Someone PLEASE re-read my posts on page one. Additional mass does not "magically appear" out of thin-air. We don't "nucleosynthesize", but we do make nucleic acids via nucleic acid synthesis.
THIS PROCESS REQUIRES ENERGY!
Again, I think this is what happens and confuses people, like CJW's wife, into thinking they've gained more weight from a single food item than the food itself weighs. Here's a point-by-point example:
1) Person eats small bag of dry potato chips. Potato chips very salty (electrolytes, namely sodium and chloride).
2) Potato chips digested. Electrolytes enter blood stream.
3) Osmolarity of blood shifted. Interstitial and intracellular fluid shifts into plasma compartment to compensate. Thirst center in hypothalamus stimulated.
4) Person drinks large amount of water. Osmolarity in plasma equalized. Water equalizes among fluid compartments.
5) Additional retained water weight adds to overall weight of person.
6) Person falsely thinks eating 8 oz. of chips made them gain 2 lbs. due to caloric value, when actually it's due to increased water weight.
7) Kidney eventually compensates, via complex mechanisms, to flush extra electrolytes. Takes time.
That's it. It's just that simple folks. This is why our weight normally fluctuates a few pounds from week to week. Forget confusing the issue with basal metabolic rates, exercise, thermic effects, etc. You cannot, I REPEAT, cannot gain MORE weight from a food product than the food product itself weighs, unless you account for the additional water weight.
Are we clear?
-TT