition.

    Meal prep means I take a banana and some measured almonds for a snack for a fraction of the calories and better nutrition. I may not know exactly how many calories are in my banana, but it's definitely not 1000.
  • sroberts1522
    sroberts1522 Posts: 14 Member
    Hollis100 wrote: »
    A food scale hasn't been necessary for me to lose weight, but it obviously helps other people. I once ordered a scale and it's still in the box.

    The biggest tool that helps me is not a measuring cup, spoon, or a scale. It's meal planning and prep.

    I didn't get fat because I didn't measure an extra tablespoon of salad dressing or ketchup. I got fat because at work I would grab a bag of potato chips (750 calories, according to the label) and a candy bar (250 calories, same info) = a whopping 1000 calories of food with little nutrition.

    Meal prep means I take a banana and some measured almonds for a snack for a fraction of the calories and better nutrition. I may not know exactly how many calories are in my banana, but it's definitely not 1000.

    Thank you! My work makes it very easy to eat healthy ( both my bosses are plant based vegans). I care less about measuring healthy wholesome foods (fruits and veggies) and more about cheese and carb snacks and nuts... I just want this to be sustainable and feel natural instead of starting to obsess about scales again.
  • Hannahwalksfar
    Hannahwalksfar Posts: 572 Member
    Different strokes for different folks.
  • Hollis100
    Hollis100 Posts: 1,408 Member
    edited September 2019
    Hollis100 wrote: »
    A food scale hasn't been necessary for me to lose weight, but it obviously helps other people. I once ordered a scale and it's still in the box.

    The biggest tool that helps me is not a measuring cup, spoon, or a scale. It's meal planning and prep.

    I didn't get fat because I didn't measure an extra tablespoon of salad dressing or ketchup. I got fat because at work I would grab a bag of potato chips (750 calories, according to the label) and a candy bar (250 calories, same info) = a whopping 1000 calories of food with little nutrition.

    Meal prep means I take a banana and some measured almonds for a snack for a fraction of the calories and better nutrition. I may not know exactly how many calories are in my banana, but it's definitely not 1000.

    Thank you! My work makes it very easy to eat healthy ( both my bosses are plant based vegans). I care less about measuring healthy wholesome foods (fruits and veggies) and more about cheese and carb snacks and nuts... I just want this to be sustainable and feel natural instead of starting to obsess about scales again.

    I feel much the same -- I don't worry about wholesome foods (but do log everything).

    I'm not going to eat five apples, but I might eat two unplanned candies etc. with extra hundreds/thousands of calories if I don't pack my own snacks.

    Lucky you to work with bosses like that. It sounds like you're on the right track. Good luck!
  • lemurcat2
    lemurcat2 Posts: 7,885 Member
    edited September 2019
    So looking at the diary, I agree with the poster who said logging could be tighened up. There are entries such as "mongolian beef" that don't specify brands, and others, like the smoked salmon, that look a lot lower than the smoked salmon I am familiar with. Also, stuff like a tsp of mayo you need to be really careful with, as it's common for people to use heaping tsps and get quite a bit more. Your zucchini entry looks like an untrustworthy entry in that it's a brand and the word is misspelled -- I think it's best to use the USDA entries for whole foods, although granted with something like zucchini it's unlikely to make a big difference if it's a little off. If you used any butter or oil to cook the zucchini, make sure that gets logged too.

    I get not wanting to weigh. I didn't weigh initially and lost fine, although I did decide to try weighing and found it to be more enjoyable than trying to estimate, but you do need to be really careful about the database entries chosen and check against your package information (it does seem like most of what you are eating is from packages, which will make that easy). Otherwise, if you pick a method and are consistent, you can decide in a couple of weeks or a month if you are happy with your rate of loss.

    How active are you? Did MFP give you the calorie goal?
  • LyndaBSS
    LyndaBSS Posts: 6,964 Member
    mmapags wrote: »
    duskyjewel wrote: »
    Why are my posts so aggressive? They're not, I just don't use soft flowery language. Also:
    Terytha wrote: »
    Ok! I took a quick look and I'm seeing a lot of cups and teaspoons when it comes to sauces and stuff. That will never be accurate

    Statements like that need to be challenged.

