Tips for Estimating Amount of Food Consumed
This table lists some handy tips to help you estimate the amount of food you eat when you cannot measure or weigh it.
Breads and grains ½ cup cooked cereal, pasta, rice volume of cupcake wrapper or half a baseball 4-oz bagel (large) diameter of a compact disc (CD) medium piece of cornbread medium bar of soap
Fruits and vegetables medium apple, orange, peach tennis ball ¼ cup dried fruit golf ball or scant handful for average adult ½ cup fruit or vegetable half a baseball 1 cup broccoli light bulb medium potato computer mouse 1 cup raw leafy greens baseball or fist of average adult ¼ cup 6 asparagus spears, 7 or 8 baby carrots or carrot sticks, or a medium ear of corn
Meat, fish, and poultry, cooked 1 oz about 3 tbsp meat or poultry 2 oz small chicken drumstick or thigh 3 oz average deck of cards, palm of average adult’s hand, half of a whole, small chicken breast, medium pork chop
Cheese 1 oz hard cheese average person’s thumb, 2 dominoes, 4 dice
Other 2 tbsp peanut butter Ping-Pong ball 1/3 cup nuts level handful for average adult ½ cup half a baseball or base of computer mouse 1 cup tennis ball or fist of average adult
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Note: The serving size indicated in the Food Guide Pyramid and on food labels is a standardized unit of measure and may not represent the portion of food a person actually eats on one occasion.
Sources: Schuster (1997), American Institute of Cancer Research (2001).
Infinite Health Resources does not at any point, for any circumstances suggest that you do not follow or stop medical advice of your physician. We do not advocate any drugs that has not been prescribed by your physician, nor suggest that we are medical doctors nor are we giving medical advice. Infinite Health Resources is here purely as a resource. |