Someone turned me onto the trick of inputting all ingredients into a calorie counter, then just dividing by the number of portions to figure out each portion's calorie count.
So... I'm wondering... does this work for baking? There's no fundamental nutritional change between baking it and the raw ingredients?
Also, have any of you taken your go-to treat recipes, and figured out just how they stacked up? I was shocked to find (if this is an accurate way of measuring) that my homemade brownies are 183 calories per piece, and my chocolate chip cookie recipe comes out at 82 calories per cookie!!! That's without making any alterations to the ingredients to be a little "better."
I am rethinking my ban on home baked goods... but I'll need to reevaluate how well I can resist overeating, that's the key... and how many people might want to share them with me so they're not all just sitting in my kitchen calling out to me. Anyone else want to weigh in on the subject?

I usually use spark people recipe calculator because most baking ingredients are already in the data base. I usually don't include ingredients like cinnamon and spice because they don't add calories. I do include baking soda in my calculations thought because of the sodium. Tweeking baking recipes can be fun but sometimes challenging because baking is more of a science than cooking. I find using Splenda and applesauce in place of sugars and oil helps tremendously. Just remember to either include a bit of regular sugar or prepare to freeze the baked good after a couple days because Splenda doesn't preserve baked goods like sugar