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It depends on size and ingredients. The bigger the cookie, the more calories. The more sugar and fats (butter, oil, lard, Crisco) in them, the higher the calories. Start adding nuts or raisins, and it goes up even more. Brent & Sam's gourmet oatmeal and pecan cookies, two inches in diameter (rather small as oatmeal cookies go), are 60 calories each. The big cookies like you might buy in a coffee shop or deli can easily go as high as 300 or more calories each.
As a breakfast cereal, not really. Peanut butter does add some protein, but it also adds a lot of fat to a breakfast, and fat equals calories. Oatmeal is just as good a start to the day without peanut butter as it is with peanut butter, since plain oatmeal keeps you full for a long time. Maybe just keep oatmeal with peanut butter for the weekends?
Why, sure! Add raisins if you want butt dimples. The oatmeal isn't particularly fattening, it is just everything else you put in it: sugar, syrup, butter, sausage patties, etc.
It can varry a little per brand and if you add butter or sugar into it, but 1/2 cup of oatmeal will have about 100 calories in it.
First of all it's "oatmeal" and.....peanut butter oatmeal lol.
Ants on a log! Celery=Log, Peanut Butter=Dirt, Raisins=Ants
Yes, you can. There are recipes for oatmeal cookies that call for vegetable shortening instead of margarine or butter.
Every product is different; 100% of the calories in margarine, butter, shortening, cooking oil come from fat. In each case, multiply each gram of fat by 9 calories/gm, then divide that number by total calories to find the percentage.
There are 72 calories in 10 grams of butter. One stick of butter has 810 calories and 1 cup has over 1600 calories.
Butter is not measure in milliliters. It is measured in grams and 5 ml of butter is equal to 4.79 grams of butter and it has 34 calories.
There are approximately 101 calories in a tablespoon of butter.
A teaspoon of butter has about 100 calories.