Advantage Cooking Software Suggestions
Cleaning Up Your Grocery Report
The best procedure is to
use the following method for each ingredient in question:
-
locate the ingredient
in the 'ingredients' tab
-
click on the 'recipes'
tab in the lower window
-
look at the measures
listed for each of the recipes which use this ingredient
Let's take one example at
a time:
"'Sweet potatoes, canned'. On the grocery list it has 'total needed 80
ounce'...BUT it has another listing for 'Sweet potatoes, canned' with
'384 teaspoons' needed and no packing listed. Packaging is 'Can (40
oz)', no conversions."
The listing for '80
ounces' needed is correct. That's just what you want; no solution
necessary.
Now for the 384
teaspoons. You probably have two types of measures for this
ingredient: one in ounces (a measure of weight), and one in cups (a
measure of volume). One cup is going to equal 48 teaspoons. Your
cooking day is likely calling for 8 cups of sweet potatoes (whether
from one recipe, or multiple recipes), which equals 384 teaspoons.
Solution: add a
conversion to the 'Sweet Potato' ingredient to turn everything into
ounces:
1 cup = 8 ounces
Sweet Potatoes
This conversion seems
like the program should already know that, but we're converting volume
measure to weight measure, and different ingredients have different
conversions. For example, one cup of marshmallows is not equivalent to
8 ounces.
"Potatoes, diced, has '216 teaspoons' needed. Packaging is 'Bag (5
pound)'; no conversions."
Follow steps 1, 2, and
3 above (locate ingredient, click 'recipes', check measures)
It is very likely that
your recipe is calling for 'cups' and the software is leaving it in
'teaspoons' on the grocery report because it can't convert from cups
to pounds.
Solution: add a
conversion to the 'Potatoes, diced' ingredient to convert volume
measure to weight measure (which is what is listed in the Packaging):
2 cups = 1 pound
Potatoes, diced
Note: this
conversion is an estimate. Adjust the conversion according to your
preference.
"'Vegetables, cooked' has two lines: one listing is '1 each' needed, a
second listing is '144 teaspoons'. Packaging is 'Bag (1/2 pound / 8
oz)'; no conversions."
Follow steps 1, 2, and
3 above (locate ingredient, click 'recipes', check measures)
The listing '1 each'
probably refers to one 8 oz. bag of vegetables.
Solution: change the
recipe to specify ' 8 ounces' instead of '1 each'.
The listing in
teaspoons means that a recipe is calling for a volume measure, like
'cups' of vegetables. Solution: add a conversion to the 'Vegetables,
cooked' ingredient, which converts a volume measure to weight (which
is what is listed in the Packaging):
2 cups = 8 ounces
Vegetables, cooked
"Milk, has two lines: one listing is '1 1/2 quart' needed, a second
listing says '1 each'. Packaging is '1 gallon' and '1 quart'; no
conversions."
Follow steps 1, 2, and
3 above (locate ingredient, click 'recipes', check measures)
The listing for '1 1/2
quart' needed is correct. That's just what you want; no solution
necessary.
The listing '1 each'
means one of a certain measure of milk. Check the recipe and then
change the measure to something other than 'each'.
If you have specific
questions or examples that aren't addressed in this article, please
email shelley@30DayGourmet.com.
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March 2007
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