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This is how I did it.

Take a cup big enough to fit your fist in. PLace it is a pan or bowl

and fill it to the top with water. Stick your fist in and wait for

the water to stop overflowing. Now the water that is in the pan or

bowl is what you measure. Mine came out to almost 1 cup.

Shonda

> Can someone explain the water displacement thing for measuring?

> I have seen that referred to a couple of times and don't know what

it

> is. I have a hard time with using the fist and palm method.

> Thanks

> Noelle

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Thanks! I'll do it when I go home for lunch and I hope that I find I have been

measuring correctly.

Noelle

Re: Portion Sizes

This is how I did it.

Take a cup big enough to fit your fist in. PLace it is a pan or bowl

and fill it to the top with water. Stick your fist in and wait for

the water to stop overflowing. Now the water that is in the pan or

bowl is what you measure. Mine came out to almost 1 cup.

Shonda

> Can someone explain the water displacement thing for measuring?

> I have seen that referred to a couple of times and don't know what

it

> is. I have a hard time with using the fist and palm method.

> Thanks

> Noelle

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hersheione wrote:

> Can someone explain the water displacement thing for measuring?

> I have seen that referred to a couple of times and don't know what it

> is. I have a hard time with using the fist and palm method.

> Thanks

> Noelle

I put two cups of water in a 4 cup measuring cup, immersed hand to wrist, new

measurement was 3 cups :) Voila!

Serenity of the 1 cup hand

--

http://www.theonion.com

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  • 9 months later...
  • 2 months later...
Guest guest

Our pts vary greatly as to the amount they can consume so it is hard to come

up with a guideline -- we stress quality of foods versus quantity of foods

for the long term.

portion sizes

We tell our clients to limit portion sizes to 4 ounces at a time for

at least 6 months. After that we really don't have any firm

guidelines. Does anybody have any suggestions or guidelines for

after that? Any input would be appreciated.

J. Sams

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  • 1 year later...
Guest guest

Meat portions like fish, chicken, and steak would be the size and

thickness of your palm.

Bread, also about the size and thickness of your palm. For a big

hulking guy, that might mean two full-size slices. For most women it's

one smallish slice of bread or half a full-size pita pocket.

Liquids aren't necessarily one cup. On the soup, if the amount of

chicken breast was equal to your palm, and the handful of noodles was

about as much as your clenched fist, then the portion was right,

regardless of the broth (mainly water) or vegetables (freebies).

Hope that helps a little.

On Thu, 03 Mar 2005 19:04:42 -0000, asa_n_nm <amandaadamss@...> wrote:

>

>

> Hi all,

>

> I'm new here and starting for BFL for the second time -- in week 2.

> I'm doing pretty good so far, but am having a little trouble with

> the portion sizes.

>

> For example, chicken breast. Size of your palm, right? But, does

> it matter how thick it is?

>

> WW Bread - I read in the book that a " portion " is 2 slices, but on

> BFL website, it says a portion is one slice.

>

> Liquids - 1 cup. I made the chicken noodle soup described in the

> book (2 servings) (2 grilled chicken breasts, 2 handfuls ww

> noodlesbwith ww noodles and carrots & onions) and then split all of

> it into two containers. Each " portion " was a lot more than one cup.

>

> Any help would be appreciated.

>

>

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

I'm so glad someone asked that question. Dh kept insisting that because the

book said 2 slices, I could have two slices of bread for a sandwich... I

kept saying no way and having a handful of sandwich meat and a bowl of

oatmeal... :o) Or a fruit of some sort.

Now I can say with authority... no I can't, because Skwiggy said so!!

Grace G

God is good, all the time.

All the time, God is good.

>From: Skwigg <skwigg@...>

>Reply-

>

>Subject: Re: Portion Sizes

>Date: Thu, 3 Mar 2005 13:51:20 -0600

>MIME-Version: 1.0

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>

>Meat portions like fish, chicken, and steak would be the size and

>thickness of your palm.

>

>Bread, also about the size and thickness of your palm. For a big

>hulking guy, that might mean two full-size slices. For most women it's

>one smallish slice of bread or half a full-size pita pocket.

>

>Liquids aren't necessarily one cup. On the soup, if the amount of

>chicken breast was equal to your palm, and the handful of noodles was

>about as much as your clenched fist, then the portion was right,

>regardless of the broth (mainly water) or vegetables (freebies).

