Food Scale
ZNnerissa
Posts: 26 Member
I have never used a food scale. From what I have read it seems like a really great tool for accuracy. What are your recommendations for purchasing a food scale? I want to get a good value for my money but want to invest in something that will last.
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Replies
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You have already put too much thought into this. Stop by Target or go on Amazon and glance at the reviews to make sure that it doesn't die after a week. There just isn't much difference in scales from brand to brand.4
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Personally, a food scale needs at least these functions for me:
- tare function
- can weigh up to 10kg/20lbs, since I need to weigh my finished dishes (in the pot/dish they were cooked in)5 -
https://www.amazon.com/Ozeri-ZK14-S-Digital-Multifunction-Kitchen/dp/B004164SRA/ref=sr_1_5_mod_primary_new?dchild=1&keywords=ozeri+food+scale&qid=1615571840&sbo=RZvfv//HxDF+O5021pAnSA==&sr=8-5
I bought this one in 2016 and it's still going strong with heavy daily use. I believe I've changed the battery once. If the one I have dies I'll probably just get another one just like it.1 -
I've had a lot of scales and for my money this one is the best at $18.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01C465Y8U/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1
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I have an Escali kitchen scale and it works great for what I need.
Pros:
* Lightweight, easy to move around and store in my tiny kitchen
* Comes in many colors (I got silver)
* Inexpensive (it was like $30 when I got it)
* Detects 1g increments with a quick read time
* Measures g, kg, oz, and lbs:oz
* Long timeout - the screen stays on for like 4 minutes, so it doesn't time out while I'm still chopping veggies or whatever
* Will tare and go negative (i.e., if I weigh out 100g of food into a bowl, tare, and scoop out 50g to divide it evenly between two bowls, it will read -50g)
* Big display, easy to read
* Takes AA batteries
Cons:
* ~11lb/~6kg weight limit - my pots and pans are heavy, so I can't just weigh my finished dishes right in their cooking vessels most of the time
* Wide bowls/plates occasionally obscure the display
* Relatively small surface area, the scale plate is about the size of a CD - some of my bowls are a little unstable on the surface, although I have definitely seen worse examples
* Does not measure in tenths of a pound, only pounds and ounces; I usually work in grams for this reason, but sometimes I need to convert and it's more math than I want to do in a day
So yeah, it's not 100% perfect but the pros definitely outweigh the cons.2 -
We've had our OXO food scale for years...like I don't even know how many because my wife has used it for baking long before we ever started weighing out servings of things. I want to say it was $10 or $15 or something.1
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INEVIFIT Digital Kitchen Scale, Highly Accurate Multifunction Food Scale 13 lbs 6kgs Max, Clean Modern Black with Premium Stainless Steel Finish. Includes Batteries
Brand: INEVIFIT
4.8 out of 5 stars 7,453 ratings | 111 answered questions
Amazon's
Choice
for Digital Kitchen Scales by INEVIFIT
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I agree...the tare function has been invaluable. I didn't even know about it when I bought my above scale but fortunately it has it. Love the scale I listed above.
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i have a digital one from costco. Its a large surface that fits pots, pans, big mixing bowls etc. Tare button is a must. Its a taylor brand. As long as you get a digital one with a tare feature you will be set
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I've had a couple (one was really old when I started using it for weight loss, and it failed, but NBD given age). Others have mentioned the useful features you'd want.
One thing I didn't see mentioned explicitly: Think about whether battery type matters to you. My first one took some obscure watch-type battery, so if it gave out, that usually required a trip to the store. The current one uses AA batteries, which I almost always have around for other things. They don't fail often, but it's so much handier that replacements are right here and ready to go.
Some people have mentioned that there are USB-chargeable ones now, too.1 -
It doesn't really matter which one you chose. Battery type might be a consideration (there's a big brand selling scales here that need batteries that are not really available!). A tar function and weighing in grams. That's all.
What pretty much all scales have in common is that they need an even, solid surface (clean the feet every now and then), and based on observations, having a phone right next to the scale with mess with it for some reason.0 -
its not a car. just a food scale. not too much thought is needed.
for me, an easy to read display when a plate is on it, measure in grams and ounces/pounds, tare. Also easy to clean
read reviews to make sure it doesn't die quickly.
that's about it.0 -
This has been really helpful. I had not thought of battery type as well as the tare feature. Weight limit too. Off to Amazon.3
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Agreed. Tare function essential. Wished I’d bought one that could cope with heavier weights though .... pots & pans0
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Did anyone mention negative weights being important? It is.1
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And one that can cope with hot pans... mine can't...2
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I ve heard that weight watchers brand is good digital scale1
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I just ordered this one:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0811RX62R/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Pretty excited...this will help with homemade meals a lot!0
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