    It definitely can be accurate if you're careful. I don't like doctrinaire opinions being touted as fact.

    Rock on keyboard warrior! (Where did that eyeroll emoji go??)

    How on earth does this whole part of this thread help me? I use a scale at home and it can convert to cups and tablespoons. I got so good at the math when I was doing this before, that I could easily convert grams and ounces just as quick. Watching you guys fight over this tiny part of this conversation has been unhelpful.

    Would you mind sharing the name of that scale? I'd love to look into that. Thanks. ☺
  • sroberts1522
    sroberts1522 Posts: 14 Member
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    So looking at the diary, I agree with the poster who said logging could be tighened up. There are entries such as "mongolian beef" that don't specify brands, and others, like the smoked salmon, that look a lot lower than the smoked salmon I am familiar with. Also, stuff like a tsp of mayo you need to be really careful with, as it's common for people to use heaping tsps and get quite a bit more. Your zucchini entry looks like an untrustworthy entry in that it's a brand and the word is misspelled -- I think it's best to use the USDA entries for whole foods, although granted with something like zucchini it's unlikely to make a big difference if it's a little off. If you used any butter or oil to cook the zucchini, make sure that gets logged too.

    I get not wanting to weigh. I didn't weigh initially and lost fine, although I did decide to try weighing and found it to be more enjoyable than trying to estimate, but you do need to be really careful about the database entries chosen and check against your package information (it does seem like most of what you are eating is from packages, which will make that easy). Otherwise, if you pick a method and are consistent, you can decide in a couple of weeks or a month if you are happy with your rate of loss.

    I know the Mongolian beef is a personal recipe. It’s broccoli, petite sirloin steak, soy sauce, onions and red pepper. Mayo is gross and the flat out wraps are dry so I used my scale and used LESS then a serving that time but still marked it a tsp. The smoked salmon is something I can get at work and it’s served cold, I requested the ounce size from the cook who is amazing and provides me info on what he makes.
    My work provides discounts for healthy foods purchased in our restaurant. Salad and broth based soups are staples. Lean proteins, bananas and whole grains in our break room. For the zucchini, I bake it, I use Pam or non stick spray and salt and pepper... it’s easy and delicious.
  • lemurcat2
    lemurcat2 Posts: 7,885 Member
    I know the Mongolian beef is a personal recipe. It’s broccoli, petite sirloin steak, soy sauce, onions and red pepper. Mayo is gross and the flat out wraps are dry so I used my scale and used LESS then a serving that time but still marked it a tsp. The smoked salmon is something I can get at work and it’s served cold, I requested the ounce size from the cook who is amazing and provides me info on what he makes.
    My work provides discounts for healthy foods purchased in our restaurant. Salad and broth based soups are staples. Lean proteins, bananas and whole grains in our break room. For the zucchini, I bake it, I use Pam or non stick spray and salt and pepper... it’s easy and delicious.

    If you cook something at home, it's important to log the ingredients separately or create your own recipe rather than relying on some random entry in the database, or you will not get accurate numbers.

    If mayo is gross (I mostly agree), why did you use it? There is no set serving size for anything unless you are talking about on a package or container.

    The problem I was talking about are the entries chosen. The amounts are likely to be a bit off since you seem to be estimating, but that's fine so long as you are consistent and adjust calories if your results aren't what you want. The thing to be careful about is using either the brand of the item you are using and checking the package information OR finding the USDA entries for whole foods and using those.

    Depending on how much Pam you use, there are going to be some calories. I typically logged a small amount when I used a spray, but if you don't want to, that's again fine so long as you are consistent and adjust.

    It seems like you are eating lots of foods that others make/restaurant items without calories listed. If so, just be aware that there's going to be a built-in error, so I'd pick your calorie goal more by results than assume you are absolutely eating the amount of calories MFP says. In other words, if you get an average of 1500/week and only lose 1 lb/week (which is fine), it could be that you are really eating more like 1750/week. So you could drop cals maybe 250 or something like that.