>

>Hope that helps a little.

>

>

>

>

>On Thu, 03 Mar 2005 19:04:42 -0000, asa_n_nm <amandaadamss@...>

>wrote:

> >

> >

> > Hi all,

> >

> > I'm new here and starting for BFL for the second time -- in week 2.

> > I'm doing pretty good so far, but am having a little trouble with

> > the portion sizes.

> >

> > For example, chicken breast. Size of your palm, right? But, does

> > it matter how thick it is?

> >

> > WW Bread - I read in the book that a " portion " is 2 slices, but on

> > BFL website, it says a portion is one slice.

> >

> > Liquids - 1 cup. I made the chicken noodle soup described in the

> > book (2 servings) (2 grilled chicken breasts, 2 handfuls ww

> > noodlesbwith ww noodles and carrots & onions) and then split all of

> > it into two containers. Each " portion " was a lot more than one cup.

> >

> > Any help would be appreciated.

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

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Guest guest

Thanks.

> >

> >

> > Hi all,

> >

> > I'm new here and starting for BFL for the second time -- in week

2.

> > I'm doing pretty good so far, but am having a little trouble with

> > the portion sizes.

> >

> > For example, chicken breast. Size of your palm, right? But,

does

> > it matter how thick it is?

> >

> > WW Bread - I read in the book that a " portion " is 2 slices, but

on

> > BFL website, it says a portion is one slice.

> >

> > Liquids - 1 cup. I made the chicken noodle soup described in the

> > book (2 servings) (2 grilled chicken breasts, 2 handfuls ww

> > noodlesbwith ww noodles and carrots & onions) and then split all

of

> > it into two containers. Each " portion " was a lot more than one

cup.

> >

> > Any help would be appreciated.

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

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Guest guest

Thanks. But, the book does say 2 slices . . . . Page 88, I think.

> > >

> > >

> > > Hi all,

> > >

> > > I'm new here and starting for BFL for the second time -- in

week 2.

> > > I'm doing pretty good so far, but am having a little trouble

with

> > > the portion sizes.

> > >

> > > For example, chicken breast. Size of your palm, right? But,

does

> > > it matter how thick it is?

> > >

> > > WW Bread - I read in the book that a " portion " is 2 slices,

but on

> > > BFL website, it says a portion is one slice.

> > >

> > > Liquids - 1 cup. I made the chicken noodle soup described in

the

> > > book (2 servings) (2 grilled chicken breasts, 2 handfuls ww

> > > noodlesbwith ww noodles and carrots & onions) and then split

all of

> > > it into two containers. Each " portion " was a lot more than

one cup.

> > >

> > > Any help would be appreciated.

> > >

> > >

> > >

> > >

> > >

> > >

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Guest guest

It does kind of depend on the bread. If it's a smallish loaf and

rather thinly sliced, of course you can have two pieces. Keep the size

and thickness of your palm in mind when you're eyeballing the bread

and you can't go too far wrong. If you're hopelessly confused by a

particular brand, look at the label. A proper carb portion would be

under 20-25g of carbs.

On Thu, 03 Mar 2005 20:03:20 +0000, Grace Gill <gracegill@...> wrote:

>

> I'm so glad someone asked that question. Dh kept insisting that because the

> book said 2 slices, I could have two slices of bread for a sandwich... I

> kept saying no way and having a handful of sandwich meat and a bowl of

> oatmeal... :o) Or a fruit of some sort.

>

> Now I can say with authority... no I can't, because Skwiggy said so!!

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Guest guest

In my experience, it really depends on the bread. Some people like good bread

(i.e. the kind that is high in calories)... I don't really care. So, Wonder

Light Wheat bread makes me happy. 1 serving (2 slices) contains only 80

calories, 18g carbs, and 5g protein. When and if I make a sandwich I need to

have 2 slices just to make sure my carbs/protein are correct. I know that BFL

in general doesn't push calorie counting but I think it's useful just to verify

that the nutritional content is what it should be.

Grace Gill <gracegill@...> wrote:I'm so glad someone asked that

question. Dh kept insisting that because the

book said 2 slices, I could have two slices of bread for a sandwich... I

kept saying no way and having a handful of sandwich meat and a bowl of

oatmeal... :o) Or a fruit of some sort.

Now I can say with authority... no I can't, because Skwiggy said so!!

Grace G

God is good, all the time.

All the time, God is good.

