Oatmeal confusion...Help!
StrawberryRainclouds
Posts: 5
My steel cut oats says 1/4 cup DRY is 150 calories and 2 grams of fat.
1/4 cup is so tiny!
So when I cook it in my crock pot with 2 cups of water and nothing else..I just scoop out 1/4 cup and it's still 150 calories..right?
That means a whole cup would be 600 calories! ):
Why must oatmeal have so many calories?!
1/4 cup is so tiny!
So when I cook it in my crock pot with 2 cups of water and nothing else..I just scoop out 1/4 cup and it's still 150 calories..right?
That means a whole cup would be 600 calories! ):
Why must oatmeal have so many calories?!
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Replies
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I do not think that is accurate. Adding water to oatmeal does not increase the calories - it only increases the water content of the oats. The calorie count is for dry oatmeal, since it is more accurate. After it's cooked (and expanded in volume), it's still 150 calories.0
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I do not think that is accurate. Adding water to oatmeal does not increase the calories - it only increases the water content of the oats. The calorie count is for dry oatmeal, since it is more accurate. After it's cooked (and expanded in volume), it's still 150 calories.
yeah that!0 -
Great Value 100% Whole Grain Old Fashioned Oats - Oatmeal, 1/2 cup dry is 150kcal
These are the rolled kind
when you measure dry and then add water it still stays 150kcal (Same for yours)
only if you add sugar or milk will you have to add those calories.0 -
lol1
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1/4 cup dry means whatever amount comes out after cooking in WATER is the same cals.0
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When you cook 1/4 cup of oatmeal it expands to 3/4 cup, this is a serving of cooked oatmeal at 150 calories.0
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It is not accurate. If you add 2 cups of water to 1/4 cup of oats do you get soup? My morning hot cereal is 1/4c cereal to 3/4c water. Eat it all to get the calories.0
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No I put in 1 cup of oats and 4 cups of water..
so half a cup would be 300 calories?
I'm sorry I'm not good with this kind of stuff ):0 -
The water is irrelevant. The calories for the dry oatmeal stays the same even after cooking. If you are cooking 1 cup of dry oats, you count the calories for one cup of dry oats and that's the number of calories.0
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No I put in 1 cup of oats and 4 cups of water..
so half a cup would be 300 calories?
I'm sorry I'm not good with this kind of stuff ):
NO.
When you measure out the amount DRY, calculate how many calories that is. THAT is how many calories it will be when it is cooked. Water does not magically add calories.0 -
It is not accurate. If you add 2 cups of water to 1/4 cup of oats do you get soup? My morning hot cereal is 1/4c cereal to 3/4c water. Eat it all to get the calories.
She's using Steel Cut Oats, not regular oats you can cook up in the microwave really fast for breakfast. Its not soup...its DELISH! with a little dried fruit and milk, i love it in the crockpot
and they're right, 1/4 cup dry is the same calories as what it makes after you cook it. So put it in as a recipe, esp if you add dried fruit or fat free half and half like we do and then count out your servings.0 -
150 X 4 divided by 2 = 300. Yes if that is how you are making it.0
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It is not accurate. If you add 2 cups of water to 1/4 cup of oats do you get soup? My morning hot cereal is 1/4c cereal to 3/4c water. Eat it all to get the calories.
She's using Steel Cut Oats, not regular oats you can cook up in the microwave really fast for breakfast. Its not soup...its DELISH! with a little dried fruit and milk, i love it in the crockpot
I understand what she is eating. It just looked strange. Her further posts identified that she used a ratio that would equal 1/4c oats to 1c water, something closer the ratio of my really fast bob's red mill microwave deliciousness.0 -
This was a great thread. I had never considered making steel cut oats in the crock pot. In order to get the timing correct, I did a quick search and found recipes for both apple cinnamon and pumpkin versions! I can't wait for tomorrow morning now!! :happy:0
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My steel cut oats says 1/4 cup DRY is 150 calories and 2 grams of fat.
1/4 cup is so tiny!
So when I cook it in my crock pot with 2 cups of water and nothing else..I just scoop out 1/4 cup and it's still 150 calories..right?
That means a whole cup would be 600 calories! ):
I made Bob's Red mill steel cut in the crockpost last week, 1 cup oats and 4 cups water in the bowl. it looked like it made a lot more than 4 servings. In fact, I got about 6 servings out of it, of varying sizes. I didn't measure as I scooped it out to serve, but each serving would have been less than the 150 calories. I added a packet of Stevia to it, and a splash of 1% milk to loosen it up. I've been drinking almond milk lately but didn't like it mixed in as much as regular milk.0 -
Ah! So confusing! Still doesn't make sense to me. Probably never will aha. Steal cut is my favorite but I can't figure out how to measure properly. At least it's healthy and if I do eat a little more then a serving it's not like it's a whole chocolate cake :laugh:0
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Ah! So confusing! Still doesn't make sense to me. Probably never will aha. Steal cut is my favorite but I can't figure out how to measure properly. At least it's healthy and if I do eat a little more then a serving it's not like it's a whole chocolate cake :laugh:
Because the amount of water/liquid you add cannot be accounted for by the manufacturer, the calories will always be in the dry amounts. If you are making more than one serving, you can figure out how many calories are in each by 1) knowing the number of calories in the dry ingredients, 2) knowing the volume of cooked product, 3) determining the percentage of the whole you are eating, and 4) calculating the consumed calories through the same precentage determined in step 3.
