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The idea is to have a way to input specific recipes ourselves, so that we have the exact ingredients for a given recipe, even for those that vary for the same kind of thing. Specifically, Weight Watchers' Web Tools does this beautifully. You click on a "recipe builder" and it takes you to an interface where you enter each ingredient, that can be searched on and found in their database, or you can add your own. You have the desired nutritional information for each item as well as portion. It also lets you add the recipe directions and other information about the recipe and then save it to their database and add it to your food log. The recipe then is in their database, along with all the other food and recipe items, which can be pulled up again whenever that recipe is made again and added to the food log for a given day whenever needed. Since the food content is already calculated for you, you just add the portions you eat whenever you use the recipe. It's very helpful and really ought to be part of a robust food logging system. The lack of this in the WebMD system is a real drawback.
The issue with Weight Watchers is that they use their own proprietary point system rather than the "open" system of counting calories like with WebMD. The effect is that you are locked into their system for calculation of nutritional totals and it's not translatable to other systems. So, I was hoping WebMD would be a good alternative and more "open", following more standard nutritional measures, but this drawback is disappointing.
The other major drawback I recently discovered with WebMD food logging is that the food items we enter ourselves are not searchable afterward, in the WebMD food/nutrition database. Once your favorites is maxed out (100 items) and you enter a new food item, once you log it for a given day, if you need to log that same food again, say, days later, you cannot search for it from the WebMD database, bring it up and add it to you food log. It's gone. You have to enter it all over again, because items you create are apparently not saved to WebMD's food database and are not searchable. I couldn't believe this when I discovered this. This is a huge drawback. It simply is unreasonable to expect dieters to re-enter custom food items over and over again when they are consumed. The only way around this is to go back to a day's food log when that items was entered, remove something from your maxed-out favorites list, add it to favorites, and then add it to your food log for the day. That is a real cludge and not effective. Weight Watchers' database adds items that are entered by dieters into their database globally, so all items you enter (including recipes) are always available and searchable in the future, whenever you need them again. You don't have to re-enter them.
I would hope WebMD could enhance the food logging interface to add a robust recipe builder feature and making food items we add/create globally searchable along with their own food database. The food logging system would then be must more user-friendly and usable.
It otherwise has some really good features, like graphing food consumption, and breaking things down for the day. But WebMD really has to improve this interface. Take a lesson from how Weight Watchers does it.View Thread

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