>From: Skwigg <skwigg@...>

>Reply-

>

>Subject: Re: Portion Sizes

>Date: Thu, 3 Mar 2005 13:51:20 -0600

>MIME-Version: 1.0

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>

>Meat portions like fish, chicken, and steak would be the size and

>thickness of your palm.

>

>Bread, also about the size and thickness of your palm. For a big

>hulking guy, that might mean two full-size slices. For most women it's

>one smallish slice of bread or half a full-size pita pocket.

>

>Liquids aren't necessarily one cup. On the soup, if the amount of

>chicken breast was equal to your palm, and the handful of noodles was

>about as much as your clenched fist, then the portion was right,

>regardless of the broth (mainly water) or vegetables (freebies).

>

>Hope that helps a little.

>

>

>

>

>On Thu, 03 Mar 2005 19:04:42 -0000, asa_n_nm <amandaadamss@...>

>wrote:

> >

> >

> > Hi all,

> >

> > I'm new here and starting for BFL for the second time -- in week 2.

> > I'm doing pretty good so far, but am having a little trouble with

> > the portion sizes.

> >

> > For example, chicken breast. Size of your palm, right? But, does

> > it matter how thick it is?

> >

> > WW Bread - I read in the book that a " portion " is 2 slices, but on

> > BFL website, it says a portion is one slice.

> >

> > Liquids - 1 cup. I made the chicken noodle soup described in the

> > book (2 servings) (2 grilled chicken breasts, 2 handfuls ww

> > noodlesbwith ww noodles and carrots & onions) and then split all of

> > it into two containers. Each " portion " was a lot more than one cup.

> >

> > Any help would be appreciated.

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

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Guest guest

Sorry... I sent my reply before reading yours. :)

Skwigg <skwigg@...> wrote:It does kind of depend on the bread. If it's a

smallish loaf and

rather thinly sliced, of course you can have two pieces. Keep the size

and thickness of your palm in mind when you're eyeballing the bread

and you can't go too far wrong. If you're hopelessly confused by a

particular brand, look at the label. A proper carb portion would be

under 20-25g of carbs.

On Thu, 03 Mar 2005 20:03:20 +0000, Grace Gill <gracegill@...> wrote:

>

> I'm so glad someone asked that question. Dh kept insisting that because the

> book said 2 slices, I could have two slices of bread for a sandwich... I

> kept saying no way and having a handful of sandwich meat and a bowl of

> oatmeal... :o) Or a fruit of some sort.

>

> Now I can say with authority... no I can't, because Skwiggy said so!!

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Guest guest

Cool I'll have to see if we have that type of bread here. Ummm, is it still

whole wheat bread? I think most of the breads in my stores here are either

light, or whole wheat but not both. I'd love to find one that was though.

Grace

God is good, all the time.

All the time, God is good.

>

>In my experience, it really depends on the bread. Some people like good

>bread (i.e. the kind that is high in calories)... I don't really care. So,

>Wonder Light Wheat bread makes me happy. 1 serving (2 slices) contains

>only 80 calories, 18g carbs, and 5g protein. When and if I make a sandwich

>I need to have 2 slices just to make sure my carbs/protein are correct. I

>know that BFL in general doesn't push calorie counting but I think it's

>useful just to verify that the nutritional content is what it should be.

>

>Grace Gill <gracegill@...> wrote:I'm so glad someone asked that

>question. Dh kept insisting that because the

>book said 2 slices, I could have two slices of bread for a sandwich... I

>kept saying no way and having a handful of sandwich meat and a bowl of

>oatmeal... :o) Or a fruit of some sort.

>

>Now I can say with authority... no I can't, because Skwiggy said so!!

>

>Grace G

>

>

>

>

>God is good, all the time.

>All the time, God is good.

>

>

>

>

> >From: Skwigg <skwigg@...>

> >Reply-

> >

> >Subject: Re: Portion Sizes

> >Date: Thu, 3 Mar 2005 13:51:20 -0600

> >MIME-Version: 1.0

> >X-Sender: skwigg@...

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> >X-OriginalArrivalTime: 03 Mar 2005 19:52:03.0490 (UTC)

> >FILETIME=[78A7B820:01C5202A]

> >

> >Meat portions like fish, chicken, and steak would be the size and

> >thickness of your palm.

> >

> >Bread, also about the size and thickness of your palm. For a big

> >hulking guy, that might mean two full-size slices. For most women it's

> >one smallish slice of bread or half a full-size pita pocket.

