06-17-2014 12:27
06-17-2014 12:27
Hi, new to fitbit and calorie counting in general, but have not really found a way to effectively use the food logging feature. I most eat home made whole foods (made from scratch), and generally find the food database including mostly chain restaurant foods and packaged foods.
I don't need to be exact, but I'd love to log and at least estimate. Does anyone have any good tools for doing more quick estimations?
Thanks!
06-17-2014 13:02
06-17-2014 13:02
It is an app called MyFitnessPal, often referred to around here as MFP - it can be set to transfer information to the Fitbit site, it has a much better food library, you can enter a recipe you use by ingredients and the app will figure out nutritional breakdown per serving. I use it for food logging and fitbit for activity (calorie) logging and am very happy with the way it works for me.
Good Luck
06-17-2014 13:38
06-17-2014 13:38
Thanks, appreciate the response, will check it out.
06-30-2014 17:14
06-30-2014 17:14
This is the question I'm looking for the answer to, as well. Most of my groceries are the base ingredients, which I then cook into my meals. Yikes!
06-30-2014 19:23
06-30-2014 19:23
Here's the thing. The Fitbit site, while it's true that the database isn't ...exhaustive, there is a nifty feature: If you go to the Fitbit Dashboard, and then click on log, to the right, there is under favorites, the option to "Create a Meal". Click on Create a meal. Then, simply enter the ingredients of your meal.
Say I make an egg sandwich. I call it "Egg Sammich". Three eggs, slice of cheese and 2 sandwich rounds. I enter in each ingredient of my sandwich and save it by clicking done. Then, I go to the log page and I'll see the food item on the right under favorites, click on it, and every time I have that sandwich, it's there.
For something more elaborate, like a stew or a soup, say it's chili.
I use 10 ounces of celery in my 1 gallon batch. (approximately)
So, I'll look up the calories for a given ounce of celery on the internet. 4 calories per ounce. Fitbit tells me it's 37 calories for 10 ounces - I won't quibble over 3 calories.
My next ingredient is 17 ounces of onion.
I keep on adding the ingredients. Red pepper, green pepper, tomatoes, chicken, etc. I don't bother adding spices because calorically, they're nil. I look up the calorie information for each ingredient, per ounce. Then, I note how many ounces of each my recipe calls for.
Then I do the math, get my total. When the chili is done, I'll portion it out in 12-16 ounce servings. Whatever I do, I make them all the same size. I know there will be some variation, but at the end of the week, it's all good. Then I divide that total calories by the portions and use that value as the number of calories. I can do the same thing with carbs, fat grams, protein, etc. I can even do the same with micronutrients if I want. It's cumbersome, but I only have to do it once.
I see no reason to be tabbing out to MFP when I can create my own database with the foods that I make from scratch. I honestly wouldn't expect any website to know what's in my chili recipe, so how would they know how many calories it has? This is where I get my calorie information:
http://nutritiondata.self.com/ They seem to have everything. That is, there's never been anything I've eaten that they didn't have.
06-30-2014 19:42
06-30-2014 19:42
07-01-2014 08:41
07-01-2014 08:41
Sam | USA
Fitbit One, Macintosh, IOS
Accepting solutions is your way of passing your solution onto others and improving everybody’s Fitbit experience.
07-01-2014 08:50
07-01-2014 08:50
@steelbikes wrote:Hi, new to fitbit and calorie counting in general, but have not really found a way to effectively use the food logging feature. I most eat home made whole foods (made from scratch), and generally find the food database including mostly chain restaurant foods and packaged foods.
I don't need to be exact, but I'd love to log and at least estimate. Does anyone have any good tools for doing more quick estimations?
Thanks!
I use Calorie Count as my second logging tool. Their database is extensive, and they also have a nutritional graphting tool that I like. I can see at a glance where I am with regard to several important nutrients. They only have five categories of meal times -- just one for snacks -- which I don't like, but they also have an "Other" where I usually log my supplements/vitamins, which I do like.