You can also use books, such as:
* Wardlaw, G. M. & Hampl, J. S. (2007). Perspectives in nutrition (7th ed.). Mc-Graw Hill: New York, New York, USA. (As well as breaking down micronutrient and macronutrient content of various foods, nutrition tables this also tells what different foods are good for - i.e. heart health, etc.)
Or diet programmes, such as:
* Diet Cruncher
* FoodWorks
~Rosie
Team APPNUT
Which nutrient analysis software do you prefer Rosie?
I hate the NHS standard ones, CompEAT, NetWisp or MicroDiet, they're all shockingly bad.
Trying to find a decent one for offline use on a Macintosh outside of what I'm used to and enjoy (fitday) is hard!
the boook u mentioed i actually own! it comes with a program called NUTRACALC pretty awesome to be honest
macro and micronutrient counts on your foods
itll show you your end numbers in terms of vitamins what you are or arent getting ect