500k of cake vs 500k of pecans
pinacolada7
Posts: 9 Member
Hellooo!!! Maybe this question is very basic but I would love if some could explain me. If I am counting calories to loose weight it is the same eating 500 calories in cake than in 500 calories of pecans.
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Best Answers
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Yes and no. It's the same for weight loss, but 500 calories of a meal high in protein and fiber is going to leave you far more satiated than 500 calories of cake. If you're in a deficit, that helps. Also, a more balanced meal helps with meeting your protein goals if you have a high target. If you have the cake instead, you need to get all your protein in with a smaller calorie balance for the rest of the day.3
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One part of you question is about thermodynamics and heat, the other is about eating food, which requires a metabolic and physiological answer that then can question the differences between cake and pecans, which are many. In the strictest sense a calorie is a measurement of heat, period.2
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It would really be best to eat 500 calories of fruit/vegetables/healthy fats and protein in a reasonable macro balance. There's room for cake AND pecans, but 500 calories of either of them isn't a balanced plan.
If those were my only two choices and calories were the goal then generally I'd pick the whole food, in this case pecans, as the better nutritional choice. Pecans are going to get most of their calories from fat and for the cake it's mostly carbs.
For weight management, it's still about calories.
Other than that, what neanderthin said above.2 -
If you were locked in a lab and had no choice of food, you'd lose weight no problem on 100%* cake given to you in an amount that would create a calorie deficit. In reality though, out here in the real world where we are surrounded by food choices, you would not feel satiated on the cake diet, which would make it difficult if not impossible to maintain a calorie deficit.
In other words - the cake diet would not fill you up, you'd be hungry, and eat more, go over your calorie budget, and not lose weight.
* I realize your example used 500 calories of cake; I am making it 100% cake for a cleaner illustration.2 -
As mentioned above, LOTS of complications. Let's assume that the 500 calories are what are actually available to your body (complication 1) and that they are equally accurately measured (complication 2). The most important complications I tend to consider when making that kind of choice are a) Which better supports my nutritional goals in context of the other things I'm eating today? b) Which better supports my thought patterns about food and myself? c) Are there other options that support a and b better than what I'm considering?
Cake may not be the most nutritious or balanced option, but it may be what I mentally need to not feed a narrative of deprivation that will have me in a binge/restrict cycle or beating myself up for even considering such an "unhealthy" option. Sometimes cake is the answer.
Walnuts may not be the most nutritious or balance option, but it may be the more satiating of the two options and what I really need is to not be hangry so that I can give myself more options to choose from for the rest of the day.
By considering complication c, I may open up other options that are neither cake or walnuts (or cake WITH walnuts, yum!) that get me out of black and white thinking about food.
Personally, I'm loving the concept of "eat what you want, add what you need". I wanted pancakes this morning. I chose a high protein option, but it was still not as high in protein as I would like for my overall satiety and protein goal, so I added some peanut/chocolate protein powder mixed with water as a "syrup". I also wanted a bit more fiber and nutrients and sweetness, so I added raspberries. It satisfied the mental craving for pancakes, but also supported my calorie and nutrient goals with a little thought and adjustment.5
Answers
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Yes. And no.
It's complicated.0 -
500 calories is 500 calories. It comes up to CHOICE of how you want to fill it.
I'm one who doesn't avoid anything I feel like eating. But I do account for all the calories I take in. If I end up eating 500 calories of candy, then I make sure not of exceed what I'm alotted for the day.
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It doesn’t matter however the cake will leave you hungry sooner but without getting into the intricacies of why the nuts are better, there would be no difference Fatloss wise.0
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Ditch 'em both. Eat 500 calories of celery. Everyone knows celery is a negative calorie food. If you're still hungry, eat another truckload of celery. You'll lose twice as much.
(Where's that bull---- button when you need it?)4 -
Corina1143 wrote: »Ditch 'em both. Eat 500 calories of celery. Everyone knows celery is a negative calorie food. If you're still hungry, eat another truckload of celery. You'll lose twice as much.
(Where's that bull---- button when you need it?)
Washed down with ACV?4 -
For the purpose of weight loss only, 500 calories is 500 calories.
The answer would be different if you were asking about the cake versus the pecans regarding health, situation, or emotional satisfaction.2 -
Sooooo..... all the above answers- yes- however....
500 calories IS 500, that is true but 500 cals of pecans ARE broken down- digested and processed differently by each person, which goes for cake too.
People who are more efficient at burning fat for example and sensitive to sugar would be better off with pecans ( not a huge difference once but over time) . Processed ( cake) food is more easily absorbed, the fiber in pecans will also have a small advantage with satiation and health. The calories can be slightly less absorbed.
BUT if you have a very hard time with fats, burn carbs easier and are eating a cake that is not as high fat as nuts ( cake is processed sugar and fat) then its plausible cake would not be as bad...( relatively). but that is less likely since pecans are a whole food with fiber, protein and GOOD FATS, cake probably has trans fat or unfavorable saturated from crisco PLUS SUGAR.
* from my experience, over time it matters more- when I switched food choices to WFPB and got rid of processed foods regardless of calories I lost more weight- gradually over time.
Bottom line, it's up to you.
You could look at a keto pecan pie instead.... 🥧 😋 😂0 -
Weird question. In 500 calories of what look like reasonable MFP database entries:
Data Item: Cake, Pecans
Weight: 4.535 oz, 2.59 oz
Carbs: 67.9 g, 10.4 g
Fat: 25.8 g, 51.8 g
Sat Fat: 7.6 g, 5.2 g
Mono Fat: 9.4 g, ?
Poly Fat: 5.9 g, ?
Protein: 4.5 g, 7.8 g
Fiber: 2.8 g, 7.8 g
Sugar: 51.4 g, 2.6 g
Calcium: 3.9%, -
Iron: 21.7%, -
Potassium: 347.1 mg, 271.9 mg
Context matters, though. What else are you eating?
For me: I'd get more cake by weight, but yeah, probably less filling. Not sure, though: I don't find nuts very filling.
Protein, neither one makes a big enough contribution to my goal for those calories, and the 3.3g extra in the pecans is hard to get excited about, especially since it's not EAA complete/balanced.
Fiber difference may be meaningful to some, but I'm usually waaay over 25g daily so I can't get excited about 5g of that, either.
The entry I picked for pecans doesn't show fats other than saturated, but there's only 5.2 g there to be split between mono/poly, so looks like more so called "healthy fats" in the cake. Sat fat difference of 2.4g (more in the cake), also a "so what" to me.
That's a lot of sugar in the cake, but still only around 10% of my TDEE. I don't count carbs at all, so don't care about those, even though it's a big difference.
Obviously, cakes are more variable than pecans, and that's a random cake. But if I actually care about how one food stacks up against another, I'd compare them. Otherwise, I'm just using preconceptions and prejudices.
For fat gain/loss, calories are calories, mostly - unless the food choice affects energy level or satiation. But there's the idea (with some evidence behind it) that the calories in nuts are not as available, so we might actually absorb less from those than from the cake. And the nuts are going to have a little higher TEF, probably, besides (small absolute number, though).
Preferences-wise, I'd rather not eat 500 calories worth of either one. Don't love cake, pecans aren't my favorite nut. Ugh.
If it's someone's birthday (not mine), I might eat the cake. I don't know why I'd eat the pecans. In fruitcake, maybe?
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