Foodclocks
Foodclocks Summary
Foodclocks is a mobile iOS app in Health And Fitness by Anthony McCollum. Released in May 2022 (3 years ago). Store metadata: updated Apr 13, 2023.
Store info: Last updated on App Store on Apr 13, 2023 .
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App Description
Foodclocks is a new way of seeing nutrition.
Instead of thinking about kcal, grams, IU, mg etc., we think about time.
For example, Foodclocks might show you that the energy in your breakfast will take you to 12:57 PM.
Foodclocks also shows how your other nutrients are paced. So for breakfast we might have:
Protein
takes you to 16:19 PM
Total Lipid (fat)
takes you to 10:04 AM
Total Saturated
takes you to 10:29 PM
Total Carbohydrate
takes you to 15:02 PM
Total Dietary Fibre
takes you to 15:12 PM
Total Sugars
takes you to 15:13 AM
Sodium
takes you to 09:02 AM
Caffeine
takes you to 15:26 PM
Water
takes you to 15:26 PM
This way we can instantly see how we are pacing and balancing our various nutrients. In this example (it was actually my breakfast) I could immediately see that I had calories to last me to lunchtime, not too much sodium or fat, a bit high in carbohydrates, sugars and caffeine, and a relatively high amount of protein.
How to use Foodclocks?
There are three basic steps:
1. Look-up a food
2. Add food to a list (known as 'Today's Choices')
3. Go to the 'Today's Clocks' tab
The idea is to keep adding foods to the list as you consume them during the day. That way you can easily see how the foods are affecting the balance of your nutrition as you go.
I've tried to make it easier to look-up foods by categorising them in various ways:
- alphabetically,
- by category,
- by unit of measure
What else can Foodclocks tell me?
Foodclocks can show you how your nutrients are building up during the day. I was curious about where the protein in my breakfast was coming from. By clicking on 'Protein', Foodclocks shows a series of 'Protein Clocks', in my case like this:
Bananas 2, small
takes you to 08:42 PM (2 g protein)
Milk 1/4 cup
takes you to 09:22 PM (2 g protein)
Coffee, 1 serving
takes you to 09:25 PM (0.2 g protein)
Oats, 1/2 cup
takes you to 13:38 PM (13 g protein)
Milk 3/4 cup
takes you to 15:37 PM (6 g protein)
Coffee, 1 serving
takes you to 15:40 PM (0.2 g protein)
Milk 1/4 cup
takes you to 16:19 PM (2 g protein)
By looking at the clocks it was clear that the oats had a relatively high amount of protein, taking me from 09:25 AM to 13:38 PM.
How does Foodclocks convert calories to time?
Let's say you want to pace 2000 kcal ov