    But if you are happy with how things are going, no need to change it up. You can come back and ask for help if you stall.
  • lemurcat2
    lemurcat2 Posts: 7,885 Member
    LyndaBSS wrote: »
    mmapags wrote: »
    duskyjewel wrote: »
    Why are my posts so aggressive? They're not, I just don't use soft flowery language. Also:
    Terytha wrote: »
    Ok! I took a quick look and I'm seeing a lot of cups and teaspoons when it comes to sauces and stuff. That will never be accurate

    Statements like that need to be challenged.

    It definitely can be accurate if you're careful. I don't like doctrinaire opinions being touted as fact.

    Rock on keyboard warrior! (Where did that eyeroll emoji go??)

    How on earth does this whole part of this thread help me? I use a scale at home and it can convert to cups and tablespoons. I got so good at the math when I was doing this before, that I could easily convert grams and ounces just as quick. Watching you guys fight over this tiny part of this conversation has been unhelpful.

    Would you mind sharing the name of that scale? I'd love to look into that. Thanks. ☺

    I'd be curious too, although I don't understand why this would be desirable. A certain number of grams is never going to be convertible into an accurate cup or tbsp amount because it depends on what's being measured (scales that convert to cups or liters are doing it for water weight, typically). Plus it adds a step and all the best entries (USDA) have grams as one of their many options.
  • LyndaBSS
    LyndaBSS Posts: 6,964 Member
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    LyndaBSS wrote: »
    mmapags wrote: »
    duskyjewel wrote: »
    Why are my posts so aggressive? They're not, I just don't use soft flowery language. Also:
    Terytha wrote: »
    Ok! I took a quick look and I'm seeing a lot of cups and teaspoons when it comes to sauces and stuff. That will never be accurate

    Statements like that need to be challenged.

    It definitely can be accurate if you're careful. I don't like doctrinaire opinions being touted as fact.

    Rock on keyboard warrior! (Where did that eyeroll emoji go??)

    How on earth does this whole part of this thread help me? I use a scale at home and it can convert to cups and tablespoons. I got so good at the math when I was doing this before, that I could easily convert grams and ounces just as quick. Watching you guys fight over this tiny part of this conversation has been unhelpful.

    Would you mind sharing the name of that scale? I'd love to look into that. Thanks. ☺

    I'd be curious too, although I don't understand why this would be desirable. A certain number of grams is never going to be convertible into an accurate cup or tbsp amount because it depends on what's being measured (scales that convert to cups or liters are doing it for water weight, typically). Plus it adds a step and all the best entries (USDA) have grams as one of their many options.

    I just want to see the description. I'm perfectly happy with the scale I use.
  • lemurcat2
    lemurcat2 Posts: 7,885 Member
    LyndaBSS wrote: »
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    LyndaBSS wrote: »
    mmapags wrote: »
    duskyjewel wrote: »
    Why are my posts so aggressive? They're not, I just don't use soft flowery language. Also:
    Terytha wrote: »
    Ok! I took a quick look and I'm seeing a lot of cups and teaspoons when it comes to sauces and stuff. That will never be accurate

    Statements like that need to be challenged.

    It definitely can be accurate if you're careful. I don't like doctrinaire opinions being touted as fact.

    Rock on keyboard warrior! (Where did that eyeroll emoji go??)

    How on earth does this whole part of this thread help me? I use a scale at home and it can convert to cups and tablespoons. I got so good at the math when I was doing this before, that I could easily convert grams and ounces just as quick. Watching you guys fight over this tiny part of this conversation has been unhelpful.

    Would you mind sharing the name of that scale? I'd love to look into that. Thanks. ☺

    I'd be curious too, although I don't understand why this would be desirable. A certain number of grams is never going to be convertible into an accurate cup or tbsp amount because it depends on what's being measured (scales that convert to cups or liters are doing it for water weight, typically). Plus it adds a step and all the best entries (USDA) have grams as one of their many options.

    I just want to see the description. I'm perfectly happy with the scale I use.

    I figured! ;-)