Going to ask a silly question about weighing meat
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strawberrygashes
Posts: 210 Member
So we are having pork loin steaks today, usually I log anything like this when its cooked but I can't find a good option for it. Scanning the packet it lists it as 'raw as sold'. Does it make any difference logging it as this? Rather than as cooked?
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Replies
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Things weigh different amounts raw and when cooked0
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Meat is normally weighed before it is cooked... When you go to a fast food place, and ask for a quarter pounder, they weigh it then fry it up. If it loses part of it's weight well your loss
As for logging wise, I don't see an issue... cause after it's cooked it would just lose some water weight and other stuffs.0 -
Same question....Do you weigh it raw or after it's cooked to get your portion size correct? I know a serving of chicken is 3oz...I am assuming that is cooked but not so sure...0
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Things weigh different amounts raw and when cooked
Oh I know that but does it mean I should really log it as cooked (weigh it when cooked and try to find the closest option)?0 -
General rule of thumb is that it loses 25% of its weight when being cooked. Maybe not always the case but that s the estimate I was told to use. So - if you have 5 oz cooked but you can only find 'raw' in the nutrient info then I would use 8 oz to be safe.0
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I weigh all of my meats after they are cooked. I also measure my vegetables after cooking (if they ar not being eaten raw)....0
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P.S. A serving of meat is not 3 oz! That is more of an appetizer! :-)0
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Same question....Do you weigh it raw or after it's cooked to get your portion size correct? I know a serving of chicken is 3oz...I am assuming that is cooked but not so sure...
3oz of cooked chicken is 4oz of raw chicken is a serving size.
To the OP: Weigh it after you cook it and use that OR weigh it before you cook it and search for RAW pork in the food database0 -
In the case of meats the weight loss will include fats as well as water - I would advise that you weigh and compare raw whenever possible. The amount it is cooked will affect any fat (and therefore weight) the meat will lose and so unless it is completely lean when it hits the cooking utensil, results may vary. Please note I am not a nutritionist, nor do I have any training in this area (except a 6-year old anatomy and physiology diploma that I have forgotten most of the content of!) - this is just my opinion! Good luck in finding a solution you are comfortable with.0
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I always weigh after cooked not sure if this helps or not But I figure 3 oz cooked is different from 3 oz raw so if I want to et 3 oz I want to eat 3 oz not 2.5 oz0
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I definately consider most meat's weight after cooking..especially with a steak or ground beef some of the fat drips out or burns away when cooking and a 16 oz steak can turn into 11-12 oz.
For your pork steak try searching for "pork grilled lean" that should give you enough options to find closest to what you are fixing..and don't be scared if its only in grams and you only know ounces - 1 oz = 28 grams ..so do a little math I've gotten pretty good at it, but at first it was so aggrevating! LOL
Protein weight/finding right option in database can be dificult but you get better at it the more you log. Not a silly quesiton at all I think we all struggle with it (especially when we were new to MFP).0 -
I use http://nutritiondata.self.com/ too, to double check what I'm seeing in the MFP database. Some times it just doesnt look right and the sodium levels can be ridiculously high or missing and potassium is hardly ever listed, either, and I like to track that.0
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Thanks for the many replies, really appreciate it0
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For every cooked portion you eat that is size of a deck of cards that is 3 oz.0
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For every cooked portion you eat that is size of a deck of cards that is 3 oz.
yeah but my steak doesnt come in the shape of a deck of cards..its easier to use my scale :laugh: :drinker:0 -
Another idea is type the recipe name exactly as you have it and see if it pops up in the database. We made chicken this past week from a recipe in a magazine I have, come to find out that exact recipe was already in the data base. It made logging my calories very easy and I was concerned it was going to be a challenge because of the marinade and other ingredients. So that might help you too!0
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I always weigh after cooking. Sometimes the difference in weight before and after can be huge. You especially don't want to cheat yourself out of anything. Then you just get hungrier and that is not a good thing. Sometime you just need to type the right thing in to get the after cooked calories.0
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I weigh and measure ALL the food before cooking. If you look at the packages of vegetables, the serving size and calories per serving are uncooked. The same for pasta, rice, etc.
I weigh beef, chicken, and fish raw too. If I add additional ingredients, I enter the recipe in the MFP "Recipe section," so all ingredients are also counted. Too messy to weigh food after is cooked.0 -
you have to be consistent - if the data is "as sold" then weigh it "as sold" ie before cooking. If the label says "cooked on grill" then weigh it after.
I find weighing after cooking to be a messy PITA so use raw data where possible.0 -
P.S. A serving of meat is not 3 oz! That is more of an appetizer! :-)
Lol...I hear ya!!
I just have an old magnent with serving sizes from the gov't & it says this but that's the gov't for you...I probably shouldn't use that chart anymore...lol0
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