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rhudgins522
Posts: 2 Member
When eating rice and tracking it is it tracked after it is cooked per cup or before it’s cooked. I have been confused about this for a while now.
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Replies
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Pick an entry that matches the way you're measuring it, i.e., one that says cooked if it's cooked, raw if it's raw. Raw is usually going to be a bit more accurate, because the rice can take up varying amounts of water, and the water doesn't change the calories but may change the weight/volume.
Some good entries are ones that look like this:
Rice - White, long-grain, regular, cooked
Rice, white, short-grain, raw
Rice, brown, medium-grain, raw
Rice - Brown, long-grain, cooked
The default servings are 1 cup, but there are both weight and volume options in the drop-down list. They exist for other types of rice, too.4 -
1 cup raw rice is probably about 600 calories. One cup cooked is about 200. Track it in the state you’re eating it0
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1 cup raw rice is probably about 600 calories. One cup cooked is about 200. Track it in the state you’re eating it
Makes no sense as rice is usually eaten cooked. Like others above have mentioned: weighing dry is more precise as the weight of cooked rice depends on how much water was absorbed. On the other hand, this might make sense if a big pot of rice is on the table and several people help themselves.1 -
1 cup raw rice is probably about 600 calories. One cup cooked is about 200. Track it in the state you’re eating it
Makes no sense as rice is usually eaten cooked. Like others above have mentioned: weighing dry is more precise as the weight of cooked rice depends on how much water was absorbed. On the other hand, this might make sense if a big pot of rice is on the table and several people help themselves.
Yes, but it seems like OP already at the rice at this point, which is why I said to track it in the state that they ate it in.
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Most food packaging nutrition info is in raw/uncooked state. So the info on the rice will be for uncooked unless the packages says cooked.
I just watched a tik tok yesterday that showed the easiest way to add it to fitness pal from uncooked to cooked without a ton of math.
But basically you want to measure everything before cooking.0 -
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1 cup raw rice is probably about 600 calories. One cup cooked is about 200. Track it in the state you’re eating it
Makes no sense as rice is usually eaten cooked. Like others above have mentioned: weighing dry is more precise as the weight of cooked rice depends on how much water was absorbed. On the other hand, this might make sense if a big pot of rice is on the table and several people help themselves.
Yes, but it seems like OP already at the rice at this point, which is why I said to track it in the state that they ate it in.
And now it's cold and mouldy2
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