For example: if 1/4 cup of dry oats has 150 calories and you add 2 cups of water for cooking. After cooking, we'll assume you have 2 cups of oats. If you eat half of what is there, you have eaten 1/2 of the calories available (or in our example, 75 calories). If you had a 1/2 cup of oats with 4 cups of liquid, then eat half of the resulting oatmeal, you would have consumed 150 calories. Does that help?0 -
the only thing that contains calories in your oatmeal is the dry ingredients, as long as you make it with water. So whatever amount of dry outmeal you start with is the amount of calories in the entire pot of outmeal that there is after it's cooked. So divide the total number of calories you started with (dry oatmeal) by the number of servings in the pot. so if dry oatmeal had 200 calories and entire pot contains 4 servings, each serving would be 50 calories (200/4).0
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1/2 cup dry is 150 calories according to Quaker Oats. I eat it all the time. Dry just means before you put anything on it. So if you use water, it's still 150 calories.0
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No I put in 1 cup of oats and 4 cups of water..
so half a cup would be 300 calories?
I'm sorry I'm not good with this kind of stuff ):
You are supposed to put 2 cups of water per 1 cup of oats. That makes 4 servings at 3/4 cups each that equals 150 calories per serving (3/4 cup)
1 cup of oats equals 600 calories so if you divide the number of servings by 600, you will get your accurate caloric content.0 -
Cups are the devil's way of tricking us into inaccuracy. See:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JVjWPclrWVY
I weigh oatmeal in grams. Then add water in grams. Simples.
If you don't have a digital scale, I recommend you get one even if you only use it occasionally for calorie dense foods like oatmeal.0 -
According to Clean & Delicious,
1/4 cup of UNCOOKED steel cut oats cooks up to about one full cup SO 1/4 cup UNCOOKED and 1 cup COOKED both have about 150 calories.0 -
i don't think that's accurate. 40g of dried oatmeal is about 140 calories with the brand I use. And 40 grams makes a nice moderate portion.0
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Bump for later0
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Ah! So confusing! Still doesn't make sense to me. Probably never will aha. Steal cut is my favorite but I can't figure out how to measure properly. At least it's healthy and if I do eat a little more then a serving it's not like it's a whole chocolate cake :laugh:
Don't be confused. Some people are talking about rolled oats and what their own personal brands that they use have as measurements and calories and they have nothing to do with your question, so just scroll past them.
What the first reply said was the answer you needed.
If you measure out 1/4 cup of your steel cut oats and the container that you have says that they are 150 calories for that 1/4 cup of dry oats, that calorie amount doesn't change no matter how much water you add. If you cooked them in 1 cup of water, the entire thing would be 150 calories. If you cooked them in 3 cups of water, it would still be 150 calories.
The only thing that would change the calories is if you add something other than water or increase the amount of dry oats you put in.
So when you put your 1/4 cup of oats and 2 cups of water in the crock pot, you get to eat that entire thing when it's done and it's still 150 calories. Enjoy!0 -
I make mine with 1 c. Hot water and I set it aside while I cut up an apple. I add the apple and cook it 2-3 min. I add cinnamon and stevia. It is 160 calories and so delicious, I feel like I'm eating dessert for breakfast!0
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Ah! So confusing! Still doesn't make sense to me. Probably never will aha. Steal cut is my favorite but I can't figure out how to measure properly. At least it's healthy and if I do eat a little more then a serving it's not like it's a whole chocolate cake :laugh:
An easier way to look at it is that if you use 1 cup of dry oats (600 cals) to make a whole batch - then the whole batch still has 600 cals when it is done (assuming you only add water).
When it is cooked, serve out the oats into four bowls. Each bowl will have 150 cals.
Easy!
The recipe tool is handy for this kind of stuff, but you need to have a minimum of 2 ingredients.0 -
This is where the algebra you always hated comes in. If you eat 1/4 cup wet or cooked, that equals one tenth or .1 of a cup dry. So, 1/2 cup wet or cooked equals (point two) .2 cup dry. I measured mine dry, then cooked it, then measured mine wet. 1 cup of dry made 2 1/2 cups of cooked. I eat 1/2 cup wet, so I enter .2 cup dry.
However, I make mine with 1 cup of dry and 3 cups of water. I think you put more water, so yours would actually be less if you use more water. You'd have to measure it after cooking to see how much the one cup dry yields to do the math.
These numbers will get you closer any way.0 -
Thanks for this comparison. I was trying to figure out how much cooked to scoop out.0
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As far as the calorie thing is concerned, I think people are confusing two different 'types' of oatmeal (technically they are just different steps in the processing of the grain itself). Old-fashioned or rolled oats are different from steel-cut oats. 1/4 cup of dry rolled oats will have 75 calories (1/2 c has 150 according to the Quaker label), steel cut oats are more calorific and 1/4 c dry will have 150 calories.0
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