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-   -   Clash of the Titans: Calorieking VS Fitday (https://www.3fatchicks.com/forum/weight-loss-support/110891-clash-titans-calorieking-vs-fitday.html)

Nikaia 04-25-2007 02:58 PM

Clash of the Titans: Calorieking VS Fitday
 
So I just bought some quinoa last night, thinking I'd try it. Today when I'm planning my meals for the day and entering things into Fitday, I hunt for quinoa, and find it. Fitday tells me that one cup of quinoa is something like 600 calories! I decide to double-check on Calorieking, because that sounds WAY too high for a cup of any kind of grain. Calorieking then says that quinoa is around 235 calories for a cup. What in ****? Where does this huge discrepancy come from? Who's right? Why would either service over/underestimate by such a massive amount?

I'm so unsure now. What do I put into Fitday? Do I need to really restrict how much quinoa I have? I just don't know what to do.:?:

jillybean720 04-25-2007 03:08 PM

Did you buy bulk quinoa, or did it come in a box? If it has a label, then go by that. If not, then I'd go with Calorie King, as FitDay sometimes has amounts for things as uncooked.

EDIT: yup, I just checked both sites, and the calories on FitDay corresponds perfectly with the calories for "quinoa, dry" on CalorieKing (636 calories per cup).

Nikaia 04-25-2007 03:34 PM

Ahhh, that makes sense then.

Thanks so much for the help! I didn't know Calorieking had a different measurement for dry, I guess I just figured sites like that would measure the cooked calories, cause well, what do they think people do? Eat it dry? Ah, well. Again, thanks, I can relax on that now. :)

JayEll 04-25-2007 04:28 PM

It is odd, isn't it? FitDay has potatoes, mashed, dehydrated, dry form. Huh?

But now that I think about it, if someone is making a recipe like a soup, and adding dry ingredients, they might need to know the calories in that form.

Jay

Nikaia 04-25-2007 04:33 PM

Hunh....I suppose that's true, Jay, although I hadn't thought of that.

Makes finding the right version of foods kind of difficult, though. Does Calorieking have the ability to keep a record of what you've eaten the way Fitday does, or is it just a database?

baffled111 04-25-2007 06:02 PM

It can also be easier to calculate the dry weights of foods if you're making a big stew or soup or something, and the portioning will only be done after everything has been all cooked together. You can't really measure rice once it has been cooked together with a bunch of veggies or legumes.

Ready2ShedLBS 04-25-2007 09:53 PM

I boycott fitday now.. I have been using a muuuuch better site, it makes Fitday look.. well... generic. I dont know if I can mention it here because it have message boards, which I have never looked at. I couldnt never leave my home! (3FC)

JayEll 04-26-2007 06:31 AM

Ready2ShedLBS, pretty impressive weight loss! :carrot: :carrot: :cb: :cb:

There are a number of calorie counting sites--a web search will give a list. A few of those sites have tried to spam members here, so their names get deleted.

Use whatever works for you!

Jay

jillybean720 04-26-2007 06:36 AM

For me, it's often easier to measure the amount of dry grain I cook before it's cooked than to try to take the moist, sometimes mushy grain out into a measuring cup or whatever. I know how many calories I'm eaing if I cook a 1/4 cup of dry grain and then eat it all (assuming nothing is added but water during cooking) without having to figure out how much it makes when cooked versus dry.


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