AI Meal Logger: Track Calories by Typing What You Ate
An AI meal logger is useful when the hardest part of calorie tracking is not nutrition knowledge, but starting the log. Instead of searching a database one item at a time, you describe the meal in plain language and review estimated calories, protein, carbs, and fat.
Quick answer: To track calories by typing, write the food, rough portion, cooking method, and add-ons in one sentence. Better input usually means a better estimate.
What to type into an AI meal logger
The best logs are short but specific. A weak entry is "chicken bowl." A better entry is "150g grilled chicken, 1 cup cooked rice, half avocado, salsa, and 1 tbsp olive oil." The second version gives the app portion, preparation, and calorie-dense add-ons.
- Include protein portions when possible.
- Name oils, sauces, dressings, nuts, cheese, and spreads.
- Use simple portion words if you do not have grams: palm, cup, slice, scoop, handful, tablespoon.
- Correct the estimate when something looks clearly off.
Why typing can beat photo-only logging
Photo logging is convenient when every ingredient is visible. Typing works better for restaurant meals, mixed bowls, leftovers, snacks, and meals remembered after the fact. A natural-language calorie tracker can also handle context that a photo may miss, like oil used in cooking or the fact that a latte used whole milk.
A simple daily workflow
Use one sentence per meal, keep the wording consistent, and review the day instead of chasing perfect precision. For most people, the win is a repeatable food log that shows patterns across the week.
- Log breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks in plain language.
- Check protein and calorie totals at the end of the day.
- Review weekly trends before changing targets.
FAQ
What is an AI meal logger?
An AI meal logger turns typed or dictated meal descriptions into estimated calories and macronutrients.
Can I track calories by typing what I ate?
Yes. MacroChat is built for typing or dictating meals in plain language, then reviewing estimated calories, protein, carbs, and fat.
Does this replace professional nutrition advice?
No. Treat calorie and macro values as estimates and talk with a clinician for medical nutrition guidance.