Food journal app WITHOUT calorie counting?

Hi, I'm trying to gain some weight and get rid of some disordered eating habits with a nutritionist, and she wants me to record what I eat every day. Do any of you have recommendations for a food diary app for iPhone and/or iPad that DOESN'T keep track of calories? I'm trying NOT to focus on those.

Sorry, I don't have any apps for any gadgets.
I think most food diaries are about calories counting.

I'm old school and I like numbers.
They are my biggest motivation tools.
My calories intake (what I eat), my calorie expenditure (BMR + physical activities), my total body weight on a scale (and I can make the difference between body fat loss/gain, muscle mass loss/gain and water/food/waste fluctuations), my monthly body measurements to the quarter of an inch using a tape measure, my reps/weights/tempo when doing weight training, my increasing speed when walking/jogging or biking (for the same physical effort), my number of pool laps in 30 minutes, my BFP (Body Fat Percentage), my THR zones (bpm… Beats per minutes according to my MHR… Maximum heart rate… According to my age).

And I always progress each session, even if it's just walking/jogging a mile 20 seconds faster (I time myself)… Until I get in shape and then it gets boring (not having to progress anymore because I reached my fitness goal and just have to maintain).

But I don't want any machines to calculate my numbers for me.
I have a pen to do my math on paper using recycling materials.
You would not believe how much paper people recycle, not using the verso page (the other side of a page).

I like to know the art of looking at an egg and knowing that the white part of a large egg has 3.5g of protein (you don't have to know that it has 17 calories if you don't want to obsess with calories) but the yolk has only 2.8g of protein (and you don't have to know that it has 59 calories).

If you have an ED and a nutritionist to help you, you should make her aware of your concerns about your wish to avoid knowing about calories.
Having an ED is a mental disorder, not a physical one. A nutritionist can know about your body's nutritional needs and try to stabilize your caloric intake but still has to dabble into your mind to accommodate you. I've never heard of a psychiatrist/nutritionist.
A psychiatrist can help you with your ED mental disorder but a good nutritionist should also be aware of your concerns.

As your nutritionist, she should know your BMR + growth + physical activities caloric requirements (based on your gender, weight, height, age (growth)/fitness level/calories expenditure with physical activities) and therefore know about your carbs/protein/dietary fats and vitamins/minerals requirements and all you have to do is just keep a journal (using a pen and paper… Gosh, you can use Microsoft Word if you want if you'd rather type), so you keep track of everything you eat and drink, using a kitchen scale if necessary (like did you eat 3oz of chicken moist and juicy dark meat or 4.5oz of dry chicken white meat?) and NOT look at food labels (they show calorie contents, let your nutritionist track those). You could avoid any processed, packaged food with labels.
Also using measuring spoons and cups (if you live in the US).

Also keep track of all your physical activities (duration, mileage, speed, THR zones… )

It should be a piece of cake (not the best metaphor for somebody with an ED) for your nutritionist to do the math and see if you're getting the nutrients that you need.