Any 'from scratch' cookers out there?
ReaT
Posts: 9
The biggest problem I have with tracking my calories is that most of what I eat is totally from scratch. I know that there are health benefits to that alone, by avoiding a lot of the food additives and junk, but it makes it hard to know how many calories I'm taking in.
For example, snack today was 3 squares of homemade graham crackers. Supper was creamed chicken on biscuits, biscuits from scratch, cr of chicken soup from scratch. I have no clue how to figure out where I'm at. How do you do it?
For example, snack today was 3 squares of homemade graham crackers. Supper was creamed chicken on biscuits, biscuits from scratch, cr of chicken soup from scratch. I have no clue how to figure out where I'm at. How do you do it?
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Replies
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I can't help you, but I'm very interested to know how you make homemade graham crackers- Graham crackers are my FAVORITE snack0
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I do this very often...the only way I have found to figure calories on it is to add up all ingredients then divide by serving size and add it to my meals. It is time consuming, but worth it for the quality food. Hope this helps :happy:0
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I try to get as close as I can with the foods listed. Kudos to you for making everything from scratch, so much healthier!!!0
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There is a site that you can put all of your ingredients in and it will calculate the calories per serving, but I don't know the name of it. Hopefully someone will respond who knows the site.
I guess I wasn't much help:ohwell:0 -
I use this to find out calories in foods from scratch.
http://caloriecount.about.com/cc/recipe_analysis.php
Sometimes you have to play with it to get it to recognize each food. But it's the best one I've found so far.
After you do it you can add it to the data base on MFP, saving it so you can use it again.0 -
I do this very often...the only way I have found to figure calories on it is to add up all ingredients then divide by serving size and add it to my meals. It is time consuming, but worth it for the quality food. Hope this helps :happy:
This is what I do... When I bake bread, I enter in everything that I put into it and then save it as a meal. Then I divide. Unfortunately, a lot is guesstimating... but I doubt 100 calories from one day to the next will make a huge difference.0 -
Just one more dedicated scratch cook chiming in but I do the same as many here. Sometimes I use the calorie count recipe analyzer and sometimes I just enter it all here. It's worth it (though I'd have a breakdown if my account lost its data!!!) and cudos for the home cooking. SO important0
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sparkrecipes has a calcuator that I use for all my scratch stuff--although making my won Grham crackers will never happen!!!::laugh:0
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I asked a similar question in the 'feedback' section today (how to enter a recipe to get the nutritional value) and there was a response this evening to "Google nutrition value of a recipe. It will give you a site where you put ingedients in and it calculates for you. I think it's recipe czar?, also nutritiondata.com." I haven't tried it yet but am passing it along. I didn't note the name of the person responding but you can see it in the ''give us feedback' string as a reply to my post.0
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I use this:
http://caloriecount.about.com/cc/recipe_analysis.php?process=resubmit&count=11#
It works for me. Then I save it in my foods.
Good luck!
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Thanks for all the responses! I'll check out some of the different sites and see which is easiest to use.
(Kelyn - the recipe I use is this one: http://everydayfoodstorage.net/2009/04/29/graham-crackers-whole-wheat-food-storage-recipes/food-storage-recipes )0 -
you could go to sparkpeople.com and use their recipe calculator and then log it in MFP.That's what I do.Good luck.0
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I'm also a 'from scratch' cooker - I've found that I log in my recipes under 'save this meal', and then I just pick out from my 'meals' the recipe I used and ate!0
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I think that may involve some time and a calculator. If you have a recipe, you would probably want to figure out the nutrition info for each (like how many calories and carbs are in a cup of flour, a stick of butter...etc) then you would have the total nutrition info for the entire recipes--then divide that by servings.
Does that make sense?0 -
I think that may involve some time and a calculator. If you have a recipe, you would probably want to figure out the nutrition info for each (like how many calories and carbs are in a cup of flour, a stick of butter...etc) then you would have the total nutrition info for the entire recipes--then divide that by servings.
Does that make sense?0 -
I think that may involve some time and a calculator. If you have a recipe, you would probably want to figure out the nutrition info for each (like how many calories and carbs are in a cup of flour, a stick of butter...etc) then you would have the total nutrition info for the entire recipes--then divide that by servings.
Does that make sense?
It makes sense, but for an accountant I am remarkably math averse! I just got done trying the sparkrecipies to enter my lunch and it worked great. I just need to make sure I'm measuring realistic servings and being consistent in the sizes I make things. And actually measuring when I make something instead of thinking 'hmm, I'll just toss some cheese in there'.0 -
yes, I scratch--0
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