07-01-2015 09:29
07-01-2015 09:29
I'm looking for a food scale to meausre my foods. i'm getting back into the fitness and nutrition and I know how important it is to be accurate and a food scale is our best bet. My husband said i need to spend a lot on it but I don't feel I need to.
Anyway, what scale do you use and/or recommend. 🙂 Thanks!
07-01-2015 09:40
07-01-2015 09:40
@DaniellaH wrote:I'm looking for a food scale to meausre my foods. i'm getting back into the fitness and nutrition and I know how important it is to be accurate and a food scale is our best bet. My husband said i need to spend a lot on it but I don't feel I need to.
Anyway, what scale do you use and/or recommend. 🙂 Thanks!
The best food scale is the Fitbit Aria - when you get on it, you know if you consumed to many
calories, and the Fitbit dashboard (extra that you get with the Aria) will keep you on track.
07-01-2015 10:05
07-01-2015 10:05
@yarddog wrote:The best food scale is the Fitbit Aria - when you get on it, you know if you consumed to manycalories, and the Fitbit dashboard (extra that you get with the Aria) will keep you on track.
That's not a food scale though right? I'm looking for one to keep in my kitchen on the counter.
07-01-2015 11:52
07-01-2015 11:52
I've been using this scale for several years now. Reliable and takes up very little space.
07-01-2015 23:38
07-01-2015 23:38
No it is not a food scale.
07-01-2015 23:40 - edited 07-01-2015 23:40
07-01-2015 23:40 - edited 07-01-2015 23:40
@yarddog wrote:
The best food scale is the Fitbit Aria - when you get on it, you know if you consumed to many
calories, and the Fitbit dashboard (extra that you get with the Aria) will keep you on track.
People who are trying to learn portion control may not understand what standard servings are by looking at it, and a food scale can help a lot. After a while you start being able to estimate how much egg fried rice you may be able to have, but for people just starting to cook for themselves they may not want to wait until they gained a few pounds before adjusting their food.
07-04-2015 08:52 - edited 07-04-2015 08:53
07-04-2015 08:52 - edited 07-04-2015 08:53
I went to find the brand and model on mine, and found it has ZERO identifying marks on it. So much for that, and it's a good one too.
I just got one for work - an Ivation digital food scale from Amazon. It was only $16 and had reasonable reviews. I haven't had a chance to use it yet, so I'll update when I do.
I didn't use to think they were a big deal, but I'm starting to see how "serving size" and "amount I actually eat" are two completely different things, and getting them wrong can throw you way off after a while.
07-04-2015 12:12 - edited 07-04-2015 12:15
07-04-2015 12:12 - edited 07-04-2015 12:15
I use a food scale almost every day, particularly for lunch, where I like to keep my portion size at 4-6 oz. I had this one for several years before it finally died:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000JVCQPC?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_search_detailpage
I replaced it with this one:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000WJMTNA?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_search_detailpage
I love/hate them both for different reasons. The first one showed parts of oz as tenths, and it displayed whole oz as simply oz, not pounds, which I found easier to convert in my head if I was portioning out food. So, if I was making hamburgers, and had 32oz of meat, I could portion out 4 8oz burgers easily. The OXO displays oz parts as fractions, and whole oz over a pound as lbs/oz, so the same 32 oz of burger woudl display as 2 lb, 0 oz. Not a problem if you end up with a nice even number like that, but you get 1 lb 2 3/8 oz on the screen and want to split that into 4 equal portions it's not so easy. You can use gram weight as well, and that often what I switch to when I end up with a weird number of oz.
What I do like aobut the OXO is that the screen pulls away from the unit, so if you have a large bowl that obscures the screen, you can pull the screen out and see what you are doing. It's more solidly built than the Escali, and I expect it to last many years.
If I could combine the oz displays of the Escali with the pull out screen and build quality of the OXO, it would be the perfect kitchen scale.
07-15-2017 18:05 - edited 07-15-2017 18:08
07-15-2017 18:05 - edited 07-15-2017 18:08
07-15-2017 22:05 - edited 07-15-2017 22:11
07-15-2017 22:05 - edited 07-15-2017 22:11
I just bought one through Costco today: Vitamix (it's bluetooth) download a app called "Perfect Blend"
Can't wait to use it !
Also says you can sync it with fitness apps
09-25-2021 07:15
09-25-2021 07:15
Does the synchronization between the Smart Chef app and Fitbit still work? I am asking because I have another Smart Kitchen Scale (without sending data to Fitbit) and I don't want to spend money on a feature that won't work.