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  2. liquid calories vs. food calories — MyFitnessPal.com

    community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/494280/liquid-calories-vs-food-calories

    melsinct Posts: 3,512 Member. February 2012. A calorie is a calorie. The energy it takes to burn one liquid calorie would be the same as that needed to burn one solid food calorie. Much like one pound of feathers weighs the same as one pound of concrete. Your body will *absorb* the nutrients from liquid quicker than solid foods.

  3. Food and Nutrition — MyFitnessPal.com

    community.myfitnesspal.com/en/categories/food-and-nutrition

    Myfitnesspal matches ingredients 100%, but it says one serving has sometimes twice the calories that the web site reports. Tried it with a bunch of different recipes from d…. Answered . 52 views. 3 comments. Started by Dan_in_PA. Most recent by COGypsy. Sep 26, 2024. Food and Nutrition.

  4. Is there a way to calculate calories from deep frying?

    community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10167888/is-there-a-way-to-calculate...

    One raw shrimp - 6 calories. Fried coconut shrimp - 70 calories. lukejspoor Posts: 11 Member. May 2015. Roasting is most definitely better, as some others have said its nice to have a treat and deep fry sometimes. I love sweet potato fries deep fried, but other times I will just roast them. DanPonting Posts: 25 Member.

  5. Calories with no food bug? — MyFitnessPal.com

    community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10861437/calories-with-no-food-bug

    Not a fundamental solution, but if you see an empty dirai and still have calories logged, use the pencil at the top of the food diary and then select all and delete. I just tried to Edit select all delete and all my exercise calories disappeared but there’s still about 800 calories sticking around.

  6. Calories from cooking with olive oil? — MyFitnessPal.com

    community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/1152735/calories-from-cooking-with...

    December 2013. yes, but I use very little. (I think it's actually 120 calories per Tbsp, btw) SailorKnightWing Posts: 875 Member. December 2013. Yes you count them. The calories don't disappear by cooking. However, I don't know anything that needs 2 Tbs of olive oil to cook. I usually use 1/2 or 1 Tbs.

  7. Calories in meat: raw vs. cooked — MyFitnessPal.com

    community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10788225/calories-in-meat-raw-vs-cooked

    So you grab the calculator. 1,488 / 39 = 38.15 calories per ounce. Now you are free to slice and plate the cooked meat, at 38.15 per ounce. (Notice that the calories per ounce have gone up, going from raw to cooked. This is because water boils/evaporates/cooks off during cooking, and has no calories.

  8. Exercise calories — MyFitnessPal.com

    community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10917355/exercise-calories

    Then you exercise for 300 calories. You eat those 300 calories back and you'll still be able to lose at the rate associated with 1200 calories. If you though don't eat them back then that's pretty much the same as not exercising and eating only 900 calories. That's even too little nutrition for a toddler.

  9. Calories Burned Working Fast Food — MyFitnessPal.com

    community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/397153/calories-burned-working-fast-food

    Probably to"Active". If you break even for calories is around 1900 you should not be eating only 1200. If you set up MFP right to start with then the daily calorie goal that MFP gives you already has a calorie deficit built in to lose weight.

  10. liquid calorie vs food calories — MyFitnessPal.com

    community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/1132882/liquid-calorie-vs-food-calories

    In theory, liquid calories such as protein shakes are absorbed quicker and more easily than food calories -- which is why many people have a protein shake after workouts. Protein shakes are great for those trying to bulk or maintain and find it difficult to eat all the calories needed to hit their daily target calories.

  11. Same food, different calories — MyFitnessPal.com

    community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/1006681/same-food-different-calories

    Unless it sounds ridiculous, in that case find ones where they seem to have similar calories and choose one of those. E.g. Pizza slice = 100 cals. Pizza slice = 30 cals. Pizza slice = 90 cals. Pizza slice = 300 cals. Pizza slice = 110 cals. Choose 100/110 cals in that instance as it seems the most correct.