> >

> >Liquids aren't necessarily one cup. On the soup, if the amount of

> >chicken breast was equal to your palm, and the handful of noodles was

> >about as much as your clenched fist, then the portion was right,

> >regardless of the broth (mainly water) or vegetables (freebies).

> >

> >Hope that helps a little.

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >On Thu, 03 Mar 2005 19:04:42 -0000, asa_n_nm <amandaadamss@...>

> >wrote:

> > >

> > >

> > > Hi all,

> > >

> > > I'm new here and starting for BFL for the second time -- in week 2.

> > > I'm doing pretty good so far, but am having a little trouble with

> > > the portion sizes.

> > >

> > > For example, chicken breast. Size of your palm, right? But, does

> > > it matter how thick it is?

> > >

> > > WW Bread - I read in the book that a " portion " is 2 slices, but on

> > > BFL website, it says a portion is one slice.

> > >

> > > Liquids - 1 cup. I made the chicken noodle soup described in the

> > > book (2 servings) (2 grilled chicken breasts, 2 handfuls ww

> > > noodlesbwith ww noodles and carrots & onions) and then split all of

> > > it into two containers. Each " portion " was a lot more than one cup.

> > >

> > > Any help would be appreciated.

> > >

> > >

> > >

> > >

> > >

> > >

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  • 1 year later...
Guest guest

I so totally agree with this article. The one thing I find is if you have stuff on a smaller plate or fix your plate and leave the food it is truly enough. But if you serve yourself from the big bowls of foods on the table it seems you will put more food on your plate. They say it is bad practice to eat in front of the tv and you should always eat at your dining room table. I find for me right the opposite is true. If I dish up my plate using care and portion size and then leave the table and eat in front of the tv then I'm not tempted for more food. What I have on my plate is satisfying.

This article on portion sizes is interesting. Nothing earth shattering but interesting.

http://www.cnn.com/2006/HEALTH/07/30/diet.cues.ap/index.html

Ann

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  • 2 years later...
Guest guest

hello!

i've been doing the Optimal Diet you've recommended and I already am

noticing some benefits. I did the math and my ratios are 68 grams of

protein. 54 grams of carbs. 170-238 grams of fat.

I havent felt like I have been exact with these ratios. How important

is it to be exact? Can I just say to myself, " Ok I ate a little bit of

cooked veggies, a decent amount of protein, and a generous amt. of

olive oil and 1 spoonful of coconut oil three times a day. " That's

what I've been doing. I'd like to be more exact and meticulous about

it, but I'd like to hear what you guys have to say about it.

Thanks!

eric

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Guest guest

> i've been doing the Optimal Diet you've recommended and I already am

> noticing some benefits. I did the math and my ratios are 68 grams of

> protein. 54 grams of carbs. 170-238 grams of fat.

>

> I havent felt like I have been exact with these ratios. How important

> is it to be exact? Can I just say to myself, " Ok I ate a little bit of

> cooked veggies, a decent amount of protein, and a generous amt. of

> olive oil and 1 spoonful of coconut oil three times a day. " That's

> what I've been doing. I'd like to be more exact and meticulous about

> it, but I'd like to hear what you guys have to say about it.

**** Hi :

I've found that this diet (based on the Optimal diet ratios) asks us to eat a

lot more fat

than many of us are used to. And we don't always know how much fat 170-238

grams is,

which is why the fitday food log can help you. You can enter your daily foods

in and see

how what you are eating stacks up against the ratios we are trying for.

But, you might be surprised to learn that your description of your fat intake is

a bit lower

than your ratiio. (Now you may just be starting and you need to work up to fat

levels... so

take that into account. This ratio is what you are shooting for by the time you

are fully on

the diet, taking all supps, using 6T of coconut oil.)

My own fat ratios are exactly yours (170-238) and if I drink two egg drinks

that use a

total of 6 eggs, 4T of butter and 6T of coconut oil I am eating 157.5 grams of

fat. So I

still need some more fat in my other meals to be in range. So you can see that

your 3T of

coconut oil and the olive oil are lower than recommended.

You should also count your cod liver oil. I think it would be interesting for

you to go on

Fitday, enter your daily food, and see where you are with protein, fat and

carbs. And see

where you are trying to get to as you slowly transition onto this diet.

Hope that helps,

Marissa

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