Measuring food
JoshuaL86
Posts: 403 Member
Hey everyone! Tonight I had some penne pasta for dinner, and as I was weighing it I encountered a slight problem. I used a measuring cup and measured out two cups of pasta. I then weighed the pasta on my food scale, and it said the pasta was on 10 oz! It should have been 16. The pasta was cooked at the time ( I know it's better to weigh it dry, but I forgot to lol ). Which would be more accurate? The measuring cup or the scale?
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Replies
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I always use the scale. I can shove an awful lot of cheese in 1/4 cup so I learned my lesson that it is 28grams for a serving of that.
I only use the cups for liquid measures. All solids go on the scale.0 -
The scales dont lie.0
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Personally I would say the measuring cups!! You watch exactly how big they measure and if you see with your own eyes how much you're putting in them, then to me, that would be better. A scale can be off by a little or alot, whether it is digital or not. Just my opinion!!0
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After it's cooked a serving of pasta is 1 cup.0
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Keep in mind that some pasta is more dense when stacked atop of itself than other pasta. For example, a cup of spaghetti has less air between noodles than a cup of penne would. As another example, if you cut down some trees and stack the logs on top of eachother, it'll weigh a lot. However, if you hollow out those logs, it'll weigh less and still take up the same amount of space. Penne is kinda shaped like a hollowed out log, in that sense.
When it comes to pasta, accurate measurements are done via scale, not by measuring cups. Measuring cups were designed for liquids and powders.0 -
scale....in the UK we don't use the cups, and my son is a professional chef and he says that if its important to have your ingredients accurate then you have to weigh them.0
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the scales without a doubt. A cup is too subjective in my opinion. I can shove more food in a cup but the scales may only be off by a gram or two.0
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The scale. After a while, you'll learn to eyeball it.0
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Digital food scale every time for me0
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Use a digital scale. They are designed for weight while measuring cups are designed for volume and are less accurate.0
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Use the scale for weighing meats,poultry,seafood, fruits and vegetables. Use measuring cup for liquids, vegs, and some fruit. But if you really want to lose weight. Stay away from the wasted carbs that are in Pasta and Breads. Good luck0
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scale..0
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scale all day everyday....and yea you're right about measuring dry0
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Digital food scale.
Cheap.
Accurate.
Simple to use.
Don't get me started on how *cough* "not entirely smart" it is to rely on something as daft as volume to measure foods like pasta, which have entirely different densities depending on their differing shapes!
Also, weigh pasta dry. How heavy it is when it's cooked depends on how much you cook it - pasta absorbs more water the longer you cook it, pasta cooked al dente pasta will have more calories per gram (and per given volume), than pasta that's boiled until it's all flobbledy dobbledy, but the calories in an amount of pasta weighed raw will remain constant however much you cook it.0 -
Weight is more accurate. Cups are the devil's measure.0
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After it's cooked a serving of pasta is 1 cup.
^^this^^0 -
After it's cooked a serving of pasta is 1 cup.
^^this^^
A statement which is as accurate and helpful as the idea of measuring irregularly shaped solids in terms of volume! :bigsmile:
EDITED TO ADD: You may as well measure pasta by length!0 -
I personally prefer the scale and use whatever the package says a serving is in grams/ounces. That way i know im as close as possible to what the Calories are.
To me, There's too much variation in measuring solids by anything but weight. I always wonder how tightly you're supposed to pack 1 cup of something to get what the manufacturers consider a serving. With things like pasta and rice, the Calorie difference can be huge.0 -
Digital food scale, in the UK we don't use cups, and our cups are different sizes :P
Also I weight the pasta dry0 -
Hey everyone! Tonight I had some penne pasta for dinner, and as I was weighing it I encountered a slight problem. I used a measuring cup and measured out two cups of pasta. I then weighed the pasta on my food scale, and it said the pasta was on 10 oz! It should have been 16. The pasta was cooked at the time ( I know it's better to weigh it dry, but I forgot to lol ). Which would be more accurate? The measuring cup or the scale?
The scales are more accurate.0 -
Personally I would say the measuring cups!! You watch exactly how big they measure and if you see with your own eyes how much you're putting in them, then to me, that would be better. A scale can be off by a little or alot, whether it is digital or not. Just my opinion!!
The cup can be even further off.
Somebody posted a video from YouTube regarding foods that are not measured and how far out cups can be, it was astonishing and the end results were the difference between a few hundred calories in some cases.
Digital scales are rarely off, at all.0 -
After it's cooked a serving of pasta is 1 cup.
How much is a serving though, in weight I mean. You see, the difference in calories can be a lot if it is not measured accurately.0 -
Ordinarily I'd say scale every time, but US cooking culture is so tightly bound to the use of volume measures (eg cups) for weight, that I might use that if I was there.
Of course, if you actually want to find out truly how much you're eating, use the scale.0
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