Estimating Thai take out
Raegold
Posts: 191 Member
Any tips with this? I'm thinking of ordering drunken noodles for my higher calorie day today, and I feel like the options when you search are all over the place. I'm thinking if I ordered something more simple like a Thai basil stir fry, I could estimate it better based on the protein and veggies. Any tips??? I love thai food but i suspect a lot of dishes have more calories than people think bc of either the coconut milk or noodles (like pad thai, curries, etc).
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The most difficult thing to estimate with Thai or anything stir-fried is how much oil they use in the pan. I'd imagine this varies a lot from restaurant to restaurant, and is the real calorie bomb.
The best you can do is go with a middle-of-the-road estimate. If I'm trying to save a few calories, I'll get something that comes with rice instead of noodles, and just use a small portion of the rice.
I love Thai food, too, especially noodle dishes, but I'd imagine those noodles absorb a lot of the oil. I still order them when I either have a lot of calories to spare, or just decide I'm going to have a treat that day. If it's every once in a while, I don't worry about it too much.2 -
We have no good Thai here near me in Tucson (sorry but true). I love Thai. I have made both of what you are talking about and you'd have to put the individual components together. When I first started using MFP, the one thing that struck me was the "optimism" of calorie estimates. Most were just SO low, IMHO.
The amount of oil means everything. Usually, for curries, they are 50 percent or more of coconut milk, full fat.
Thai basil stir fry isn't bad except the oil (well, and all the white rice). I found that nutrition online was usually more accurate than MFP listed choices.2 -
MikePfirrman wrote: »We have no good Thai here near me in Tucson (sorry but true). I love Thai. I have made both of what you are talking about and you'd have to put the individual components together. When I first started using MFP, the one thing that struck me was the "optimism" of calorie estimates. Most were just SO low, IMHO.
The amount of oil means everything. Usually, for curries, they are 50 percent or more of coconut milk, full fat.
Thai basil stir fry isn't bad except the oil (well, and all the white rice). I found that nutrition online was usually more accurate than MFP listed choices.
That was one thing I didn't like about Tucson -- every Thai place we tried was so lackluster. Even Little Rock had better Thai food.1 -
Asian food is a complete crapshoot. At 9 calories per gram, a chef can put 500 calories in the fried rice and you won't even notice it. (1/4 cup) The noodles and the rice are easy. A cup of cooked rice is 200 calories, the noodles about the same. Soy is zero, shallots are zero, garlic is zero more or less. Its all about the oil.0
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For those types of foods where small non-chain restaurants without any nutrition information dominate (e.g. Thai, Vietnamese, Indian), I usually build a recipe or log the individual ingredients. I will look to recipes that seem equivalent in preparation to what I had for guidance. Coconut milk and oil are very high calorie, so it's a bit of an educated guess and judgement in estimating proportions used, and those can have significant impacts on total calories.0
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janejellyroll wrote: »MikePfirrman wrote: »We have no good Thai here near me in Tucson (sorry but true). I love Thai. I have made both of what you are talking about and you'd have to put the individual components together. When I first started using MFP, the one thing that struck me was the "optimism" of calorie estimates. Most were just SO low, IMHO.
The amount of oil means everything. Usually, for curries, they are 50 percent or more of coconut milk, full fat.
Thai basil stir fry isn't bad except the oil (well, and all the white rice). I found that nutrition online was usually more accurate than MFP listed choices.
That was one thing I didn't like about Tucson -- every Thai place we tried was so lackluster. Even Little Rock had better Thai food.
LOL, but there is Lee Lee's! Great oriental supermarket with everything necessary. They carry Thai, Korean, Chinese and even Cuban a few other ethnic specialties. Love the place. There's one decent Thai place but it's in Vail, other side of town from me. Not awesome but acceptable. Just no patio dining and right now we won't eat inside.0 -
use the highest number you found1
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Nah, just don't over think it. Log it as being over your deficit, enjoy yourself, then start fresh tomorrow. You probably dont want to know.0
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I had drunken noodles last night, called it 620 calories and moved on but did not change my diet at all otherwise.0
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Thanks everyone!! I ended up logging the ingredients (chicken, veggies, noodles, etc) I think it ended up being 800-900 calories. Probably best to not overthink it and move on!!2
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