V-Nut offers graphical food nutrition information with unique features and focused on vegetarians and vegans Check more or less scientifically if you're doing it healthy. Analyse food or whole recipes. Give the total nutritional value for a recipe! Search operators Combined sorting Sorting by nutrition value per calorie Immediately comparing search results by relative bar representation A lot of info directly without information overload. (By using hovers and accordions. Not for smartphones (yet)) A unique graphical presentation Focus on some important nutrients for veg*ns Filtering of concentrates Vegetarian food only (and some vegan filtering, though it needs some work) Marked nutrients that "may" be rarer for vegans A more real food pyramid in your personal requirements find some super foods
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V-Nut's answer
The features say it all.
V-Nut's answer
The features say it all.
V-Nut's answer
the site was originally made as a tool for vegans and vegetarians to be used as scientific defense against people that undermine the health benefits of a vegan or vegetarian lifestyle. Not only are there so many people, even professional dietists that are so badly informed about it, not even do many of them have a big bias, it's also amazing how few vegans or vegetarians get or even know where to get scientific nutritional info. Even in the media, TV-shows (cooking show e.g.), debates, etc.., vegans and vegetarians let themselves be talked down by very bad informed so called professionals! OF course, it's always the vegan that needs to bring numbers and datasheet, the others are guilt-free. And sometimes the latter do bring data, but data that is just wrong and with this site the former can prove that. We hope that anyone going to any of these events or anyone wanting to show their peers the scientific proof of adequate nutritional availability in a vegan ot vegetarian lifestyle, use this site before and stand on firm ground!
V-Nut's answer
Vegans and vegetarians interested in food, recipes and their nutritional content. This includes scientists, dietists, chefs and amateurs
V-Nut's answer
php, mysal, javasctipt, web
V-Nut's answer
Only free users. No payment
Based on our record, LifeSum should be more popular than V-Nut. It has been mentiond 8 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Description: I am the creator of this vegan focused nutritional info site: http://v-nut.e-motiv.net. It's very unique and one can't find anything like this anywhere, at least not with all its features. Source: 11 months ago
I have just updated my scientific but graphical, vegan focused, nutritional website. Source: almost 2 years ago
A last note to my progress is that I started using Lifesum to track calorie intake and macro nutrients after my weight loss, in order to find my balance and gain a more healthy relationship with eating - I learned so much from that. I was straight up practising malnutrition and had a very unhealthy fear of carbs and fat for a long time - but I also needed to loose that weight, maybe just not THAT fast 🙈. Source: about 1 year ago
I don't have the premium version but if you're willing to shell the $, Lifesum has a beautiful interface, barcode scanning, recipes, and nutrition tracking info. You'll get macros at the free level. Source: over 1 year ago
*** For what it's worth, I'm switching to Lifesum for tracking calories. I looked at the majority of major apps, and this seems like it fits best for me. ***. Source: over 1 year ago
I use Lifesum. Best user experience from all the apps I’ve used before. It’s paid but I think it’s pretty cheap ($23 /year) https://lifesum.com. Source: over 1 year ago
I’ve only tried Lifesum and Yazio. Recommend them both. Source: almost 2 years ago
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