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I am counting my carbs, limiting my meals to less than 50g of carbs and Applebee's menu doesn't include carbs.

2006-10-03 07:36:29 · 5 answers · asked by Jules 5 in Health Diet & Fitness

5 answers

You don't have the appropriate information to even calculate that.

All food is made up of 1 to 3 macronutrients. Fat, protein or carbs. The related caloric value of all food is derived from the quantity of each macronutrient. Fat has 9 calories per gram; carbs 4 calories per gram; and protein 4 calories per gram. Fiber is an undigestible complex carb so it has no nutritional value and no calores.

The only place you can get the carbs for Applebee's food is from Applebees.

The answer below is incorrect because both protein and carbs have the same caloric content per gram. After removing the calories from fat, what'se left is calories from protein and carbs. The answer below assumed that all the remaining calories were composed of carbs and no protein, which is not necessarily true.

2006-10-03 07:42:34 · answer #1 · answered by aint_no_stoppin_us 4 · 0 1

Just the bullet? Anywhere from 29 grains (now not grams; within the United States, bullet weight is measured in grains) as much as over three hundred grains, possibly. It all relies on the cartridge and cargo in query. A .22 Short, which can be utilized in a few .22-quality revolvers, quite often makes use of a 29 grain bullet. A .500 S&W Magnum, that's probably the most robust current handgun cartridge, can use bullets of three hundred grains or extra. That quantities to someplace round two grams as much as over 18 grams. Again, that's best on the grounds that the specific projectile (i.e., the "bullet"), now not the whole cartridge, which entails the casing, primer, and powder. EDIT: Raoul Duke's scale ought to be poorly calibrated. The a hundred and fifteen grain bullet (JUST the bullet) utilized by many 9mm Parabellum cartridges is good over one gram.

2016-08-29 08:38:31 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

8 grams fiber=0
9 grams fat =81 cal
370-81/4=72.25 carbs
Stop this ridiculous diet. The medical profession has stopped all these diets without carbs.

2006-10-03 07:45:04 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

calories don't determine carbs, it depends on what the food is made of. Can't you ask them about the carb content? or just don't eat there.
Veggies don't tend to have a lot of carbs, but bread and starchy stuff (potatoes) does.

2006-10-03 07:39:36 · answer #4 · answered by phiebee87 3 · 0 0

It has 72.25 grams of carbs/protein together. You didnt give enough info to say how much of each there is.

2006-10-03 07:41:49 · answer #5 · answered by adammatter 2 · 0 0

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